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Old 05-16-2013, 10:46 AM   #301
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Do I know the tomb visit really happened? That's the kind of thing critical historians readily acknowledge as meaningful to explain how Christianity arose, regardless of whether a miraculous Resurrection occurred. That's regarded as history, isn't it?
No it's not. The existence of a religion does not prove that its origin stories are true. There are many ways that Christianity could have started other than an empty tomb on Easter morning.
....
I don't think that Adam has answered this point.

I don't see the point in continuing this thread if Adam really thinks that critical historians believe that women visited Jesus' tomb on Easter morning.
There I go again thinking something is too obvious to need my input to clarify it. Christianity exists, and whatever it was that got it started could reasonably have included real events. Mythicism is not the standard view of critical historians, I think even you agree. Many of these historians think an empty tomb story was early. You're saying that this story arose even though women did not visit the tomb? That's possible of course, even though all four gospels agree at least on that much, that women visited the tomb. Then again, if there was no Crucifixion either, there would have been no tomb at issue in the first place! That takes care of that problem.
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Old 05-16-2013, 10:47 AM   #302
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[#285] If you want to try and establish credibility here than you can respond with an outline of the Methodology you used to determine that John Mark was the author of John 20:11-16.
Let’s break it down first into the chain involved here:
Who was involved in John 20:11-16?
Mary Magdalene
Could that person have written it?
No, because we have contrasting accounts from two or three women, not just one witness.
Could anyone else tell what happened?
No, Jesus didn’t hang around to write anything.
Who could have been told what happened?
Disciples. We have no known accounts from no one else.
Did any of these people write about the event?
Yes
No. No. No.

There is no reliable evidence that there was an event, or that anyone close to it wrote anything. The contrasting accounts are evidence of story telling variations.

But this is the most coherent thing you have written about how you reached your conclusions, so go on...

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Where did they write about it?
Perhaps still surviving in the gospels.
Perhaps not.

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Does it looks like fiction?
No, it looks like a diary entry about the latest weeks in the writer’s life—it’s straightforward without any supernaturalism.
Yes, it looks like fiction. Once again, you bring supernatualism into the question as if the lack of supernatural elements makes a story reliable history.
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Which strata in the gospels is it?
A source in John 20.
What other verses can be linked to that?
Other source verses in the Johannine Passion Narrative.
Who could have written that strata?
Various disciples.
Anyone could have written that. Anyone in the first few centuries of the Christian era.

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Are any of those involved in that strata?
Peter, the disciple known to the High Priest, and “another disciple” (not the Beloved (agapa) Disciple (just ephilei in 20:2), perhaps the same disciple known to the High Priest)
Are any of those named in that strata?
Just Peter and maybe Thomas. (The Beloved Disciple of John 19:26-27 is from a later stratum per Teeple. If that later edition nevertheless refers to someone already in the story, it would have to be John Mark, making him the Beloved Disciple.)
Which of these seems in the best position to know the most of these contents?
Peter and the other disciple.
If this person is not named, are there any indications herein of who he is?
Priestly family.
Any other clues in the New Testament?
Peter goes to John Mark’s house in Acts 12:12, perhaps same house as Last Supper. John Mark in good position to know a lot.
Mark 14:51-52 tells of a young man fleeing away naked. 14:54 picks up with Peter following Jesus, same as in John 18:14. This young man may be the “another disciple” in John.
Are there any external indications of who he is?
Peter had John Mark write his gospel, thus young in the time of Jesus. John Mark was said to be from priestly family.
So IF you accept that the gospels have to be historical, your reconstruction identifies a possible author. But your assumptions are not those of anyone else on this thread, or any respectable scholar that I know of in the modern era, even Christian believers.
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Old 05-16-2013, 10:50 AM   #303
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Editing to add:
Great Post #302, Toto. We understand where we agree and disagree, and that I stand pretty much on my own.

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...spin's posts 162-3 (IIRC) can be split out, with any substantive replies, to start a new thread that will focus only on Adam's claims.
Yes, starting substantive replies would be great!
Keep in mind that the first two paragraphs was later introductory material, not a thesis statement. The Abstract gets it right.
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Old 05-16-2013, 11:01 AM   #304
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I don't think that Adam has answered this point.

I don't see the point in continuing this thread if Adam really thinks that critical historians believe that women visited Jesus' tomb on Easter morning.
There I go again thinking something is too obvious to need my input to clarify it. Christianity exists, and whatever it was that got it started could reasonably have included real events.
Yes, Christianity exists, but that doesn't require a specific real event to have started it.

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Mythicism is not the standard view of critical historians, I think even you agree.
We're not talking about mythicism here.

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Many of these historians think an empty tomb story was early.
An early story does not translate into a real event.

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You're saying that this story arose even though women did not visit the tomb? That's possible of course, even though all four gospels agree at least on that much, that women visited the tomb. Then again, if there was no Crucifixion either, there would have been no tomb at issue in the first place! That takes care of that problem.
There is no evidence of this story before Mark's gospel, assuming that is the earliest. The other gospels took the story from Mark and embellished it. But Paul makes no mention of an empty tomb, or any tomb, and no mention of Mary or any women as early witnesses.

Even if there was a crucifixion, a respectable portion of critical historians think that there was no burial and no tomb.

If you have read any of the more recent scholarship, you might have noticed that even believing Christian scholars working at seminaries do not insist on the historicity of much in the gospels (at least when they are writing for a secular audience.)

So now that you have laid out the assumptions behind your work, it is crumbling like a stale cookie. This is why no one will "refute" it - your assumptions are just unsupportable.
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Old 05-16-2013, 11:06 AM   #305
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Great Post #302, Toto. We understand where we agree and disagree, and that I stand pretty much on my own.

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Proposal:
...spin's posts 162-3 (IIRC) can be split out, with any substantive replies, to start a new thread that will focus only on Adam's claims.
Yes, starting substantive replies would be great!
But you have realized that no one else here shares your assumptions, so what's the point?
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Old 05-16-2013, 12:37 PM   #306
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Um, that I come over here and work with your assumptions tailored into my "GattA" and no one responds even to that?
So just like these believing Christian professors at seminaries, I present basically accepted sources (Q, Passion Narrative, Discourses) that are entirely free of supernaturalism, but they are still a priori rejected here because I don't accept the assumption that there were not and could not have been any eyewitnesses? Can't take the chance that assumption won't stand scrutiny?

Maybe it's going too far here to argue for other sources tainted with supernaturalism like the Signs Source, L, and Ur-Marcus, but you guys would still be free to argue that these must be late and that they integrate with the non-supernatural sources in ways that show they are all late. Or that they are later and are lies or myths.

So the problem seems to me to be the prevailing paradigm here of Mythicism. If any of the three non-supernatural sources wound up still standing, some sort of HJ would prevail. It might be hard for you to show that these non-supernatural sources also are lies or misidentified as relating to Jesus. So it's safer to treat the gospels as finished products and wave off dealing with sources, even those I identify in agreement with most critical scholars. Is the failure here to attack the substance of my Significance of John that (apart from my naming of authors and their dates) this would require rejecting too much of current scholarship?
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Old 05-16-2013, 01:22 PM   #307
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Um, that I come over here and work with your assumptions tailored into my "GattA" and no one responds even to that?
What do you mean no one responded?

Your assumptions about our assumptions are incorrect, as I keep telling you.


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So just like these believing Christian professors at seminaries, I present basically accepted sources (Q, Passion Narrative, Discourses) that are entirely free of supernaturalism, but they are still a priori rejected here because I don't accept the assumption that there were not and could not have been any eyewitnesses? Can't take the chance that assumption won't stand scrutiny?
No, your claims are rejected because the mere fact that the ancient stories are free of supernaturalism does not constitute evidence that they were written by eyewitnesses.


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Maybe it's going too far here to argue for other sources tainted with supernaturalism like the Signs Source, L, and Ur-Marcus, but you guys would still be free to argue that these must be late and that they integrate with the non-supernatural sources in ways that show they are all late. Or that they are later and are lies or myths.

So the problem seems to me to be the prevailing paradigm here of Mythicism. If any of the three non-supernatural sources wound up still standing, some sort of HJ would prevail.
This is not the problem. Most of the people arguing with you are not mythicists.

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It might be hard for you to show that these non-supernatural sources also are lies or misidentified as relating to Jesus.
But it's so easy for you to shift the burden of proof.

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So it's safer to treat the gospels as finished products and wave off dealing with sources, even those I identify in agreement with most critical scholars. Is the failure here to attack the substance of my Significance of John that (apart from my naming of authors and their dates) this would require rejecting too much of current scholarship?
Are you pretending to not understand the issue? You can claim to identify "sources" but you can't tie those sources to eyewitnesses.

What current scholarship would we be rejecting? Please give names and citations, not just your casual impression of what current scholarship claims.
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Old 05-16-2013, 02:10 PM   #308
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Lock the thread already, Toto. You're sucked in to thinking there is a dim chance that it's going to dawn on him that he's been making things up. It's not. He's been going on and on and on with this nonsense for well over a year. He still assumes basic veracity of the contents of the text and that he can then guess how things must have happened. The only person convinced with rhis amateur hour stuff is Adam, though I have thought a few times that he could be trolling, for who could be so persistently impenetrable? Instead of taking your turn at futility, lock it, Toto. You'll thank me.
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Old 05-16-2013, 02:32 PM   #309
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Maybe it's going too far here to argue for other sources tainted with supernaturalism like the Signs Source, L, and Ur-Marcus, but you guys would still be free to argue that these must be late and that they integrate with the non-supernatural sources in ways that show they are all late. Or that they are later and are lies or myths.

You persistently miss the point. It's not that its unlikely that there were sources for the gospels. There were. It's not that a source with supernatural elements in it could not be an early, let alone an eyewitness, source given the belief in the supernatural in the first century and the indisputable evidence from pagan sources that first century people did "see" and report what we would call supernatural events (to say otherwise, as JW and S have been claiming, is cultural idolatry and question begging). It's not even that a gospel's source(s) could not have come from an eyewitness. There's at least a prima facie case for it.

The point is

1. whether you have, not to mention that you have demonstrated (not asserted) that you have, the skills necessary to identify what is and is not a source (you don't, you haven't);

2. whether the sources you identify as sources are actually sources (they aren't), let alone early ones (they aren't) and have been demonstrated through sound linguistic and literary analysis as such (they haven't been -- and they can't have been by you since, as you've admitted, you lack the skills necessary to do so), and

3. whether your claims about who stands behind your alleged early sources have anything going for them (they don't -- your identifications are arbitrary if not ridiculous and down right question begging), let alone are as certain as you claim they are (unless we had some actual writing from, say, Nicodemus to compare your alleged Nicodemus source with for linguistic and stylistic and literary similarities with your alleged source, how could we possibly know?).

Stop blaming others for your failure to make your case or to see its merits. It isn't out of any bias that no one sees what you say is there. It's because there's nothing there to see. And you certainly have not shown that there's anything actually there worth looking at.


And I'm still waiting for you to produce the letter from Bossman that says he intended to publish your work in BTB, whether in a 1980 volume or one in 1981.

Jeffrey
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Old 05-16-2013, 03:18 PM   #310
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Um, that I come over here and work with your assumptions tailored into my "GattA" and no one responds even to that?
What do you mean no one responded?
Your assumptions about our assumptions are incorrect, as I keep telling you.
Here on
Post #178
I linked to my posts on Gospel Eyewitnesses in which I trimmed down to three sources that could not be a priori rejected here. Those posts ranged from #525 to #561, but the thread only lingered on less than 70 posts without addressing this presentation of gospel sources that can't automatically be rejected by atheists.
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So just like these believing Christian professors at seminaries, I present basically accepted sources (Q, Passion Narrative, Discourses) that are entirely free of supernaturalism, but they are still a priori rejected here because I don't accept the assumption that there were not and could not have been any eyewitnesses? Can't take the chance that assumption won't stand scrutiny?
No, your claims are rejected because the mere fact that the ancient stories are free of supernaturalism does not constitute evidence that they were written by eyewitnesses.
Granted, there is no proof that they were. But they provide evidence for HJ. Is this why no one was even willing to deal with whether I was correctly delineating sources?
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Maybe it's going too far here to argue for other sources tainted with supernaturalism like the Signs Source, L, and Ur-Marcus, but you guys would still be free to argue that these must be late and that they integrate with the non-supernatural sources in ways that show they are all late. Or that they are later and are lies or myths.

So the problem seems to me to be the prevailing paradigm here of Mythicism. If any of the three non-supernatural sources wound up still standing, some sort of HJ would prevail.
This is not the problem. Most of the people arguing with you are not mythicists.
OK. Maybe I should modify my statement to include that there's a second paradigm of hard Agnosticism that denies that we have any knowledge one way or the other. (Perhaps linked to an attitude of just negativism and people-bashing.)
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It might be hard for you to show that these non-supernatural sources also are lies or misidentified as relating to Jesus.
But it's so easy for you to shift the burden of proof.
I still haven't heard any offers to desist from claiming there is no evidence for eyewitnesses. You guys say that without citing any evidence or scholars to support you. It's an open issue. Why do you insist otherwise?
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So it's safer to treat the gospels as finished products and wave off dealing with sources, even those I identify in agreement with most critical scholars. Is the failure here to attack the substance of my Significance of John that (apart from my naming of authors and their dates) this would require rejecting too much of current scholarship?
Are you pretending to not understand the issue? You can claim to identify "sources" but you can't tie those sources to eyewitnesses.
Maybe I don't understand, then. I have failed to state that identification of sources is preliminary to trying to find who wrote them? Maybe in fearing to just repeat myself I omit a key step? In any case, once the source is established and then I go beyond this to state an author, that makes me vulnerable about the source if my suggested author is refutable. Stephan Huller's objection about John the Apostle could shift me over to John Mark as author of that stage, regardless of the clear stylistic differences. That Editor stratum Teeple identified might be just a different scribe? It's possible. I'm not taking that position yet, but my position has never been examined here and thus has to be subject to revision.
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What current scholarship would we be rejecting? Please give names and citations, not just your casual impression of what current scholarship claims.
Just my messy notes then?
R. A. Martin Syntax Criticism in 1987 said Q is more Semitic than the Marcan material, L is particularly Semitic.
H. T. Fleddermann in 1995 said Mark used Q.
The above are in Scott McKnight Synoptic Gospels in 2000.
Thomas Brodie Proto-Luke: the Oldest Gospel Account in 2006. Luke is independent of Mark.
Delbert Burkett in Rethinking the Gospel Sources gives exceedingly complex sources.
On early dating of the gospels:
N. T. Wright Simply Jesus in 2011.
Charlesworth The Historical Jesus in 2008

My earlier citation was to Herman Waetjin, The Gospel of the Beloved Disciple, 2005 (pg. 3) that recent scholarship has revolved around what I said about John in my paper I finished in 1981,
that a pre-johannine narrative "Signs Source" combined with a Passion story and subsequently with a "Discourse Source" and redacted into the present form of the Gospel, has dominated scholarly efforts to resolve its enigmas, aporiai and riddles.
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