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11-18-2006, 01:28 PM | #1 |
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scribes who failed to record Jesus
It strikes me in reading GMark the number of times Scribes are expressly mentioned observing with amazement Jesus healing the sick amongst multitudes, having Jesus smack them down on scripture, the alleged trial, and etc.
In a search of GMark, "Scribe" appears 21 times, and the vast majority are instances where a scribe is present in some gospel event. Yet, no record exists of any scribe actually recording any of these deeds. Nor is there any secondary reference to such recordings at a later date. The historical Jesus approach is of course to put forward a completely different Jesus than that of the gospels - an insignificant itinerant with almost no following completely escaping notice. When you have such an overwhelming abundance of references like this though, and it is coupled with the numerous other exploits of fame - running thousands of pigs into the sea, healing the offspring of high officials, outright claims he is known to the ruler, and all the rest of it - This is so central to the assertion about Jesus you simply cannot excuse it. It's like looking for a "Historical Muhammed Ali" who never boxed. The entire message about Jesus was that he shook up the old order, overturned the tables (literally), and brought the "New Testament" in seismic fashion. In front of multitudes of scribes. The historicists are infatuated with their stretching of the "argument from silence" out of all proportion. We have emphatic wagon loads of assertions in the gospels that scribes are present. Scribes are amazed. Scribes who then record absolutely nothing. When the gospel accounts go so far out of their way to insist on the presence of scribes then the absence of recordings indeed becomes a key piece of evidence against that claim - for they have not explained the canyon gulf between these mutually exclusive positions. And this indeed is why the historicists dodge the matter by agreeing there was no such Jesus. That Jesus is mythical, they say hypocritically while sneering at the "Jesus Myth". And what record is there of any Jesus that the historicists lay claim to? There is none. They expressly deny the existence of the Jesus in the gospels, proposing instead some personage for which there is no record at all. I'm calling them on this. There are no records whatsoever amongst the Docetists, Marcionites, and proto-catholics or whatever about the lowly Jesus of no note. There is no tradition, no record - nothing. The historicists thinks himself cunning by saying "why should you expect such a record?" Argument from silence, they say! Well that is bizarre. Insisting on the existence of a person for which not only does no record exist whatever - but a person for which the entire written record is in the most significant way diametrically opposed to. As if Paul Bunyan was the proof for the existance of the 98 lb weakling. We also hear the ridiculous criterion of "embarassment" being used to legitimize Jesus - that the fact the crucifiction is mentioned, for example, is so embarrassing that it must be true. This flies in the face of the whole thrust of the gospels in which Jesus is depicted as drawing multitudes and performing miracles. If there is any merit to the "embarrassment" criteria, and if there was indeed a Historical Jesus of the form the historicists claim, then it is precisely here that the lowly, insignificant life of the itinerant loser would be recorded. |
11-18-2006, 02:31 PM | #2 | |
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http://www.keyway.ca/htm2001/20010207.htm Richard Carrier has written previously on this board: we have no reason to expect any historical record of a HJ [historical Jesus]. We are lucky to have any sources at all from that time and place, and those sources do not record every movement or its founderIt's reasonable to ask: "Why didn't more people write about Jesus?" But, as Carrier noted, we need to take into account that a lot of material simply didn't survive (for example, Papias's 5 volumes of oracles on Jesus), much less that of a cult that didn't appear to register in the consciousness of society until the Second Century (except possibly in certain circumstances). It's reasonable to ask: "Why didn't such-and-such write about Jesus?" But then we need to ask whether the author wrote about equivalent figures. For example, there is a miracle-working divine figure (with divine origin) who has millions of adherents living today. He has been performing miracles for decades. It is rumoured he has even raised at least one person from the dead. That the newspapers of the world (and posts on this board) aren't filled with information about that person should perhaps be taken into consideration. |
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11-18-2006, 03:00 PM | #3 | |
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The stark reality is Jesus can not be placed in history, there is no evidence to support him. The NT is not credible, both in chronology and events. HJ is a hopeless position and is only for those with vivid imaginations. |
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11-18-2006, 03:06 PM | #4 |
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And seriously HJ is probably an enlightenment position. All the main creeds talk of Jesus having God as his father and he being equal to God.
Logically that means most xianity is actually mythicist, unless Jesus is the only godman in the universe and the xians are therefore correct. |
11-18-2006, 03:15 PM | #5 |
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It is interesting, isn't it? Just by their name, one could expect this particular group to have written more. But then again, I doubt that they thought of themselves as “scribes.” It sounds more like the sort of name that a Rush Limbaugh of the time would bestow on someone. Think, “oh, you don't need to listen to him – he's a scribe.”
In contrast are the Pharisees. There seems to be evidence that this group actually existed and had a clear identity. Yet, seldom does one find a reference to one group without a mention of the other. It is almost always “scribes and pharisees”, very much like “those damned liberals” that we heard so much about over the past several months. Have you ever met anyone who calls themselves a “damned liberal?” I'm still looking. But, it could also be that Hebrew scribes simply were not respected. Most of the writing that has been preserved from 2000 years ago was from the Greeks and Romans. So the “historical” accounts of the life of Jesus have their slant on things. Could it be that what Josephus thought and put into writing was considered far more important that what some Hebrew had to say? Was one preserved and the other not? Of the writings that later were called “the bible”, most were in Greek or Latin, although some Aramaic survived. Why is that? Is this related to one of the many diasporas, or is it that if something was really important, it was written in a language that was relatively universal at the time? Greek and Latin were the English of their time. If you wrote something that you felt was important for everyone to read, would you write it in Esperanto? But thanks for making me think about it. |
11-18-2006, 03:25 PM | #6 | |||||||
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And yes - scribes were quite busy copying texts, recording official documents, making correspondence for their employers - that is how we have the written record, GakuseiDon - from the extant copies of the work from scribes. Quote:
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Keep putting up the "Historical Jesus" that is 100% antithetical to the gospels and heretics alike. Invent one that absolutely nobody in the 1st or second centuries records. Every time putting up the 98 lb weakling where the gospels put out Muhammed Ali and the heretics put out George Foreman. Quote:
I am focusing in on the dozens of assertions in the gospels regarding the presence of scribes at his amazing feats. Maybe you would first like to address that point. Do you believe or do you not believe that there were scribes present as the gosples emphatically attest to? Cheers. |
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11-18-2006, 03:44 PM | #7 | |
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Some of them might also have known how to chip something on a stone!
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11-18-2006, 04:13 PM | #8 | |
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11-18-2006, 05:23 PM | #9 | |
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11-18-2006, 05:23 PM | #10 | |
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Also, calling it a bait-and-switch only makes sense if someone is trying to use the HJ to get you to believe in the gospel Jesus. |
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