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12-30-2011, 11:19 AM | #31 | |||||
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Because.... scholars of 3000 years latter find it hard to accept that violent religious disputes and intrigues do actually happen. |
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12-30-2011, 11:46 AM | #32 | |
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Not at all, but the fact that it's possible something happened in antiquity is not evidence that it did. The texts in this case (1) date to centuries after the events they purport to narrate, (2) are part of a corpus of narratives aimed at promoting a very specific ideology that engaged the culture contemporaneous to the editors, not the characters of the narrative, and (3) follow a structured and highly rhetorical thematic pattern. These considerations, combined with the complete and total lack of any material or independent textual evidence to support the events, leave us with no reason whatsoever to take it seriously. Certainly the fact that the events are not physically impossible is not evidence enough to outweigh these concerns. |
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12-31-2011, 01:28 AM | #33 | |
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What about Ahab? or Jezebel? Is it your position that because these texts are latter than the purported conflicts, that these conflicts never occured? And what source(s) do you derive this information from? |
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12-31-2011, 07:33 AM | #34 | ||
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That the text is Deuteronomistic derives primarily from a combination of literary criticism and the situations we know existed as a result of synthesizing textual and material remains from the immediate contexts of those time periods. That it is also not true derives from the what those same sources tell us about how royal conflicts were handled in antiquity, as well as more literary criticism. It's simply too convenient that these murders always followed the same pattern that just happens to take a shape that perfectly fits the Deuteronomistic authors' rhetorical goals. Whence do you derive the information that supports the historicity of the murder of the priests of Baal as described in 2 Kings? |
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12-31-2011, 09:28 AM | #35 |
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Allow me to put it this way, being aware of the known and historically documented conduct and brutality of fevernt religious believers, and extrapolating from the known facts and instances of such heinious conduct, and lacking any other contemporary testimony or evidence that contradicts the Biblical accounts, I find little reason to dismiss these fratricides out of hand.
It was The Law that those of Israel who turned and served other Elohim, or even suggested such, were to be immediately executed. 'Your hand shall be first upon him to put him to death'. (Deut 13:9) Look at religious fundamentalism in any primative Middle Eastern country to this day, those that dissent, or are viewed as serving other gods, or as promoting other faiths are summarily executed either by the Political process, or simply by the religious factions taking their Laws into their own hands and taking up stones and carrying it out to the letter. Or gangs of organised religious factions fall upon entire groups murdring and beheading religious infidels. Before you say 'only Muslims' do these things, stop and consider where these practices originated. Religiously motivated murder is much older than the written texts of the Torah. And where religion and government go hand in hand, religion is Power, and Authority, and control of the common Wealth, for which men are willing, and if able, to enter into wars, and to rationalise the carrying out of mass-murder purging of their 'unpatriotic' or 'infidel' countrymen as being the will of their god. I do not at all buy into a view, that the Jewish nation out of all people on earth, alone, did not conduct their religious affairs with the kind of brutality that is related in these ancient texts, and which has long been endemic to feverent pursuit of religious domination. This kind of 'Historical Criticisim' smacks of whitewashing the Jewish religion and people, and falsly presenting them as the only innocent religion to exist. |
12-31-2011, 09:40 AM | #36 |
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But do you really really believe that the person writing these things actually saw the events he was describing? Do you really believe there was a talking ass? Flying fiery snakes? Why is any of this any more historical?
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12-31-2011, 10:05 AM | #37 |
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The mass murders could have been invented in order to legitimize any future genocides.
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12-31-2011, 10:06 AM | #38 | ||||||
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12-31-2011, 11:37 PM | #39 |
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Maklelan,
I am not sure I understand what you are saying about Deut. 32:8-9 and 43, and other quotes that mention other gods. Are you saying that some quotes were changed in the Masoretic text and the Septuagint to sound more monotheistic because the Septuagint and the Masoretic text have other quotes like Psalm 82 that were not changed in Hebrew or Greek. I looked at some of Michael Heiser's articles that list different quotes and the Masoretic text and the Septuagint seem to have kept the words "gods" in most of them, even if they didn't sound monotheistic, so why would you think they intentionally changed some of them, but not all of them, if that is what you think? Ps.82:1,6, Ps. 95:3,Ps. 86:8, Ps. 136:2 I think are the same. Ps. 138:1, Ps. 97:7, and Ps. 58:1 are different in the Septuagint, but the Hebrew says "gods" ( I am a little blurry right now, but I think I am right about this). I might have messed up this list because I wrote it sleepy. Kenneth Greifer |
01-01-2012, 07:05 AM | #40 | |
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The most important theological innovation was the identification of the gods and the "sons of God" (בני*אלהים) with angels. This restricted the gods of the nations to a servile and contingent taxonomy, which made it perfectly fine to acknowledge other gods: "Yeah, they're called gods, but they're just angels." This is why at Qumran you can have dozens and dozens of positive references to "gods." |
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