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Old 09-19-2011, 09:29 AM   #61
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Originally Posted by maryhelena View Post
So, looks like it's been a bit of back and forth re adding and deleting the name of 'Jesus' to the wonder-doer story that is preserved in Slavonic Josephus.
It does look that way. I'm afraid that makes it pretty difficult to figure out what was there originally.

Quote:
Originally Posted by maryhelena View Post
The Slavonic Josephus nativity story is placed prior to the 15th year of Herod the Great, ie prior to 25 b.c. (counting from 40 b.c.)
Ok, I found the story in the book you cited. I have to say it looks like the entire nativity story is an interpolation because we have this:

1. "..so wealth came in to him day by day and he distributed it for his good works"
2. The nativity story, which begins with 'Having so spoken'.
3. "in the fifteenth year of his reign he [re]build the temple.."

#2 doesn't follow #1 since there was nothing in #1 which Herod had spoken.
#3 follows #1 naturally, as a use of wealth mentioned
The Greek text content has #3 following #1 with nothing of #2 between.


Of course you know that the references to the 'wonder-doer' take place during Pilate's reign. I noticed too that the Slavonic version of the wonder-doer places it between the problem with the Caesar images (the semaria) Pilate had put in Jerusalem, and the aqueduct issue which begins with 'and then <the Jews> raised a second disturbance. This too this makes the wonder-doer story appear to be an interpolation squeezed in.


At this point I have lost some enthusiasm for the Slavonic version, although I find the different accounts along with the apparent ambivalence in some of the writings to be very fascinating, as they would not seem to be the hand of a Christian writer.
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Old 09-19-2011, 10:22 AM   #62
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Again, it is a LOGICAL FALLACY to claim that "Antiquities of the Jews" is authentic or partially authentic therefore Jesus called Christ was human.

This LOGICAL FALLACY is confirmed when we see that Church writers ALSO claimed "Antiquities of the Jews" was authentic and that Jesus was a Child of a Holy Ghost.

Without any eyewitness account of Jesus FROM credible contemporary non-apologetic WRITERS from antiquity then authenticity of "Antiquities of the Jews" does NOT affect at all the nature of Jesus as the myth child of a Ghost.

Even, "Paul", a supposed contemporary of Jesus, only managed to be a WITNESS to Jesus in a NON-historical state.

The Pauline writers appear to be DELIGHTED that they were able to WITNESS Jesus when he could NOT have been seen alive.
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Old 09-19-2011, 10:55 AM   #63
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This discussion of your motivation does not make any sense to me. You've been around here a long time, and this passage has been discussed here before. Price is not putting forth any new arguments. If you care enough about this issue to start a thread, why have you not done just a little bit more research? Why confine yourself to Price's article, without reading Peter Kirby, or Steve Mason, or finding a copy of Olson's article?
While I can see why a greater expectation exists for my level of research, I didn't know that I would be expected to have done thorough research on the subject prior to starting a thread on a specific topic. I am not aware of prior discussion here on Price's points, nor do I find anything with the 'search feature' that discusses this article. What I do find is what seems to be a personal issue that you have with the man.

I read Kirby's article a few years back. I had never heard of Price nor looked into the arguments for partial authenticity, though I knew they existed. I found the article a few months back and mentioned it on another thread and Doug Shaver reviewed it. I decided to respond to his review and start a thread to see what problems people have with Price's points, which I found to have some validity.

It appears that few here want to interact with Price's points, and would rather give me their pet theories or generalities. It would be nice to know what people find wrong with Price's points.

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And Price's arguments do not appear to be very good to me, so I don't know what you see in them.
You keep saying that but not demonstrating what problems you see. I don't think you have quoted him even once yet.


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I read Steve Mason's Josephus and the New Testament (or via: amazon.co.uk) which has an excruciatingly thorough discussion of the issues. Price has quote mined some of that work, but does not report Mason's conclusion that the original text is unrecoverable. This is one reason that I do not take Price's work all that seriously.
I don't think Mason's conclusion is an argument for or against the partial interpolation theory, so fail to see why Price's failure to report his conclusion is even relevant.


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I think that if someone went through the George Washington Prayer Book, a few phrases could be extracted that were Washingtonian. But the experts reject it for the same reason that the experts think the TF was interpolated - the text embodies a point of view that belongs to someone else.
It's a matter of degree. Price claims that only 2 short phrases are necessarily Christian. That does not equate to text which 'embodies a point of view'.


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Originally Posted by toto
Quote:
Originally Posted by me
So, you ask where does that lead us? What I pointed you to leads us to re-evaluating the validity of Olsen's arguments in general since he appears to be unable to determine the proper context of Eusebius's writings. It also leads us to accepting the idea that non-Christians were probably more likely to refer to Christians as a 'tribe' than were Christians, and that then leads us to re-balance the scales, with a little more weight given to a pre-existing text that has been preserved in the existing text which was either authentic to Josephus, interpolated in by a non-Christian, or interpolated in by a 'clever' Christian interpolator --which possibly implies a second interpolator who wasn't so clever.
Have you read Olson's essay? Why do you think he is "unable to determine the proper context of Eusebius's writings?" The rest of your statement makes no sense.
I have not read Olson's short essay, but intend to do so soon. I told you why I think he is unable to determine the proper context of Eusebius's writings: his treatment of the phrase 'tribe of Christians', if as one sided as is implied by what I have read from you, Price, and the source I gave, is terrible.


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This is what Olson says on that issue:
"From that time to now the nation of Christians has not failed." In Adversus Hieroclem, Eusebius asks that those who consider Apollonius "a divine being and superior to a philosopher, in a word as one superhuman in his nature" to point out any of his effects that have lasted "to this day" (EISETI NUN; A.H. 7). Jesus according to Eusebius, has left such effects (EISETI KAI NUN; A.H. 4 x2). The word "Christians" is not found anywhere in Josephus, but "nation (FULON) of Christians" is found in Eusebius (H.E. 3.33.2, 3.33.3). In the first book of the Demonstratio, Eusebius argues that the Christians are the "nation" promised to Abraham (D.E.: Ferrar 10, Migne 25c). He uses the terms FULON, EQNOS, and LAOS, pretty much interchangeably, to describe Christianity.
The rest of my statement makes sense to me given the source material you have yet to respond to. It appears to me that you decided not to look at it. It claims Olson's case is very weak, and provides evidence in support. It directly says that Olson doesn't seem to recognize that Eusebius uses the term that means 'tribe' very negatively, and that the use of 'tribe of Christians' in 3.33.2, 3.33.3 was not his own use (ie it was a quote).


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I think that the original text cannot be recovered with any degree of certainty, therefore this passage is of no help in deciding if there were a historical Jesus.
This logic only works if you are trying to prove that Josephus wrote the entire passage. Again, the original text cannot be recovered with any degree in any ancient writing because we haven't a clue as to who might have slipped in at night and changed a word, phrase, paragraph, or entire book. The issue, to me, isn't 'recoverability'. The best that we can hope for is 'consistency'. If it is consistent, then there is no reason to reject it on a linguistic basis. You must then resort to other forms of argument to reject it.


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Perhaps you can start by explaining how clever is 'clever enough' and what kind of forgery he did need to create. If the answer is 'one that Christians would accept', then why include a bunch of Josephan phrases at all? If the answer is 'one that scholars or religious leaders of the day would accept' do you really think they would accept Josephus saying that Jesus was the Christ? I am having a hard time seeing what you are thinking here, so please do help me.
Whoever interpolated this passage put no effort into trying to fool a modern skeptic into thinking that Josephus actually wrote it. But there are lots of Christian forgeries that are similarly obvious.

It was probably a mistake to talk about a clever forger. If Eusebius was the interpolator, we can't say that he was stupid, but he was not trying to be a cleaver forger.
You seem hung up on the 'modern skeptic' straw-man argument. Why not just address what it is he was trying to do then?:Again, what was he trying to do? Who was he trying to convince, and of what?



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Originally Posted by toto
Quote:
Originally Posted by me

Now, let me expand: If you take any text written by a particular person and remove the phrases they could not have written, you are left with words that sound like that author could have written them. But this is not evidence, much less proof, that the author did write those words.
So you agree that there is no evidence that this passage was written by Josephus? You seem to be agreeing with my point ??
I"m saying it is a useless argument because you can apply that to any ancient work.


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Passages written by a given author will not have words that they could not have written. If they do, we know the passage has been tampered with, and we cannot trust it.
What you can't trust are the words that cannot have been the authors'. What remains should not be rejected on a linguistic basis--you must go to secondary arguments to reject the authorship. At least that makes sense to me.

Ted
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Old 09-19-2011, 11:14 AM   #64
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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
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Originally Posted by maryhelena View Post
So, looks like it's been a bit of back and forth re adding and deleting the name of 'Jesus' to the wonder-doer story that is preserved in Slavonic Josephus.
It does look that way. I'm afraid that makes it pretty difficult to figure out what was there originally.

Quote:
Originally Posted by maryhelena View Post
The Slavonic Josephus nativity story is placed prior to the 15th year of Herod the Great, ie prior to 25 b.c. (counting from 40 b.c.)
Ok, I found the story in the book you cited. I have to say it looks like the entire nativity story is an interpolation because we have this:

1. "..so wealth came in to him day by day and he distributed it for his good works"
2. The nativity story, which begins with 'Having so spoken'.
3. "in the fifteenth year of his reign he [re]build the temple.."

#2 doesn't follow #1 since there was nothing in #1 which Herod had spoken.
#3 follows #1 naturally, as a use of wealth mentioned
The Greek text content has #3 following #1 with nothing of #2 between.


Of course you know that the references to the 'wonder-doer' take place during Pilate's reign. I noticed too that the Slavonic version of the wonder-doer places it between the problem with the Caesar images (the semaria) Pilate had put in Jerusalem, and the aqueduct issue which begins with 'and then <the Jews> raised a second disturbance. This too this makes the wonder-doer story appear to be an interpolation squeezed in.


At this point I have lost some enthusiasm for the Slavonic version, although I find the different accounts along with the apparent ambivalence in some of the writings to be very fascinating, as they would not seem to be the hand of a Christian writer.
Ted, at the end of the day it does not matter if the wonder-doer story, or the wise man story, were interpolated into Slavonic Josephus or into Antiquities - or were their originally. What matters is the story. ie a story about a man that was crucified under Pilate. The story is not going to lead one to that man - because it is a story not history. The man in the story is not a historical man. Does the story reflect an historical figure? ie. is the story a fictional drama of a historical happening. And being a story, the drama is able to add as much colour and special effects as the story is developed. And the central figure of the drama is able, much more than any historical figure, to become a symbol. A cross, in the story, that was the instrument of death becomes the cross as an instrument of life. Yes, obviously, the very stuff of ridicule, misrepresentation and fun. But, that, as we know, is what became the christian story.

What inspired that story? 'Paul's imagination? Or an historical event. My thinking runs with Antigonus, last King and High Priest of the Jews, and his being bound to a cross, flogged and beheaded by Marc Antony in 37 b.c.

The drama, the wonder-doer story who was crucified under Pilate - 7th year of Tiberius 21 c.e. or following the 15th year Tiberius, either 29/30/33/36 c.e. are all simply a re-telling of the story that developed following the execution of Antigonus. Of course, once history moved on and the memory of Antigonus fades into the background - the wonder-worker/wise man of the historical drama story begins to take on a life, a 'historical' life of his own.

Pilate? The wonder-doer/wise man story involves Pilate. Taking Pilate as being historical (the Pilate stone) then Pilate is nothing more than the Roman governor at the time in which the story is set. And as the story is retold - 7th or the 15th year of Tiberius - then it became necessary for the dating of Pilate to become ambiguous (and Josephus obliges) The historical crucifixion that has inspired, motivated, the wonder-doer/wise man story, is far removed from the time of Pilate. And it was not the Jews who sent Antigonus to his death (as in the wonder-doer/wise man story) but Herod the Great who sent Antigonus to Marc Antony. (Herodians and Romans in power - so the Jews are the fall guys in the gospel story...)

Ted, it's the story - not who, where and when, someone interpolated it, whole-cloth or partially into Antiquities. It's the story that has survived as the foundation for christianity - and it's the story, in and off itself, that we have to deal with if we are seeking early christian origins.

(no, I don't think Antigonus is the gospel JC - I think the history of Antigonus has been used as a model for the crucifixion element of the gospel JC story. JC being a composite figure.)
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Old 09-19-2011, 11:21 AM   #65
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Ok, spin. Your turn..

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Originally Posted by spin View Post
.. the issue was decided at the beginning of the 20th century in favor of forgery, after which apologetics has arbitrarily resuscitated a partial TF.
No serious, unbiased scholars, see validity in the partial TF theory? Do we have commentary from these unbiased scholars, or do they refuse to entertain a subject of this nature?

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As to the claim of the TF being appropriate in its context the analysis is simply wrong. To understand the fact, you have to read outside the TF. See my blog entry on the way the TF fits the discourse. This is strong evidence for the total rejection of the TF.
3.4 very well could be linking back to 3.2. Despite my comments above to Mary on the same subject on the Slavonic Josephus, there is no reason to assume that a second disturbance cannot have followed the TF. In fact, if that were such 'strong' evidence why did the interpolator not simply move the TF to AFTER the 3.4 so that your first and second disturbances remained next to each other? See my thread http://www.freeratio.org/showthread.php?t=304161 which shows why the TF is nearly perfectly in context--especially if it had contained something it does not contain now--the temple incident which led to Jesus' arrest. Even without it, the location is quite appropriate.



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The James reference as christian apologists use it is a crock of shit. People ignore every other example of Paul's usage of αδελφος to claim that it must mean "biological brother" rather than Paul's preferred idiosyncratic meaning of "(fellow) believer". "James the fellow believer of the Lord" is rather unhelpful for the apologist.
I'm not sure what you are saying here. You can't just ignore the different way in which Paul uses the phrase 'the Lord's brother(s)' simply because he uses the same word for 'brother', meaning fellow believer, elsewhere. People use the word 'brother' now in more than one way.


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The linguistic evidence has been tampered with, by removing passages that are overtly considered to have been interpolated. This means that one cannot say much that is useful, given the arbitrary nature of the resultant text.
Linguistically, exactly. That's why the best you can do is conclude that something is consistent or not consistent. The next step then is to look at the other kinds of arguments, which is what Price has done.


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Price's persuasive evidence that earlier Antiquities manuscripts lacked the phrases "he was the Christ" and "if indeed it is right to call him a man" is fallacious, based on the Agapius data, which Ken Olson easily clarifies. Even if you don't have time to read Olsen, the evidence actually comes from a rather late Arab source and the claim of "earlier" is baseless conjecture by hopeful apologetics.
I'll read Olson's short essay.


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The fact that scholars don't like some bits and are prepared to remove them doesn't say anything useful about what they aren't prepared to omit. The act of removal just taints the linguistic analysis on purely arbitrary grounds. My advice is: grow up. This is transparent disgraceful apologetics. You should know better than to present this greasy kid's stuff.
And my advice is: don't be so lazy. Deal with what you got. You don't junk your car just because the radiator is leaking. All cars can break down.
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Old 09-19-2011, 11:29 AM   #66
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Originally Posted by maryhelena View Post
....What inspired that story? 'Paul's imagination?....
We can eliminate "Paul". The Pauline writers are LAST on the LIST of 500 other persons who was aware of resurrection of Jesus.

"Paul" claimed he PERSECUTED the FAITH that he Now preached.

The PERSECUTED MUST have had a story and it was because of their Story why they were PERSECUTED by "Paul".

So forget about "Paul". He claimed he was LAST and LEAST.



Quote:
Originally Posted by maryhelena
....Or an historical event. My thinking runs with Antigonus, last King and High Priest of the Jews, and his being bound to a cross, flogged and beheaded by Marc Antony in 37 b.c......
The FALL of the Temple and the destruction of Jerusalem was that event.
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Old 09-19-2011, 11:37 AM   #67
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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
... I am not aware of prior discussion here on Price's points, nor do I find anything with the 'search feature' that discusses this article. What I do find is what seems to be a personal issue that you have with the man.
There's nothing personal - it's all a question of debaters positions.

The prior discussion of this article happened around 2004. You can find some discussion by going to the archives - e.g. this thread.

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...

It appears that few here want to interact with Price's points, and would rather give me their pet theories or generalities. It would be nice to know what people find wrong with Price's points.
Click on the link above. Read spin's blog.

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And Price's arguments do not appear to be very good to me, so I don't know what you see in them.
You keep saying that but not demonstrating what problems you see. I don't think you have quoted him even once yet.
Price is playing a game. He cannot demonstrate that the TF is authentic, or partially authentic, so he tries to demonstrate that some parts of this TF could have been written by Josephus. But there is no reason to conclude from this that Josephus did write those phrases.

There is a hidden assumption here that the passage should be treated as authentic if it cannot be shown to be forged. Christian apologists will sometimes make this explicit. But it is not true - it reverses the burden of proof.

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I don't think Mason's conclusion is an argument for or against the partial interpolation theory, so fail to see why Price's failure to report his conclusion is even relevant.
It is an argument against the idea that the original text can be recovered. If you can't recover the text, there is no point in talking about a partial interpolation. Price and others claim to be able to recover the original text by stripping out a few interpolated phrases.

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...But the experts reject it for the same reason that the experts think the TF was interpolated - the text embodies a point of view that belongs to someone else.
It's a matter of degree. Price claims that only 2 short phrases are necessarily Christian. That does not equate to text which 'embodies a point of view'.
Price is not an expert. The experts who identify the interpolations base their claims on the Christian nature of those phrases, i.e., their point of view.

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I have not read Olson's short essay, but intend to do so soon. I told you why I think he is unable to determine the proper context of Eusebius's writings: his treatment of the phrase 'tribe of Christians', if as one sided as is implied by what I have read from you, Price, and the source I gave, is terrible.
Why not read it first? Even if you disagree, what does this have to do with the context of Eusebius' writings?

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The rest of my statement makes sense to me given the source material you have yet to respond to. It appears to me that you decided not to look at it. It claims Olson's case is very weak, and provides evidence in support. It directly says that Olson doesn't seem to recognize that Eusebius uses the term that means 'tribe' very negatively, and that the use of 'tribe of Christians' in 3.33.2, 3.33.3 was not his own use (ie it was a quote).
I did read that essay by Alice Whealey, and I have read other essays by her. She disagrees with Olson on the use of the term "phulon" or tribe. She does not dispute that Eusebius did use that term.

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This logic only works if you are trying to prove that Josephus wrote the entire passage. Again, the original text cannot be recovered with any degree in any ancient writing because we haven't a clue as to who might have slipped in at night and changed a word, phrase, paragraph, or entire book. The issue, to me, isn't 'recoverability'. The best that we can hope for is 'consistency'. If it is consistent, then there is no reason to reject it on a linguistic basis. You must then resort to other forms of argument to reject it.
Is there a hidden assumption here that if the language is consistent, it must be accepted unless proven to be a forgery? This assumption is false.

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You seem hung up on the 'modern skeptic' straw-man argument. Why not just address what it is he was trying to do then?:Again, what was he trying to do? Who was he trying to convince, and of what?
The interpolator might not have been trying to convince anyone. He might have just wanted to make the text more Christian.

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I"m saying it is a useless argument because you can apply that to any ancient work.
It can be applied to any ancient work with evidence of tampering, not all ancient works. All ancient works need to be examined critically; this is how historians work.

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Passages written by a given author will not have words that they could not have written. If they do, we know the passage has been tampered with, and we cannot trust it.
What you can't trust are the words that cannot have been the authors'. What remains should not be rejected on a linguistic basis--you must go to secondary arguments to reject the authorship. At least that makes sense to me.

Ted
I think you have again reversed the burden of proof, perhaps without even realizing what you are doing.
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Old 09-19-2011, 02:20 PM   #68
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I think you have again reversed the burden of proof, perhaps without even realizing what you are doing.
IMO there should be no default position that requires no burden of proof. I think anyone who claims a position on this has the burden of providing a reasonable argument. That includes those who claim there was no interpolation, partial interpolation, and full interpolation.

I will check out the old Price thread.

I have read the Olson essay once, and found the most damning evidence in favor of complete interpolation by Eusebius to be the fact that the two differences in two of his quotations of the TF were the two phrases that are found in Josephus and not in Eusebius. This implies Eusebian 'clever' interpolation of Josephan phrases, which could then form a basis for claiming total Eusebian interpolation. I have to read it again, and research further. From all I've read about the TF, this --at first glance--is the most damning evidence against partial interpolation.

HAS there been a thread discussing this issue where someone has put up reasons why that should not be considered a Eusebius addition? If so, I'd like to see it.

Will report back at another time..

Ted
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Old 09-19-2011, 03:56 PM   #69
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I'm confused. I must be misreading something. Olsen gives us two quotes from Eusebius of the TF, and says that the latter one has replaced 2 phrases with more Josephan phrases. Wouldn't this be grounds for arguing that Eusebius not only interpolated the first passage, but deliberately put Josephan language into the second one--ie that if there as a 'clever' interpolator, it was Eusebius himself? Otherwise, how would one explain the presence of similar, non-Josephan language in the earlier citation? One could say that Eusebius changed existing Josephan language in the first and then it was put back in the latter version, but what would be the reason for doing that?

The very Josephan phrases that argue for Josephan authenticity suddenly 'appeared' and Olsen almost seems to downplay that fact. Rather than concluding with "These two phrases are not a sufficient basis on which to infer an authentic Josephan version of the _Testimonium_" I would have expected him to say "the sudden appearance of two Josephan phrases in a TF in place of two non-Josephan phrases is strong evidence of an attempt by Eusebius to create an air of authenticity to the passage". What am I not getting here?

Here's what he wrote:

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I will comment on a few of the differences between the two versions of the _Testimonium_.

hHDONHi DECOMENWN, "receive with pleasure," replaces SEBOMENWN, "revere" (or "revering"), and PRWTWN ANDRWN, "first men," replaces ARCONTWN, "rulers." Both hHDONHi DECOMENWN and PRWTWN ANDRWN are phrases found in Josephus for which I have been unable to find other parallels in Eusebius' writings. Are they signs of an authentic Josephan substratum lying beneath our present _Testimonium_?

I do not think so. For the reasons given above, it would be difficult to argue that our version of the _Testimonium_ does not show Eusebian influence. Further, the Eusebian version of the passage was originally composed for the _Demonstratio_, not the _Historia_. The _Demonstratio_ is the earlier text, and the _Testimonium_ is an encapsulation of arguments found in it that receive relatively little attention in the _Historia_. In particular, the main argument of D.E. 3.5, that the disciples continued affection for Jesus after his death is proof of his and their good character, is missing from the _Historia_. This means that Eusebius added the two Josephan phrases to his own version of the _Testimonium_. But if Eusebius is capable of isolating these two phrases in Josephus and adding them to his work, there is no special reason to believe he took them from a passage about Jesus. The phrases themselves have no necessary connection with Jesus and could have been taken from elsewhere in Josephus writings ( e.g., hHDONHi DECASQAI from A.J. 18.59). These two phrases are not a sufficient basis on which to infer an authentic Josephan version of the _Testimonium_.
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Old 09-19-2011, 04:18 PM   #70
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Fact of the matter is that no matter how much scholars or anyone else tries to dissect this it comes out the same. Some passages in the Ant 18:3 were forged by a later hand....the very language of the passage is not something that a Jew would have claimed at the time especially not Josephus writing under the Roman empire. Just my take.

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At face value, Josephus appears to be the answer to the Christian apologist's dreams.

In a single paragraph (the so-called Testimonium Flavianum) Josephus confirms every salient aspect of the Christ-myth:

1. Jesus's existence 2. his 'more than human' status 3. his miracle working 4. his teaching 5. his ministry among the Jews and the Gentiles 6. his Messiahship 7. his condemnation by the Jewish priests 8. his sentence by Pilate 9. his death on the cross 10. the devotion of his followers 11. his resurrection on the 3rd day 12. his post-death appearance 13. his fulfillment of divine prophecy 14. the successful continuance of the Christians.

In just 127 words Josephus confirms everything – now that is a miracle!
Consider, also, the anomalies:

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1. How could Josephus claim that Jesus had been the answer to his messianic hopes yet remain an orthodox Jew?
The absurdity forces some apologists to make the ridiculous claim that Josephus was a closet Christian!

2. If Josephus really thought Jesus had been 'the Christ' surely he would have added more about him than one paragraph, a casual aside in someone else's (Pilate's) story?
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Christian apologists, for their own convenience, blur the distinction between evidence of Jesus and evidence of Christians.

It is rather as if a child who believed in the Tooth Fairy was to be presented as evidence that the Tooth Fairy really existed.
http://www.jesusneverexisted.com/josephus-etal.html
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