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06-28-2010, 10:41 PM | #171 | |
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The Pauline writings, as we have them today, make mention of a character called Jesus the Christ and repeats the name of Jesus over 200 times and referring to Jesus as the Christ or Messiah over 150 times.
Now a Pauline writer place himself in Damascus around the time of Aretas or sometime around 40 CE. This event is EXTREMELY significant. 2Cor. 11:32 - Quote:
The Pauline writers preached, at around 40 CE that Jesus the Christ, Jesus the Messiah was : 1. Born of a woman. See Galatians 4.4 2. Betrayed in the night. See 1 Cor. 11.23 3. Crucified. See 1 Cor 1.23 4 Dead and resurrected. See Galatians 1.1 Again, the time line is EXTREMELY significant. At around 40 CE during the time of a King Aretas a Pauline writer preached about JESUS called CHRIST or the MESSIAH in Damascus. Now the Messiah or Christ is probably the MOST SIGNIFICANT EXPECTED figure to the Jews, even today, Jews are still looking for a Messiah. Josephus, Tacitus and Suetonius wrote that the Jews expected a Messianic ruler at around 70 CE and Josephus claimed the expectation of the Messiah at around 70 CE may have been the cause the elevation of the Jewish War. See Wars of the Jews 6.5.4, Suetonius Life of Vespasian and Tacitus Histories 5. Up to 70 CE or around the Jewish War, there is NO EVIDENCE of Jesus the Christ or Jesus the Messiah from Philo, Josephus, Tacitus or Suetonius. At around 40 CE the Pauline writers were preaching that Jesus the Messiah had ALREADY come, was betrayed, crucified, was dead and even resurrected but historical sources claimed the Messiah was expected at around 70 CE. No extant historian or non-apologetic writer can account for Jesus the Messiah or Christ during the time of Aretas, Tiberius or Pilate. The Pauline Jesus the Messiah or Christ appears to be a non-historical. Jesus the Christ, the Messiah, of Paul was EQUAL to God, the Creator of heaven and earth and EVERY knee should bow to the name of Jesus including the Roman Emperors. There is NO really no non-apologetic evidence of Jesus called Christ up to 70 CE . There is no non-apologetic evidence of a character called Paul who went all over the Roman Empire telling non-Jews that Jesus the Messiah of the Jews had ALREADY come, was to be worshiped as an EQUAL to God and was the Creator. It would appear the Pauline writers wrote FICTION and backdated their story of Paul and his resurrected JESUS called Christ. |
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06-29-2010, 12:51 AM | #172 | ||
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And no, I'm not contradicting myself with the analogy I made - ie comparing how our own reality works to what is reflected within the NT storyline. Fantasy and reality. Ideas and reality. Interpretation and the historical reality that gives 'birth' to that interpretation. We operate on both levels - the subjective and the objective. Thus, however grand is ones interpretation of the NT storyline it remains an interpretation. It remains an interpretation until such time as that interpretation can develop some 'legs'. Some evidence, some historical footing. Some physical component beyond the mythical. Yes, the historical Jesus storyline has staying power - not because of the assumed historical Jesus - but because of the belief, the very subjective belief, that it's not all mythical. We know, from our own subjective experience of life, that the real staying power is not ideas but the man who holds and creates the ideas. Earl, your 'picture' is black and white - it needs some rainbow colors to bring it to life... |
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06-29-2010, 05:14 AM | #173 | |||||||||||
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An alternative view of Q is that of Mark Goodacre in his book: Quote:
There is also a Research Project at the University of Copenhagen. Quote:
The End of Q http://www.freeratio.org/showthread.php?t=282014 Quote:
The John, Jesus, and History Project http://www.freeratio.org/showthread.php?t=283267 Quote:
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As to the actual life history of the historical non-crucified figure being dropped into a “black hole’. Great question. That such has been the case is grounds for investigation, for imagination, for speculation . It could well be that the ‘black hole’ is in the smallness of our imagination to present possible scenarios why this could be the case. Quote:
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Actually, Earl, I don't see any need for your 'picture' to bother itself with the gospel storyline. If its fiction to your theory re Paul' spiritual, mythical, Jesus construct, why not just go the whole hog and jettison the gospels altogether? Quote:
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06-29-2010, 06:24 AM | #174 |
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06-29-2010, 06:48 AM | #175 |
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Dumb question: Why is the argument that Luke didn't use Mathew and not the other way around for getting away from a need of Q? Is it obvious some way or a link maybe that lays it out??
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06-29-2010, 07:17 AM | #176 | |
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May I preface my comment with the fact that I have respect and admiration for your work. Honest. That said, I can't agree with your assessment of the credibility of the Q hypothesis. Quite simply we disagree on the statement I have bolded in my quote from you above. I think the prima facie case of either "Luke" copying "Matthew" or vice versa [which never seems to rate a mention for probably good reasons] is far better at explaining the common material in those 2 gospels. As Dunn said in one of his books "I have found no need for that hypothesis" [or something like that]. An ancillary problem I have with Q is the way it is used by believers in an historical Jesus to bridge the gap between an alleged HJ an the first gospels. An extremely convenient back up to oral tradition. Reading Burton Mack's "Who Wrote the NT" I came across this : "Q will put us in touch with thw first followers of Jesus. It is the earliest written record we have of the Jesus movement ...That is because it documents the history of a single group of Jesus people for a period of about fifty years, from the time of Jesus in the 20s until after the Roman-Jewish War in the 70s"p 47 Mack, a believer in an HJ, apparently places the gospel of "Mark" c 70ce. Using Q, the Gospel of Thomas and bits of "Mark" that he separates as discrete pre-"Markan" elements [pronouncement stories and sets of miracle stories] , Mack comes up with 5, count them 5, separate groups he traces, somehow, back to a live HJ 50 years pre "Mark". Q is a very convenient hypothesis for believers in an historical Jesus. I would say that my mind is not made up with respect to Q, I would like to read your material on it, but I must also say that Goulder, Farrer, Goodacre and co, make, for me, a strong case for not accepting it. And I also find Ken Olsen's work on "How Luke was Written" [I presume you are familiar with that?] persuasive. cheers yalla. |
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06-29-2010, 10:22 PM | #177 |
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Thanks for your kind words, yalla. I, too, have read Goulder, Farrer (some of) and Goodacre (not Olson), but when evaluating them after balancing them with critiques of their no-Q case, I find them wanting, Goodacre especially.
Have you read the standard rebuttal to Goodacre by John Kloppenborg, "On Dispensing with Q?: Goodacre on the Relation of Luke to Matthew"? It was published in NT Studies 49 (2003), p.210-236. You can find it online at: http://www.chass.utoronto.ca/~kloppen/2003mwqh.pdf. I have also read a couple of other critiques of the Luke used Matthew case, and find that some of the objections to it have not been answered by Goodacre in any satisfactory way that I can see. In my Jesus: Neither God Nor Man I itemize all the standard objections, as well as contribute a few of my own observations on the question. There is just too much problematic with the Luke used Matthew position which even Goulder does not efficiently rebut, let alone Goodacre, who uses some very questionable devices to try to deflect those problems. OTOH I would say that there is very little that is problematic per se about the Q hypothesis. The argument that it is unnecessary, or it hasn't survived, or it somehow contravenes Occam's Razor, are not substantive objections in the same way as those against the Luke used Matthew position. They don't relate to the 'unworkability' of the hypothesis as the latter do. However, I must protest that just because the 'opposition' finds the existence of Q convenient for their defense of an HJ should in no way prejudice us against evaluating the evidence in an objective manner. Earl Doherty |
06-29-2010, 10:30 PM | #178 |
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I am going to bow out on any further discussion with Maryhelena. Our respective thought processes simply don't cross at any point. It is futile from my point of view to try to get her to understand me, or me to understand her. That sometimes happens, and one simply moves on to other things.
Thanks, anyway. Earl Doherty |
06-29-2010, 11:08 PM | #179 | |
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Greetings Littlejhon . |
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06-30-2010, 12:17 AM | #180 | ||
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