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07-20-2010, 08:07 AM | #11 | |
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And Who Isn't Apocalyptic?
Hi Huon and Apostate,
Also, many Greeks, Romans, Egyptians and Jews, in fact, most ancient peoples were/are apocalyptic. For example, Hesiod says, Quote:
As far as Jesus' false prediction, this just indicates that the original text did not have an historical situation assigned to it. When the Jesus character was historicized, somebody must have realized that the text now contained a false prediction. That is why they added Jesus saying, (Matthew 41:36) " But concerning that day and that hour, no man knows, not the angels of the skies, but the Father alone." Thus Jesus repudiates his own prediction, a little anti-climatic and absurd if we think of the text coming from an historical Jesus. Imagine a man carrying a "sign saying the world will end in 2012." You go up to the man and ask, "Will the world really end in 2012?" He answers, "Who knows, it may or it may not. Only God knows." Wouldn't such a man be perfectly absurd? Can we really argue that Jesus must be real because the character is so absurd, he could not be fictional? Warmly, Philosopher Jay |
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07-20-2010, 08:07 AM | #12 |
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ABE
Paul wrote of Cephas (Peter), James and John as “reputed pillars” (Galatians 2:9), who are the same three disciples who were core disciples of Jesus according to the gospels (Mark 5:37 and Matthew 17:1). CARR Abe makes more mistakes. This James was not a disciple. Paul never claims Jesus had disciples. God appointed apostles. Not Jesus. Sorry, we should look at the whole of the case, which somehow means you can't look at any of the pieces. |
07-20-2010, 08:14 AM | #13 |
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I explain each of those things as myths that developed after the death of Jesus. For example, the resurrection myth was attested by the delusional wishful thinking of a few women, and the apostle Peter upheld it and turned it into a messianic expectation. The elements that I focused on are more difficult (not impossible) to explain as mere myths.
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07-20-2010, 08:23 AM | #14 | ||
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EDIT: Shoot, I was aware of that bad habit even when I was typing the title to this thread, but I decided to stick with the bad habit for the sake of brevity. |
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07-20-2010, 08:42 AM | #15 | |
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Who wrote these gospels? When did they write them? Who are they writing to? Why did they write them? The answer to these questions are critical to your assessment - because they establish whether we can trust them to contain any meaningful historical data. I like how you repeatedly bring Josephus into this equation, yet never address why Josephus would call someone the brother of someone called the messiah. The only two times that Josephus' entire corpus writes "christ" are the two times that are talking about the Jesus of Christianity. Because of that, this passage is just as suspect as the Testimonium - even moreso because its language depends on the earlier presence of the TF. You need to first establish that you are working with slam-dunk data before going about your slam-dunk summary. As it stands now, your data is not slam-dunk, so your summary falls flat. |
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07-20-2010, 09:15 AM | #16 | ||
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"I like how you repeatedly bring Josephus into this equation, yet never address why Josephus would call someone the brother of someone called the messiah. The only two times that Josephus' entire corpus writes 'christ' are the two times that are talking about the Jesus of Christianity. Because of that, this passage is just as suspect as the Testimonium - even moreso because its language depends on the earlier presence of the TF." The presence of the earlier Testimonium Flavianum, as I explained, is made probable by the writing of Origen. At the least, the original TF stated that Jesus was NOT the Christ. The last time we talked about Josephus using the word, "Christ," I quoted a third passage in the writing of Josephus where the word "Christ" is used and does not refer to Jesus. You apparently missed it, because I got no reply from you. That is OK--I'll just cite and quote that passage again. I have a large text file containing all of the writings of Josephus, so it is easy for me to do a word search. If you like, I can send that text file to you--just give me your email over pm. An Extract Out Of Josephus's Discourse To The Greeks Concerning Hades, 6. |
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07-20-2010, 09:36 AM | #17 | |||||
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This might be true, but we have to determine what it's valid for. The gospel narratives are good data for analyzing what the writers were thinking, but bad data for history about WWII.
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Again, all of these assumptions are about the nature of the writer(s) of the gospels, not the historical Jesus. So your conclusions in your OP should be even more tentative. At the most, you can say what the gospel authors believed. But is what they believe in grounded in history? That is the case you have to make. Quote:
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So for one, Origen is mistaken in his recollection of Josephus, and two you still have Josephus writing the word "christ" which is still unlike him. Quote:
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07-20-2010, 09:38 AM | #18 | ||
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Josephus's_Discourse_to_the_Greeks_concerning_Hade s
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07-20-2010, 09:47 AM | #19 | |
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Your key point seems to be that we can trust the NT texts to provide reliable historical information. This is in fact the traditional position, though I realize you do allow for mistakes, interpolations, theological refinements etc. I'll just say that, if the NT writers were consciously emulating the OT then the presence of pseudepigraphy, historical distortions and outright mythmaking must be part of the mix. I don't think there are many scholars left who read the Hebrew scriptures as literal history. Similarly the NT can't be read that way either imo. |
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07-20-2010, 10:02 AM | #20 | ||
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