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Old 05-19-2013, 10:01 AM   #281
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...... If you are so convinced my book is horse-shit, it must be because you have a shit-load of counter-arguments and means of discrediting it yourself. Otherwise, you have nothing to back up your dismissal of it. If you are convinced that "real scholars" can thoroughly discredit me, I guess that means you consider yourself anything but a real scholar. So why are you pontificating against me?

I'm a patient man. Why don't you tackle my book chapter by chapter? Pick the most egregiously horse-shitty aspect of each one and debunk it. But you'll have to do it with more substance and understanding of my arguments than you have shown to date.....
One does not have to be a scholar to expose your errors. There are Apologetic writers of antiquity that completely contradict you.

All Apologetic writers of the Jesus cult who used the Pauline writings or mentioned Paul and made reference to the existence of Jesus show that the Jesus cult of antiquity did believe Jesus was on earth and was delivered up by the Jews to be killed or that the Jews caused the death of Jesus.

Let us first examine the Canon of the Jesus cult.

1. The author of Acts mentioned PAUL and claimed the Jews crucified Jesus.

Acts 2:36 KJV

2. The author of 2nd Peter mentioned Paul and claimed he was with Jesus on the mount.

2 Peter 1

Now, let us examine Apologetic Jesus cult writers.

The supposed 1st writer to mention that Paul wrote Epistles wrote about the story of Jesus in the time of Paul.

1st Clement


2. Ignatius' Ephesians 12-18

3. In Irenaeus' "Against Heresies" it is claimed Paul knew of no other Jesus but the one who was born, crucified, died and resurrected.

"Against Heresies" 3.16


Doherty's claims that the Jesus cult of Christians did believe in a "never on earth crucified Jesus" is without corroboration--without evidence--contradicted by ALL known Apologetic WRITERS of antiquity that mentioned Paul and Jesus.

The evidence from antiquity is extremely clear---the Jesus cult of Christians did believe Jesus was born of a woman and the Holy Ghost, was baptized was crucified, buried and resurrected on earth.

Doherty does not seem to understand what the early Jesus cult believed--- The Jews murdered Jesus Christ the Son of God.

People who "murdered" the truth wanted to acquit the Jews of murdering their God and Christ.

Tertullian's On the Flesh of Christ
Quote:

But answer me at once, you that murder truth: Was not God really crucified? And, having been really crucified, did He not really die? And, having indeed really died, did He not really rise again? Falsely did Paul “determine to know nothing among us but Jesus and Him crucified;” falsely has he impressed upon us that He was buried; falsely inculcated that He rose again. False, therefore, is our faith also.

And all that we hope for from Christ will be a phantom. O you most infamous of men, who acquittest of all guilt the murderers of God!.....
The Jesus story is rather easy to understand--The Jews murdered or caused Jesus Christ to be murdered.

It is wholly erroneous that Jesus cult Christians believed that their Jesus was never on earth and was crucified in some kind of heaven.
Well of course they believed the words as written in the order that they appear
and they wanted people to believe the order and literalness but is this what the writers of the NT believed? Did Jesus believe that God was a burning bush?

Is Tert. complaining that Paul doesn't believe in the literal word? Was the idea of Saviour of the World and the Logos,in the world before a messiah dying and transfiguring?

aa, you yourself have established that there was no jesus cult in the early 1st ce. Yes the jesus story is easy to understand if you just read the story as it's presented and come to understand the literal word.
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Old 05-19-2013, 10:05 AM   #282
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With that widespread faith movement present in the period before Mark and the other Gospels were written, we have every reason to regard Mark's story of an earthly crucifixion and rising as quite possibly an allegorical rendition of the heavenly myth during an exercise in syncretism. No one is saying it can be proven. But it makes far more sense than alternate suggestions of a different source.

Earl Doherty
Earl, the gospel JC story has no need for the Pauline writing. The Markan JC is not an "allegorical rendition of the heavenly myth". You admitted such in a previous quote.


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Even the death and rising dimension of the Gospel Jesus, which Mark added to the Q Jesus, cannot be firmly shown to be based on the Pauline Christ, though I suspect that the latter type of movement had some influence.

http://www.freeratio.org/showthread....69#post7358669
"Suspect", "No one is saying it can be proven ". Speculation and assumption. Pure imagination. And you want NT scholars to take all this imaginative story telling seriously?

Earl, interpretations of the NT are a dime a dozen. It's a game of a pseudo-lottery in which no one has any chance of winning. Interpretations are the road to delusion and dogmaticism i.e. to fundamentalism. Your theory (and your approach to marketing that theory) is a prime example of such dangers.
But mh, what makes your own theories about Antigonus any less of a dime-a-dozen interpretation of the NT than mine? And I have demonstrated that I have a lot more basis for mine in the actual texts of the NT than you do. Not to mention your failure to even attempt to answer the questions I've asked surrounding why Mark would even be interested in Antigonus in the context of what he was doing?

Instead of quoting from me as if my acknowledgement of a lack of 100% certainty disproves my case and automatically proves yours, how about answering the questions I've raised about your theories?

Earl Doherty
Earl, please feel free to post any questions regarding Antigonus on the thread I put up dealing with Hasmonean/Herodian history and the gospel story.


http://www.freeratio.org/showthread.php?t=313038

This thread was put up over one year ago - and I noticed no interest on your part of posting on that thread....

The difference, Earl, between my position and yours is very simple. I am dealing with Hasmonean/Herodian history and it's relevance for the gospel JC story - you are dealing with your own imaginative interpretations of the NT story.

Your errors, Earl, are your own. Your errors do not grant my position anything at all - they simply show up your own theories on the gospel JC story as being questionable.
Mh, I've asked those questions here, and since you promote your theories here it is encumbent on you to answer them here where everyone can see them.

I am asking you to supply evidence of the relevance of Hasmonean/Herodian history to the gospel JC story, not simply to declare it. And as I've outlined several times, your list of so-called parallels is simply not compelling enough. So if that's all you have to offer, and you refuse to answer the problems I raise in you declaring that connection, then we are at an impasse, and I suppose I should go back to ignoring you.

Earl Doherty
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Old 05-19-2013, 10:27 AM   #283
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With that widespread faith movement present in the period before Mark and the other Gospels were written, we have every reason to regard Mark's story of an earthly crucifixion and rising as quite possibly an allegorical rendition of the heavenly myth during an exercise in syncretism. No one is saying it can be proven. But it makes far more sense than alternate suggestions of a different source.

Earl Doherty
Earl, the gospel JC story has no need for the Pauline writing. The Markan JC is not an "allegorical rendition of the heavenly myth". You admitted such in a previous quote.


Quote:
Even the death and rising dimension of the Gospel Jesus, which Mark added to the Q Jesus, cannot be firmly shown to be based on the Pauline Christ, though I suspect that the latter type of movement had some influence.

http://www.freeratio.org/showthread....69#post7358669
"Suspect", "No one is saying it can be proven ". Speculation and assumption. Pure imagination. And you want NT scholars to take all this imaginative story telling seriously?

Earl, interpretations of the NT are a dime a dozen. It's a game of a pseudo-lottery in which no one has any chance of winning. Interpretations are the road to delusion and dogmaticism i.e. to fundamentalism. Your theory (and your approach to marketing that theory) is a prime example of such dangers.
But mh, what makes your own theories about Antigonus any less of a dime-a-dozen interpretation of the NT than mine? And I have demonstrated that I have a lot more basis for mine in the actual texts of the NT than you do. Not to mention your failure to even attempt to answer the questions I've asked surrounding why Mark would even be interested in Antigonus in the context of what he was doing?

Instead of quoting from me as if my acknowledgement of a lack of 100% certainty disproves my case and automatically proves yours, how about answering the questions I've raised about your theories?

Earl Doherty
Earl, please feel free to post any questions regarding Antigonus on the thread I put up dealing with Hasmonean/Herodian history and the gospel story.


http://www.freeratio.org/showthread.php?t=313038

This thread was put up over one year ago - and I noticed no interest on your part of posting on that thread....

The difference, Earl, between my position and yours is very simple. I am dealing with Hasmonean/Herodian history and it's relevance for the gospel JC story - you are dealing with your own imaginative interpretations of the NT story.

Your errors, Earl, are your own. Your errors do not grant my position anything at all - they simply show up your own theories on the gospel JC story as being questionable.
Mh, I've asked those questions here, and since you promote your theories here it is encumbent on you to answer them here where everyone can see them.

I am asking you to supply evidence of the relevance of Hasmonean/Herodian history to the gospel JC story, not simply to declare it. And as I've outlined several times, your list of so-called parallels is simply not compelling enough. So if that's all you have to offer, and you refuse to answer the problems I raise in you declaring that connection, then we are at an impasse, and I suppose I should go back to ignoring you.

Earl Doherty
Earl, you brought Antigonus into this thread not me. Post#231. I have twice now, in this thread, given a link to the thread I set up to discuss Hasmonean/Jewish history as it reflects on the gospel JC story. You are welcome to discuss Antigonus on the thread I have set up for that purpose.

Earl, don't try and deflect attention away from your own errors regarding your theories on the gospel JC story.

Ignore my posts by all means - your postings on your theories will continue to receive, from me, my rejection of their imaginative speculation and assumptions.
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Old 05-19-2013, 10:36 AM   #284
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Nothing that Shesh has demonstrated to exclude the Paulines from that earlier period.
And nothing that Earl has constructed out of all of his 'possibly's', is any evidence that the Paulines existed in that earlier period.
He employs volumes of words as a smokescreen to disguise that simple fact.

Quote:
And despite my entreaties he still provides no feasible explanation for why the Paulines could have been written so late (180) and yet show zero Gospel content or even presentation of an historical Jesus.
I have made my views on the origins of the Pauline epistles clear in many posts in this forum, and even in this thread (see post #174) and have argued for those views with aa for pages in multiple threads, as anyone acquainted with my views can attest.


Quote:
3. For I delivered to you first of all that which I also received: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures,

4. and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures,

5. and that He was seen by Cephas, then by the twelve.
Where Earl ?

Quote:
6. After that He was seen by over five hundred brethren at once, of whom the greater part remain to the present, but some have fallen asleep.
Where Earl ?

Quote:
7. After that He was seen by James, then by all the apostles.
Where Earl ?

Quote:
8. Then last of all He was seen by me also, as by one born out of due time.
Where Earl ?
Omigod!!! Shesh, you clearly do not understand the depths of your ignorance about religious belief and divine epiphanies. How many people in how many religions over how many millennia have claimed they "saw" or had an experience of a deity, without that deity having been an incarnation (resurrected or otherwise) in human form on earth??? I cannot believe this!!!

Do we have to go back to Religion 101 to correct your deficiencies? Why are you even here if you have such an abysmal understanding of the basics?

For one thing, did it escape you that Paul, in that verse 8, is talking about a vision he had of Christ, and that he does not differentiate between that vision and the "seeings" of all the rest of the people he enumerates? Are you not aware that virtually the entire body of critical scholarship no longer regards 1 Cor. 15:5-7 as recounting traditional experiences of people who reputedly saw a risen Jesus in the flesh, but that Paul is listing traditions about people who, like himself, had visions of a spiritual Jesus from heaven? Have you never pondered 1 Cor. 9:1, "Have I not seen Jesus our Lord?" as Paul's justification for putting himself in the same rank as the other apostles, who clearly also were apostles because they "saw" Jesus our Lord, not because they were followers of his on earth or because they broke bread with him in human flesh on Easter Sunday.

I guess it's impossible to think that you are aware of a longstanding analysis of the language of those verses in the prestigious Theological Dictionary of the New Testament which you can find in all of my books and website, as follows:
In a comprehensive study of the meaning of ōphthē', a passive aorist (past tense) of the verb horaō, to see, the Theological Dictionary of the New Testament (vol.V, p.358) points out that in this type of context the word is a technical term for being “in the presence of revelation as such, without reference to the nature of its perception.” In other words, the “seeing” may not refer to actual sensory perception. Rather, it may simply be “an encounter with the risen Lord who reveals himself…they experienced his presence.” If what we have here is more an experience of Christ’s “presence” than a full-blown hallucinatory vision, this would make it easier to accept that so many individuals and even large groups (such as the “more than 500 brothers” in 1 Corinthians 15:6) could imagine that they had undergone such an experience.[Jesus: Neither God Nor Man, p.76]
I have also numerous times in numerous places pointed out that an understanding of Paul's language in recounting his gospel in 15:3-4 must take into account that he more than once elsewhere claims that he got this gospel from no human beings, and that it is the product of revelation. Therefore, we are fully entitled to take his "according to the scriptures" as referring to the source of his gospel, and that his Christ "dying for sin" and "rising on the third day" (with being "buried" thrown in for good measure, for reasons I've outlined before) are products of scripture, not of historical experience. Therefore there is no time or place sequence operating between verses 3 and 4, and the visions which follow.

You really do need to go off to a desert cave and ponder what you know nothing about, Shesh. Perhaps you, too, will be visited by visions and revelations of those deficiencies.

P.S. And I will add as a postscript: In view of this analysis of 1 Cor. 15, how can anyone maintain that the Gospels come before the Paulines, or that the Paulines are products of a post-180 period?

Earl Doherty
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Old 05-19-2013, 11:14 AM   #285
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Earl, you brought Antigonus into this thread not me. Post#231. I have twice now, in this thread, given a link to the thread I set up to discuss Hasmonean/Jewish history as it reflects on the gospel JC story. You are welcome to discuss Antigonus on the thread I have set up for that purpose.

Earl, don't try and deflect attention away from your own errors regarding your theories on the gospel JC story.

Ignore my posts by all means - your postings on your theories will continue to receive, from me, my rejection of their imaginative speculation and assumptions.
Whether you spoke the word "Antigonus" in this particular thread is beside the point, and is a far more obvious "deflection" than my questions. We all know what your theories maintain, and the central position of Antigonus in them. I have asked some very simple questions, and there is no reason why you cannot answer them here:

What would the history of Antigonus himself have had to do with any interests Mark shows in his gospel? The simple fact that he was crucified by the Romans is hardly conclusive, let alone reveals why he would be of interest to Mark. Thousands of Jews were crucified by the Romans in the period preceding Mark.

Was Antigonus to be viewed as a sacrifice for mankind, or even the Jews, and where can we see any hint of this in Mark's story, or that Mark could have considered him an archetype for his Jesus in that respect?

Did Antigonus preach Cynic-style wisdom teachings? Did he advocate apocalyptic expectations as Mark's Jesus does? Did Antigonus know anything about the Danielic Son of Man who is an essential part of Mark's Jesus character?

Did Antigonus rise from the dead, and if not, why would he be regarded as the archetype of a Savior figure?

All the alleged parallels in the world are of no value if questions like these cannot be answered in your favor. Without such answers, the alleged connection makes no sense. But perhaps you feel you do have some positive answers to my questions. Let's put them under the spotlight here, since you have a very heavy presence on FRDB, not only championing your "terra-firma history" position and Antigonus himself as embodying it, but your constant belittling of my own theories without actually engaging with my arguments.

Earl Doherty
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Old 05-19-2013, 11:23 AM   #286
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Earl, you brought Antigonus into this thread not me. Post#231. I have twice now, in this thread, given a link to the thread I set up to discuss Hasmonean/Jewish history as it reflects on the gospel JC story. You are welcome to discuss Antigonus on the thread I have set up for that purpose.

Earl, don't try and deflect attention away from your own errors regarding your theories on the gospel JC story.

Ignore my posts by all means - your postings on your theories will continue to receive, from me, my rejection of their imaginative speculation and assumptions.
Whether you spoke the word "Antigonus" in this particular thread is beside the point, and is a far more obvious "deflection" than my questions. We all know what your theories maintain, and the central position of Antigonus in them. I have asked some very simple questions, and there is no reason why you cannot answer them here:

What would the history of Antigonus himself have had to do with any interests Mark shows in his gospel? The simple fact that he was crucified by the Romans is hardly conclusive, let alone reveals why he would be of interest to Mark. Thousands of Jews were crucified by the Romans in the period preceding Mark.

Was Antigonus to be viewed as a sacrifice for mankind, or even the Jews, and where can we see any hint of this in Mark's story, or that Mark could have considered him an archetype for his Jesus in that respect?

Did Antigonus preach Cynic-style wisdom teachings? Did he advocate apocalyptic expectations as Mark's Jesus does? Did Antigonus know anything about the Danielic Son of Man who is an essential part of Mark's Jesus character?

Did Antigonus rise from the dead, and if not, why would he be regarded as the archetype of a Savior figure?

All the alleged parallels in the world are of no value if questions like these cannot be answered in your favor. Without such answers, the alleged connection makes no sense. But perhaps you feel you do have some positive answers to my questions. Let's put them under the spotlight here, since you have a very heavy presence on FRDB, not only championing your "terra-firma history" position and Antigonus himself as embodying it, but your constant belittling of my own theories without actually engaging with my arguments.

Earl Doherty
But that's the issue is it not Earl - my "belittling" of your theories....requires you to seek to slap down my ideas. Earl, knocking down my position does not in anyway remove the errors of your own theories. It is your errors that have been pointed out on this thread. Deal with your errors rather than seeking to deflect the issue.

Earl, keep in mind that I don't jump when you shout. If you want to engage with me re my chart on Hasmonean/Herodian history - then please do so on the appropriate thread that I have set up.

http://www.freeratio.org/showthread.php?t=313038
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Old 05-19-2013, 11:50 AM   #287
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Nothing that Shesh has demonstrated to exclude the Paulines from that earlier period.
And nothing that Earl has constructed out of all of his 'possibly's', is any evidence that the Paulines existed in that earlier period.
He employs volumes of words as a smokescreen to disguise that simple fact.

Quote:
And despite my entreaties he still provides no feasible explanation for why the Paulines could have been written so late (180) and yet show zero Gospel content or even presentation of an historical Jesus.
I have made my views on the origins of the Pauline epistles clear in many posts in this forum, and even in this thread (see post #174) and have argued for those views with aa for pages in multiple threads, as anyone acquainted with my views can attest.

'Paul' -as we have him- is a fraud from the 180s.


Quote:
3. For I delivered to you first of all that which I also received: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures,

4. and that He was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the Scriptures,

5. and that He was seen by Cephas, then by the twelve.
Where Earl ?

Quote:
6. After that He was seen by over five hundred brethren at once, of whom the greater part remain to the present, but some have fallen asleep.
Where Earl ?

Quote:
7. After that He was seen by James, then by all the apostles.
Where Earl ?

Quote:
8. Then last of all He was seen by me also, as by one born out of due time.
Where Earl ?
Omigod!!! Shesh, you clearly do not understand the depths of your ignorance about religious belief and divine epiphanies. How many people in how many religions over how many millennia have claimed they "saw" or had an experience of a deity, without that deity having been an incarnation (resurrected or otherwise) in human form on earth??? I cannot believe this!!!

Do we have to go back to Religion 101 to correct your deficiencies? Why are you even here if you have such an abysmal understanding of the basics?

For one thing, did it escape you that Paul, in that verse 8, is talking about a vision he had of Christ, and that he does not differentiate between that vision and the "seeings" of all the rest of the people he enumerates? Are you not aware that virtually the entire body of critical scholarship no longer regards 1 Cor. 15:5-7 as recounting traditional experiences of people who reputedly saw a risen Jesus in the flesh, but that Paul is listing traditions about people who, like himself, had visions of a spiritual Jesus from heaven? Have you never pondered 1 Cor. 9:1, "Have I not seen Jesus our Lord?" as Paul's justification for putting himself in the same rank as the other apostles, who clearly also were apostles because they "saw" Jesus our Lord, not because they were followers of his on earth or because they broke bread with him in human flesh on Easter Sunday.

I guess it's impossible to think that you are aware of a longstanding analysis of the language of those verses in the prestigious Theological Dictionary of the New Testament which you can find in all of my books and website, as follows:
In a comprehensive study of the meaning of ōphthē', a passive aorist (past tense) of the verb horaō, to see, the Theological Dictionary of the New Testament (vol.V, p.358) points out that in this type of context the word is a technical term for being “in the presence of revelation as such, without reference to the nature of its perception.” In other words, the “seeing” may not refer to actual sensory perception. Rather, it may simply be “an encounter with the risen Lord who reveals himself…they experienced his presence.” If what we have here is more an experience of Christ’s “presence” than a full-blown hallucinatory vision, this would make it easier to accept that so many individuals and even large groups (such as the “more than 500 brothers” in 1 Corinthians 15:6) could imagine that they had undergone such an experience.[Jesus: Neither God Nor Man, p.76]
I have also numerous times in numerous places pointed out that an understanding of Paul's language in recounting his gospel in 15:3-4 must take into account that he more than once elsewhere claims that he got this gospel from no human beings, and that it is the product of revelation. Therefore, we are fully entitled to take his "according to the scriptures" as referring to the source of his gospel, and that his Christ "dying for sin" and "rising on the third day" (with being "buried" thrown in for good measure, for reasons I've outlined before) are products of scripture, not of historical experience. Therefore there is no time or place sequence operating between verses 3 and 4, and the visions which follow.

You really do need to go off to a desert cave and ponder what you know nothing about, Shesh. Perhaps you, too, will be visited by visions and revelations of those deficiencies.

P.S. And I will add as a postscript: In view of this analysis of 1 Cor. 15, how can anyone maintain that the Gospels come before the Paulines, or that the Paulines are products of a post-180 period?

Earl Doherty
I knew you would come up with exactly that explanation Earl.
Your so called 'analysis of 1 Cor. 15' is horse shit.

Yep. 'ol 'Paul' the inveterate liar through and through, claims that he has 'seen' and heard zombie Jesus in a 'vision'.
He does not however, anywhere state or even imply that Cephas, the twelve, or the 500 ever saw Jesus in any similar vision.
This is something you are pulling out of your rectum. The texts nowhere state nor even imply any such thing.

But there is an additional factor here. Who was 'Cephas' to Paul?
Who were 'the twelve'? What 'twelve'? How would 'Paul' know anything about any 'twelve'?
'Paul' only knows of 'Cephas' and of 'the twelve' by way of the Gospels, as 'Cephas' is the name first given to Simon Peter in the Gospel of John (1:42). And the 'twelve' are those first described within the Gospels (Mk 3:14, Matt 10:1-5)

'Paul' constructs his self-serving self-aggrandizing religious lies upon information gleaned from the earlier written Gospels.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Earl
I have also numerous times in numerous places pointed out that an understanding of Paul's language in recounting his gospel in 15:3-4 must take into account that he more than once elsewhere claims that he got this gospel from no one human being, and that it is the product of revelation.
Yes, you have already told us that you 'wish to believe that a dead 'Jesus' actually communicated this to 'Paul' from heaven. ... and was now in communication with the entire sect of early Christians."
Well that is your religious belief, not ours.

I do not accept your religious claims that 'Paul' or anyone else ever saw or talked with zombie Jesus.
'Paul' got his information for composing his self-serving self-aggrandizing religious lies from earlier writings, the Scriptures and the written Gospels.

'Paul'-as we have him- is a fraud from the 180s CE.
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Old 05-19-2013, 12:10 PM   #288
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Originally Posted by Earl
You really do need to go off to a desert cave and ponder what you know nothing about, Shesh. Perhaps you, too, will be visited by visions and revelations
Unlike you I do not have a religion where "'Jesus' actually communicated this to 'Paul' from heaven .... And " that is exactly what I wish to believe"

You are the one that needs to go out and commune with your zombie Jesus that you 'wish to believe' communicated with 'Paul' and with the entire sect of early Christians."

You believe, then you go have your 'visions' and 'revelations' from your talking zombie Jesus.
But I'm not about to buy what you are selling.
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Old 05-19-2013, 03:06 PM   #289
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The Jesus story is rather easy to understand--The Jews murdered or caused Jesus Christ to be murdered.

It is wholly erroneous that Jesus cult Christians believed that their Jesus was never on earth and was crucified in some kind of heaven.
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Originally Posted by EarlDoherty View Post
Aa, you continue to show that you know absolutely nothing about my theories or my analyses of the texts. I have made a very strong case for 1 Clement knowing no HJ, including the passage in ch.42 which you quote. I don't know why it is so difficult for so many people here to understand that if they are going to condemn the interpretations of someone they disagree with, they have to engage with their actual arguments.
I am responding to what you post here.

Now, the author of 1st Clement either believed or wanted people to believe Jesus was on earth.

Essentially, the author of 1st Clement do not support you at all.

The Jesus cult of antiquity did NOT claim their crucified Jesus was never on earth.
Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
Why do you quote Ignatius? I've long presented the Ignatians (whether authentic or coming shortly after Ignatius' death) as containing the very first extra-gospel references to any elements of the Gospel story, and fitted this into a rational time-line of development for the dissemination of the features of that story.
Again, your position is wholly erroneous.

The author of the Ignatian Epistles mentioned Paul but still believed or wanted people to believe Jesus was on earth.

Quote:
Originally Posted by -EarlDoherty
..And where the heck do you get Paul on the mount with Peter's vision of Christ in 2 Peter? That is only one of the many egregious errors in presenting the texts which you are constantly guilty of.
The author of 2nd Peter contradicts you. The author of 2nd Peter believed or wanted people to believe Jesus was on earth.

You have NO author or writings of the Jesus cult that corroborates your interpretation


Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
....You are also one of the worst atomists I've ever encountered, quoting passages with no examination of context, immediate or in the document as a whole. You've shown that in regard to Aristides.

You are impossible, aa, and why the only recourse for someone with any concern for preserving their sanity is to largely ignore you, which I do as much as possible.

Earl Doherty
Your reply is contradictory and extremely disturbing.

You are giving people here the impression that you ignore me but that is impossible.

You appear terrified to respond to my post simply because I have exposed your errors.

Your theory is extremely weak and without a shred of corroboration even within the Canon.

It was gMark's story that was the fundamental core of the Jesus cult.

The Jesus story in the short gMark has PRIORITY of the ENTIRE Canon.

Now, Aristides contradicts you.

1. Aristides claimed the Jews killed Jesus.

Aristides Apology
Quote:
The Christians, then, trace the beginning of their religion from Jesus the Messiah; and he is named the Son of God Most High. And it is said that God came down from heaven............ This Jesus, then, was born of the race of the Hebrews; and he had twelve disciples in order that the purpose of his incarnation might in time be accomplished.

But he himself was pierced by the Jews, and he died and was buried; and they say that after three days he rose and ascended to heaven..
2. Justin Martyr contradicts you. Justin claimed the Jews killed Jesus.

Dialogue with Trypho
Quote:
Accordingly, these things have happened to you in fairness and justice, for you have slain the Just One...
3. Hippolytus contradicts you. Hippolytus claimed the Jews killed Jesus.

Hippolytus "Against the Jews[/u]
Quote:
But why, O prophet, tell us, and for what reason, was the temple made desolate? ........ it was because they killed the Son of their Benefactor...
4. Lucian of Samosata contradicts you. Lucian claimed Christians worshiped a crucified man.

[u]Lucian's Death of Peregrinep/u]
Quote:
The Christians, you know, worship a man to this day,--the distinguished personage who introduced their novel rites, and was crucified on that account.
5. Origen contradicts you. Origen claimed Jesus lived among the Jews.

Origen's Against Celsus
Quote:
When false witnesses testified against our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, He remained silent; and when unfounded charges were brought against Him, He returned no answer, believing that His whole life and conduct among the Jews were a better refutation than any answer to the false testimony, or than any formal defence against the accusations,,
There is no evidence whatsoever that Jesus cult Christians believed that the crucified Jesus was never on earth.
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Old 05-19-2013, 03:57 PM   #290
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
The Jesus story is rather easy to understand--The Jews murdered or caused Jesus Christ to be murdered.

It is wholly erroneous that Jesus cult Christians believed that their Jesus was never on earth and was crucified in some kind of heaven.
Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty View Post
Aa, you continue to show that you know absolutely nothing about my theories or my analyses of the texts. I have made a very strong case for 1 Clement knowing no HJ, including the passage in ch.42 which you quote. I don't know why it is so difficult for so many people here to understand that if they are going to condemn the interpretations of someone they disagree with, they have to engage with their actual arguments.
I am responding to what you post here.

Now, the author of 1st Clement either believed or wanted people to believe Jesus was on earth.

Essentially, the author of 1st Clement do not support you at all.

The Jesus cult of antiquity did NOT claim their crucified Jesus was never on earth.
Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
Why do you quote Ignatius? I've long presented the Ignatians (whether authentic or coming shortly after Ignatius' death) as containing the very first extra-gospel references to any elements of the Gospel story, and fitted this into a rational time-line of development for the dissemination of the features of that story.
Again, your position is wholly erroneous.

The author of the Ignatian Epistles mentioned Paul but still believed or wanted people to believe Jesus was on earth.

Quote:
Originally Posted by -EarlDoherty
..And where the heck do you get Paul on the mount with Peter's vision of Christ in 2 Peter? That is only one of the many egregious errors in presenting the texts which you are constantly guilty of.
The author of 2nd Peter contradicts you. The author of 2nd Peter believed or wanted people to believe Jesus was on earth.

You have NO author or writings of the Jesus cult that corroborates your interpretation


Quote:
Originally Posted by EarlDoherty
....You are also one of the worst atomists I've ever encountered, quoting passages with no examination of context, immediate or in the document as a whole. You've shown that in regard to Aristides.

You are impossible, aa, and why the only recourse for someone with any concern for preserving their sanity is to largely ignore you, which I do as much as possible.

Earl Doherty
Your reply is contradictory and extremely disturbing.

You are giving people here the impression that you ignore me but that is impossible.

You appear terrified to respond to my post simply because I have exposed your errors.

Your theory is extremely weak and without a shred of corroboration even within the Canon.

It was gMark's story that was the fundamental core of the Jesus cult.

The Jesus story in the short gMark has PRIORITY of the ENTIRE Canon.

Now, Aristides contradicts you.

1. Aristides claimed the Jews killed Jesus.

Aristides Apology
Quote:
The Christians, then, trace the beginning of their religion from Jesus the Messiah; and he is named the Son of God Most High. And it is said that God came down from heaven............ This Jesus, then, was born of the race of the Hebrews; and he had twelve disciples in order that the purpose of his incarnation might in time be accomplished.

But he himself was pierced by the Jews, and he died and was buried; and they say that after three days he rose and ascended to heaven..
2. Justin Martyr contradicts you. Justin claimed the Jews killed Jesus.

Dialogue with Trypho
Quote:
Accordingly, these things have happened to you in fairness and justice, for you have slain the Just One...
3. Hippolytus contradicts you. Hippolytus claimed the Jews killed Jesus.

Hippolytus "Against the Jews[/u]
Quote:
But why, O prophet, tell us, and for what reason, was the temple made desolate? ........ it was because they killed the Son of their Benefactor...
4. Lucian of Samosata contradicts you. Lucian claimed Christians worshiped a crucified man.

[u]Lucian's Death of Peregrinep/u]
Quote:
The Christians, you know, worship a man to this day,--the distinguished personage who introduced their novel rites, and was crucified on that account.
5. Origen contradicts you. Origen claimed Jesus lived among the Jews.

Origen's Against Celsus
Quote:
When false witnesses testified against our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, He remained silent; and when unfounded charges were brought against Him, He returned no answer, believing that His whole life and conduct among the Jews were a better refutation than any answer to the false testimony, or than any formal defence against the accusations,,
There is no evidence whatsoever that Jesus cult Christians believed that the crucified Jesus was never on earth.
Would you like to quote 2 Peter's passage where it says that Paul was with the apostles on the holy mount when they had their vision, which is what you claimed? Remember this?:

Quote:
Originally Posted by aa
2. The author of 2nd Peter mentioned Paul and claimed he was with Jesus on the mount.
Now if you want to claim that the "he" doesn't refer back to Paul, but the writer of 2 Peter, then you need to write considerably more clearly. But your alternate contention is also wrong. The writer of 2 Peter is claiming that Peter was with Jesus on the mount. He is misrepresenting himself as Peter, but no scholar regards 2 Peter as genuinely written by the apostle Peter. And I have more than once pointed you to my analysis of 2 Peter which demonstrates that he did NOT seek to have his readers think of Jesus as having been on earth, because he presents no such thing.

And as expected, you have also completely ignored my posting on the Apology of Aristides and simply repeated your quote from it as though nothing has been presented that would disturb your use of it. Of course, I fully anticipated that posting my Appendix on the topic would be a complete waste of time.

And I have fully acknowledged your statement on Ignatius, which has been my own position for years.

Finally, quoting from writers of the late 2nd century and beyond, when the Gospel story has been universally established as representing history, is another example of your detachment from reality and any understanding of what we are debating.

I think these several observations by me (and they are hardly new) on your repetitively bizarre output, aa, is ample evidence to sum up what is the matter with you, and why you need to be ignored. This is a firm pledge by myself that finally, finally, I will follow my own advice. You may continue to sound off from the vantage point of your strange planet and the incomprehensible world you live in, but you will not ever get another response from me. And "terror" has nothing to do with it.

Earl Doherty
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