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Old 11-11-2009, 01:09 PM   #21
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‘...the imposition of such an elaborate myth on some minor figure from Galilee..”
I think Dunn has trapped himself here. There is realistically no chance that Jesus was the lionized figure of the the gospels and then escaped all historical attention of his time. So, the Bultmann solution seems pretty much the only exit out of the dilemma. If it is, then someone has to explain Paul's 'elaborate myth' around the obscure, rejected figure of Q. Dunn has all the learning that he needs to crack this - except he is not an ecstatic himself or dedicated some of his time to be around such people to grasp Paul's paradox of Christ. His immense erudition is wasted on churning out what Paul Tillich called 'empty theism'.

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Old 11-11-2009, 01:25 PM   #22
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I found the following review online - - nothing of note by the reviewer. I just had a chuckle with the reviewer's quote from Crossan - who seemingly wrote, in regard to Robert Price's contribution to the book: "...John did not say, "God so loved the world that God sent us a story.".....

http://bbhchurchconnection.blogspot....-review-3.html
This is one of those things that is never going to help Price, Doherty or anyone else get a fair hearing. The type of rhetoric (or as Earl has called it, "colorful language") Price is employing will only serve to incense those opposed to him, and appeal only to those sympathetic in the first place.

Unsympathetic reviewers of Price fairly consistently remark on his rhetoric, which serves only to inspire in-group backslapping, but convinces no one.

It might be good for a chuckle. But it's bad scholarship.
My chuckle was in regard to Crossan not Price....

I am finding this review - although as Toto termed it - a report rather than a review - rather interesting. Particularly the comments the various contributors have made to the scholarship of the others....Perhaps more of this sort of thing is needed i.e. instead of these scholars writing nicely for the general public - make them publicly expose the errors in each others work! Far more interesting than just giving out their own ideas. In fact a similar thought is made by the reviewer:
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So, I’m back to wondering would the book have been even better if it were only four views and allowed more space for responses.
As to being scholarly - looks like taking little digs at one another is part of the setup:
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And remember how Crossan said Price’s treatment of Josephus was “not acceptable scholarship?” Well, here’s what Dunn says of Crossan, “The selective acceptance of one sequence of texts, and effective dismissal or denigration of others . . . is poor scholarship.” (145)
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Dunn concludes that Crossan leaves us with a Jesus “who is far too nice to be worth crucifying.” (147)
Crossan responses

Open debate is to be applauded - and that Price was invited to the party - good for him - and good for the Jesus myth theory to have achieved a place at the table.
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Old 11-11-2009, 01:30 PM   #23
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Open debate is to be applauded - and that Price was invited to the party - good for him - and good for the Jesus myth theory to have achieved a place at the table.
Well, unless he's changed recently, Price isn't quite a mythicist, just very close. But you're right, I'd misread your post, and it was Crossan taking the shot. Which also isn't terribly scholarly.
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Old 11-11-2009, 01:32 PM   #24
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there is still God who does miracles of all sorts
The historicist error can't be as simple as that can it?

If someone has a god starting point, the five impossible things before breakfast becomes very easy.

They will pare away all or most of the legendary accretions - most do not actually - but because of the default god position they still think a person is required to start it all.
For Chris'socks sake, Clive, I was just trying to be funny !
Is avi the only one here who gets my jokes ?



Dunn is a Christian theologian: I was just applying Mark 10:27 to MJ : 'with men the theory is impossible, but with God all things are possible'. I was saying well, how can he then say the theory has "fatal" flaw ? So what if, by God's miracle, MJ becomes accepted ? He should fall on his knees and pray to God that MJ "is either not true or it does not become generally known", as the wife of the bishop of Oxford suggested that her friends do when she heard of Darwin's theory of man's descent from apes.


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Old 11-11-2009, 01:49 PM   #25
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I see the above Jesi missed the teacher of righteousness - and Solo, I believe the depth of soil of the Christ is much much deeper - back to the main prophets and the Septaguint translators in Alexandria.

The grafting of a Jesus to the root stock Christ was probably started unconsciously by Paul, and then Mark wrote a Greek play in Alexandria.

Made in Egypt?
"Out of Eqypt I called my son.".........perhaps the gospel storyline was trying to provide some mythological linkage or other....:constern01:
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Old 11-11-2009, 02:04 PM   #26
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Dunn concludes that Crossan leaves us with a Jesus “who is far too nice to be worth crucifying.” (147)
It's always going to be a dilemma: either the guy is far too nice to be worth crucifying or there is no point to resurrecting him at all.

Paul actually had a solution to this but it was just too hard and did not sell as well as the miracle fetish : the guy was made look like an impudent imposter or a lunatic, but who knows the mind of God ? Would you believe he was God's own, and I am he as you are he and we are all together ..... ?

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Old 11-11-2009, 03:17 PM   #27
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It's always going to be a dilemma: either the guy is far too nice to be worth crucifying or there is no point to resurrecting him at all.
I don't think it's that simple. Meier nails this one on the head (putting aside the historicity argument for a moment). A Jesus who does not offend authority is not the historical Jesus.

He can be offensive. He just can't be offensive to everyone.

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Old 11-11-2009, 03:31 PM   #28
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It's always going to be a dilemma: either the guy is far too nice to be worth crucifying or there is no point to resurrecting him at all.
I don't think it's that simple. Meier nails this one on the head (putting aside the historicity argument for a moment). A Jesus who does not offend authority is not the historical Jesus.

He can be offensive. He just can't be offensive to everyone.

Regards,
Rick Sumner
So why does Paul not deal with this 'offense' of Jesus? The only objection Paul has to deal with is the fact that this Jesus was crucified.He never deals with any charges brought against Jesus.

And why does Paul insist that the governing authorities hold no terror for the innocent, but are agents of God to punish wrong-doers?
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Old 11-11-2009, 03:41 PM   #29
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It's always going to be a dilemma: either the guy is far too nice to be worth crucifying or there is no point to resurrecting him at all.
I don't think it's that simple. Meier nails this one on the head (putting aside the historicity argument for a moment). A Jesus who does not offend authority is not the historical Jesus.

He can be offensive. He just can't be offensive to everyone.

Regards,
Rick Sumner
You are not getting what I have said. To the Nazarenes, and anti-Paulines like Crossan, Jesus was innocent (a really nice guy) who was murdered. Paul maintained he was offensive...just as he and his ecstatic friends were.

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Old 11-11-2009, 04:45 PM   #30
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‘...the imposition of such an elaborate myth on some minor figure from Galilee..”
I think Dunn has trapped himself here. There is realistically no chance that Jesus was the lionized figure of the the gospels and then escaped all historical attention of his time.
Leaving aside the question of whether you beg the question in your claim that Jesus was "lionized", let alone by the very people you imply should have mentioned (who are they, by the way), you might want to review your claim (which has an air of the appeal to personal incredulity about it) of what is and what is not a "realistic chance" in the light of the absence of any mention in Josephus (a Pharisee) of the "lionized" Hillel or in Dio Cassius' account of the Jewish revolt of 132-135 of the "lionized" Bar Kochba.

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