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07-14-2007, 09:12 PM | #11 | |
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What you're missing is that Acts may have enhanced the Paul story into a kind of legend. Paul himself (assuming the "Paul" who wrote the epistles attributed to him was really himself ... or whatever) doesn't claim Roman citizenship. Acts does attribute it to him. I doubt seriously that the residents of Cilicia had obtained Roman citizenship as early as 27 BCE. The entire population of what? Cilicia is a region, a former client kingdon, its major city Tarsus. What about the 90%+ of the population who were peasants in the countryside? They get Roman citizenship too just because the former kingdom gets taken over by the Romans directly? I seriously doubt such a wild idea could have even entered a Roman ruler's mind. Again, even if any citizenship allegedly granted is restricted to the "Greek" citizens of the polis of Tarsus (which is at least possible), Paul would likely NOT have been among those so granted citezenship. Why? Because he is a member of the autonomous Ethnos of the Jews, who could not legally be citizens of a Greek city. To fully participate in Greek city life, a Jew would have to violate his ancestral traditions. Herod, through his not insignificant military, grain and financial contributions to the Roman rulers, had earned Jews many priviliges that other peoples did not have. Among these was the right to self govern wherever they were living, and the city magistrates could not even force Jews who were active right in the city itself (as traders, whatever) to participate in the pagan rites associated with the management of a Greek city. I am not aware of one single case where a Jew was considered a citizen of a Greek city. Roman citizenship as it had evolved in the 1st century BCE was something entirely different than citizenship in a Greek polis, and Jews could accept it because the Romansd had exempted them from certain things that might violate their customs. Romans, however, also respected the rights of established Greek cities to regulate themselves, and did not dare dictate to them an order to accept Jews on Jewish terms. Their solution was effectively to establish a separate legal status for Jews that was distinct from citizens of Greek cities, and which did not also demote them to second class status such as was accorded to peasants and artisans and most other retainers. DCH |
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07-15-2007, 07:15 AM | #12 | |
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I am not aware that any skeptic rejects all of Acts as outright fiction. I assume that you accept parts of other religious writings, but reject other parts as outright fiction, in which case your argument does not make any sense since you do exactly the same thing that you accuse skeptics of doing. It should not be amazing to you that skeptics reject the supernatural claims in Acts since the claims cannot adequately be corroborated by any credible means. The claims were written decades after the fact. When the claims first appeared in print, how could people have reliably verified the claims? |
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07-15-2007, 07:25 AM | #13 |
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07-15-2007, 09:35 AM | #14 | |||
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The issues of where Paul came from and the supernatual claims in Acts are not logically comparable. The former is an ordinary historical claim. The latter is an extraodinary historical claim. In other words, you are comparing apples to oranges. If the Bible said that a pig sprouted wings and flew, would you believe it? Would you be surprised if skeptics did not believe it? You said: Quote:
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07-15-2007, 02:22 PM | #15 | |||
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The issues of where Paul came from and the supernatual claims in Acts are not logically comparable. The former is an ordinary historical claim. The latter is an extraodinary historical claim. In other words, you are comparing apples to oranges. If the Bible said that a pig sprouted wings and flew, which is certainly no more unusual than the claim that Jesus walked on water, would you believe it? Would you be surprised if skeptics did not believe it? You said: Quote:
There is in fact nothing at all amazing about considering claims in ancient or modern historical literature INDIVIDUALLY, not COLLECTIVELY. That is the way that the modern historical method works, right? Are you actually suggesting that the logical approach to considering the truth claims in Acts is to accept all of them, or none of them, and that there is not any difference between secular historical claims and supernatural historical claims? |
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07-15-2007, 02:45 PM | #16 |
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JS - There are some skeptics in academia and on this Board who think that Acts is entirely fictional, not just a historical work embellished with supernatural events. (There are other skeptics who think that there is some kernel of historical fact in Acts and reject only the supernatural parts.) I think Ben was speaking to those people, although I am not sure who rejects Acts completely and also thinks that Paul came from Tarsus.
I am not aware of anyone who treats the Hindu scriptures this way, accepting parts and rejecting the supernatural parts, but then I don't think that anyone has ever tried to extract secular history from the Mahabarata or the Upanishads, or tried to construct a historical Arjuna. |
07-15-2007, 03:07 PM | #17 | ||||||||
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07-15-2007, 07:25 PM | #18 | |
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07-16-2007, 06:46 AM | #19 | |
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And I gave you one such poster in my last post. Ben. |
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07-16-2007, 12:40 PM | #20 | |
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spin seems to be busy elsewhere and is not here to defend himself.
It is of course possible that there are some parts of Acts that are historically accurate. There seems to be no good reason for the author of Acts to invent the idea that Paul came from Tarsus. But we should keep the provisional nature of this factoid in mind before spinning out too many theories based on Paul's origins in Tarsus. Quote:
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