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01-01-2001, 06:31 AM | #11 |
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penatis: Were all the saints buried close to where criminals were executed? Where did they go after they were seen in Jerusalem? Who knows? Matthew never tells us. Maybe they went bowling. (I am beginning to understand why no one takes Nomad seriously. Apparently, he does not take himself or his ideas seriously.) I believe the reason “Matthew” never mentions where the saints went is because he was unconcerned with logic. The reality is, there were no resurrected saints. He merely embellished “Mark” for theological reasons. quote: penatis: If it was physically possible for corpses to come back to life back then, why don’t they come back to life, at least on occasion, now? Ummm... huh? Is this an argument of some sort? It is a serious question asked of someone who pretends to believe in the impossible. Please notice that Nomad gives no answer. quote: penatis: There are other problematic facts that relate to the above passage. Not only is the writer anonymous, but the passage itself is not attested to in any extant MS until the fourth century. So? A rational, thinking person would question the reliability of an anonymous writer, especially one whose work dates from hundreds of years after the events he writes about. (Obviously, it is not a concern for someone who has blind faith.) quote: penatis: This is all the more amazing when we consider that literally hundreds of non-Christian MSS can be dated to the first and second century. Check again penatis. There are virtually no surviving original ancient texts from the first century that are not Christian (the Dead Sea Scrolls being a very notable exception). Nomad is incorrect (again!). According to Peter Van Minnen, “We have hundreds of papyrus manuscripts of Greek pagan literary texts from this period [100 to 300 CE] and again hundreds of carefully written papyrus documents that show the same types of handwriting.” (See Dating the Oldest New Testament Manuscripts online.) I decided to confirm, for myself, Van Minnen’s statement. My research was fruitful; I found that there are literally thousands of Greek non-Christian texts that date from 300 BCE to 500CE. I personally read (or read from) scores of translated Greek texts from the first century of our era. Many have the day, month, and year of composition. For example, I read a fairly lengthy contract that can be dated precisely to April 4, 33 CE. If a reader is interested, just go to www.lib.umich.edu/pap/ or www.hum.ku.dk/cni/papcoll/. In fact, most sceptics spend their time telling me that this is because Christians destroyed it all in some kind of grand scroll burning conspiracy. On the other hand, maybe papyrus just doesn't hold up very well unless extraordinary measures are taken to preserve them, and the ancients preferred to copy things rather than keep the originals. That does seem to be the more reasonable and simpler explanation don't you think? There is evidence that early Christians destroyed numerous MSS, but they did not destroy the thousands that are extant in the University of Michigan Papyrus Collection or the Carlsberg Papyrus Collection. quote: penatis: (Ironically, without the non-Christian writings, it would be virtually impossible to determine when the Christian writings were produced. For, the non-Christian MSS are sometimes dated, the Christian ones are not. Just out of curiosity, where do you get these curious beliefs? The reason we know the dates on the Christian documents is the same way we know the dates on most ancient documents. The copiest tells us. Again, I quote Peter Van Minnen: “We have hundreds of papyrus manuscripts of Greek pagan literary texts from this period [100 to 300 CE] and again hundreds of carefully written papyrus documents that show the same types of handwriting. These documents are very important for paleographers because they are often exactly dated. As a rule New Testament manuscripts written on papyrus are not.” quote: penatis: Experts compare the style of writing from dated MSS to those which are not dated and determine, approximately, when the undated MSS were produced.) Not always. Please offer some sources for your beliefs. Very often the copyist made sure to include the date of the text he was copying, and thus we can see how old it was. Carbon dating comes into play sometimes as well. See Dating the Oldest New Testament Manuscripts by Peter Van Minnen. quote: penatis: If the ancient Egyptians (among others) could preserve their original religious literature for several thousands of years (see the Pyramid Texts), [b]You mean the stuff written on stone? According to R. O. Faulkner, “The Pyramid Texts of Ancient Egypt were carved on the walls of the pyramids of King Wenis of the end of the Fifth Dynasty [circa 2500 BCE] and of the rulers of the Sixth Dynasty, and constitute the oldest corpus of Egyptian religious and funerary literature now extant.” (See The Ancient Egyptian Pyramid Texts, PREFACE) quote: penatis: why couldn't the early Christians preserve just one original of any work from the NT? You mean the stuff written on papyrus? Maybe you have a suggestion on how they could have done this? Or even why they should have done this. 1. There are no originals of any book contained in the NT; consequently, there is no way of ever knowing precisely what the anonymous autographs (presuming there were books similar to the ones extant) actually said. 2. The early Christian writers could have carved their religious works on stone or engraved them on metal. These methods were sometimes used by ancient writers. 3. There are millions of people who would be interested in knowing what the earliest Christians originally wrote. quote: penatis: The fact is, every surviving MS is a copy of a copy, etc. All scholars admit that no two copies of any work are identical. So? No one knows what the original writers wrote. Nomad fails to understand the significance of this fact. (Again, if someone, like Nomad, relies on blind faith, history and textual evidence are not important.) |
01-01-2001, 11:08 AM | #12 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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In a nutshell: 1) The Jews had NO CONCEPT of a non-physical resurrection, and still don't to this day. It simply would not have occured to Paul or any other Jew (like the disciples and ALL of the first Christians). 2) EVERYONE that read 1 Corinthians 15 up to 200 years ago KNEW that Paul was talking about a physical as well as spiritual resurrection, and never even imagined that he was talking about a non-physical resurrection. The ONLY reason some people started reading it otherwise 200 years ago is that the Enlightenment created a bias that said physical resurrections were impossible (along with all other miraclulous events). Thus, they used their a priori bias to radically change a well understood reading of the passages in question. This is not scholarship, it is prejudice in action. 3) For Paul to change the story while Peter and the other apostles were still alive would have been IMPOSSIBLE. If he had done so, then Peter, James, John and the other disciples would have identified him as a heretic, and he would have been expelled from the church. 4) If Paul had actually taught a non-physical resurrection, then the Gospels, which were produced by the communities that he help found himself would have reflected this doctrine. Instead, ALL of them attest to an empty tomb (and again, the communities knew what this meant, John believed on the basis of the empty tomb alone, without even needing to see the risen Christ), and three of them go into tremendous detail to show that the risen Jesus was not a ghost or vision, but a real physical person. 4) Since NO ONE has ever offered one shread of evidence that Paul or the early Christian communities believed in anything except a physical resurrection of the dead (i.e. explain why the Athenians laughed Paul out of town for his stories of a risen body, HINT, unlike the Jews, the Greeks had NO CONCEPT of a physical resurrection). In fact, even Carrier himself admits that a proper reading of 1 Corinthians 15 COULD be talking about a physical resurrection, and considering Carrier's agenda, that is enough for me. Quote:
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Mark should end at 16:8, and the books of Barnabas and Hermas were considered to be too late to be reliable at Nicaea. I would think sceptics would treat this as a good thing. Quote:
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Your biases really are showing here penatis. Quote:
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And as for the concern about Matthew being the only one to write about a specific event, Homer was the only one to write about the Trojan War. Did it happen? If all you have is arguments from silence and prior prejudice just admit as much, and we can save a ton of time here. Thanks. Nomad [This message has been edited by Nomad (edited January 02, 2001).] |
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01-01-2001, 08:10 PM | #13 | |||||||||||||||||
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Don't do this again please. Nomad |
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01-01-2001, 08:19 PM | #14 | |||
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01-01-2001, 08:53 PM | #15 | ||||||||||||||||
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(BTW, don't worry yourself over what others think of me hear, since it is not your concern, but mine.) Quote:
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From The NET Bible: No ancient literature has survived in its original form; everything we have is derived from copies of the originals. The NT is no exception. However, in comparison with any other ancient literature, the NT is without a peer—both in terms of the chronological proximity and the surviving number. Several ancient authorities are preserved in only a handful of manuscripts. Not so with the NT. There are approximately 5,500 Greek witnesses, ranging in date from the second century AD into the middle ages. Besides the Greek evidence, there are nearly 30,000 versional copies (e.g., Latin, Coptic, and Syriac), and over 1,000,000 quotations from the NT in the church Fathers. NT textual criticism has always had an embarrassment of riches unparalleled in any other field. No other work of antiquity has so much hard copy papyrus evidence standing behind it. None is even close. Quote:
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If, for example, you want to argue that there are significant changes to the NT documents from original to what we have now, you no doubt have evidence of this. So skip the spelling and translational mistakes and give us something concrete to look at. Quote:
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You have been rude, arrogant, assertive, and almost totally lacking in substantiating evidence for your claims on both the original thread, and now this one. No doubt you don't like my dismissiveness, but quite frankly, I still do not know what your major beef really is here. Is it authorship, translational integrity, age of documents, conspiracy theories, the Resurrection accounts, or what? You strike me as a very confused individual more interested in advancing your agenda than a discussion, and as you can see, I have little patience for such foolishness. Get to your point, and tell me what you want to prove, or ask me some serious questions. Let's tighten things up here, shall we? Nomad [This message has been edited by Nomad (edited January 01, 2001).] |
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01-01-2001, 08:57 PM | #16 | |||
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The Gospels ARE eyewitness accounts, as are the epistles. That is the point. And I am glad that you find it convincing, thank you. Quote:
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On the other hand, if you refuse to believe them when all four agree, then what else would you like to see? Nomad |
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01-01-2001, 09:33 PM | #17 |
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Were the gospels actually written by those who actually witnessed the events with their own eyes? More importantly, the burden of proof is upon you to establish they are not hearsay.
The fact that some gospels omit evidence that should clearly appear (why would Mark omit an earthquake) cast doubt on the factual credibility of them all. I'm no biblical scholar but if I'm going to validate purported eyewitness testimony, I'm going to look for collusion and fabulation. I will detect collusion by noting accounts from various eyewitnesses that agree in too much detail. If two people tell me exactly the same story, I can deduce that they colluded and they are telling me a shared fabrication rather than their separate testimony. I will detect fabulation by the differential presence of highly important general aspects. So, if one witness to a car crash insists that there's an airplane involved, and the another doesn't even mention it, I'm going to consider one of them lying, and neither corroborating the other. I'm not a biblical scholar, so I'm not going to make factual claims about the bible itself. That being said, I can say, if two gospels show almost exactly the same wording, then I would consider that evidence of collusion or borrowing. If one gospel mentions a significant event, such as an earthquake, eclipse or a shitload of corpses walking around, and another mentions nothing about such events, I would find that evidence of fabulation. I'm not trying (at first) to sift the truth out of a limited number of sources, I'm trying to determine the overall confidence I can have. And from the arguments I've seen, I wouldn't accept the gospels as testimony. |
01-01-2001, 10:42 PM | #18 | ||||||
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Mark, for example, can be dated to the early to mid 60's, as can Matthew. This means that John Mark, and Levi/Matthew, both disciples of Jesus were very likely to be the authors, and that other witnesses were still very much alive and offering their first hand accounts to the writers. And as for Luke's reliability, given that he was not a personal witness to the events, again he assures us that he does use witnesses. Clearly we can choose not to believe him, but I would think anyone that was going to question the integrity and honesty of the man would offer some clear evidence that he was a liar rather than simply dismissing him out of hand (again, keeping in mind that his Gospel was written when the witnesses could have been questioned independently, especially by someone with the social stature and power of Theophilus (Luke 1:3, Acts 1:1), the sponsor of the GLuke and Acts. Quote:
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To quote the leading classical philologist (the study of ancient Latin and Greek) Wolfgang Schadewaldt: "As to the substance of the anrratives and sayings, I would say that if, as often in philology, we make a comparison in terms of good tradition, bad tradition, and very good tradition, on this scale of values we would say that the Synoptic Gospels (Mark, Matthew and Luke) are very good tradition." (As quoted in Eyewitness to Jesus, by Matthew D'Ancona and Carsten Peter Thiede, pg. 9. Robin Lane Fox, a well respected atheist and historian drew a similar conclusion with regards to the historicity of the empty tomb (albeit, not of the mass resurrection, nor Jesus actual resurrection which he leaves as an unexplainable puzzle) in his book The Unauthorized Version Quote:
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Nomad |
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01-02-2001, 10:24 AM | #19 |
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Nomad,
I have followed this thread with interest and admire your audacity and outrageous style. At first I thought my cognitive faculties were failing me, but now realise my error. Would I be right in thinking that when you use the terms 'Fact' and 'Evidence' you are in fact talking in tongues? |
01-02-2001, 11:09 AM | #20 | ||||||||
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Remember I'm not an expert historian, but I understand the rules of evidence. Hearsay is not wrong by definition, but it's much weaker than direct testimony.
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Besides, an empty tomb does not a resurrection make. Quote:
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