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01-16-2008, 04:43 AM | #1 |
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Historical evidence for Jesus.
It seems that we really only have a disputed text from Josephus outside the Bible texts so what evidence can we substantiate for the person of Jesus. I can accept that there may have been many apocalyptical prophets but, again, I don't know of any relating evidence that might indicate they were the same person.
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01-16-2008, 06:48 AM | #2 |
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You mean, besides the gospels (all of them, not just the Christian 4), besides Paul, besides the various Acts, besides the various other epistularies, besides Papias, besides the mostly-undisputed passage in Josephus, besides Tacitus, we only have the disputed passage in Josephus, right?
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01-16-2008, 10:37 AM | #3 |
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There is no contemporary evidence for the existence of Jesus. Paul never met Jesus and one has difficulty finding anything in his writings that suggests that he got any first hand witness of Jesus from others. We don't know when the gospels were written, but the earliest, Mark, was written after the fall of the temple, mentioning the rending of the curtain of the temple to make the overthrow of the Jews and the liberation of their god for christians.
Josephus writes half a century after the time of Jesus and despite the fact that the Testimonium Flavium had been rejected as spurious for a long time there has been a resurgence of support for arbitrarily reclaiming parts of it. People parade the sorry excuse for evidence as though a lot of names well after the fact make up for none when it counts. Then one must admit that the pagan texts which do mention Jesus were maintained by christians scribes, scribes well known for innovation in their own literature. We have
Non-christians trying to sell this stuff as secure historical sources is like Somali women advocating infibulation for their daughters. The task of trying to do history in the area has to involve rolling back the two millennia of apologetic actions aimed at securing the faith from any attack in order to have any hope in trying to understand the origins of christianity. It may have started as described, but we will never know unless we try to use a coherent historical methodology as employed in other fields of history. spin |
01-16-2008, 10:58 AM | #4 | |
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It is wholly reasonable to reject Jesus of Nazareth as an historical figure. There are no known credible non-apologetic extant records of a man called Jesus of Nazareth who had thousands of followers and was regarded as the Messiah and son of a God, in the 1st century. Up to late 1st century, Josephus' Wars of the Jews 6.5.4, and 2nd century Tacitus' Histories 5.13, and Suetonius' Life of Vesapasian wrote that the Messiah was probably Vespasian and that the Jewish Messiah was expected around 70CE, not during the procuratorship of Pilate. Even Philo of Alexander, who wrote about events during and after Pilate, made no mention of this Jesus of Nazareth, his disciples, apostles, Paul, or his doctrine, although Philo lived during the reign of Tiberius. And further Philo used the word "Logos", meaning the "Word" and never mentioned Jesus of Nazareth at all, but then, very strange, the author of gJohn referred to Jesus of Nazareth as the Word or Logos. See John 1. The history of Jesus of Nazareth is exteremly doubtful. |
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01-16-2008, 12:18 PM | #5 | |
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None of what you mention can be classed as objective historical evidence. I disagree that Josephus's passage is "mostly-undisputed" and I think most serious Christian scholars would class it as a given that Paul never met Jesus; indeed I find it interesting to ponder the miracles and supernatural events in the gospels that Paul doesn't mention as well as finding it probable that his kristos was not Jesus at all. I don't think historians would consider the acts objective and historical either but I may have led you to believe that this was what I was looking for by the way I asked the question. I find it interesting that scholars within the Jesus Seminar rely upon an amalgamation of figures to create this one personality rather than what would have been an easily recordable objective account of his life. |
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01-16-2008, 02:48 PM | #6 | |
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The word "Christians", as used in the Pliny letters, is very ambiguous. It would appear that there were different concepts of Christ in the 2nd century, and there were also persons who believed that they were sons of God whose followers were referred to as "Christians".
It would appear that all the followers of the heretics, as mentioned in Against Heresies, were called Christians among themselves, yet some of these Christian sects had no connection to Jesus of Nazareth. The Pliny letters, whether authentic or not, have very little use to identify the the sect of Christians mentioned therein. In First Apology, Justin Martyr claimed that followers of Simon the magician were called Christians, and these Christians of Simon the magician predated the Pliny letters. Justin Martyr's First Apology 26 Quote:
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01-16-2008, 03:01 PM | #7 | |
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01-16-2008, 07:06 PM | #10 |
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