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04-13-2011, 12:05 PM | #21 |
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Let me note that this question is not related to mythicism. If Jesus existed, and early Christians thought that the Holy Spirit descended upon him rather than that he was born as the son of God, then the baptism is just not embarrassing.
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04-13-2011, 12:06 PM | #22 | |
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04-13-2011, 12:11 PM | #23 | ||
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04-13-2011, 12:12 PM | #24 |
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Toto:
It would not be embarrassing to someone who thought that prior to the decent of the Holy Spirit Jesus was just an ordinary man, as sinful as anyone else, and in need of John's baptism. Can you document the existence of such people. As Abe has pointed out the baptism appears to have been progressively more embarrassing through Matthew and Luke and finally to John where it is omitted altogether. According to standard dating this would be over a period of about 35 years. Steve |
04-13-2011, 12:12 PM | #25 | |
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There is always a hope that there will be more evidence discovered from the first century that would validate one theory or another about the origins of Christianity. But so far, we only have various forgeries. |
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04-13-2011, 12:30 PM | #26 | |
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There were many varieties of adoptionism, some of which held that Jesus was the son of a virgin. The Ebionites believed that Jesus was chosen for his sinless character, but I do not see that this would preclude baptism by John, which was probably analogous to the ritual mikvah of the Jews. I do not expect Christian doctrine to be strictly logical. The writer of Mark and the early adoptionists did not appear to be embarrassed by the baptism, and this is what counts. |
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04-13-2011, 12:32 PM | #27 | |
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04-13-2011, 12:36 PM | #28 | ||
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04-13-2011, 01:13 PM | #29 | |
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ALL we NEED is the CREDIBLE historical source of antiquity that can SHOW OR mention Jesus did actually EXIST and was ACTUALLY baptized. You have ALREADY admitted that we CAN'T TRUST the NT GOSPELS so just GO find an historical source of antiquity that we can TRUST. We ALREADY KNOW that people think it is plausible Jesus may have existed and was baptized but we CAN'T find a single CREDIBLE SOURCE of antiquity for the baptism of Jesus, the child of the Ghost. |
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04-13-2011, 01:42 PM | #30 |
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Relating to the point about "predictive power" or "explanatory power," I found a blurb on TalkOrigins.org that appropriately expresses why "predictive power" can be applied to reinforcing explanations for past evidence. It is on the Index to Creationist Claims, Claim CA210: "A true science must make predictions. Evolution only describes what happened in the past, so it is not predictive." One of the counterpoints is:
2. The predictive power of science comes from being able to say things we would not have been able to say otherwise. These predictions do not have to be about things happening in the future. They can be "retrodictions" about things from the past that we have not found yet. Evolution allows innumerable predictions of this sort."Retrodictions" seems like a more appropriate word. There is actually a Wikipedia page on Retrodiction. Retrodiction ... is the act of making a "prediction" about the past. This is especially useful when one wishes to test a theory whose actual predictions are too long-term to be of immediate use. One speculates about uncertain events in the more distant past so that the theory would have predicted a known event in the less distant past. This is useful in, for example, the fields of archaeology, climatology, evolutionary biology, financial analysis, forensic science, and cosmology.Toto, my request remains open for you to explain why you would accept fossils discovered before Darwin's theory as lending greater weight to Darwinism, if not by "predictive power." |
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