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Old 03-23-2012, 08:50 PM   #41
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Originally Posted by outhouse View Post
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WE DONT KNOW.

isnt that the truth

I agree.


But there is a amount know with certainty to historical jesus and only a few small sentances covers it..
Without ancient historical evidence one word covers such certainty: faith.
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Old 03-23-2012, 09:15 PM   #42
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Originally Posted by Bernard Muller View Post
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5) ??? CE: The Letters of "John"

Many there were who would "refuse to confess that Jesus appeared in the flesh"

b) Does anyone feel strongly that any of the above 5 sources should be scrubbed off this list? If so, please present your reasons
RSV 1Jn4:2 "By this you know the Spirit of God: every spirit which confesses that Jesus Christ has come in the flesh is of God,"
It is undeniable the emphasized words are against 2nd century Gnostics/Docetists. However, looking at the next verse (4:3) with its negative version of most of the preceding one, and the words in italics (compare them with the ones in 4:2), it appears "that ... Christ has come in the flesh" is likely a later interpolation.
4:3a RSV "and every spirit which does not confess Jesus is not of God. This is the spirit of antichrist ..."
Of course, Jesus is also Christ & Son, because earlier, he has already been adamantly declared as such:
1Jn2:22 "Who is a liar but he who denies that Jesus is the Christ? He is antichrist who denies the Father and the Son."
Therefore, not confessing Jesus is also denying Jesus as Christ & Son.
Thanks for quoting the RSV instead of the KJV.
People here appear fond of citing the RSV.
How does this version appear at Blue letter bible?

Here is the translation according to the NIV:

Quote:
Originally Posted by NIV 2Jo 1:7

Many deceivers, who do not acknowledge Jesus Christ as coming in the flesh, have gone out into the world. Any such person is the deceiver and the antichrist.
The question is whether these people, so decribed as deceivers, would have believed that Jesus existed, or whether these people would have believed that he did not exist.
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Old 03-23-2012, 10:03 PM   #43
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Originally Posted by Sheshbazzar View Post
The problem with this line of discussion is that 'modern' logic does not interface with the natural credulity of primitive belief systems.
And yet our modern logic has its precedent articulation by the ancients as far back as Plato and Aristotle. While I totally agree that of the "common people", who were uneducated, could not read or write, and who were subject to mass manipulation by the more educated, and wealthy and influential class of citizens, many possessed primitive belief systems.

This is summarised in Seneca:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Seneca

"Religion is regarded by the common people as true, by the wise as false, and by the rulers as useful.".

Quote:
People in the 1st century, and right through medieval times were extremely credulous with respect to the existence of the supernatural, and most firmly believed in the existence of a Deity or deities, and in the attendant angels, demons, ghosts, spirits and a large variety of other phantazmagorical creatures.
It would not have even entered into their minds that the 'Nephilim', 'Satan', the 'Cherubim', 'Seraphim' etc. did not indeed exist or that they were mythical, much less any figure that might have been said to have done this or that amazing feat in their naive versions of a hear-tell 'history'.

A common trick to get people to 'see' these various apparitions was simply point at the sky and shout 'Look! hundreds of angels!' or 'There appears a great dragon in the clouds of heaven! And a sure enough out of any crowd of the credulous there would be those that also 'saw' and witnessed the same phenomenon, with the usual set-up being an implication that if you did not also see what these others claimed that they 'saw' you were not as spiritually righteous as they were. So there was considerable group pressure to conform and to confirm whatever it might be that others claimed they saw. And the tighter knit the group identity the more pronounced the tendency to conform.
This was the hysteria of witnessing 'spectral evidence' that powered the infamous Salem Witch Trials, but it had been around since the dawn of human civilization. This type of cult manipulation is still the stock and trade of backwoods Pentecostalism.

Because of this common primitive credulity we are not likely to ever find any early source that would even think to argue for the non-existence of a real Jeebus, but then neither will you find these early sources arguing for the non-existence of Satan, demons, the Sepharim, the Phoenix, Atlantis, or even a real King Arthur.

You are describing the "common people" above, and as such all that you say I can see to be quite reasonable.

Quote:
This way of critical thinking, demanding the provision of verifiable evidence for miraculous claims, simply was not that prevalent or considered as being vital in the ancient world, or even today within more primitive societies.
However, when Constantine made the following statement at the Council of Antioch, he was not addressing the common people alone ....

Quote:
Originally Posted by Bullneck at Antioch c.324/325 CE

"Our people have compared the chronologies with great accuracy,
and the 'age' of the Sibyl's verses excludes the view
that they are a post-christian fake."

According to Robon Lane Fox, Constantine was alive to the arguments of the skeptics. Here he is providing counter evidence to convince them that the Sybil who predicted the coming of Jesus in the epoch of deep BCE, could not have been a fake.

UNBELIEF and the Nicaean pronouncement that "Religious privileges are reserved for Christians

This law was not enacted for the common people alone but also for all the people of the empire, including the educated "Guardian Class" (to use the term used by Plato).

While I agree we would get no statements of UNBELIEF from the common people (by defn?; for a start they could not write, but there may have been exceptions) my expectation is that such statements would have been forthcoming from the educated class of Alexandrians c.324/325 CE in opposition to the floating of Jeebus.

In the generations of the early centuries, there would have been many well educated people, one's would could ask skeptical questions, and who would employ astute logic quite comparable to the modern world. For example, we need only read some of Marcus Aurelius's "Meditations" to see how the human mind of antiquity could express itself.

Quote:


"If you are distressed over some external thing,
it is not that thing that has distressed you,
but your own estimation of it;
And THAT you have the power to change in any instant."


~ Marcus Aurelius, Meditations
He may have been paraphrasing the Buddhist literature. Having said all this I must return to the military, social, religious and economic boundary event known as Nicaea.

Imagine you are a pagan and one of the relatively small educated class and you became aware of the new Emperor's religious pronouncement that your pagan religion has lost all its --- shall we say ---- "privileges". The temples were CLOSED. It was an era of PROHIBITION.

Many well educated and intellegent people immediately became extremely interested in the notion of what it was like to be Christian. It was a matter of survival. Many rich people had sudden dreams, and converted. Entire cities wrote petitions of alliegance to the incoming new Boss. They rapidly understood that it had to do with comprehending the contents of the Constantine Bible, so they eventually were able to read through it, to see for themselves the story of the Jeebus, which Constantine declared to be true.


Arius of Alexandria was a logician, and if you were read the Philip of Side fragmnent about Nicaea, you would find a situation where Nicaea saw a great confrontation between the philosophers and the so-called christian clergy. The philosophers are described as supporting the opinion of Arius. We are not dealing with the common people, but the educated classes here at Nicaea.

I reject the "Christian version" of Nicaea as twisted. A magic wand of 5th century ink has downplayed the savagery of the acceptance of the historical Jeebus.

My argument is that I quite expect that people of this Nicaean generation, and those following for some time, are those from whom we might find statements to the effect that they did not believe that the 300 year old Jeebus actually existed.

Arius, Nag Hammadi compilers, Julian and Nestorius have been listed as possible sources for such a statement. That's where I am up to atm Shesh.


What I suspect happened was that at this time the greatest UNBELIEF was related to the historical existence of a purportedly 300 year old Jeebus, but the unbelievers were eventually exterminated, and the record of their unbelief expunged (as best as possible) from the historical record.

It is called "damnatio memoriae" and it was applied to the books, writings, name and political memory of Arius of Alexandria. The Jeebus Church could not tolerate unbelief, and they won. The question is whether they managed to search our and destroy all the evidence of UNBELIEF.

Stuff is preserved against the odds. I have listed 5 possible sources. Those who understand the concept of positive and negative evidence should be very interested in these 5 possible sources.

I have been praying to Huey the Surf god. I have asked for a miracle, namely that the earlier history books of Ammianus, the first 13 are presumed "lost", are suddenly and unexpected found in a manuscript discovery somewhere, somewhen soon.

IMHO the information for example disclosed in Bullneck's obituary written by Ammianus will be like a boundary event of its own.





This question involves studying the UNBELIEF of the HJ in antiquity.

If we were to graph this unbelief, whether or not christians frolicked in the pre-Nicaean 300 years, we would expect to find a massive peak of unbelief in the HJ at that time the HJeebus got floated as the new and strange Roman god. A turbulent Arian controversy then persisted for centuries and centuries. At the heart of his massive socio-religious tornado of controversy was unbelief --- I think in the historical Jeebus.
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Old 03-23-2012, 10:28 PM   #44
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Default Unbelief in the historical Nicaean jesus

The idea that Jesus did not exist at Nicaea may have been called UNBELIEF.

The majesty of the Roman Emperor and "Pontifex Maximus" was being questioned.
Good god "chrestos" - what was the world coming to? A groaning of Arianism?

Anyone who espoused such an unbelief was a blasphemous heretic.


Here are two separate sources for "Unbelief in the Nicaean HJ" ...



(1) Constantine on the UNBELIEF of that evil "Porphyrian", Arius of Alexandria and his followers ....

Quote:
Originally Posted by Letter of Constantine to Arius

(2.) Therefore he introduces a belief of unbelief
new and never yet at any time seen since men have been born.
Wherefore truly that does not seem at variance from the truth,
which long ago was described distinctly by the divine saying:
“They are trusty for evil.”



Discard then discard this silly transgression of the law,
you witty and sweet-voiced fellow, singing evil songs
for the unbelief of senseless persons."


(2) Eusebius on the UNBELIEF of the Arius of Alexandria and the Arian "heretics" ...


Quote:
Originally Posted by Big E

"the sacred matters of inspired teaching
were exposed to the most shameful ridicule
in the very theaters of the unbelievers."


How Controversies originated at Alexandria through Matters relating to Arius
Eusebius, "Life of Constantine", Ch. LXI
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Old 03-24-2012, 12:38 AM   #45
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Originally Posted by LegionOnomaMoi
The question concerns whether or not the notion that Jesus did not exist is a modern one or not. If the ancient sources all thought he was akin to Herakles or Zeus, but that he did exist, then the answer would still be "we have no ancient sources arguing that Jesus did not exist." We have sources claiming he only appeared human, we have sources claiming he was human but attributing supernatural powers to him, and we even have sources like Celsus, who argues that he was nobody special, just the illegitimate son of a roman soldier.
The question about sources is not restricted to extant sources, even though Ehrman so qualifies his statement. Neither it is necessarily qualified by sources in the 1st and 2nd century, otherwise one already presumes the existence of Jesus as given in the undated new and strange testament.


The following from the blog on Ehrman's book, The unseen, as mentioned by Steven Carr in this post


Quote:
Originally Posted by Ophelia Benson

Here’s the problem. Note that “Otherwise it is impossible to explain all the written sources that emerged in the middle and end of the first century.” Because he says “all” he must mean the ones that don’t actually exist as well as the ones that do – but if that’s what he means, he’s arguing in a circle.

He does the same thing with “themselves based on earlier written accounts.” He twice cites “written sources/accounts” that don’t actually physically exist but are inferred via ones that do, as if they were physical evidence.

That’s terribly circular. It may be that the sources did exist; it seems quite plausible that they did; but he doesn’t know that they did. It’s circular to rely on them as conclusive.
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Old 03-24-2012, 09:20 AM   #46
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by outhouse View Post


isnt that the truth

I agree.


But there is a amount know with certainty to historical jesus and only a few small sentances covers it..
Without ancient historical evidence one word covers such certainty: faith.
whats worse is the myth plattform is more faith, then HJ
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Old 03-24-2012, 09:25 AM   #47
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
The idea that Jesus did not exist at Nicaea may have been called UNBELIEF.

The majesty of the Roman Emperor and "Pontifex Maximus" was being questioned.
Good god "chrestos" - what was the world coming to? A groaning of Arianism?

Anyone who espoused such an unbelief was a blasphemous heretic.


Here are two separate sources for "Unbelief in the Nicaean HJ" ...



(1) Constantine on the UNBELIEF of that evil "Porphyrian", Arius of Alexandria and his followers ....

Quote:
Originally Posted by Letter of Constantine to Arius

(2.) Therefore he introduces a belief of unbelief
new and never yet at any time seen since men have been born.
Wherefore truly that does not seem at variance from the truth,
which long ago was described distinctly by the divine saying:
“They are trusty for evil.”



Discard then discard this silly transgression of the law,
you witty and sweet-voiced fellow, singing evil songs
for the unbelief of senseless persons."


(2) Eusebius on the UNBELIEF of the Arius of Alexandria and the Arian "heretics" ...


Quote:
Originally Posted by Big E

"the sacred matters of inspired teaching
were exposed to the most shameful ridicule
in the very theaters of the unbelievers."


How Controversies originated at Alexandria through Matters relating to Arius
Eusebius, "Life of Constantine", Ch. LXI


Are you missing the point to Nicea????


no one doubted HJ at all.

they only debated the divinity of BJ, it was just a matter of definition.






There were many people back then who didnt believe in the religion as it was a small sect growing rapidly. But that says nothing of the belief in a HJ or a study to determine that a teacher actually lived.

They did no scholarship on he subject back then, and this is your OP is it not?
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Old 03-24-2012, 09:42 AM   #48
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Originally Posted by outhouse View Post
...whats worse is the myth plattform is more faith, then HJ
Have you forgotten that you claim that you are 55/45 in favor of HJ??? Your own figures suggest that there is not any significant difference between HJ and MJ.

If your tolerance is plus or minus 10% then you may be 55/45 in favor of MJ without even realizing it.

Please state you tolerance immediately so that your position can be properly analysed.

Your 55/45% borders on Agnosticism which means you really DON'T know and have NO idea if Jesus did exist.

And further, the MERE fact that you have introduced a NEW TAX Jesus means you are almost certain that all other HJs are FAKES.
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Old 03-24-2012, 12:59 PM   #49
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Quote:
Originally Posted by outhouse View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
The idea that Jesus did not exist at Nicaea may have been called UNBELIEF.

The majesty of the Roman Emperor and "Pontifex Maximus" was being questioned.
Good god "chrestos" - what was the world coming to? A groaning of Arianism?

Anyone who espoused such an unbelief was a blasphemous heretic.


Here are two separate sources for "Unbelief in the Nicaean HJ" ...



(1) Constantine on the UNBELIEF of that evil "Porphyrian", Arius of Alexandria and his followers ....

Quote:
Originally Posted by Letter of Constantine to Arius

(2.) Therefore he introduces a belief of unbelief
new and never yet at any time seen since men have been born.
Wherefore truly that does not seem at variance from the truth,
which long ago was described distinctly by the divine saying:
“They are trusty for evil.”



Discard then discard this silly transgression of the law,
you witty and sweet-voiced fellow, singing evil songs
for the unbelief of senseless persons."


(2) Eusebius on the UNBELIEF of the Arius of Alexandria and the Arian "heretics" ...


Quote:
Originally Posted by Big E

"the sacred matters of inspired teaching
were exposed to the most shameful ridicule
in the very theaters of the unbelievers."


How Controversies originated at Alexandria through Matters relating to Arius
Eusebius, "Life of Constantine", Ch. LXI


Are you missing the point to Nicea????

What point are you referring to?

The harmonious ascendancy of Constantine's christians?

The total acceptance of the Greek Alexandrians of the Bullneck Bible?

The stronger the beliefs in such things, the stronger the illusion is held in place that Nicaea was just a stroll in the park, and a bishops' tea party to which Constantine invited himself.


Quote:
no one doubted HJ at all.

Ahhh! There we go. That was easy, wasn't it.

Sounds like Bart Ehrman and the Mainstreamers.


The Greek intellectual tradition just took one look at the Bullneck Bible and the Jesus story it contained from 300 years prior, and said to themselves in a very serious voice, we bow down to these historical facts about a 300 year old dead Jew.

The Alexandrian Greeks immediately acknowledged the superiority of Moses over Plato, and left their Plato behind them from that day forth.


BULLSHIT.


Quote:
they only debated the divinity of BJ, it was just a matter of definition.

I take it that you have read about the Supporters of Arius at the Council of Nicaea from the Philip of Side fragment, written over a century after Nicaea.




Quote:
There were many people back then who didnt believe in the religion as it was a small sect growing rapidly. But that says nothing of the belief in a HJ or a study to determine that a teacher actually lived.

Try and deal with the OP which seeks not belief (what you want to see in the evidence) but UNBELIEF (which you and others here do not want to see in the evidence).

I have cited two items of evidence above that appear to demonstrate that Arius of Alexandria and the Arians were characterised not by their belief, but by their very healthy unbelief.


Quote:
They did no scholarship on he subject back then, and this is your OP is it not?

The greatest scholar of that epoch, whose learned books were preserved in Rome and probably had copies in Alexandria, who wrote on such a variety of subjects, including Euclid and Plato and Vegetarianism and Plotinus, was the Platonic philosopher Porphyry.

Constantine ordered his books to be burnt
while the Bible was replicated fifty fold.
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Old 03-24-2012, 01:12 PM   #50
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I take it that you have read about the Supporters of Arius at the Council of Nicaea from the Philip of Side fragment, written over a century after Nicaea.
100 years after [facepalm]


but lets look


Quote:
For truly, the blasphemous heart of the fighter against God, Arius
Arius was a bishop and did not fight against god. They are painting him in a light they personally chose.


he only argued the divinity of HJ, and did not claim him to be of the same substance and power as yahweh



that wholeparagraph you posted falls a part when one who knows what the hell there doing places it into the proper context.

Poor try and your part
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