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|  12-17-2006, 01:12 PM | #21 | |
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|  12-17-2006, 01:29 PM | #22 | |||
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 Look at the context, and you'll see that I was trying to lay out the argument for interpolation and its implications: Quote: 
 Kevin Rosero | |||
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|  12-17-2006, 01:40 PM | #23 | 
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			rlogan, though it was not obvious to me in those threads where you did not reply to several questions I asked of you, it is obvious now that you've replied to me for the first time and I can get a good look at your manner of replying: you are too quick to see "obvious hypocrisy" and disengenuous arguments without even trying to examine where a misunderstanding might lie; and it now obvious to me that you're a lot farther off from even understanding the HJ position (much less refuting it) than I formerly gave you credit for.  It is indescribably wearying to argue with a person so determined to see opposing arguments as dishonest, and I see no further point in it. I only hope someday that this forum sees less of this attitude toward HJ positions and more openness to dialogue. That will only make it a better forum and can only bring us closer to understanding any question, including the historicity of Jesus. Kevin Rosero | 
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|  12-17-2006, 01:52 PM | #24 | 
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			I've got some questions myself.  What if the "Jewish Revolt" was really a Christian revolt?  Could Josephus have conspired with his "silent" contemporaries--the tacit Tacitus and the tranquil Suetonius Tranquillus--to save the Christians from future persecutions?  Could the unnamed man that Josephus claimed to have saved from crucifixion (Life of Josephus para. 75) have been an allusion to the Christians?  Could Joseph of Arimathea have been an allegoric representation of Josephus and the "empty tomb" a metaphor for Josephus' history?  Could this be the reason that Christ is portrayed in the Gospels as attempting to hide his identity?
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|  12-17-2006, 02:01 PM | #25 | |
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 In the meantime, I am not interested in relentless unsubstantiated hypotheticals with one aim in mind - apologia for a Historical Jesus. | |
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|  12-17-2006, 02:13 PM | #26 | |||||
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 Maybe all of Josephus is a clever attestation to Jesus, if we just look at it correctly... Quote: 
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 Good old anonymous Jesus... | |||||
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|  12-17-2006, 02:33 PM | #27 | |
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 spin | |
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|  12-17-2006, 05:47 PM | #28 | |
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 1. Minor contradictions between Roman historians are rather frequent. Tacitus himself says that Cumanus and FeliX were procurators at the same time, the former in Samaria whilst the latter in Galilea, while Josephus says that Cumanus was first and Felix, his successor, later on, both ruling a unified Judea. 2. That’s a problem in whatever witch-hunting. 3. This is not what Tacitus says, but a personal interpretation by spin. Tacitus says that the government of Judea, after the kings, was entrusted by Claudius to knights and freedmen, yet the word “procurator” is lacking. 4. Questions about rhetorical eloquence assumed in an author, and allegedly missing in a paragraph, are the weakest type of internal evidence of interpolation. Proof that spin’s position is far from “mainstream” even among those that either deny or seriously doubt Jesus’ historicity, is the fact that many of them accept the authenticity of the paragraph, while question Tacitus’ sources. Actually, Tacitus’ mentioning the word “procurator” is proof of authenticity, for - why would a Christian scribe include that word in his forgery, provided that no mention of the word occurs in the Latin gospels? Mark and Luke call him simply Pilatus, while Matthew says he was a “praeses,” and John suggests he was a praetor since he calls the governor’s hall “praetorium.” Such a scribe would more naturally interpolated either the word “praeses” or “praetor,” but “procurator” makes no sense at all. | |
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