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03-03-2003, 12:36 PM | #11 | |
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03-03-2003, 12:51 PM | #12 |
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I agree, Gregg
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03-03-2003, 12:59 PM | #13 |
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Every time I try to bring up the issue of the lack of biographical detail in the epistles, a believer I know hollers, "Foul! That's an "argument from silence" and can never be used." He tells me that no history professor would ever let me get away with using such an argument. It's been a long time since I've been in academia and was wondering if the "argument from silence" is really as anathema as he claims it to be - or is that just the evangelical's strongest argument and that's why he insists so vehemently on it?
I pointed out that, if historians didn't use SOME kind of argument from silence, then we would all have to accept every statement, no matter how outlandish, as historical. Joshua's stopping the sun from moving across the sky would have to be declared true since pointing out that no other document of the time reports it would be an example of "arguing from silence." I guess maybe all those other writers at the time were too busy looking somewhere else to notice and comment on it. |
03-03-2003, 05:23 PM | #14 |
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The gospels are also filled with quite a few bloopers regarding Old Testament prophecies, history, and the mannerisms of Jewish law. It is very likely they were composed by Hellenistic Jews and Gentiles some time after following the destruction of the temple.
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03-04-2003, 08:59 AM | #15 |
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Personally, I have never bought the argument of silence. Just because Philo doesn't mention Jesus, doesn't mean that Jesus didn't exist. This is not the time of CNN and Barbara Walter specials.
And for all we know some wannabe historian could well have documented the "Jesus" affair and it has been lost in the sands of time. However, as several posters have mentioned the cumulative effect coupled with Paul's almost disregard for the human Jesus (though he does mention he was born of a woman, and I believe quotes him once?) does give one pause. We will of course completely disregard Josepheus and his well documented tampered description of Christ. Even G.A. Wells, has recanted and hinted that there might have been an historic Jesus. Stark in his book about early Christianity (though always not easy to follow) makes a strong case that Jesus belonged to the "end of the world" teachers in the tradition of the monastary who produced the Dead Sea Scrolls. God was coming to smash the Romans, and the "children of light" would prevail. Virtually every single NT writer felt the end was coming soon, very soon. This left poor Peter in his epistle to explain away the tardiness as the mercy of God. Helms in his book, Gospel Fictions puts forth a very strong case for parrallism comparing OT stories with NT with frightening strong connections. and finally from the Gospel of Mark, comes the story of Legion (a Roman term) and the swine forced over a cliff. I suspect that the number used for the swine (2, 000) is somehow connected with military partion of men. The story clearly points to the arrival of the kingdom of God, thru Jesus, and the end of Rome. |
03-04-2003, 10:12 AM | #16 | |||||||||
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Anyway, you are making the argument from silence look a lot weaker than it really is. Not only do you have the silence of every epistle writer (including the many "positive" silences), you have complete silence from contemporary historians. Quote:
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The quote you're thinking of is probably where Paul talks about Jesus breaking bread and saying, "Take, eat, this is my body, which is..." As I pointed out, there's nothing to prevent a spiritual being in a sublunar heavenly dimension from eating and talking. Lots of gods did that, and more besides. Anyway, Paul claims that he has received this information about Jesus from revelation, not from oral tradition. Quote:
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03-04-2003, 10:45 AM | #17 |
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Gregg,
While I greatly enjoyed reading your post, I still say the argument of silence is a weak one. A thousand years from now there will be no proof you existed. But clearly you do. Thank you for the "quote" for Paul, I was embarrased I did not know it. And as you point out...Paul never met Jesus, except in vision. As to the touchstone of your post, Why Jesus, why was he elevated.....thats the question isn't. Why him and not another? My use of Stark and Helms is to get a more focused picture of the historical Jesus. Whats myth, whats real? Anyway, I hope that clarifies some of my dashed off thoughts on the matter. |
03-04-2003, 11:54 AM | #18 |
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Again, we tend to get very focused on Paul here. The silence extends pretty much into the middle of the 2nd Century, with occasional exceptions like Ignatius mentioning Mary and Pontius Pilate around 107.
The one that strikes me as most significant is the lack of any extra-canonical reference to Judas, one of the most dramatic of all gospel figures. The first time his name appears is in Papias and Marcion in around 135 A.D., a full hundred years after he supposedly lived. That's the same length of time as the Wright Brothers to now. |
03-04-2003, 12:47 PM | #19 | ||
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So, what's the point in trying to understand why Jews would have elevated a human being to such dizzying heights, when there's a much simpler explanation--they didn't? Gregg |
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03-05-2003, 07:41 AM | #20 | |
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But of course, 1 Cor is an interpolation, thus, Galatians is as well. And Josephus probably had a lot more there originally. In any case, the passage names James as the brother of Jesus, and of course, there is already a Jesus in that passage, Jesus of Damascus. The letter of Jude is profound evidence that James was a potent figure in his own right who has been swallowed up in Christian mythologizing. Why on earth would Jude call himself the Brother of James when he is the Brother of God as well? Your vectors are air. The whole of the NT is ex post facto mythologizing by people who had no idea about the origins of their faith, and even less interest. Vorkosigan |
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