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Old 10-30-2009, 05:08 AM   #41
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Finally, whilst the other discussions are important, to return to the OP. I still find it utterly remarkable that a Jew as fiercely monotheistic as Paul was should, in a statement of that monotheism, include a human being; and that this created no problems in the way Torah observance did. The likes of Peter continued to work with him, instead of going mad on what was, for a Jew, a core non-negotiable part of their beliefs.
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Old 10-30-2009, 05:48 AM   #42
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Finally, whilst the other discussions are important, to return to the OP. I still find it utterly remarkable that a Jew as fiercely monotheistic as Paul was should, in a statement of that monotheism, include a human being; and that this created no problems in the way Torah observance did. The likes of Peter continued to work with him, instead of going mad on what was, for a Jew, a core non-negotiable part of their beliefs.
I guess your astonishment may simply be a result of your assumptions.

So I suggest that you might try to assume a bit less.
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Old 10-30-2009, 07:14 AM   #43
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Finally, whilst the other discussions are important, to return to the OP. I still find it utterly remarkable that a Jew as fiercely monotheistic as Paul was should, in a statement of that monotheism, include a human being; and that this created no problems in the way Torah observance did. The likes of Peter continued to work with him, instead of going mad on what was, for a Jew, a core non-negotiable part of their beliefs.
That's good enough reason for Paul never to declare Jesus God, not even infer it in the [trinitarian] benediction at the end of 2 Corinthians 13:14.
"The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Ghost, be with you all. Amen."

[Who added that piece nobody knows. Possibly some second century bishop of Rome to promote/create a special baptismal formula.]
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Old 10-30-2009, 07:31 AM   #44
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The monotheism of the Jews might have accommodated a spiritual Christ, evolved possibly from the earlier mythical figure of Wisdom. But a living human being claiming to be God incarnated seems absolutely un-Jewish. This may have been a later development, a "bringing down to earth" or historicizing of the original saviour figure, maybe when the movement became predominantly gentile.

The "shocking event" you propose could have been the bar-Kochba revolt in the 130s, the final and utter destruction of the Jewish state. At this point Christianity may have split into Jewish and non-Jewish groups, and the torah-free gospel of the earthly Jesus may have taken over from messianic or gnostic Jews.
But, there is no records even among Church writers where Jews, outside of the Gospel characters, did believe in or worshipped some-one called Jesus as a God who could forgive sin.

Trypho, the Jew, in Justin Martyr's Dialogue with Trypho did not exhibit any belief or mentioned any Jewish teachers that believed in, worshiped or taught that Christ was God with the ability to forgive sin and that Christ was the Creator of heaven and earth.
Well, there is the idea that both Christianity and rabbinic Judaism were related branches of the old Mosaic temple cult. We have some idea of how diverse the pre-70 situation was among Jews, such as the various messianic beliefs.

By the mid-2nd C the average Jew may have vilified any ideas that were associated with messianism or Zealotry or "kingdom of heaven" movements against Rome. Pre-135 Jewish gnosticism, if there was such a thing, might have included primitive Christian ideas (I don't presume that Jews started the whole thing, but it is one possibility).

Paul might represent the "fringe" of Jewish speculation before bar-Kochba, a messianic or gnostic midrash that later Jews would find totally unacceptable.
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Old 10-30-2009, 08:17 AM   #45
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Again, for comments on Acts, see my discussion with Toto. The Testimonium Flavianum gets enough debate to which I won't add, but hopefully we can agree that if I can't claim Josephus said, “He drew over to him both many of the Jews and many of the Gentiles”, you can't claim he didn't. And there is always the James the Just reference, which is near universally considered authentic.
Now this is just poisoning the well. Josephus says there were chariots flying around Jerusalem, but this doesn't mean that he can't be used as some sort of history. Besides, Josephus' Antiquities is a different book than his Life, the latter is where he mentions investigating the Pharisees, Sadducees, and Essenes. The reason why the TF isn't admissible is because it's more than likely an interpolation. Suspiciously, Josephus nowhere else uses the heavily loaded religio-political word "christ" other than the two times he's describing the Jesus of Christianity. He doesn't even use the term "christ" when he describes Cyrus the Great, whereas Isaiah 45:1 LXX does. It's especially suspect because Josephus argues that Vespasian was the messiah.

Just because one paragraph (and possibly the James reference) is corrupt doesn't mean that almost 30 volumes of his other works must be inadmissible. That would be like throwing out a physics book just because on page 55 out of a 3,000 page tome it has the typo "E = mc4".

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On Maranatha- NRSV “Our Lord, come!” {footnote or} “Our Lord has come” (and other translations similarly). The second option would rule out non-Christians, so I will assume the first.

Non- Christian Jews could have used it, and it could have entered the Greek synagogues before Christianity, and then transferred to the new churches. Could have, but it's not likely.
There's no prescedent for the supposition "not likely". It's a messainic phrase which any messanic Jews would have been using.

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Firstly, we have no indication from any sources that maranatha was used in this way in non-Christian Judaism.
This is true. But we actually have no writings from any messainic Jews of the time period other than Greek speaking Christians (and some of the DSS) and their spiritual savior - and this includes whatever the beliefs were of the Jesus-movement in Jerusalem. Messainism was smacked down in 70 CE and utterly wiped out in 135 CE.

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Secondly, it is a roundabout means of transmission where a much more obvious one (within the church) is available.
It's a transmission that would have occured between any Jews. You seem to be under the assumption that Greek speaking Jews and Aramaic speaking Jews avoided each other like the plague, and that only Christians had any dialogue between the two groups.

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Thirdly, I don't see the Greek Jews expressing the same enthusiasm about Messianism as the Israel based ones.
Why not?

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Fourthly, we know that Paul taught the word “Abba” in a similar way. Fifthly if it was used in the synagogues, it would have been addressed to YHWH, whereas in its Christian context, it is being addressed to Jesus. First century Jews wouldn't have done that- they were more aware of the different roles of YHWH and Jesus than we are.
The only Jews who seem to know who Jesus was were the Jerusalem movement and Paul's gentiles. And we don't even know what the Jerusalem movement thought about Jesus, unless we take Ebionite/Desposyni belief as a marker. Jesus was a veritable nobody in most of the non-Christian Jewish writings describing the time period. The impression that Jesus was insanely popular is due to treating the gospel accounts as actual history. There's no corroboration of Jesus' popularity in any Jewish, Greek, or Roman writings in the 1st century.

And Jews do not say The Name YHWH out loud. The conflation of Jesus as "lord" is due to Hebrew ignorant, Greek speaking Christians (Paul included) thinking the unnamed "lord" (kyrios) in the LXX had the revealed name Jesus, whereas the kyrios theos was god the father. There is no distinction between the Hebrew "lord" (adonai, as opposed to "adoni" which is a human title) and YHWH, since YHWH is usually given the vowel points of adonai to instruct Hebrew-literate Jews to pronounce The Name as "adonai" (or it is given the vowel points of Elohim to instruct Jews to pronounce YHWH as "god").

But we're talking about Aramaic, not Hebrew. Aramaic was the spoken language of 1st century Judaea (Hebrew was more for synagoge use), where the phrase maranatha would be spoken out loud with possible messainic intention by any messanic Jews.
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Old 10-30-2009, 08:42 AM   #46
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...I would argue that the claims of non-interpolation are motivated by Christian resistance to treating their sacred texts as products of human history.
Given that textual analysis is his thing, I think it likely that Bart Ehrman deals with issues of authorship/dating in much of his work, but a good introduction would be this (or via: amazon.co.uk)
I don't see any analysis of the issues behind dating Paul's letters there. This is not a textual issue. The texts all date to much later than they were written.

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Such as the Encyclopaedia Britannica?
No.
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Old 10-30-2009, 09:41 AM   #47
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The LOGOS, not Jesus.

And please show me where Philo wrote that the Logos could have died, and where the Logos shed his blood, or was resurrected to save Jews from their sins while the Jews obeyed the Laws of the God of Moses?

.
All that gnostic conjecture can be found detailed in the yellow book of G.R.S. Mead "Fragments of a Faith Forgotten".
Very interesting stuff, but also confusing.
http://www.gnosis.org/library/grs-me...tten/index.htm
But, we are dealing with the writings of Philo with respect to the Logos.

Philo was also a contemporary of the so-called Jesus.

Philo wrote not one thing about Jesus and did not compare any character called Jesus with the Logos.

So, this would mean or suggest that even if Jesus did exist, he had not one single effect on Philo, physically or spiritually.

And further, Philo was selected by Jews of Alexandria to go on an embassy to Gaius to argue AGAINST having effigies or statues of Emperor at Jewish sacred places and the deification of humans.

This is Gaius about the Jews on deification of Emperors in Philo's "On the Embassy to Gaius."

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.......Your loyal and excellent fellow citizens, the only nation of men upon the whole face of the earth by whom Gaius is not esteemed to be a god, appear now to be even desiring to plot my death in their obstinate disobedience, for when I commanded my statue in the character of Jupiter to be erected in their temple, they raised the whole of their people, and quitted the city and the whole country in a body, under pretence of addressing a petition to me, but in reality being determined to act in a manner contrary to the commands which I had imposed upon them."
It is recorded that the Jewish nation was considered by Gaius to be the only nation on the WHOLE face earth that did NOT worship him as a God, yet the author of Acts of the Apostles implied that while Gaius observed that the Jewish nation did NOTworship him as a God that there were thousands of Jews worshiping a blasphemer as a God and was asking him to forgive their sins while these very Jews obeyed the Laws of the God of Moses and the Temple was still standing.

Jesus was placed in the wrong nation.

See http://www.earlyjewishwritings.com
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Old 10-30-2009, 09:43 AM   #48
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Philo taught that the Logos (distinct from the Father) was the creator of the world and a paraclete on behalf of the human race, though.
The LOGOS, not Jesus.

And please show me where Philo wrote that the Logos could have died, and where the Logos shed his blood, or was resurrected to save Jews from their sins while the Jews obeyed the Laws of the God of Moses?
I just wrote that to explain that some Jews did believe in a second power that created the world. It's just that Christians shoehorned Jesus into Philo's Logos 100 years later.
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