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11-05-2012, 12:27 AM | #21 | ||
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Philo had nothing whatsoever to with a Jesus cult or story in the 1st century. Examine Philo's On Embassy to Gaius. Quote:
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11-05-2012, 12:46 AM | #22 |
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Here's a philological quandary for you Stephan:
Somewhere, in the boundless volume of school and university essays written since the beginning of Western Academia, some person, somewhere, must have written the single sentence: "Early Christianity was a religion." That may imply that the author was pretty stupid, but the sentence's content itself is neither stupid nor wrong. And your categorical statement demands that everything that has ever been written about Early Christianity is stupid, including everything that has been written when examined on a sentence by sentence basis. You're also forbidding the possibility that your Marcion of choice wrote anything that wasn't stupid if it was about his own religion, |
11-05-2012, 01:49 AM | #23 |
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Everything that has ever been written about Adam [the guy of the OT!] and Eve being historical persons is stupid.
Everything that has ever been written about Noah and the Flood is stupid. Everything that has ever been written about Moses being a historical man swimming across the Red Sea without getting a gold medal at the Olympic Games is stupid. Everything that has ever been written about Joshua destroying Jericho is not only stupid but horrible. It was a good example for the destruction of the Warsaw Ghetto, among many other destructions. |
11-05-2012, 02:34 AM | #24 | |
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Religions are built on the ‘knowledge’ of what afterlife is and how it relates to the brief transitional phase that began on this earth. Those who claim to have the power to make men and women happy or unhappy in the “kingdom of the dead “are malignant vermin. |
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11-05-2012, 02:42 AM | #25 | |
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http://www.ccel.org/ccel/edwards/sermons.sinners.html |
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11-05-2012, 07:54 AM | #26 | ||
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We don't just live in our heads - we live on terra-firma. And if there is any relevance at all in the gospel JC story - that relevance relates to how we live in our physical environment. I often have thought - on a very basic level - that the gospel JC story, as we have it today, is the in your face response to a purely mystical interpretation of Christianity. However grand the intellectual philosophizing - it's our ordinary needs; food in the stomach, warm shoes on the feet, a bed to rest ones head, a roof to call ones own - that have to be accommodated. We need to think - and we need to eat. No choice at all. And if Christianity has any relevance for how we should live our lives - then it will not be asking us to choice between our mind and our belly. It will not be asking us to choose between our ideas and our physical realities. |
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11-05-2012, 07:59 AM | #27 | |
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A few questions: 1. Do you need to establish that Philo believed that there were two Gods like Marcionites believed, or is this unnecessary? I don't see anything in your Philo quotes that indicates he thought Lord and God were two different beings..Rather two powers within the same being. 2. If Clement is telling secrets about Jesus as having purchased believers from the judicial God to the beneficial God, why be secretive? 3. If that is what Clement was saying, how does this take away from the Christian origins of Jesus, as the long anticipated Messiah who would bring salvation? Why does this in any way change the Messiah from being a human to a non-human? There is still the matter of WHEN and HOW he made this purchase, right? 4. What does it matter if some thought the salvation was from judgement from the judging God and others thought the salvation was from 'sins' or Satan? I don't really see the distinction you are making since the judging God is judging those who were under Satan's rule. Can't one --including a Christian-- see the purchasing of salvation as a purchase both from Satan's ownership as well as God's judgement? Just trying to get a handle on your perspective here. Thanks, Ted |
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11-05-2012, 09:47 AM | #28 | |
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Let's start from the beginning. The 'mythicism' that has been popularized until now relies too heavily on pagan conceptions. Sure there is some evidence of such appropriations but it comes too late to explain the appeal of Christianity. Second of all mythicism tends to undervalue the importance of Judaism. The reason for this is that the Jewish tradition demands an apprenticeship on the part of those wishing to come near. You can't understand the Pentateuch in a scatterbrained manner. It is a system with a clear message. The problem is figuring it out and that demands step by step instruction starting with the ten commandments. The way that things work so far is that you have basically two models for the origins of Christianity: 1. Christianity is dependent on 'Judaism' and 'Judaism' is defined as an expectation in the future advent of the messiah 2. Christianity is a 'lie' developed from pagan myths What I have accomplished over the last twenty years is reached a point where I can offer up Marcionitism, perhaps the earliest organized form of Christianity as actually being a third way which has nothing to do with the artificial contrivances of (1) and (2). Let's start from the beginning (or at least the pathway that I arrived at the truth). Lactantius references those who call Jesus Chrestos rather than Christ and says that they did so because of Aquila's translation of the Bible. He points to Aquila's refusal to translate 'mashiach' as christos. Symmachus does and so does Theodotion but as I noted Aquila and the LXX do not. If the Marcionite refusal to call Jesus 'Christ' derives from the Jewish scriptures. The next stage in the process is to wonder whether their identification of his as Chrestos had a similar root (remember it is not the same thing to argue for Chrestos via the Scriptures as it is the rejection of Christos). The problem is that most scholars live in this artificial world where there is this thing called 'Judaism' that existed forever. Steve Mason notes that the very term 'Judaism' is more associated with the second century than the first (the exceptions are New Testament texts which can be argued to have been written or corrected in the era). The idea that there was this thing called 'Judaism' which expected the future advent of the messiah is a pipe dream. The religion of Moses cannot by its nature be limited in this manner to a ethnic culture. The term shomrim (= Samaritans) is a general term meaning 'keepers' 'guardians' and is used in modern Hebrew speaking Jews in New York to mean 'guards' of a neighborhood. The point is that originally the religion of Moses was non-specific to an ethnos. It was open to everyone who wanted to join. The Samaritans and many other traditions translate all references to ger in the Pentateuch as 'proselyte' so the presence of outsiders was understood to exist from the beginning. What I am arguing here is that the Bar Kochba revolt changed the religion of Moses. Celsus demonstrates that in the middle of the second century a monolithic designation of 'Judaism' (meaning belief the specifically Jewish ethnos's belief in the future advent of the messiah) and 'Christianity' (the specifically Gentile belief that the messiah had already come in the form of Jesus Christ) was established. I think this was by design and judging from the Latin form beneath the term Christianos was set by Imperial policy in the Antonine administration as a reactionary policy related to the Bar Kochba revolt. In effect then after the messiah (bar Kochba) had failed and the kingdom of God was lost the administration of Antoninus Pius only allowed for two positions, two 'orthodoxies' - both of which (a) denied the legitimacy of the recent revolt and (b) the original Christian faith associated with 'Marcion.' The potential implication of this 'killing of two birds with one stone' is that Marcionitism and the Jewish messianic movement associated with bar Kochba were somehow related but I can't prove that. Nevertheless what we do see emerging from this analysis is that the sanctioned forms of religious expression - 'Judaism' and 'Christianity' - are very tightly defined. This is a far cry from what we know to be true up until the bar Kochba revolt. There were dozens of sects. There were sectarian believers in Jesus who were in turn dependent on Jewish sects which by passed the artificial formulation established in the second century with respect to monolithic conceptions of 'Judaism' (the messiah will come) and 'Christianity' (the messiah already came in Jesus). When we read for instance that the Marcionites (a) rejected applying the term Christ to Jesus and (b) offer up the divine title of 'the good god' instead this was a violation of the established order. While there is no specific identification that Roman law forbade people from specifically believing in Jesus Chrestos, Celsus's work makes explicit allusions to 'Christianity,' Christianity being a voluntary association and a secret voluntary association punishable by death according to the laws of the Roman state. Marcionitism is explicitly referenced throughout according to Origen. It would seem to be the forbidden, secret voluntary association Celsus has in mind. Celsus also seems to offer an olive branch to the 'great Church' which accepted the orthodox doctrines of 'Judaism' encouraged by the Roman state such as we see reflected in texts like Acts etc. What I am suggesting then is that Marcionitism clearly fits the bill as the Hadrianic (and hence pre-Antonine) Christian faith which developed from what was now a heretical form of Judaism (just as Marcionitism later became a heretical form of Christianity). The Marcionites began with Philo's (and other Jewish sects) belief that god was unknowable but that his two 'hands' the Lord and God (= the just god and the kind god) were stages in the advancement to knowing him. The initiate (= proselyte) began fearing God and living only in faith. Then, taking cue from Genesis 28:21 and Jacob's vision of the heavenly ladder at Bethel the initiate could move from fearing the Lord to loving and being loved by the kind God. Christianity developed from identifying the apostle's heavenly ascent (2 Corinthians 12) as the fulfillment of the vision of Jacob. Yet necessarily they called this 'the redemption' where they saw themselves as being 'purchased' or 'redeemed' from the just Lord to the kind Jesus. Once again, the point here is not that this 'disproves' the existence of Jesus but it would seem that (a) because this redemption framework is older than the gospel and (b) that it continues to be expressed in third, fourth, fifth century Church Fathers as a core concept with in the faith it is hard to believe that this ancient Jewish concept of being adopted by the kind God simply supplemented the historical Jesus narrative of the gospel. The crucifixion is interpreted as early as the apostle as the 'redemption' within this ancient expectation associated with Jacob (who in Jewish literature becomes God at Bethel i.e. he sits on top of the heavenly ladder). As I said to outhouse, it is impossible to argue that the gospel did not point to this 'redemption' myth. The redemption myth is older than Christianity. As such it stands to reason that the gospel was created for the redemption (the passing from one hand to another http://stephanhuller.blogspot.com/20...anity-and.html) rather than the other way around. History developed from the needs of myth (i.e. to re-present the traditional conception of 'redemption' in a narrative) rather than myth from history. |
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11-05-2012, 09:50 AM | #29 |
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My opinion is a better statement would be;
Everything that Has Ever Been Written About Early Christianity is False. because it is. |
11-05-2012, 09:56 AM | #30 |
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mistakes I believe your making Stephan
are you not purposely narrowing judaism to a very limited view for the first century. judaism was wide and varied in the first century with beliefs ranging all over the board. and the same exact statement goes for christianity. that and using later sources like you love to do, are to far removed from the beginning of the movement, to have anything to do with the beginning of the movement. FACT, the movement evolved and you cant use homo erectus to explain any details of robust australopiths |
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