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05-16-2001, 12:34 AM | #21 |
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I have to stick to my point that if the baptism of Jesus is something you accept as real, when at the same time you accept Jesus is God, you yourself are happy reconciling these two issues. So how can you claim that these two issues combined lead to embarrasment? It is either an embarassment or it is not. If it is one to you, can you please explain which of the two issues is the false one? And if it is not an embarrasment to you, why maintain that it would have been one to the gospel writers?
Moreover, even if we assume that the gospelwriter(s) honestly believed that Jesus was baptised by John, because that was the oral tradition they were writing down, does tha mean that therefore this event must have happened? Don't you know how stories get changed and embellished over time, for a host of reasons? Finally, can you please address the question of whether Jesus the Man could have been without sin? Part of being human is doing (some) of the things called 'sin' by the Christian church. If the gospel writers would have seen Jesus in this light, surely his baptism is not that far-fetched? I could accept that they thought he only became 'righteous' after having been filled with the Holy Spirit, immediately after his baptism by John. Who are you to state categorically that this line of thinking cannot possibly be true? I am not saying that the baptism demonstrates that Jesus is a fictional person - not at all. But to claim that it proves that he is historical is stretching the argument beyond breaking point, because it is inconsistent and simplistic. Had John the Baptist left us some writings, in which he descibes the baptism of Jesus, things would have been different. We don't have that. Admit it and move on, please. fG |
05-16-2001, 01:35 PM | #22 |
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Originally posted by Nomad:
Alright, so the only evidence you are willing to consider is archeological evidence. Fair enough, but we still won't know anything about history Michael. This is a non-argument. I DID NOT say it was the ONLY evidence I'd be willing to consider. I am not going to discuss your bizarre interpretations of plain English. Read the statement starting with "Even if....." again. As for the letters from Cicero re: Caesar's assassination, we have already covered this off. Cicero was known to lie to advance his own cause, so we should not trust him as a source. And as for an archeological find in which an inscription refers to the asssassination, how naive can you get Michael? Octavian/Augustus and Mark Antony won the war against the "assassins" and the Julian family and its successors ruled the empire for over a hundred years. If the inscription was made during this time frame, then obviously it was made with the permission-authorization of one of these two tainted sources. If it was later, then it is based on hearsay evidence that was almost certainly under the control of the Caesars. Face it Michael, using your criteria, we just don't have any means to know anything about history. Thanks for your thoughts however. Nomad What criteria? It's all in your head, Nomad. Michael |
05-16-2001, 01:36 PM | #23 | |
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05-16-2001, 03:36 PM | #24 | |
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05-16-2001, 07:14 PM | #25 | ||||||||
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From a purely historical point of view, there is no question that John the Baptist was a bigger fish in his day than was Jesus. Josephus credits the disasters associated with Herod Antipas with his execution of the holy man. By contrast, even if we took the Testimonium Flavius at face value, Jesus barely rates a mention. Josephus' only apparent interest in Jesus was really because He was related to James the Just (whose unjust execution helped trigger the Jewish Revolt of 66AD). If we were to look for a modern equivilant, think of the amount of attention history has paid to Joe Kennedy Jr. compared to that of his younger brothers John and Robert. On this basis it is little wonder that the evangelists have a big problem on their hands with John. He was a big name in the region, and at least a hero. Trashing him would have been impossible (since many of the followers of Jesus were also followers of JB), but they could hardly make him Jesus' equal. And as for the problem of why Jesus' submission would be a problem for the supposed Messiah, this runs counter to Jewish expectations for the Messiah. No Jew would have expected their Messiah to have been subject to anyone, especially a mere prophet. Quote:
Basically, the evangelists had no reason to make their own lives more difficult, and to make their message harder to sell to their fellow Jews. The only reason to explain why they did this was because it was not possible for them to deny the fact that Jesus was baptized by John. Quote:
As it was, the belief amongst historians is that the evangelists did the best that they could, and minimized John's role, and ascribed words to him that do not appear to be historical, all with the intention of making the baptism of Jesus less embarrassing than it already was. Quote:
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Nomad [This message has been edited by Nomad (edited May 16, 2001).] |
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05-16-2001, 07:22 PM | #26 | |
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05-17-2001, 05:38 AM | #27 |
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Nomad,
If we accept Mark as the first, most 'original' gospel, it appears that Jesus was originally not understood to be God, but at most a messenger of God, ie. some kind of prophet. Nowehere in Mark does it say that Jesus is God, on the contrary, it says: "And Jesus said unto him, Why callest thou me good? [there is] none good but one, [that is], God." The implication is clear. (By the way, talking about an embarrassing statement!- does this also 'prove' that Jesus existed? Or does it just prove that your concept of Jesus is quite a bit different from Mark's?) Within this context it is quite possible to come up with one prophet, John, baptising the next one, Jesus. If Jesus is a fictional character, describing an interaction between him and John, a historical person, would lend strength to the claim that Jesus was historical as well - if this was Mark's purpose, he seems to have done a good job! You are looking at this thing far too much with 20/20 hindsight, looking at the bible as one single monolithic entity. Is Mark actually claiming that Jesus is the Messiah? Or is this again an later expansion, a further development of the person he presents? Once particular elements are part of the story it may be difficult to delete them, which is why we still have the baptism story in the later gospels, when Jesus has grown into much more than Mark may ever have intended. The embarassment may stem from the change in Jesus' role, rather than from an a priori contradiction. You see, there are so many ways of interpreting why the baptism story is in there, that it hardly counts as decisive evidence. You call my suggestion that Jesus only became 'righteous' after his baptism 'heresy'. Apart from the fact that this is a funny word to use in a supposedly historical discussion, it is again based on your a priori assumption that the various elements of the bible form one consistent entity, because they are true and the word of God. This, in case you forgot, is under discussion, so it cannot be used as an argument. For if Jesus never existed, all biblical traditions about him are necessarily fictional, and any basis for why they should form one consistent entity is lost. So, what is your historical evidence that Mark didn't think of 'his' Jesus as a man, who at some point in his life became filled with the Holy Spirit and from then on acted as a messenger from God to mankind? fG |
05-17-2001, 09:50 AM | #28 | ||||||
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Remember, if Matt, Mark, Luke and John were making Jesus out of whole cloth, then they would have been much more careful to make sure that the story did not have any elements that were embarrassing, or undermined the claim that Jesus was the Messiah. Nomad |
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05-17-2001, 10:44 AM | #29 |
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Why is it embarassing to have the Messiah baptized by another? I can see the logical problem if Jesus is God and born without sin, because then then there is no reason to baptize to remove the sin. But the Jewish Messiah is conceived by Jews as a person with a political mission, not a god or a part of god. The Messiah (translated as the Anointed One, which translates into Greek as the Christ) has to be anointed by someone.
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05-17-2001, 12:37 PM | #30 |
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[QUOTE]Originally posted by Nomad:
Remember, if Matt, Mark, Luke and John were making Jesus out of whole cloth, then they would have been much more careful to make sure that the story did not have any elements that were embarrassing, or undermined the claim that Jesus was the Messiah. Not necessarily. First of all, you misunderstand (I think deliberately so) "myth." Something like Asimov's _The Foundation Trilogy_ is made up out of whole cloth. I don't think any of us who take the position that the NT is largely myth takes the position that Mark sat down one day and dreamed it all up. Rather, "Mark" had an existing corpus of myth that he reworked using his imagination and background, as did all the gospel writers. That is why "myth" differs from "fabrication." Fabrication has an element of deliberate artifice that "myth" does not. Myth is an organic outgrowth of complex sociological and cultural elements. Myth has no one author, and there is no one story. Myths that convey legitimacy on mythologized figures by linking them to other mythic (i do not mean "fictional") figures are not exactly uncommon (look at all the Kings who descended from the gods). In fact, the messiah tradition of the hebrews itself does this, by demanding that the messiah be of the line of David! A "mythic" explanation of JtB's baptism of Jesus is all-too-easy to come by -- Mark would have had to explain how, if Jesus was really the Messiah, why a really major figure like JtB didn't recognize him somehow. You can imagine what the skeptics would be saying if JtB hadn't baptized Jesus: "Hey! Explain why the prominent rebel John the Baptist never ran into Jesus, even though they were preaching at the same time in the same place!" The existence of a multitude of highly plausible alternatives shows why the embarrassment criterion is only an "embarrassment" to its wielders. Further, where in the OT does it say that the Messiah will not baptized? Nomad, we do not know what would be acceptable to first-century jews who had strong folk traditions of magic, prophecy, exorcism, and healing, as well as nursing a messianic savior cult and a deadly grudge against their colonial overlords. Further, we do not know what would be acceptable to Mark's audience (Mark was writing for someone), and we do not know what was acceptable for Mark. We can't just make sweeping statements "jews wouldn't do X" when in fact there might be jews who would do X from time to time, and others who would make a habit of it. People just don't fit into neat categories. Another issue is that indeed some people were recognized as messiah from time to time. Simon Bar-Cochba, the rebel who got the jews annihilated in 135, was proclaimed messiah by the famous Rabbi Akiba, so, yes, it would appear that the messiah needed to be recognized and proclaimed by lesser mortals. Of course, the Jews did not accept Jesus as a Messiah, the Christians did. Messianism continued, going through revivals as Jewish fortunes waxed and waned. The Christian position is that the Jewish messiah came but the Jews somehow missed it. The Jews in fact rejected Jesus, by and large. So to explain Jesus in terms of what first-century Jews would or would not do about their messiah is problematic. We only know what first-century Christians did, and they accepted a tradition that JtB had baptized Jesus and incorporated it into their burgeoning Jesus mythos. We know that first-century Christians did other un-jewish things, like set aside dietary laws, make circumcision optional, make no distinction between jews and outsiders under god, recognize someone as messiah who did not come from the Davidic line, usher in an era of world peace and hold the kingship over the jewish state, and so on. Obviously the Christians did not consider themselves strictly bound by the jewish scriptures, customs and beliefs. In sum, many plausible stories could be constructed, and there is not enough evidence to conclude that such an event did or did not actually occur. Michael [This message has been edited by turtonm (edited May 17, 2001).] |
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