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Old 03-03-2010, 01:56 AM   #141
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I'm not shocked in the least. It's all there in black and white what to me seems extremely plausible. and probably the truth. I've gone over and over the letters of Paul that scholars claim may be authentic, and nowhere do I see/read of a historical flesh and blood human Jesus.
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Old 03-04-2010, 12:06 PM   #142
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I'm not shocked in the least. It's all there in black and white what to me seems extremely plausible. and probably the truth. I've gone over and over the letters of Paul that scholars claim may be authentic, and nowhere do I see/read of a historical flesh and blood human Jesus.
There are a half-dozen or so sentences within the presumably authentic letters of Paul that clearly refer to a human earthly Jesus of the seemingly recent past. These have to be dealt with from a non-HJ perspective. To the degree I'm familiar with Doherty's work, I seem to recall he puts a mystical spin on these few sentences.

I think a simpler explanation is that they are the work of someone other than Paul. Scholars generally agree that even the genuine Pauline corpus has been reworked by multiple authors over time, and often refer to the texts in terms of these various layers. If the texts really do contain a pastoral layer as scholars tend to agree, then earthly human Jesus ideas certainly fit that layer, as do the various creeds interspersed throughout (which also happen to be the source of about half of the earthly human Jesus ideas).
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Old 03-04-2010, 01:57 PM   #143
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- Paul didn't quote from Jesus because Paul's Jesus was a revealed heavenly person and not a historical person

- Paul doesn't need to tell us what made the crucifixion of Jesus special, because he's using it symbolically and both he and early christians knew that

- Paul uses 'crucify' loosely because he is not referring to a Roman crucifixion, but instead to the complete annihilation of a fleshly outlook on life

- The crucixion is intertwined with the end of the law, because those who are fully devoted to a spiritual life are aligned with the real spirit of god rather than the silly legalistic ways of the law. Paul explains this explicitly in Galatians, and even makes an 'out' for Jews who follow the law because they understand this, rather than those who do so for legalistic reasons. The crucifixion of the flesh and the subsequent ending of the law is what makes a gentile mission possible at all.

- Paul's demonstration of the crucifixion is simply his argument for how the idea is derived from scripture

- Paul's witnesses are all post resurrection witnesses, because Jesus only ever appears in visions

- Jesus family disappears from history because they never existed in the first place

- There was no tomb, so there was nothing to venerate. The gospel authors concocted an empty tomb story in response to this problem.

- The passion reads like it was constructed directly from Isaiah 53 and Psalm 22, because it was. There was no collective memory of any details of a historical crucifixion, so they could easily get away with this. They placed the events an exact symbolic 40 years prior to the destruction of the temple.


It's all really very simple and clean, and flows directly from the best/earliest evidence we have.

Dear "Paul".
Amen.

Some questions from Scotland Yard

1) So who forged the Pauline literature and when did this happen and why, etc?

2) How is "Paul" actually related to "Matt" and "Mark" and "Luke" and "Johnny"?

3) When and where was the New Testament literature first brought under the scope of an Editor-In-Chief?

4) Was there a publisher (and/or sponsor) and did the publisher (and/or sponsor) stand to make anything out of the deal?

5) Why was Eusebius so certain of his "facts"?

6) Are the Editor-In-Chief of the NT and the Chief Researcher of Christian "Church History" two separate, distinct and independent authors --- or the same person?

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The curtain is slowly rising ....
pipe music in background ...


Eusebius of the Caesars;
Historia Ecclesiastica, Book 1, Chapter XII.
The Disciples of Our Saviour.


1 The names of the apostles of our Saviour are known to every one from the Gospels.188 But there exists no catalogue of the seventy disciples.189 Barnabas, indeed, is said to have been one of them, of whom the Acts of the apostles makes mention in various places,190 and especially Paul in his Epistle to the Galatians.191

2 They say that Sosthenes also, who wrote tothe Corinthians with Paul, was one of them.192 This is the account of Clement193 in the fifthbook of his Hypotyposes, in which he also says that Cephas was one of the seventy disciples,194 a man who bore the same name as the apostle Peter, and the one concerning whom Paul says, "When Cephas came to Antioch I withstood him to his face."195

3 Matthias,196 also, who was numbered with the apostles in the place of Judas, and the one who was honored by being made a candidate with him,197 are like-wise said to have been deemed worthy of the same calling with the seventy. They say that Thaddeus198 also was one of them, concerning whom I shall presently relate an account which has come down to us.199 And upon examination you will find that our Saviour had more than seventy disciples, according to the testimony of Paul, who says that after his resurrection from the dead he appeared first to Cephas, then to the twelve, and after them to above five hundred brethren at once, of whom some had fallen asleep;200 but the majority were still living 4 at the time he wrote.

4 Afterwards he says he appeared unto James, who was one of the so-called brethren of the Saviour.201 But, since in addition to these, there were many others who were called apostles, in imitation of the Twelve, as was Paul himself, he adds: "Afterward he appeared to all the apostles."202 So much in regard to these persons. But the story concerning Thaddeus is as follows.
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Old 03-04-2010, 08:40 PM   #144
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1) So who forged the Pauline literature and when did this happen and why, etc?
IMHO, they were not forged. They were reworked many times. From what I can tell, this was a common practice in ancient times. The concept of copyright or of authorial rights of any kind just didn't exist back then.
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Old 03-04-2010, 11:23 PM   #145
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I'm not shocked in the least. It's all there in black and white what to me seems extremely plausible. and probably the truth. I've gone over and over the letters of Paul that scholars claim may be authentic, and nowhere do I see/read of a historical flesh and blood human Jesus.
There are a half-dozen or so sentences within the presumably authentic letters of Paul that clearly refer to a human earthly Jesus of the seemingly recent past. These have to be dealt with from a non-HJ perspective. To the degree I'm familiar with Doherty's work, I seem to recall he puts a mystical spin on these few sentences.

I think a simpler explanation is that they are the work of someone other than Paul. Scholars generally agree that even the genuine Pauline corpus has been reworked by multiple authors over time, and often refer to the texts in terms of these various layers. If the texts really do contain a pastoral layer as scholars tend to agree, then earthly human Jesus ideas certainly fit that layer, as do the various creeds interspersed throughout (which also happen to be the source of about half of the earthly human Jesus ideas).
Not forgetting of course, that the earliest of Paul's writings are from at least 20 years after Jesus' supposed life on earth. A long time for an oral tradition/myth to be floating about without getting polluted, or added/subtracted to.
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Old 03-05-2010, 09:06 AM   #146
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1) So who forged the Pauline literature and when did this happen and why, etc?
IMHO, they were not forged. They were reworked many times. From what I can tell, this was a common practice in ancient times. The concept of copyright or of authorial rights of any kind just didn't exist back then.
The concept or practice of altering or manipulating the contents of writings was not accepted and was abhorred by the Church.

The Church writers even referred to those who forged writings as devils or working for the the devil.

In a writing attributed to Tertullian "On Baptism", a presbyter was removed from office for admitting forgery.

"On Baptism" 17
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......But if the writings which wrongly go under Paul's name, claim Thecla's example as a licence for women's teaching and baptizing, let them know that, in Asia, the presbyter who composed that writing, as if he were augmenting Paul's fame from his own store, after being convicted, and confessing that he had done it from love of Paul, was removed from his office...
The Church writers bitterly complained that many of their writings were being forged or altered and Jerome even castigated Rufinus for altering or attempting to harmonise some passages of Origen.

"Apology Against Rufinus" 1
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......You make an open profession in the prologue that you have amended what is bad and have left all that is best: and therefore, if anything in the work is proved to be heretical, you cannot enjoy the license given to a translator but must accept the authority of a writer: and you will be openly convicted of the criminal intent of besmearing with honey the poisoned cup so that the sweetness which meets the sense may hide the deadly venom. ....
See http://www.newadvent.org

Honesty superceded copyrights. It was expected in antiquity that copies of documents be reproduced without unauthorised alterations or additions even by the Church.
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Old 03-05-2010, 02:44 PM   #147
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Not forgetting of course, that the earliest of Paul's writings are from at least 20 years after Jesus' supposed life on earth. A long time for an oral tradition/myth to be floating about without getting polluted, or added/subtracted to.
Maybe, but I flat out don't buy the whole 'oral tradition' argument. It seems to me to be completely ad hoc. The earliest texts we have indicate the author directly invented the theology (Paul) or built on previous written works (the gospels). The few creeds we find in Paul's work seem to me to be anachronisms inserted in a later time period when the doctrine wars had already been mostly settled.
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Old 03-05-2010, 05:51 PM   #148
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1) So who forged the Pauline literature and when did this happen and why, etc?
IMHO, they were not forged. They were reworked many times.
The Pauline literature was "reworked many times"? Eusebius does not mention this anywhere I can see except for the "Marcionite Affair". The "reworked many times" suggests some form of editorship over a period of time. Exactly which century or centuries do you think the Pauline literature was "reworked many times"?

Who first drafted "Paul"?
When, where and why?


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From what I can tell, this was a common practice in ancient times.
Forgery was a common practice in ancient times.

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The concept of copyright or of authorial rights of any kind just didn't exist back then.
I dont think so. Porphyry preserves Euclid. The educated people who preserved the literature, at libraries such as at Alexandria and other places were usually well aware of the original and novel authorship of most works which were authored in the Greek language on a variety of subject matters.
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Old 03-05-2010, 06:01 PM   #149
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Of course. This assumes that "according to the flesh" is original to Paul. The first person to present Romans as "holy scripture" was Marcion, and Marcion did not believe that Jesus came "according to the flesh". In other words, this phrase couldn't have possibly been in the very first New Testament canon.

Far as I can tell, that argument holds only if Marcion is personally a more reliable exegete or theologian than the collective custodians of the NT text. Marcion's writings only survive through the reports of the church fathers, who tell us emphatically that he is not a reliable exegete or theologian, so at best we cannot know Marcion's reliability.

The fact that Marcion did not acknowledge the physicality or historicity of Jesus certainly does not mean that Paul nowhere described Christ as born "according to the flesh." Witness the many contributors on this board arguing that kata sarka means something entirely consonant with rejection of the historical Jesus in favor of mythicism. It should also be mentioned that in Marcion's canon, entire extant books from the NT canon are missing, such as Matthew and Mark, so that he would be a poor arbiter of what phrases were and were not in the original NT canon.



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Phrases like "according to the flesh" and "born of a woman" just so happen to refute 2nd century heresies.

They refute the same heresies just as effectively in the 21st century.

But it seems more likely to me that the more theologically developed 2nd century gnosticism was built upon 1st century proto-gnosticsm, than that the former simply appeared on the scene out of the blue and Paul's writings just happened to contain apologetic language to counter it.



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I think simply ignoring this fact is one of the mistakes that people are making in this whole endeavor. Which is why I don't think we can rely on Paul's letters as any sort of smoking gun into the historicity of Jesus.

Paul was originally the apostle of the heretics. The Catholics/orthodox "recruited" Paul as a reaction to heresies.

If 2nd century gnosticism emerged virtually without 1st century precedent, which you seem to have implied, then the reverse is almost certainly the case -- that heresy was reaction to orthodoxy.



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This is a map of 2nd century Christianities (from the blog Vridar)



Blue = “non-orthodox” (e.g. Marcionites, Valentinians, and other such “gnostic” types)
Red = Roman-orthodox strongholds
Purple = contested areas; where “orthodoxy” was struggling, often in some form of “rear-guard” action, against the “non-orthodox”
Red stars = minority presence of “orthodoxy” (Edessa is a special case: the “orthodox” were also described as “gnostics”)

It doesn't seem like "heresies" were a falling away from "orthodoxy". It actually looks the other way around. I mean, why would a movement that started in Judea and Galilee have a "first pope" in Rome?

That's a very good question. I think it reasonable that the evangelistic enterprise initially overextended, largely in response to the violence of local persecution and the Jewish War. Rome's prominence in early church history, meanwhile, can be explained easily enough on the basis of the martyrdoms of Peter and Paul believed to have occurred there.
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Old 03-05-2010, 06:19 PM   #150
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Apparently you did not finish your reading of the Pauline epistles, or did not pick up on the fact that Paul speaks of "flesh" and "body" in quite mystical ways which do not refer to physical realities.

It would be a non sequitur to suggest that Paul's use of these terms in a mystical context prohibits him from using them in an historical context. If he is like virtually every writer ever born, he frequently uses the same terms in different contexts, with different meanings emerging as a result. Understanding this fact is one of the guiding principles of biblical exegesis, indeed of verbal communication generally.

Context offers another "clue" to Christ's historicity, namely reference to "resurrection from the dead" (v. 4). This refers to the same phenomenon which Paul explains quite thoroughly in 1 Corinthians as a dead physical or fleshly or corrupt body being transformed into a living spiritual body and thereby rising bodily from a physical death, i.e., a death experienced in historical time and space. From this perspective, it is no wonder that Pilate, a mundane Roman official, should be found playing a prominent role in the execution of Christ.


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He regularly refers to the "body of Christ" of which believers form the limbs, Christ being the "head" (as in 1 Cor. 12:27, or Col. 1:18, or Eph. 1:22-23 in which the church becomes Christ's "body.") In Eph. 2:14-16, Christ "abolishes the Law in his flesh" with the result that "he might create in himself a new man out of the two, and in this one body reconcile both [Jew and gentile] to God through the cross." Hebrews, non-Pauline, speaks of Christ's "flesh" as the "curtain" through which believers can enter the new sanctuary where Christ made his sacrifice (in the heavenly world) by offering his blood. Here, "blood" is clearly presented as a form of non-material/earthly blood in a non-earthly dimension.

There is no support for finding an 'out' here by declaring that all these things are metaphors or allegories. Paul never states or treats them as such. They seem to be literal concepts within a mystical, spiritual dimension.

Like any other author, Paul is under no obligation to explain his use of literary devices, not even as he is using them. Indeed, as C.S. Lewis and many other scholars and theologians have pointed out, it is virtually impossible for humans to speak at any length of spiritual realities without earthly referents and anthropomorphisms. That fact should not be taken to mean that such references are literal depictions of the spiritual realm.

As for the metaphor / analogy of a physical body, it's obvious enough on its face (so to speak!) that the various bodily appendages should not be expected to exactly correspond with individuals constituting a quickly growing population of believers. The truth of that contention becomes all the more evident in light of Paul's other metaphors for the church, such as a household (many bodies rather than one) or a building (an altogether non-biological structure), which are clearly not compatible with a single literal body. The church cannot literally be all those entities at once, whereas its functions and characteristics can be described legitimately and concurrently with multiple metaphors.



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When he wants to present an allegory, Paul states it as such, as in Galatians 4's allegory of the sons of Abraham. And even there, the phrase kata sarka is applied in some kind of mystical way, since he makes it a point of applying it only to one of the sons, while declaring the other was born kata pneuma.

This appears to be a false dichotomy: We supposedly know that Paul did not use allegories when he did not state as much, because, after all, we know that when he does use allegories he states as much. Left unaddressed is the distinct possibility that Paul often used figurative language but did not always announce the fact. Recall the many instances in the Gospels involving both scenarios -- where the evangelist states that the story to follow is a parable, while Jesus tells the same story without calling it a parable.



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(Would they not both have been born kata sarka if all the phrase meant was a literal physical birth?)

Not necessarily. Even if kata sarka referred strictly to physical flesh, it would not prevent other phrases from being used in comparison to it for a theological purpose. Although I have not studied the particular language to nearly the same extent as you, I would say that the very point Paul is making in Galatians 4, that there is a vital difference between physical and spiritual realities, underscores the pointedly physical or "fleshly" connotation of kata sarka.



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It is also possible to understand the kata sarka of Romans 1:3 as not referring specifically to Christ's flesh itself, whether material or spiritual, but rather is a phrase which conveys the idea of being 'in relation to flesh, to the fleshly realm,' or if you like, even the world of human flesh.

Of course it is possible, especially when there appears to be no great difference between being born directly into human flesh and being born in relation to the world of human flesh -- whatever the latter is supposed to mean exactly. Given Paul's immediate context and his general appreciation as a Jew for the role of history in the plan of God (a major theme of Romans as it happens), yours still seems to me a less plausible interpretation.



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A similar form of non-literal meaning one finds in 2 Cor. 5:16. The phrase, then, describes Christ's relationship to the human David, but not in the sense of physical descent. Whether he understood it or not, he got it from scripture which states that the Christ will be of the seed of David. Even the word "seed" in Romans 1:3 need not have a literal meaning, as we know from Romans 9:6-8 and Galatians 3:29, where the gentiles are Abraham's "seed" even though they are not physically descended from him. Even Christ, declared to be Abraham's "seed" in Gal. 3:16, is said to be so solely on the basis of a single word in scripture, with no appeal made to him being in a physical descent from Abraham.

Also, If you know any of the OT Pseudepigrapha, you would realize that Jewish sectarian writers were very capable of presenting pictures of activities that go on in various layers of the heavens which have very human-sounding descriptions, but involve spiritual equivalents.

So things are not quite as straightforward as you might imagine.

In a sense I agree with you. That's precisely why I drew the comparison between Christ-myth theories and epistemological idealism. Once we openly call into question the obvious, like the objective reality of the physical world we live in, or in this case the prima facie textual evidence indicating apostolic belief in the Incarnation (hence historicity) of Christ, all sorts of curious possibilities begin to emerge.


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I can only recommend my new book which discusses this sort of thing at great length, including an entire chapter on the language of sarx in the epistles of the New Testament.

Earl Doherty

...at great length? Exactly how long is that discussion, in Imperial units?

In any case, I would eventually like to read your book, or at least look through it. From what I can tell, your book should provide a pretty comprehensive treatment of the subject. Though I disagree with your thesis from where I stand, I do respect the tremendous amount of work you evidently have put into it.
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