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11-23-2009, 09:54 AM | #11 | |
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Our canonical gospels were only canonical because they were the most popular. Though the "heretical" Christians used variants of our canonical four. |
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11-23-2009, 09:58 AM | #12 | |
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Neither shall they say: Behold here, or behold there. For lo, the kingdom of God is within you.--Lk 17:21 |
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11-23-2009, 09:59 AM | #13 | |||||||||
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Virtually all that is known about Jesus is from the NT and the Church writings and they agree that Jesus was fully DIVINE or Supernatural. Quote:
The information or evidence from antiquity found in the NT and Church writings is extra-ordinarily good that Jesus was considered a God and the offspring of the Holy Ghost. Quote:
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Look at the abundance of evidence. The evidence has been recorded for perhaps eternity. See Matthew 1.18, Luke 2.35, MARK 16.6, John 1, Acts 1.9, Galatians 1.1 and others. This is Tertullian claiming that it is agreed that Jesus was DIVINE or Supernatural. On the Flesh of Christ Quote:
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11-23-2009, 10:01 AM | #14 | ||
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11-23-2009, 10:16 AM | #15 | ||
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Since there's also no evidence of any Christians knowing of any narrative gospels prior to the Bar-Kokhba revolt of 132, I think a range of 70 - 135 would be more appropriate for the creation of the canonical narrative gospels. In either case (70 or 135) anyone who could have been an eyewitness to any sort of historical Jesus was significantly dead by the time the narrative gospels were written. Even worse, this all assumes that Mark was intended to be historical, even if written in 70. What if Mark is primarily theology/allegory about how the Jews and the historical witnesses (disciples) were clueless and their obtuseness is what caused the events of 70/135 CE? The gospel of Mark is decidedly hostile towards the posited "historical witnesses" while the subsequent gospels try to reconcile this, meaning that the gospels that rehabilitate the disciples were using the non-historical Mark as their "witness". Lastly, there could have been Christians around for decades before any narrative gospels were written. They just might have all been gnostics. |
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11-23-2009, 10:23 AM | #16 | ||||||
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Have you actually read these quote mined sources, or did you just copy and paste from some internet page? Would you like to expand these quotes with the date, the name of the book or article or other source? Quote:
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But we don't have a date on this quote, so we don't know what recent means. Archaeology has added nothing to the search for Jesus. The Dead Sea Scrolls do not mention Jesus or Christianity, and have been radiocarbon dated to the first century BCE. Literary analysis of the gospels has shown them to be based on readings of the Jewish scriptures, in particular the Septuagint, leaving little or no room for any history. |
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11-23-2009, 11:18 AM | #17 |
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While this may be true of non-Jewish scholarship, many Jewish scholars, versed in Jewish literature, do find considerable room for history in the Gospels.
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11-23-2009, 11:33 AM | #18 | ||
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11-23-2009, 11:39 AM | #19 | ||
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All of these give us information about how Christianity formed. If our only choices were to focus on the NT, or exclude the NT but look at everything else, I think we'd get a much better picture with the second option. Quote:
If Christianity had died off 1000 years ago, I don't think anyone would be trying to reconstruct a historical Jesus from such obviously mythical theological sources. Few people engage in the fool's errand of trying to reconstruct the historical Moses. |
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11-23-2009, 11:51 AM | #20 | |
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That being the case, not only do we not know *how* it started, but we also don't know *when* it started. It could easily have existed for hundreds of years before the events of the 1st and 2nd century brought it to the forefront, or it might not have existed at all until the penning of the first gospel effectively created it. But a newly empowered cult needs an origins story...and that's what the gospels provide, a novel and theologically relevant origin that replays the same 2nd born theme seen over and over in the Jewish scriptures and explains why Christianity replaces Judaism. |
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