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06-04-2007, 03:10 AM | #131 | ||
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On the one hand, I'm relying on nothing more than general psychology. People, generally, get excited about their idols, want to know the details, use their sayings to guide their lives, etc., etc. On the other hand, someone who wants to claims Paul's writings are evidence of the "Jesus" we all know and love, to try and figure out some special psychological (or whatever) reason why Paul doesn't mention that "Jesus"' sayings and doings, contrary to what one would normally expect. |
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06-04-2007, 03:31 AM | #132 | |||
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06-04-2007, 04:49 AM | #133 | ||||||
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Seeing by Starlight: Celebrity Obsession Divine Trash: the Psychology of Celebrity Obsession And for celebrity in the ancient world: Review of a an article on the subject Quote:
(Btw I got a sense of this ages before I read Doherty, in my own totally amateur way. Years ago, in my twenties, I was in a hotel room and there was one of those bibles they have in hotels, and I read the letters. It seemed to me even then that something very peculiar was going on, if the "Jesus" Paul was speaking about was the "Jesus" I was familiar with - they didn't seem like the same entity at all, to me.) |
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06-04-2007, 05:05 AM | #134 | |
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So far in this thread, when presented with evidence, we have MJ'ers --saying that the references in Paul are later Christian insertions "because it makes sense". --confusing Josephus' Ant. 20.9.1 with the TF. --And here, assuming that any references in Paul to a literal man, "are probably contested", even before the specific passages are given. What's next? Are those who think that there was likely a historical Jesus once again going to be accused of being closet Christians? I'm particularly curious why Earl Doherty, who is participating in this thread, has completely ignored my question of why he hasn't published his claims in a peer-reviewed scholarly journal, or even whether he has attempted such publication. Talk about a glaring argument from silence! |
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06-04-2007, 06:26 AM | #135 | |
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As I said, I was just outlining the form of the kind of "argument from silence" that Doherty uses and how it applies in Paul, or, to be absolutely precise, how Doherty and other mythicists tend to think it applies (to show Lee that it wasn't as simplistic as he was making out). At the end of the day we all come to these texts with some background assumptions. If you simply assume that the "Jesus" Paul was talking about is the "Jesus" of the Gospels (or some obscure preacher/revolutionary/whatever supposed to be at the root of that "Jesus") then there's a problem with Paul, a problem which seems to have been recognised by scholars for a long time. OTOH, if you don't have that assumption, and have only the general background assumption I've been talking about (that when somebody is idolised, loved, a celebrity, even in a small circle, then there's bound to be a great interest in the details of that person's life and sayings), then there's no problem with Paul whatsoever - he straightforwardly seems to be talking not about somebody who ever lived, but about a sort of proto-Gnostic, mystical "Christ", with a hint of non-dualism and a maybe a hint of the Mysteries. The "it's one and the same Jesus" assumption is quite natural for Christians of course, and has been natural in the Christian tradition. But I don't think it's quite the blank slate that a proper historical study would start with - and although that's just my opinion judging from general reading of history, it seems to be a point that's also made by some of the sceptics/agnostics on this board like Spin, Toto, etc. Plus also, if it's true that this is the earliest writing we have about "Jesus", then it's even more important to read it without importing assumptions coming from later times, to see what kind of "Jesus" Paul presents, in and of itself, and see if it makes sense as being the first kind of "Jesus" there ever was. If it makes sense as a mystical Redeemer figure, then the historical stuff surely must be a later addition somehow? (Or at least, that's highly plausible as an alternative to "obscure preacher immediately deified then given life details and having words put into his mouth". This seems bizarrely convoluted compared to what seem to me the much more straighforward "mystical Redeemer concretised and a lineage to him concocted in order to gain political and psychological ascendancy of one part of the early Church over others." The latter seems more par for the course in world religions - e.g. compare and contrast Lao Zi who has been mentioned before. People do that sort of thing, concretise over time, if there was a lack of concrete detail in the beginning.) |
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06-04-2007, 08:20 AM | #136 | |
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Now that, IMO, is a more interesting angle on the issue though probably no more likely to obtain a surrender. |
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06-04-2007, 09:23 AM | #137 | |||
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In the humanities, there is no comparable agreement on methodology or standards of proof, and scholarly journals cannot not play the same role. If you look at some of the articles published in scholarly journals in the field of NT studies, they generally confine themselves to small incremental steps in understanding some aspect of textual analysis or interpretation. Doherty could not publish his book in that fashion - he would have to carve out a small area of interpretation, and then another. If he were a young scholar with a long term plan to overturn the field, this would be a good strategy. But he doesn't have that time line. There are probably other factors. |
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06-04-2007, 11:16 AM | #138 | ||||||
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IIUC it is difficult to combine Markan priority with the idea of Marcion's version of Luke being original. Marcion's Gospel is further from Mark than our Luke. Quote:
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Hence Apocalypse of Peter is presumably written c 133 CE Quote:
Andrew Criddle |
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06-04-2007, 11:25 AM | #139 | |
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06-04-2007, 11:40 AM | #140 | |
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Book one survived as a stand alone introduction to Greek philosophy. A single manuscript of books 4-10 (without 1-3) also survived probably copied by someone uninterested in the prelims and only interested in the core themes. It is not certain what books 2 and 3 contained, although quite plausibly it was mystery religions. However IMVHO it may have been esoteric information about Egyptian and Babylonian religion. Andrew Criddle |
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