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Old 08-16-2013, 10:03 AM   #51
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I was initially going to publish this on Bible and Interpretation, but since I have already published a more thorough response to Bart Ehrman there which covers all of these same issues, I just decided to blog it:

http://tomverenna.wordpress.com/2013...gure-of-jesus/
In your article I find that it is not at all reasonable or logical that one cannot argue that Jesus never existed when there is no evidence for his existence.

In court trials or at any level where evidence is required the lack of evidence provides the fundamental basis for acquittal.

In effect, one can argue that he NEVER did commit an offense once there is no evidence.

The lack of evidence for an historical is the fundamental basis for the argument that Jesus of Nazareth NEVER existed.

Only evidence from antiquity can overturn the argument that Jesus never did exist.
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Old 08-16-2013, 10:18 AM   #52
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Does Meier think that the author of Mark was embarassed by these stories?
Meier thinks that Matthew and Luke were embarrassed by the stories (and omitted them). They are also unusual in terms of Mark's typical miracle story in which Jesus performs instantaneous cures by the spoken word alone.

Andrew Criddle
Andrew, you mean that Luke cut the story down to a minimum and John omitted, no?

I think Meier muddies his own waters by his tendency to speak about what "the Church" thought, did, etc. I can understand this from a doctrinal point of view, since he's a Catholic, but from a historian's perspective, one needs to know about the early groupings and leadership structures before one can speak confidently about a purported unitary community.
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Old 08-16-2013, 12:11 PM   #53
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Does Meier think that the author of Mark was embarassed by these stories?
Meier thinks that Matthew and Luke were embarrassed by the stories (and omitted them). They are also unusual in terms of Mark's typical miracle story in which Jesus performs instantaneous cures by the spoken word alone.

Andrew Criddle
Andrew, you mean that Luke cut the story down to a minimum and John omitted, no?

I think Meier muddies his own waters by his tendency to speak about what "the Church" thought, did, etc. I can understand this from a doctrinal point of view, since he's a Catholic, but from a historian's perspective, one needs to know about the early groupings and leadership structures before one can speak confidently about a purported unitary community.
The story in gMark and gLuke is essentially the same story. In fact, the author of gLuke added details not found in gMark. The author of gLuke claimed Jesus was praying when he was baptized and that he was about 30 years old at the time.

gLuke baptism event is an expansion of gMark's

Mark 1
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9 And it came to pass in those days, that Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee, and was baptized of John in Jordan. 10 And straightway coming up out of the water, he saw the heavens opened , and the Spirit like a dove descending upon him: 11 And there came a voice from heaven, saying, Thou art my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased.

Luke 3
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21 Now when all the people were baptized , it came to pass , that Jesus also being baptized , and praying , the heaven was opened , 22 And the Holy Ghost descended in a bodily shape like a dove upon him, and a voice came from heaven, which said , Thou art my beloved Son; in thee I am well pleased. 23 And Jesus himself began to be about thirty years of age.........
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Old 08-16-2013, 12:27 PM   #54
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Meier thinks that Matthew and Luke were embarrassed by the stories (and omitted them). They are also unusual in terms of Mark's typical miracle story in which Jesus performs instantaneous cures by the spoken word alone.

Andrew Criddle
Andrew, you mean that Luke cut the story down to a minimum and John omitted, no?

I think Meier muddies his own waters by his tendency to speak about what "the Church" thought, did, etc. I can understand this from a doctrinal point of view, since he's a Catholic, but from a historian's perspective, one needs to know about the early groupings and leadership structures before one can speak confidently about a purported unitary community.
A unitary community? :facepalm:

Church?
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Old 08-16-2013, 01:20 PM   #55
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What is your problem with "unitary community" or church? The issue is that there were competing Christian factions with disagreements about theology. The orthodox version of history is that there was one true church (unitary) and some insignificant heretics who are best forgotten. Historians who have looked at the remaining records reject this view.
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Old 08-16-2013, 01:41 PM   #56
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a/ Matthew is clearly embarrassed.
Could you quote for us the passages where he expresses embarassment, since it is so clear?
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Old 08-16-2013, 02:14 PM   #57
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For a guy like me, who have dished out tongue aplenty, somethines can't tell when others are doing it too.

BTW, thanks for having a sense of humor! Maybe I am running across too many who don't and just got jaded ...

DCH

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In fact, I think this ["fact" that "the groom worried about the wine"] demonstrates conclusively that the wedding at Cana was actually Jesus' wedding.
I don't know that it is established fact that in Galilee in that period that the Groom provided the wine for his wedding ceremony. Bla bla bla bla ... bla bla bla ... bla!
I'm sorry, meant that to be tongue in cheek,
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Old 08-16-2013, 02:24 PM   #58
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What is your problem with "unitary community" or church? The issue is that there were competing Christian factions with disagreements about theology. The orthodox version of history is that there was one true church (unitary) and some insignificant heretics who are best forgotten. Historians who have looked at the remaining records reject this view.
In context to the gospel authors. Do you think there were churches. or just private houses where these people gathered in the first century?


Who cares about orthodox version. That is not history as Ficino points out.

Early members of the movement were wide and diverse.
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Old 08-16-2013, 03:45 PM   #59
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What is your problem with "unitary community" or church? The issue is that there were competing Christian factions with disagreements about theology. The orthodox version of history is that there was one true church (unitary) and some insignificant heretics who are best forgotten. Historians who have looked at the remaining records reject this view.
In context to the gospel authors. Do you think there were churches. or just private houses where these people gathered in the first century?
Please read more carefully. The gospel authors do not refer to churches. Meier refers to "the church" by which he only means a gathering of believers, not a church building. Andrew Criddle commented that there was no "unitary community" that could be referred to as "the" church. It doesn't appear that you would disagree with this.

Quote:
Who cares about orthodox version. That is not history as Ficino points out.

Early members of the movement were wide and diverse.
The orthodox version of history is the basis for Meier's analysis of the criterion of embarrassment. If you agree with the idea that there was diversity in early Christianity, it is difficult to identify anything that would have been embarrassing to all Christians.

You could save time by writing more details in complete sentences, rather than facepalming yourself.
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Old 08-16-2013, 04:19 PM   #60
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In context to the gospel authors. Do you think there were churches. or just private houses where these people gathered in the first century?
Please read more carefully. The gospel authors do not refer to churches. Meier refers to "the church" by which he only means a gathering of believers, not a church building. Andrew Criddle commented that there was no "unitary community" that could be referred to as "the" church. It doesn't appear that you would disagree with this.

Quote:
Who cares about orthodox version. That is not history as Ficino points out.

Early members of the movement were wide and diverse.
The orthodox version of history is the basis for Meier's analysis of the criterion of embarrassment.
.

My post covered everything I needed to say, your the one with comprehensive issues. Which seems to be normal with you when dealing with real scholarships. You mentioned orthodox not me or Ficino

I was facepalming Meier, if Ficino's interpretation was correct regarding a "unitary community" in the first century.


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If you agree with the idea that there was diversity in early Christianity, it is difficult to identify anything that would have been embarrassing to all Christians.
Nonsense. It is not difficult to identify JtB a human baptizing a deity, if your creating a deity you want all to worship, let alone a peasant Galilean.

There are cores to the legend that this criterion and others are used in conjunction.

It's not a idea that the early movement was diverse. It is fact based on scripture and the diversity within its pages.
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