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05-02-2007, 11:12 AM | #41 | |
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05-02-2007, 11:39 AM | #42 |
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I know of no academic historian of any stripe who argues that Jesus wasn't an historical figure. However, non-Christian historians routinely do find an historical Jesus. So even were we to assume your unfair inference (that Christian academics would necessarily let their beliefs impact their scholarship) it doesn't get you anywhere.
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05-02-2007, 11:42 AM | #43 | |
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Who is / was Schumacher
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I have often seen the claim regarding the disciples but when looking for the basis of that claim find that documentaion is lacking : http://www.allaboutjesuschrist.org/h...ostles-faq.htm for example and Jeffrey, Grant R., "The Signature of God", Frontier Research Publications, Inc. (1996), p.254-257 Our present-day church doctrine is mainly taken from these early writings. But actual scientific evidence that the apostles existed and that the accounts of these 12 happened exactly as it is written in the Bible is much more difficult and is still being debated by some scholars today. There are many books out there on the subject of the apostles but it is difficult to tell where the author got his information.. The history of the apostles does start in the books of the Bible. The genealogies of the original 12 disciples of Jesus were most important to the scholars of the day. We have many other documents that were supposedly written about the same time as the Bible, but were not included in our modern day Bible. Some of these are 'Acts' of Paul, the 'Shepherd of Hermas,' 'Revelation of Peter,' 'Epistle of Barnabas,' 'Teachings of the Apostles,' and 'Revelation of John. Another famous and well read church historian is Schumacher. He researched the lives of the apostles and recounted the history of their martyrdoms. ----------------------------------------------------------- It seems a lot of modern christian writters (IMO - apologists) use that claim but it very well could be nothing more than a legend founded on folk tales ... Interesting that in the bible there is no mention of those deaths yet questionable and even heratical writtings are used to validate the claim ...:huh: Just thought I would add this the Holy Foreskin http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Prepuce |
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05-02-2007, 11:45 AM | #44 | |
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And since I can't drink, you should do so for me, sort of like that transubstantiation thing but in reverse or sideways or something. Basic general rule: Respect. Most important specific rule: Don't be a nuisance! Otherwise, thank me and have a good one. |
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05-02-2007, 11:50 AM | #45 | |
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And they didn't have all the medical knowledge to figure this out, even more impressive. They had to do a lot of experimentation, fortunately they had plenty of lab xians to work with. |
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05-02-2007, 12:27 PM | #46 | |||||
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The more likely scenario would be that they would be killed (if caught) because they were equivalent to terrorists to the Roman occupiers. Quote:
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For example, if such a person were crucified by the Romans, it would most likely be because they were either a murderer or a seditionist; the two most common applications of the use of crucifixion and certainly not because they were found completely innocent of all crimes, but Pilate was afraid he'd have a riot if he didn't do what the crowd of Jews he was there to subjugate was inexplicably threatening him to do during a ritual that never existed. If Jesus existed and were crucified (and I see no reason to doubt either), the most likely reason would be because he was the leader of what the Romans would have considered a "terrorist" organization. Which also explains why he allegedly instructs his disciples that if the shit hits the fan, they should all leave their women and children behind and run like cowards and how they would be "persecuted" for knowing him. Of course they would be; they were seditionists. That's the most likely, reality version of why any "followers" of Jesus might have been hunted down and killed, though, again, as others have pointed out, we have no reliable confirmation that this actually happened. It also would explain, however, why they might have been killed "for their beliefs;" because what they believed in was sedition against their oppressor, so the first question I guess I would ask your teacher is what did a first century Roman think one of Jesus' alleged disciples was? A Jew? Certainly, no questioning that. A Jew who believed that Jesus was God? No evidence in the gospels that I know of confirms this, but even if it were true, why would any Roman kill a Jew who thought another Jew was their God? Try thinking from the only perspective that matters in regard to the "disciples" being hunted down and killed; that from the hunter, the Romans. Would a Roman give one tiny shit about a small group of religious whackjobs who went around "professing their faith" that one of their dead Rabbis was actually their own resurrected God? Do you give a shit about, say, twelve people you've never met or heard of who are right now in, say, Wyoming going around "professing their faith" in Bozo the Clown being their God? The story only means something from the perspective of the cult; not from the perspective of anyone outside that cult and in 35 C.E. those who were supposedly inside the cult of Jesus meant about. let's say, twenty people. Those outside it? Millions. :huh: |
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05-02-2007, 02:14 PM | #47 | |
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05-02-2007, 02:44 PM | #48 | |
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Also, Koresh et al prove that within a few short years of a sect's birth, people can become so convinced by lies (or by a sufficiently charismatic, but otherwise perfectly ordinary, human) that they're willing to die for them. |
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05-02-2007, 02:46 PM | #49 | |
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However - the followers of Sai Baba have, many of them, seen his alleged miracles, the followers of Jones knew Jones, the followers of Manson knew Manson, the early followers of Jo Smith knew Smith, many of the followers of Maharishi knew Maharishi, and were believers in spite of knowing them. And many others. Not all of those who have died for lies personally knew, or could observe, the founder of their cults, and not all of those who follow cults to the point that they would honestly claim that they 'know' the cult is true have died for it. However, if disciples of Jesus did die on the basis of their faith in Jesus, then that is far from unprecedented in the history of cults. That disciples of Jesus died (my working hypothesis is that some of them did) for their beliefs does not make the early church in any way special You might address the whole of my posts, and not cherry pick the odd nit pick which makes no difference to the purport of what I was saying. David B |
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05-02-2007, 02:52 PM | #50 |
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It is not clearly established whether Jesus existed or had disciples; there is no credible evidence that any disciples, if any, were martyred; if they were, we have no idea whether it was for professing their beliefs or not; people often die for false beliefs; people are often mistaken, particularly about religious experiences. Other than that, it's an outstanding argument, on par with most Christian apologetics.
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