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Old 10-07-2011, 05:48 AM   #461
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... He humbled himself by NOT coming as king or warrior or ruler, but as a servant.
Yeah right, like I could have been the King of the World if I had merely decided to be born that way. igsfly:
Imagine you were born that way -- the heir to a kingdom, for example -- and then you were taken to a large mountain where you were offered all the kingdoms of the world. And then you refuse the offer. That's the sort of scenario that would fit here.
And what has this got to do with Phillipians chapter 2? Or the reputed Historical Jesus for that matter? The answer is nothing.

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Hint: only pre-existent beings with plenty of juice (divine entities) would have been believed by the author to get to make these kinds of choices.
Really. So Paul is offering this example for his readers who are pre-existent divine entities?
That is so lame. To turn the question around to you, is Paul offering this example to his readers who are Kings, Warriors, and Rulers? Obviously, this advice is not something being restricted to those who are "Christs" by anyone's definition.

The real anoalogy in this passage is: since the divine Christ Jesus emptied and humbled himself, you can follow his [more exalted] example and be humble too! And no, GakuseiDon, the readers did not have to be a Christ by any definition to get it.

And you know, Dunn et al are completely wrong. Paul was not a good Jew. If Judaism and Yahweh were deemed to be doing such a great job, there would be no need to bring in another savior.

No good Jew would even is passing likened the Ten Commandments to the “Ministry of Death in letters engraved in stone.” 2 Cor. 3:7.

Jake
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Old 10-07-2011, 06:01 AM   #462
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No, it rules IN lowly carpenters from Nazareth. I'm honestly confused by people's thinking on this. This is how it probably came about:

"Look! Jesus is the son of David! The Messiah!"
"Wait a moment, he's just a carpenter. And he just got crucified! How can he be the Messiah?"
"Er... he CHOSE that. Yeah, I know this will be a stumbling block to you guys, but actually Scriptures predicted that this would happen. Let me get the verses for you..."

Hi GakuseiDon,

You sure are allowing yourself plenty of latitude with imaginative scenerios, and dragging content from all over the place into the Pauline context. All for what, to "prove" you teneditious point that Christ Jesus was believed to have no pre-existence?

I am sure Earl Doherty will appreciate it when you treat him like you want to be treated. ><

Jake
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Old 10-07-2011, 10:12 AM   #463
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GDon - carpenters are not messiah figures. And if one wants to nit-pick here - the word translated as carpenter can also be translated with reference to other craftsmen - or, interestingly, it could be "an idiomatic expression for a scholar". here In other word - don't read 'Paul' into the gospel JC story....
Then why did YOU bring in "carpenter"? :banghead: My point was that early Christians who claimed that Jesus was Christ, to get around the unpleasant fact that Christ was crucified without becoming a great king, claimed that he COULD have come as a great king, but that he chose not to. (The word "probably" that I used above related to the explanation rather than the occupation.)

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My own view is that If one wants to fuse these two stories - then perhaps pay attention to Wells - first get ones ducks in a row - first read these two stories as though they were independent stories - and then attempt the fusing of these two stories into one storyline, the NT storyline.
That's a fair enough approach. That's why I'm concentrating on Paul in trying to get the meaning behind Phil 2. So let's not worry about the Gospels at this time. Not your fault; I shouldn't have allowed myself to be distracted.

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So what? Wells has suggested two Jesus figures - and that insight could go someway to resolving some of the issues over the NT JC storyline.
Interesting, but irrelevant at this time.
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Old 10-07-2011, 10:15 AM   #464
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It would appear to me that HJers have NO intention of producing any evidence or source for their HJ of Nazareth and are just ASKING QUESTIONS for which they themselves have NO answer.

QUESTIONS are NOT evidence for anything.

But, it is time for HJers to end their charade.

HJers have INTRODUCED gMark as evidence for their HJ born in Nazareth.

1. gMark does NOT ever claim Jesus was born in Nazareth.

2. gMark does NOT ever claim Jesus lived in Nazareth from birth.

HJers are promoting propaganda or unsubstantiated claims.

But, I will DESTROY the HJ argument ONCE and for all since they have introduced gMark as evidence for their MAN of Nazareth.

I will show that The Jesus of gMark is NOT the explanation for the Jesus movement.

I will show that the Jesus of gMark EXPLAINS PRECISELY what would have happened if Jesus was BELIEVED to be a MAN from Nazareth

In gMark, the Man from Nazareth carried out many Fantastic miracles with the SPIT and TOUCH technique, walked on water and transfigured but on the day he was ARRESTED his disciples FLED the Scene.

They SIMPLY ABANDONED the man and his own disciple Judas BETRAYED him.

Mark 14:50 -
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And they all forsook him, and fled.
Next, Peter, the very disciple who claimed Jesus was Christ, DENIED that he even knew or was associated with the Man.

Mark 14
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67 And when she saw Peter warming himself, she looked upon him, and said, And thou also wast with Jesus of Nazareth.................... But he began to curse and to swear, saying, I know not this man of whom ye speak.
So, the disciples have HAVE ABANDONED the Man and he is LEFT alone to face the Sanhedrin.

Now, when the Man is being questioned by the Sanhedrin he claims he is the Son of the Blessed and is condemned to be GUILTY of DEATH for BLASPHEMY under Jewish Law.


Mark 16
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Again the high priest asked him, and said unto him, Art thou the Christ, the Son of the Blessed? 62 And Jesus said, I am.......Then the high priest rent his clothes, and saith.......Ye have heard the blasphemy: what think ye? And they all condemned him to be guilty of death.
So the first 15 chapters of gMark is a DISASTER for the Man from Nazareth.

The Man DIED abandoned and disowned.

1. The Disciples ABANDON the Man.

2. Peter DENIED ever knowing the Man.

3. The Sanhedrin believed Jesus was a Man and condemned him to death for Blasphemy.


But, there is ONE more chapter on the MAN from Nazareth in gMark, the 16th chapter.

When the WOMEN went to visit the burial site the MAN'S body had Vanished.

Now, it is TOTAL DEVASTATION.

We have NO disciples, No Peter, No body and that is the END of the story of MAN from Nazareth.

Mr 16:8 -
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And they went out quickly, and fled from the sepulchre; for they trembled and were amazed, neither said they any thing to any man, for they were afraid....
The story of the MAN of Nazareth was a DISASTER.

What a shame. The MAN from Nazareth came, was REJECTED as a Blasphemer.

The STORY of the MAN is done at Mark 16.8.

The MAN from Nazareth does NOT explain the Jesus movement.

But, wait the 16th chapter is NOT finished.

Did NOT THE BODY of the MAN from Nazareth VANISH???


Can anyone EXPLAIN what has HAPPENED?

What is this RESURRECTION?

It cannot be the MAN from Nazareth. HE DIED in DISGRACE as a BLASPHEMER, his disciples fled, betrayed and denied ever knowing him.

HOW COME the story has NOT ENDED at Mark 16.8?

There is NO EXPLANATION except for MYTH JESUS.

MYTH JESUS EXPLAINS EVERYTHING.

Mark 16:9 -
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Now when Jesus was risen early the first day of the week, he appeared first to Mary Magdalene.......14Afterward he appeared unto the eleven as they sat at meat...... he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature..............So then, after the Lord had spoken unto them, he was received up into heaven, and sat on the right hand of God. 20And they went forth, and preached every where, the Lord working with them, and confirming the word with signs following. Amen.
The story of the MAN from Nazareth EXPLAINS NOTHING about how the Jesus movement began.

The story of the Man from Nazareth ENDED in DISASTER at MARK 16.8.

The MAN from Nazareth DESTROYED the Jesus movement.

MYTH JESUS SAVED the Movement.

MYTH JESUS SAVED the MAN from Nazareth in gMark.

Remember no body could even locate the dead body of the Man from Nazareth.

MYTH JESUS RESURRECTED the missing body of the Man from Nazareth in gMark.

Mark 16.9-20 EXPLAINS how the Jesus MOVEMENT began when Jesus was a resurrected MYTH.[
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Old 10-07-2011, 11:14 AM   #465
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Imagine you were born that way -- the heir to a kingdom, for example -- and then you were taken to a large mountain where you were offered all the kingdoms of the world. And then you refuse the offer. That's the sort of scenario that would fit here.
And what has this got to do with Phillipians chapter 2? Or the reputed Historical Jesus for that matter? The answer is nothing.
Nothing necessarily to do with the HJ/MJ debate; everything to do with Phil 2 and a "heavenly origin" for Christ, esp in a thread about the prima facie reading of passages.

There is no need to read in a heavenly origin for Christ in Phil 2. The Christ was supposed to have come as a powerful man; Jesus Christ didn't come as a powerful man. He came as a servant, humble, obedient, according to Paul.

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Really. So Paul is offering this example for his readers who are pre-existent divine entities?
That is so lame. To turn the question around to you, is Paul offering this example to his readers who are Kings, Warriors, and Rulers?
It is being offered to people who should be humble in order to become sons of God, in fact.

The context: Paul is saying "Be like Christ -- who was humble, obedient (unto death), so therefore God has highly exalted Him -- that you may become blameless and harmless, the sons of God without fault."

That Paul believed that Christ was appointed Son of God because of his obedience is not a coincidence, in my view.

Anyway, nothing to do with a heavenly origin for Christ, unless you import it.

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Obviously, this advice is not something being restricted to those who are "Christs" by anyone's definition.
Agreed.

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The real anoalogy in this passage is: since the divine Christ Jesus emptied and humbled himself, you can follow his [more exalted] example and be humble too! And no, GakuseiDon, the readers did not have to be a Christ by any definition to get it.
Agreed. So what was the point of your comment "Hint: only pre-existent beings with plenty of juice (divine entities) would have been believed by the author to get to make these kinds of choices"? :huh:

Anyway, it is irrelevant to the heavenly origin of Christ AFAICS.

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And you know, Dunn et al are completely wrong. Paul was not a good Jew. If Judaism and Yahweh were deemed to be doing such a great job, there would be no need to bring in another savior.

No good Jew would even is passing likened the Ten Commandments to the “Ministry of Death in letters engraved in stone.” 2 Cor. 3:7.
Let's just stick to Phil 2 and a "heavenly origin" for Christ, unless you think it is relevant to it.

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You sure are allowing yourself plenty of latitude with imaginative scenerios, and dragging content from all over the place into the Pauline context. All for what, to "prove" you teneditious point that Christ Jesus was believed to have no pre-existence?
I'm saying that there is no heavenly origin for Christ in Phil 2, unless you import that meaning in. The rest are tangents, which I'm as responsible for as anyone else.
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Old 10-07-2011, 12:10 PM   #466
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[
I'm saying that there is no heavenly origin for Christ in Phil 2, unless you import that meaning in. The rest are tangents, which I'm as responsible for as anyone else.
You don't seem to care that PAUL claimed the Lord Jesus was FROM heaven.

You don't seem to care that Paul claimed he was NOT the apostle of a man.

You don't seem to care that Pauline claimed Jesus was the Sent Son of God.

You don't seem to care that in Philippians 2 Jesus was in the FORM OF GOD before he became flesh.

Philippians
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5 Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: 6 Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God:

7 But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men..
Please do not import your fallacies.

Jesus was GOD and then humbled himself and then took the form of man in the PAULINE writings.

You KNOW that it was BLASPHEMY for a Jew to worship a man as a God.

Please stop your theological absurdities.
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Old 10-07-2011, 12:36 PM   #467
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Polite reminder, borne of nothing but genuine curiosity:

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Agreed, that would be tough, if all we had to go on was writing styles. But we might have a fighting chance if several people had disagreed so strongly with the earlier version of your letters that they had written a line by line commnetary on how wrong you were. :devil1:

Jake
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We have this?

I don't mean for my letters, obviously.
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Old 10-08-2011, 05:49 PM   #468
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Not sure I disagree, but it is outside the point I was making: that the Christ was expected to be the son of David and therefore a person of worldly power. We see it in numerous places in the Gospels, including the odd statement in John 7:41-43; and in the Palestinian Talmud with Bar Kochba, where the Hebrew Scriptures were used to show that Bar Kochba was the Messiah:
http://www.livius.org/men-mh/messiah...aimants17.html
No doubt it was the central point of discussion between the Paulinist sect(s) and the Jewish proto-Christians in the late stage of the first war and a couple of decades after. In the end Christ was given a Davidic pedigree - and the hard-core Paulinists started to split into docetism. If Paul's Christ told him that his "power is perfected in weakness" he could not IMHO be referring to the Messiahship as it was traditionally understood. It must have been a central point of disagreement

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This passage was likely post-Pauline manifest of his church.

ended on both, revealing their respective functions in God's play pen.

The problem however is that Carmen Christi (Phl 2:6-11) is a higher Christology than Paul's and more formulaic. Sophia (1 Cr 1:18-31) speaks of Christ as every man's divine potential, whereas Carmen seems focused on nomenclatura as the mechanics of salvation. In the latter, Jesus' is name is glorified as unique mark of a specific character - and is markedly separated from the function of the believer's faith. It is for this reason I believe the passage is later, from a time when Paul was gone and his church was defending its conception of Christ against the messianists from Palestine, asserting Jesus' Davidic line of the 'real McCoy' against them. The Carmen formula shows the weakening of confidence in imitating Paul (imitating Christ) and placing theological justifications in their stead.
Interesting that you see it as post-dating Paul. To me it makes sense as pre-dating Paul. The focus is on what Christ did in life -- he came as a servant -- and it is the obedience of what Christ did in life that is the cause of his exaltation by God.

That would make sense if Jesus came out of a group of itinerant Galilean preachers, as some have proposed the Q community to be. Paul's focus is on the significance of Jesus' death however. He is using the hymn to encourage humility in his fellow believers, and so uses Christ as an example of this. He's not using it for its high Christological value.
If you agree to the proposition there was a single Christian church at Paul's time of which Paul was a regular member (despite his occasional huffing and puffing) then this looks like a sound proposition. But the problem is that there seems to be nothing but Acts to vouch for such a scenario. Now, the interest of the author of Acts seems to be plain: the contremporary proto-orthodox church required a historical argument that there was - from the beginning - but one church, created by a supernatural event in Jerusalem from exclusively Jesus following and exclusively for Jesus, a few weeks after his death. Seems difficult to grant for all sorts reasons, not the least of which is that Paul evidently knew nothing of the Pentecost :

1 Cor 14:23 raises a scenario where all members of the assembly speak in tongues hypothetically. Further Paul warns that strangers entering such a pandemonium would think the worshippers were mad. And low and behold: some time later someone tells a story (Acts 2) which assures that Paul was wrong, that Jesus founded his church for his faithful led by his disciples precisely via such an event and the outsiders who were present not only did not think the ravers mad but joined up on the spot by the thousand. How likely was the Pentecost, or anything that would establish the orphaned Jesus entourage in a hostile Jerusalem without outside protection and support ?

Not very.

My own little theory starts with the assumption that the gospel of Mark "ended" at 16:8. This basically changes everything. If the tradition of appearances of Jesus post-mortem to his disciples did not start after his execution, but as a reaction to the earliest gospel of Mark, then we are looking at very different Christian beginnings. Think about it ! It is like a new magical scenery opening up. No one in Jerusalem likely even could conceive of 'resurrection' the way some crazy Jewish apostate was preaching it to the goyyim, as an event which has already happened, let alone credit that Jesus was anything more than a martyr for the Davidic king to come. This is of course prior to the war, when the hopes for the resoration were still high and animating the Jerusalem missions.

Best,
Jiri
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