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01-31-2012, 10:58 PM | #21 | ||
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Just for the newcomers' benefit, I'll take a guess at your meaning and respond accordingly. By way of preface, I note that the word "invention" is yours, not mine. (1) I don't have a name for the author of the original work of fiction in which the central character was Jesus of Nazareth. The oldest extant revision of that work is called the Gospel According to Mark. Its author is entirely unknown, but for the sake of rhetorical convenience I usually refer to him as "Mark." (2) Mark probably wrote his work sometime in the second century. The original story might have appeared in the late first century, but there is no unambiguous evidence that it did. |
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02-01-2012, 08:59 PM | #22 | |||
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Thanks for this summary answer. It could be called the C2 (2nd century) theory as distinct from the C1 (1st century) theory. It would therefore seem, when examined, that 99% of all theories of the origins of the history of christianity (whether HJ or MJ) are either C1 or C2 theories. I dont know of any C3 theories. It is possible that Robin Lane Fox's "Minimal Historical Jesus Facts" will be represented as "Minimal Historical Jesus Facts" by other people in support of a C1 theory, such as Bart Ehrman. But I agree with Philosopher Jay in questioning whether "Minimal Historical Jesus Facts" can be differentiated from "Minimal Fictional Jesus Facts" Quote:
If we are dealing with a fictional story, unless there are tell-tale anachronisms, it is difficult to tell from INSIDE the text when the text was authored. To determine the date of authorship of a fiction usually evidence OUTSIDE the text is used to estimate when the fiction (i.e. the "invention") appeared. |
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02-01-2012, 10:43 PM | #23 | |||
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Speculation resolves nothing, does NOT need any verified or verifiable data and cannot be tested. Quote:
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Again, for example, a jury does NOT have to know what a defendant actually did ONLY what the EVIDENCE, presented data, reveals. If a defendant actually committed a crime but NO credible evidence is presented at the trial then defendant may most likely be exonerated. In the case of the character called Jesus, and the history of the Church there is an abundance of evidence to show that the ENTIRE Canon is NOT at all from the 1st century and that the character called Jesus, his disciples, including Paul were inventions. |
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02-02-2012, 03:35 AM | #24 | |
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02-02-2012, 08:51 AM | #25 | ||
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02-03-2012, 08:46 AM | #26 | |
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It does seem to me that Earl Doherty's account is correct in broad outline. There are at least two points on which I suspect he is mistaken. One is his dating of the canonical gospels, which I think is too conservative. The other is his estimation of the integrity of the Pauline corpus. I do not yet doubt Paul's historicity, but the I think the surviving documents are only suggestive of what he was really thinking. They do suffice to rule out, in my judgment, the notion that Paul's Christ was a man who had lived, preached, and died recently in this world. |
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02-03-2012, 10:07 AM | #27 | |||
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Do NOT rope in other people with your LACK of hard Facts. There is an abundance of WRITTEN statements from antiquity to show that the Jesus story of a Human Sacrifice for Atonement of Sins was NOT likely to have been known at all in the 1st century. Quote:
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There is ENOUGH Hard Facts that Paul, the Pauline writings, and Pauline Churches did NOT exist in the 1st century Before the Fall of the Jewish Temple c 70 CE. We have NO credible source for the Bishops of Rome, Corinth, Galatia, Philippi, Thessalonica, Ephesus and Colosse. Most remarkably we have letters to Churches and NO credible sources for any names of Bishops of those Churches for at least 100 years after they were supposedly written. In "Against Heresies" we hear of a Bishop called Clement of Rome of whom the Church cannot recall when he was Bishop. There is Total confusion in the chronology for the Bishops of Rome and for the SIX other Pauline Churches there are NO bishops named likewise for 100 YEARS after the Epistles were supposedly written. There is NOTHING at all credible coming from a Pauline Church until 100 years after the Pauline letters. The hard fact is that the the Jesus story is an INVENTION of the 2nd century and that apologetic sources did NOT account for the Pauline letters to the Churches even up to the mid 2nd century. |
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02-03-2012, 11:01 AM | #28 |
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It is rather interesting how this kind of dispute is reproduced in Islam itself. The Shia argue that they emerged concerning a succession issue involving Ali, and Sunnis argue that this is all myth, that in fact there were no appreciable differences among Muslims until approximately 700 years ago when the whole succession issue, the 12 imams etc. was all made up out of thin air.
Indeed, one piece of evidence to this is that Shia accept much of the hadiths ascribed to Bukhari who was a Sunni from the 10th century. Now had they broken away before that, why would they have accepted anything proposed by an opponent? |
02-03-2012, 12:04 PM | #29 | ||
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They didn’t, apparently Hadith Collections In the eighth century Malik’s Muwatta A second early collector Ahmad ibn Hanbal's Musnad, collected between thirty and forty thousand hadith Canonical Collections of Hadith: Bukhari and Muslim and the “Six Books” Later in the ninth century the two hadith collections of Bukhari and Muslim were collected. Bukhari’s Sahih (“sound” or “authentic”) contains 2,602 distinct hadith, repeated several times such that each hadith is contained under every topic heading it pertains to, for a total of 9,082 items. Muslim’s Sahih contains 3,033 distinct hadith. Together with four other books, those of Abu Dawud, al-Tirmidhi , al-Nasa`i and Ibn Maja, they form a body of canonical hadith known as “the six books.” Shiite Hadith Shiites refer to hadith by the word khabar (pl. akhbar), or “report,” “tiding.” They do not pay as much attention to the isnad beginning with the Companions of Muhammad, but rather to reports transmitted by Shiite imams—12 descendents of Muhammad designated by God, having a near prophetic status. The “four books” of the Shiites were compiled later in the tenth and eleventh centuries. They differ from the Sunni collections mainly in containing numerous references to the Shiite imams, references they believe were suppressed by the Sunnis. The Koran & Hadith By Kenneth Garden The Middle East Institute George Camp Keiser Library |
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