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05-28-2001, 05:16 PM | #41 | ||
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Brian,
I took this question (directed to Toto) from another thread: Quote:
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As you have elsewhere stated that you believe the earliest Christians were Jewish, which agrees with Spong, and I see that you date the gospels 55-70, I get the impression you may have read Spong's Liberating the Gospels, and are familiar with his assertions. Have you? joe |
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05-28-2001, 08:58 PM | #42 | |
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Meta =>That's becasue it's a sayings list and not a narative. It's also been re-worked by Gnsotics in the 4th century and I said up to the 4th century. But it doesn't offer an alternate version and that's the point. ________________ Q Gospel -- No crucifixion story, no idea of passion (reading of "Son of Adam" as passion reference is post hoc by Christians) Meta =>Ibid. See above. _________________ Gospel of Philip -- reference to cross only, no passion story Meta =>ahahahaa, why would they have a cross without a passion? Because obviously the passion is implied, except that Philip is heavily Gnostic and very late, so they didn't believe his death was real. But he doesn't deny that he was seemingly curcified. He doesn't offer a differnent verison. He doesn't say he was stroned or hung. Why can't you understand that distinction? ______________________ Gospel of Mary -- allusion to death only, no crucifixion story, resurrection strictly a vision, no body Meta =>Again, that is unimportant. Those are mere details, and res. does agree with the main story. The point is, no altenrative account is offered. Doesn't say he was stroned, shot with arrow, hung, ran thorugh with spear, wacked with sword, or whathave you. ___________________________ Apocryphon of James -- no crucifixion story, bare fact of "cross" only Meta -> If cross doesn't imply crucifiction what's it doing there? That's still allusion to the main story line. _________________ Dialogue of the Savior -- no crucifixion story Meta =>Also no narrative,and no disagreement either. But it does say he he gave up his life on the cross. _________________ Book of Thomas the Contender -- no crucifixion story _____________________ Meta =>No alternate version! are you just dense. Can you not get it through your head what the argument is? ____________ The two Infancy Gospels -- no crucifixion story Meta =>cause it's about his infancy! ______________ Of the fragments of other gospels -- which are all too short to be conclusive, so far I have only found to Fayyum have a reference to the crucifixion story (the denial of Peter) Meta =>That's becasue you are blind. when it speaks of the cross and of giving up his life and does not offer any alternate story of his death it is agreeing with the main story. _________________ The lost gospels, recognized from quotes in the church fathers, are also too fragmentary to make sure. Meta =>IF they had an alternate story something somewhere would have survived of it. _____________________ I won't count Secret Mark, which I believe is a forgery, and any case is too short. Meta =>That still leaves a couple of hundred others. And Peter, Nichedemius and several others do have both cross, and passion and death and resurrectoin. And you still have failed to show a single alternative account. None of those disagree with the 11 points I spoke of. |
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05-29-2001, 06:23 AM | #43 |
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No alternate version! are you just dense. Can you not get it through your head what the argument is?
Some gospels have a passion narrative. Some don't. Some gospels which have a narrative and are faithful to a certain version of events. Others don't even mention it, or only vaguely allude. Your "widespread agreement" turns out to mean "if it mentions the passion, it mentions the passion." BTW, you were the one who admonished me to "let the text speak for itself." The mere mention of a cross does not necessarily imply the whole passion scheme invented or copied by Mark. In the Second Treatise of the Great Seth, Jesus says someone else died on the cross. And remember the one that says he was buried in the sand? There are differences even within the story. Like I said before, what do you think would have happened to this set of myths if a Church had not arisen to defend it, define, conserve it and rule out other versions? Michael |
05-29-2001, 10:28 AM | #44 | ||
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Also, why did you ignore the Gospel of Peter in your list of examples, calling it, instead, too short to be reliable? Thanks, Nomad |
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05-29-2001, 02:11 PM | #45 |
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Could you give us some details on this source please? How old is it, and why do you consider it to be reliable?
A typical Nomad non-point. The statement was made on another thread that "all sources agree." No mention was made of relative or absolute reliability, just the blanket statement. Obviously, all sources do not agree, some sources don't mention the story, others give differing details, etc. As Metacrock rightly points out, those sources that mention the passion story seem to stick to the same general story, with a few exceptions. However, not all mention it, and that was my point. Originally. I don't consider any "reliable" in the sense that they reflect actual events. In any case, widespread agreement among sources means nothing. In China the invention of paper is attributed to an historical figure, Cai Lun, immortalized as the God of Paper. All sources agree he invented it, including court histories of his time. His biography in the standard history of the Han goes into some detail about it, as well as in a work written by contemporary historians over the period from +25 to +189, Cai died in 121. All provide information on the kinds of raw materials and processes he used. It's quite detailed. However, we know from both archaeology and documentary evidence that paper predates him by at least 250 years! Michael |
05-30-2001, 09:08 AM | #46 | |||
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In the Second Treatise of the Great Seth, Jesus says someone else died on the cross. And remember the one that says he was buried in the sand? There are differences even within the story. Meta =>That's still an associatation with the cross. What one about sand? That's probably very late, quote it, tell me what text it is? Quote:
We see some drift away from it with the Gnostics, but it's very late, 4th century and even then most of the still associate the cross with Jesus. |
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05-30-2001, 09:19 AM | #47 | ||||
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The point is not agreement, try putting on the thinking cap and ponder the issue. The piont is that there are no alternate versions. I bet you can't say that about Chinese mythology. All myths around the world have some alternate versions. You also never dealt with the issue of the nature of mythology in the first place. Quote:
Meta => I can spout rhemes more about Marx. I know tons about Marxism. I know the names of obscure communist maryters who died in the 1905 dress rehersal. I know the names of brigade commanders in the spanish civil war. |
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06-03-2001, 01:22 AM | #48 | |
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07-20-2001, 09:49 AM | #49 | |
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*laugh* I was responding to Layman. I have no interest as to whether there was such a person at that time. Need you ask me such a question? Single me out when I've never once denied there was a real person named Jesus Christ? Maybe there was, maybe there wasn't. I just don't find it that important. |
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07-20-2001, 09:53 AM | #50 | |
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