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Old 04-19-2002, 03:04 PM   #71
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To turtonm:

I hear what you say about scholarly tides but I am enough of a history snob to rather resent your implication that we've learnt nothing over the last sixty years and simply blow in the wind of fashion.


Well, what's really new since Loisy et al? Not much as far as the NT gospels are concerned. The gnostic gospels and the DSS really do not tell us whether Jesus was a single real historical person; indeed, the gnostic gospels, with their cheerful use of Jesus-as-metaphor, do the HJ further harm. The major change is that it has become unfashionable to label Jesus a myth, like we do without hesitation for other famous figures.

I will defend no more about Jesus except to say he was a Jewish preacher crucified by Pilate. In turth, not much more can be defended.

I am not sure I believe this. I believe the Pilate story is mythical embellishment, similar to the way Robin Hood is connected to Prince John in the legends, simply because he is one evil SOB. The Jesus of the gospels is clearly a composite figure, like Arthur, Robin Hood, Confucious, Buddha...

Normal methodologies of multiple independent attestation apply: for Jewish preacher - Q, GMark and Paul. Also maybe GJohn, GThomas, Josephus and other letters. For crucifixion: Paul, GMark, Tacitus, Josephus, Hebrews and other writings. Under Pilate: GMark, pseudo-Paul, Josephus, Tacitus maybe GJohn.

If this were history, they would. But all we get is attestation to some of the legendary points. Robin Hood's interactions with Prince John and association with (several) woodlands are multiply attested too. Pliny and Tacitus testify to the existence of the legend, no more.

These documents would be more trustworthy if the Church had not worked so many of them over, and deleted sources it didn't like.

Criteria of verisimilatude reinforces picture of Roman oppression of Jews; Pilate himself has a contempory inscription as witness.

Yes, but the Pilate of the gospels and of the historical record are soooooo different....which is why I doubt Jesus got whacked under Pilate. Probably happened earlier.

Parsimony leads to a common historical source for Q, Paul and Mark's Jesuses as they are all independent of each other.

No, it does not. Q is a collection of sayings...Paul knows nothing of the story in Mark, who seems to have invented his stories. About the only thing you can say is that they all know of the same legendary outline.

Criteria of non-contradiction notes fatally for the myth case that there was no branch of the notoriously fracticious early Christians denying Jesus was crucified (although some insisted it was a phantom, they didn't deny the event).

Also inconclusive. All versions of the notorius Hitchhiker by the Side of the Road urban legend (collected in numerous countries over a couple of centuries) insist that the Hitchhiker is a ghost. Does this make it true?

Although, personally, I agree with you here.

If HJ was a later invention you can bet that many Christians would have clung to the earlier preaching of non historical Christ but we have no witness of them or polemic against them.

Well, none that we know of. How likely is it anything could have survived?

Historical sociology tells us that it is inconceivable in that society that a myth would be invented around a criminal crucified by the very power that the myth needed to ingratiate.

Happens over and over again in colonial societies. Why do you think they used to draw and quarter rebels, and send the pieces to the far corners of the Empire? Historical sociology says that such myths are normal and natural -- I could cite many cases -- which is why I believe that the figure under the myth, whoever he was, wound up crucified and by the Romans. It's not the crucifixion story alone, but crucifixion + resurrection that is the signal we are dealing with some kind of wacky nationalist and his equally wacky followers who in desperation developed a belief that he would come back.

Finally, reading the sources against themselves, it is clear that they are engaged in special pleading with regard to explaining the crucifixion which they would clearly rather be without.

Yes, that is why I believe that the original figure was crucified by the Romans, probably before Pilate, though.


I hope this explains how historical methodology leads to a clear conclusion. Nothing is certain but in this case, it's the next best thing.


Thank you. But after all this, even you feel the only defensible position is that someone was executed by the Romans. There's no history anywhere in the gospels. It's all legendary accretion.

Michael
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Old 04-19-2002, 05:57 PM   #72
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Quote:
Originally posted by sotzo:
<strong>
(Skeptical wrote Wow, that's quite a few fallacies to pack into one paragraph. First, you state that Jesus was either in a tomb or he was not, (obviously) and then you immediately assume that he was.

I do because the empty tomb is not a hotly debated item and largely taken for granted even by Crossan, et al. However, if you'd like to debate this issue, we can!
</strong>
The empty tomb is a debated item.

This is quoted from my essay written here (cut and paste if you have to):

<a href="http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/peter_kirby/tomb/introduction.html" target="_blank">http://www.infidels.org/library/modern/peter_kirby/tomb/introduction.html</a>

A list of 20th century writers on the NT, with references to relevant works, who do not believe that the empty tomb story is historically reliable: Gunther Bornkamm (Jesus of Nazareth), Rudolf Bultmann (History of the Synoptic Tradition), Peter Carnley (The Structure of Resurrection Belief), John Dominic Crossan (The Birth of Christianity), Michael Goulder (Resurrection Reconsidered), Hans Grass (Ostergeschehen and Osterberichte), Charles Guignebert (The Christ), Uta Ranke-Heinemann (Putting Away Childish Things), Randel Helms (Gospel Fictions), Herman Hendrickx (Resurrection Narratives), Roy Hoover (Jesus' Resurrection: Fact or Figment?), Hans Kung (On being a Christian), Alfred Loisy (The Birth of the Christian Religion), Burton Mack (A Myth of Innocence), Willi Marxsen (Jesus and Easter), Gerd Ludemann (What Really Happened to Jesus? A Historical Approach to the Resurrection), Norman Perrin (The Resurrection according to Matthew, Mark, and Luke), John Shelby Spong (Resurrection: Myth or Reality?), and Rev. John T. Theodore (Who Was Jesus?). A list of other people who doubt that the empty tomb story is historical: Marcus Borg, Gerald Boldock Bostock, Stevan Davies, Maurice Goguel, Helmut Koester, Robert Price, Marianne Sawicki, and Howard M. Teeple.

Note that I am not saying that this list of scholars 'proves' that the empty tomb is a fiction or something. I only made the list to debunk the apologetic claim that 'the fact of the empty tomb' is universally accepted in scholarly circles.

Because you brought up Crossan, here is a bit of elaboration on the views of Crossan.

Crossan contributed the section on chapter 16 of Mark in _The Passion in Mark_, edited by Verner H. Kelber (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1976). In this essay, Crossan argued that the empty tomb story finds no corroboration before Mark, that the empty tomb story is only found after Mark where other authors have copied it over, and that the empty tomb story in Mark is congruent with Mark's narrative aims. On this basis, Crossan regards the empty tomb story as the creation of the evangelist Mark.

It is in the 1976 essay that Crossan laid down his dictum, which was repeated in his 1991 book _The Historical Jesus_: "With regard to the body of Jesus, by Easter Sunday morning, those who cared did not know where it was, and those who knew did not care. Why should even the soldiers themselves remember the death and disposal of a nobody?" (p. 394)

In 1994, Crossan's _Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography_ was published. On p. 154, Crossan states: "What actually and historically happened to the body of Jesus can best be judged by watching how later Christian accounts slowly but steadily increased the reverantial dignity of their burial acconts. But what was at the beginning that necessitated such an intensive volume of apologetic insistence? If the Romans did not observe the Deuteronomic decree, Jesus' dead body would have been left on the cross for the wild beasts. If the Romans did observe the decree, the soldiers would have made certain Jesus was dead and then buried him themselves as part of their job. In either case, his body left on the cross or in a whallow grave barely covered with dirt and stones, the dogs were waiting. And his followers, who had fled, would know that, too. Watch, then, how the horror of that brutal truth is sublimated through hope and imagination into its opposite." Crossan proceeds to trace a development from the hypothetical Cross Gospel with a burial by Jesus' enemies, through Mark with a person who is both in power (with the enemies) and a friend ("waiting expectantly for the kingdom of God"), through Matthew and Luke who try to make better sense of Mark's Joseph of Arimathea, and finally to John in which Jesus is given a full regal burial.

In 1998, Crossan's _The Birth of Christianity_ came out. Crossan states (p. 552): "Mark created both the women's discovery of the empty tomb and the burial story needed in preparation for it." After some detailed elaboration, Crossan concludes (p. 555): "Mark's story presented the tradition with double dilemmas. First, if Joseph was in the council, he was against Jesus; if he was for Jesus, he was not in the council. Second, if Joseph buried Jesus from piety or duty, he would have done the same for the two other crucified criminals; yet if he did that, there could be no empty-tomb sequence. None of these points is unanswerable, but together they persuade me that Mark created that burial by Joseph of Arimathea in 15:32-47. It contains no pre-Markan tradition."

So it seems safe to say that, at no point in Crossan's academic career has he held to the hypothesis that Jesus was buried in a tomb that was found empty three days later. Instead, Crossan consistently argues that the tomb burial by Joseph of Arimathea is a fiction, although Crossan gives somewhat different arguments in each of his books.

I have not posted this to defend Crossan's arguments against the tomb burial of Jesus but rather to show that it is baseless to claim that Crossan takes the empty tomb for granted.

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Peter Kirby
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Old 04-19-2002, 08:50 PM   #73
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Greetings Vinnie,

thanks for your comments,

an original T.F. was authentic?

You agree that the T.F. was a later interpolation, yet also argue that there was an original, authentic (and negative) comment by Josephus - but there is NO evidence for such an original Josephan T.F. - it is merely wishful thinking, based on nothing more than hopeful speculation. Perhaps you can explain exactly what you base this notion of an earlier authentic passage on?

If there had been ANY comment about Jesus, we would expect at least some of the early Christian Fathers to have noticed it, whether to argue against it, or agree and/or amplify, yet -

G.A. Wells notes :
Quote:
L. H. Feldman observes: "No fewer than eleven church fathers prior to or contemporary with Eusebius cite various passages from Josephus (including the Antiquities)", but not this passage. He adds: "Moreover, it is a full century -- and five other church fathers, most notably Augustine, who had many an occasion to find it useful -- before we have another reference to the passage in Jerome", who "knows Josephus so well, cites from him ninety times, and admires him so much that he refers to him as a second Livy", yet cites this passage "only once". It seems, then, that, even after the time of Eusebius, some further considerable time elapsed before all or most copies of the Antiquities came to include the passage.
There appears to be NO EVIDENCE what-so-ever for an original (non-Christian) Josephan T.F.


Digression

You quote verbosely that the alleged original un-tampered T.F. (for which we have NO evidence) MAY have been a real Josephan digression - sure it MAY, but you give no case that it WAS - the mere fact that an unknown and un-attested passage MAY have been a real digression does not prove it WAS.

Furthermore, the arguments from Crossan you give for the T.F. being in context are weak - the subject in question is the misfortunes and upheavals of the Jews - but Jesus does not fit this subject - G.A. Wells notes :

Quote:
What has been widely admitted as a powerful argument for excising the whole passage is that it breaks the thread of the narrative at the point where it occurs. Its removal leaves a text which runs on in proper sequence. Holding calls this "[i]a favourite objection" which "comes from people who obviously have not read very much of Josephus", who is a patchwork writer given to digressions. He does not disclose that H. St. John Thackeray -- who has been called "the 'former prince' of Josephan scholars", as Holding himself records -- allowed in 1929 that the objection "carries great weight" and was "powerfully advocated" by Norden (another close student of Josephus), who regarded it as conclusive. Holding deals with this whole issue by writing as if Josephus' prime concern in this section of his narrative were to detail the misdeeds of Pilate, so that the mention of his condemnation of Jesus would not be an irrelevancy. But Josephus' actual concern here is to list upheavals which have brought misfortune to the Jews. He mentions Pilate as responsible for some of these upheavals, but includes others in which Pilate was not involved, as Holding's own summary of this section shows. Now the condemnation of Jesus was neither an upheaval nor something that brought misfortune to the Jews -- except from the Christian perspective which made the destruction of Jerusalem in A.D. 70 God's punishment for their rejection of Jesus. Mason puts the point as follows:

"Josephus is speaking of upheavals, but there is no upheaval here [in the disputed passage]. He is pointing out the folly of Jewish rebels, governors and troublemakers in general, but this passage is completely supportive of both Jesus and his followers. Logically, what should appear in this context ought to imply some criticism of the Jewish leaders and/or Pilate, but Josephus does not make any such criticism explicit. He says only that those who denounced Jesus were 'the leading men among us'. So unlike the other episodes, this one has no moral, no lesson. Although Josephus begins the next paragraph by speaking of 'another outrage' that caused an uproar among the Jews at the same time, there is nothing in this paragraph that depicts any sort of outrage" (quoted in JL, p. 50. For France's attempt to brush this objection aside, see JM, pp. 202 f.).

Overlap

You quote Crossan at length about the overlap between Antiquities and War - but he fails to address the issue that the passage is not found at all in War even though it is almost as detailed - Feldman argues :

Quote:
"in the passage in Josephus' The Jewish War parallel to the one in the Antiquities about Pilate, there is no mention of Jesus, despite the fact that the account of Pilate in the War is almost as full as the version in the Antiquities. This, he says, "corroborates our suspicion that there was either no passage about Jesus in the original text of the Antiquities or that it had a different form".
And Crossan is hardly considered 'unbiased' by all - the Jesus Seminar never dealt properly with the issue of Jesus' historicity (apart from an informal show of hands) - they ASSUMED at the start that Jesus existed - i.e. a pre-judgment.


Tacitus
You also quote Tacitus, yet he, like Pliny, is at best merely repeating Christian beliefs of his time and gives no details unknown to believers of the period - Wells says :
Quote:
The Catholic scholar J. P. Meier allows that Tacitus and Pliny "reflect what they have heard Christians of their own day say", and so are not "independent extracanonical sources" E. P. Sanders' verdict is fully justified: "Roman sources that mention Jesus are all dependent on Christian reports"
It beggars belief to think that Rome kept written records of all the THOUSANDS of crucifixions in the far-flung provinces.

Wells gives several arguments that Tacitus is merely repeating hearsay of his time :
Quote:
  • First, he gives Pilate an incorrect title: procurator was the title of governors of equestrian rank in Tacitus' own day. Under Augustus and Tiberius the title was 'prefect' and this is what Pilate is called in an inscription naming him which was found at Caesarea in 1961. Tacitus cannot, then, have been quoting from any official document which reported 'Christ's' execution.
  • Second, he does not name the executed man. He could hardly have found, in a state document, a statement that the Messiah (Christ) was executed on such and such a date.
  • Third, he was glad to accept from Christians their own admission that Christianity, pernicious superstition that it was, originated only recently, since the Roman authorities were prepared to tolerate only ancient cults.
Furthermore, Tacitus is another case that no early Church Father noticed - it is not at all clear that the Tacitus passage is authentic.

Quentin David Jones
 
Old 04-24-2002, 02:47 PM   #74
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Quote:
Originally posted by sotzo:
[QBI find this to be a pretty weak argument. You base part of your belief in an extraordinarily supernatural story on the idea that it is different from other supernatural stories? I don't see how this really means much.

It means very much because these differences support the view that the Gospels' authors are aiming at recording history rather than simply writing uplifting (no pun intended) accounts for their fellow man.[/QB]
It means nothing of the kind. At the very most, it means that they had a desire to make the stories appear to be historical. This does not count as evidence for their truth anymore than the fact that historical novels contain elements of true history indicates they are true accounts.

Quote:
<strong>The jews already took pains to try and separate themselves from other ethnic groups and in any case, while I am not a mythology expert, I suspect the claim that the "not recognizing the hero" element is not all that unique.

My point exactly. The disciples, as Jews, did not expect a resurrection</strong>
That was _not_ my point. My point was that you claim the stories were unique WRT the unrecognized hero. I said I doubted this were true and in any case even if they were unique in some ways I would not be suprised as the Jews writing the stories would most likely have tried to differentiate them from the other myths of their time.

Quote:
<strong>It has been argued that this very tendency is what makes the stories likely to be simplified aplications of mystery religion elements to Jewish ideas. This is hardly the sort of thing that would convince someone not wanting to believe.

This is not a rebuttal to my point above because it doesn't offer the details of the argument which you cite.</strong>
Sorry, I thought the Jesus myth hypothesis was fairly widely known. Try reading "The Jesus Mysteries". I don't subscribe to all of the beliefs in that book, but they do present the theory regarding the formation of a Jesus myth from other, older myths. (not a new theory, as they acknowledge)

Quote:
<strong>I think you need to define "grew rapidly" first. I haven't seen any information that shows concrete evidence for how many Christians there were prior to Constantine.

Nor have I, but it was enough of a force that Constantine decided it would make a great political platform to adopt.</strong>
First, emperors do not need a "political platform". Second, if you believe that Constantine chose to follow Christianity for pragmatic reasons, you must not believe the story of his supposed vision prior to battle that caused his conversion as related by Eusebius. It is interesting to me that you don't take the story of Constantine's conversion at face value.

Quote:
<strong>I think it's also a very strong statement to say "no good reason" for its growth without a resurrection. Even granting a rapid growth, I don't see how this really proves one thing one way or another.

The original question posed to me by REasonable Doubt was "What is the compelling evidence for the resurrection?" . I am making the claim that the church would never have gotten off the ground, much less spread as rapidly as it did by the 4th century, unless the resurrection had taken place. Given that A)the environment in which the faith matured was polytheistic providing many options to the religious, B)the initial followers (Jews) were not expecting a resurrected Jesus and C)the Jewish ruling class tried to end the schism (and included the empty tomb in their polemic), I believe the hypothesis with the most explanatory power is the physical resurrection of Jesus. what is your hypothesis and corresponding pieces of evidence?</strong>
If you read some of the Christ myth literature, you'll find ample theories about the rise of Christianity that don't even require a real Jesus, much less a real resurrected Jesus. The point isn't that this theory is correct, it's just that there are other theories, how reasonable they are is obviously in the eye of the beholder. Since in my opinion you haven't presented any evidence of any kind, I don't feel the need to either. You have simply made assertions about why you think Christianity spread. I have made a counter-assertion that it could have spread without it. Since you are the one claiming a supernatural force as the cause, something outside of human experience, the onus is on you to provide extraordinary evidence and in my opinion you have utterly failed to do so. Simply because you claim the rise of Christianity couldn't have happened otherwise does not make it true, especially when there are other reasonable theories.

Quote:
<strong>Not even the most devout Christian apologist has claimed that the reason for the growth was because all of the converted "saw" Christ as Paul reportedly did or that they went to the supposed tomb location and did a thorough investigation. They converted because of a story they were told. That story could have been true or untrue. If many converted because they believed the story was true, that lends no credence whatsoever to the story itself being true, only that it was believed. Belief is not evidence of truth, it is evidence of belief.

So all truth is self-discovered truth? I guess I'm jusitifed in not believing what my organic chemistry professor taught me until I actually see the geometric patterns of carbon atoms. The fact that people converted to Christianity based on a "story" is no different than truth that you accept without yourself discovering it. Did you derive the Pythagorean theorem prior to using it or did you trust it was correct from the outset?</strong>
A complete red herring, but it doesn't seem to stop apologists such as yourself from continually bringing it up. It's the difference between testable and untestable assertions. All scientific assertions are testable. People believe them because many scientists have actually tested the assertions, and, in theory, anyone could in fact test the assertion for themselves. Compare this to the NT claims or any other supernatural claims. Untestable, pure and simple. I would appreciate it if your going to make an argument if you wouldn't bring up nonsense that any 5 year old could see through.

Quote:
<strong>And belief can be evidence of truth, if in the absence of that truth the belief can shown to be unlikely. If a child says that he has been molested and we actually didn't witness the molestation, we usually understand that the belief would not be present unless the child was indeed molested. Now some children may lie in such instances, for whatever reason, but an account has to be given as to why they can't be trusted. Same for the disciples testimony about the resurrection.</strong>
Fact: False child molestation claims are extraordinarily common in divorce cases
Fact: There are many true cases of child molestation, it is common, unfortunately, in the human experience
Fact: The stories in the NT record events never seen in the modern world. If you make such a claim, the requirement for evidence is extraordinarily high.

If you want to compare the NT stories to something in the modern world, compare it to alien abductions. I would argue that there is actually considerable more evidence for alien abductions than for the stories in the NT, and I think the alien abduction stories are nonsense. At least in the case of alien abductions we have thousands of witnesses with _some_ sort of physical evidence. (scars for example)

Quote:
<strong>By way of comparison, Scientology has "grown rapidly" in the 15 years of so since the death of L Ron Hubbard (no, I'm not a scientologist and no, I don't know how many members they have but it's certainly in the hundreds of thousands). Modern Scientologists tell stories about their religion and people believe them. I think you would grant that this doesn't mean the stories are true.

What stories are those? Elaborate on those stories so that we can compare them to the resurrection account. I'm not saying that other belief systems don't grow rapidly. What I am saying is that the growth of early Christianity can be best accounted for in light of an historical resurrection. In other words, growth doesn't evidence truth unless that growth would not have occured in the absence of the truth.</strong>
First, I don't know the stories because, as I said, I'm not a Scientologist and from what I understand it takes big bucks to get the whole story. Second, I understand perfectly your argument, it's just a weak argument. You have utterly failed to show what you claim, that there is no other reasonable explanation for the growth of Christianity without the resurrection. You are simply assuming that is the case. There are other explanations that don't require supernatural causes, you just refuse to acknowledge them. (again, I recommend familiarizing yourself with the Jesus myth literature)

Quote:
<strong>I don't have a hard time understanding why Jews living in a time of subjugation, when stories of a promised messiah were continually in the air, would find the stories of Jesus filled with hope and choose to follow the presbyters such as Paul. After all, if the choice was between traditional Judaism which said the messiah still had not arrived, the Roman state religion or something new that promised more, which would the peasantry most likely pick?

Well, you've beautifully stated my view exactly here. Promised Messiah's were indeed continually in the air - why did they, then pick Jesus over the others if it was just another "dime a dozen" story? Also, getting out from under the Roman empire was exactly what they all wanted Jesus to help them out with. However, he didn't do that. Indeed, he was executed instead. So how do you explain the growth of a church that was initially expecting a political saviour rather than a spiritual?</strong>
It would really help if you would familiarize yourself with the Jesus myth hypothesis. There are many arguments about why Jesus became the mythical figure that he did, most revolve around local pagan stories being attributed to a collection of individuals collected under the name "Jesus". The mystery relgions of the time were very widespread throughout the near east. Adapt the mystery religions to a Jewish idea of an actual, physical messiah and it's a small jump to Christianity. The point isn't that these theories are necessarily true, it's that there are other explanations, ones that don't require supernatural causes.

I just don't see how this is evidence of truth. At most, it _might_ be evidence that someone named Jesus lived in Palestine and was an itenerrant preacher and healer that had followers. That's not really saying much.

It compelled me as an agnostic, but I know that evidence that is compelling to one may not be to another!

Quote:
<strong>Wow, that's quite a few fallacies to pack into one paragraph. First, you state that Jesus was either in a tomb or he was not, (obviously) and then you immediately assume that he was.

I do because the empty tomb is not a hotly debated item and largely taken for granted even by Crossan, et al. However, if you'd like to debate this issue, we can!</strong>
It may not be a "hotly debated" item in the literature you are familiar with, but there are people who doubt that Jesus even existed, and provide long, reasoned arguments about it. Try looking at Earl Doherty's web site. (sorry, don't have the url in front of me but you can find it easily with a search engine)

Quote:
<strong>You then say either the tomb was empty or it was not (again, obviously, granting there was a tomb to begin with), and then you assume it was empty. Based on these assumptions you say there is no natural explanation for this "data". Well, there is no natural explanation because there is no "data".

If there's no data then your reply posts should be alot shorter. Out of nothing, nothing comes.</strong>
Nonsense. My replies are long because the original post was long. Just because in my opinion the evidence is severly lacking does not keep people like yourself from posting long apologetics about it, and from people like me from replying to it. Try keeping your comments relevant please.

Quote:
<strong>You are assuming the answer.

How so?</strong>
It would be nice if you would stop jumping in the middle of my posts to ask a question I answer later. In the next sentences I explain why I think you are assuming the answer.

Quote:
<strong>The only "data" we have are anecdotal stories from 2,000 years ago.

Well, unfortunately, peer-reviewed refereed journals were not around then so I'm afraid anecdotal is all you will find in literature coming out of that period. But more than that, the fact that it is anecdotal and written 2,000 years ago cannot rule out the historicity of its content a priori (which is exactly what you have done here and in what follows.)</strong>
I don't "rule it out" because it is 2,000 years old and anecdotal. I don't even rule it out. I say, again, that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. The point is that if the only evidence for the NT stories are the stories themselves, no reasonable person could accept this as evidence.

Quote:
<strong>4 of the stories rely on 1 other

There are 4 Gospels...are you referring to the Q source document as the 1 other or are you meaning 3 with the one other being Mark? Also, what is wrong with an author using a source?</strong>
Sorry, that should have read "2 of the stories...", by which I meant the reliance of Luke and Matthew on Mark. John being the one that does not. I didn't count Q as a source, so I suppose one could argue that there are 3 sources and not 2.

Quote:
<strong>, which means we have only 2 sources for the resurection story right out of the gate.

And since there are only two then the accounts must be false?????</strong>
Not necessarily, but barring other external evidence it makes the evidence pretty thin compared to the extraordinary evidence required to validate an extraordinary claim.

Quote:
<strong>The earliest of these stories is from no more recently than 40 years after the supposed events.

That's pretty darn good when it comes to ancient literature and argues strongly against it being myth, especially when you're talking about writings that were being circulated among Gnostic influences that the church could have easily included to beef up the "mythic" elements.</strong>
Mythology can spring up very quickly. Take the example of Scientology. Take further the example of alien abductions and Roswell. Arguing about what was included and was not included in the NT stories may be an interesting conversation, but it doesn't do much for determining their veracity.

Quote:
<strong>Paul, the earliest Christian writer makes no mention of the details of the resurection.

See I Corinthians 15. Are you going to argue that the context there requires Paul to go into further detail on things like physical location of the tomb? If so, why? The context is Paul laying out doctrine and not giving details such as those that would be given in a biography (like the Gospels!).</strong>
The point isn't that Paul should have given every detail about the resurrection in every mention of it. The point is that in all of his genuine letters he never mentions details that would ground the resurrection in an historical setting. It defies logic that no element of historical setting would have crept in to his letters about this monumental event, even in passing, during his letters unless Paul himself did not see this as an historical event.

Quote:
<strong>We don't even know where the supposed tomb is located with any degree of accuracy. I utterly fail to see how you can consider this "data" that needs an "explanation".

How much accuracy would you like?</strong>
The exact latitude and longitude coordinates would be nice.

Quote:
<strong>You also don't seem to understand the skeptical mindset. The point is not that out senses define all "truth", it is that in the absense of extraordinary evidence, extraordinary claims cannot be taken at face value.

Your not being asked to take it at face value.

The more extraordinary a claim is, the more it is outside of everyday experience, the more evidence required for it to be believed.

The resurrection of Jesus is outside everyday experience. If it were not, there would be nothing different between Jesus and every one else who could undergo a resurrection. But that's not what is in question. The question is what kind and amount of evidence is required to give intellectual assent to such an event. As far as "kind" of evidence, historical biographies of the resurrection event are appropriate since it is, after all, an historical event. As for "amount" of evidence, you imply that more is needed - yet you haven't engaged the evidence we do have. Your argument is essentially that: the resurrection can't be true because an event of such magnitude cannot be believed on the basis of 2000 year old writings that use source documents and which do not give accurate details such as where the actual tomb is. The problem with this is that it rejects the documents a priori based on an arbitrary standard. So, what requirements would have to be met in order to make the resurrection accounts worthy of intellectual assent? Would they need to appear in 8 Gospels coming from 4 sources? Would they need to give the first names of the guards at the tomb?</strong>
Something more than anecdotal stories would be required. Here's a short list of some things that might indicate supernatural backing for the NT:

1) If modern Christians could raise the dead (Jesus followers are said to have done so, it logically follows that modern followers should be able to do so)
2) If there were a prayer in the NT that, when uttered, allowed you to have a real (not figurative) conversation with God
3) If there were clear, unambiguous prophecies of future events that were not later forgeries. For example, a prediction of a day and time of a modern earthquake or of the start of a major war.

There are other examples that could be given. The point is that if you make a supernatural claim, you are going to have to provide some at least somewhat supernatural evidence. Nothing like supernatural evidence is to be seen. Nothing close is seen. You continually fail to grasp the requirement for extraordinary evidence. Listing guard names is not evidence. Having more sources is not evidence. According to the criteria you have used, if we were to discover new documents of a heretofore unknown religion that reigned supreme prior to Christianity, that had documents making supernatural claiims that was wide-spread in antiquity prior to Judaism and that would have propsered in the near-east had not a calamitous flood destroyed the temple and most of the sacred documents, we would have good reasons for believing in this religion.

Quote:
<strong>Perhaps Jesus _did_ rise from the dead, but if the only evidence for this is 2 stories written 2,000 years ago, of which none is earlier than nearly a half century after the supposed fact, how can you expect a skeptic to take these stories more seriously than the many other stories of similar events in the past few thousands of years?

I take all religious literature seriously and try to investigate as many claims as I can. I don't expect the skeptic to give more favor to the Bible out of the gate. Also, I can only provide what has been convincing to me. Evidence is perceived and evaluated differently person to person.</strong>
Well, I can only say that you have not developed a skeptical mindset. I am curious though, what constitues your investigation of religious claims? What is your criteria for determing their truth? It appears that for you the growth rate is a strong indicator, so do you believe that Islam is equally valid? Pleae lay out for me your testing methodology.

Quote:
<strong>I submit to you again that you do not believe in Christianity for these reasons. You believe because of what you were taught and because it makes you feel good, no different from any other follower of the worlds other religions.

The old genetic fallacy again (we've seen this fallacy multiply on this thread faster than e. coli in a petri dish!). I could just as easily say that you remain an atheist because you are just a product of your environment, but you wouldn't accept that. To tell you the truth, my faith at times is a source of great misery as I struggle to come to grips with the same existential issues that my fellow humans struggle with.</strong>
It's not a fallacy, its an opinion and was clearly expressed as one, besides which I stated it twice despite your hyperbole. You also assume, as most Christians, that if you do not accept the NT stories, you are an atheist. I never stated I was and your assumption speaks volumes about your world view. I could just as easily be a Hindu or Muslim. (unless you consider those "atheist" beliefs) Since you brought it up, I consider myself a religious agnostic, by which I mean I believe that no religion has demonstrated evidence that would convince a skeptic. I have yet to see an argument to convince me of the truth of Christianity.
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Old 04-24-2002, 11:06 PM   #75
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Earl Doherty's site is <a href="http://www.jesuspuzzle.com" target="_blank">http://www.jesuspuzzle.com</a> -- "The Jesus Puzzle".

It's the best case for the mythicist hypothesis that I've ever seen.
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