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Old 08-03-2010, 07:54 PM   #71
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Before even attempting an explanation that is in any sense worthwhile and has some relevance to the early origins of Christianity - the ‘Occupant’ of that cross has first to be established to be a historical figure. (maryhelena)
We may only be talking about characters in a book. We know for sure that much of it is fiction because of the supernatural agency. We exclude supernatural claims from the analysis. But the supernatural claim itself is a natural phenomenon. People make such claims for a purpose. If anybody suggests that Captain Ahab was pursuing Moby Dick because he was getting low on lamp oil - that is not a valid explanation for that character's motivation. He represents something, but it couldn't be that. No way. We can discuss the motivation of characters whether fictional or not. Jesus was not sent from heaven, period. But if he was sent from heaven according to some authors, we would like to know for what purpose.

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You are endeavouring to use the NT storyline as a historical source, to run your theories from that source. I want to do the opposite. To run historical events into that NT framework. (maryhelena)
I think we're using more similar methods than you recognize. I just can't see coming up with theories that do not attempt to explain the cross and the blood and how they make the New Covenant different from the Old. Those are parts of the data set and close to the core. There are similarities between the covenants, too. I have said that among the similarities are that the Christians were zealous for the One God and the voice of the prophets. The big difference is that Christians were not zealous for the Law.

I don't mean to cause you frustration. I'm beginning to see how you (and Stephan) could think that Alexandrian developments in allegorizing Judaism could have contributed to the origin. It's not something I have studied much because I didn't think that was where the action was. We find Logos in Philo and gJohn. I need to look into this more.

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It cannot be that Ignatius was charged with a crime punishable with DEATH and carried out the very same crime while in custody. (aa5874)
Duh! But yet we have an actual historical artifact that says he did. Somebody wrote that for a reason. I don't want to hear your explanation for how that came about, but I'm sure I will anyway and it will include CAPITALIZED WORDS!

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All the claims about the Jesus the Messiah in the Pauline writings appears to be false. (aa5874)
I wrote about the social attachments of the author know as 'Paul'. Religion is a social phenomenon and while all these authors of undetermined identity were creating PLANTED writings to be STORED until later Christianity was spreading through the normal channels that religion always moves through: social attachments. If 'Paul' was connected to Caesar (and he was taken under arrest to Rome to stand trial also) Then it would be good to investigate the social connectedness of centers of power.
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Old 08-04-2010, 04:16 AM   #72
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I'm beginning to see how you (and Stephan) could think that Alexandrian developments in allegorizing Judaism could have contributed to the origin. It's not something I have studied much because I didn't think that was where the action was. We find Logos in Philo and gJohn. I need to look into this more.
Probably the main function of the Library of Alexandria was rewriting Homer for modern times. And what do we find about the gospel of Mark?

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This is an incredible book that must be read by everyone with an interest in Christianity. MacDonald's shocking thesis is that the Gospel of Mark is a deliberate and conscious anti-epic, an inversion of the Greek "Bible" of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, which in a sense "updates" and Judaizes the outdated heroic values presented by Homer, in the figure of a new hero, Jesus (whose name, of course, means "Savior"). When I first heard of this I assumed it would be yet another intriguing but only barely defensible search for parallels, stretching the evidence a little too far—tantalizing, but inconclusive. What I found was exactly the opposite. MacDonald's case is thorough, and though many of his points are not as conclusive as he makes them out to be, when taken as a cumulative whole the evidence is so abundant and clear it cannot be denied. And being a skeptic to the thick, I would never say this lightly. Several scholars who reviewed or commented on it have said this book will revolutionize the field of Gospel studies and profoundly affect our understanding of the origins of Christianity, and though I had taken this for hype, after reading the book I now echo that very sentiment myself
http://www.infidels.org/library/mode...erandmark.html

Add a very significant Jewish population that were clearly evolving very differently in a separate part of the Greek Empires.
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Old 08-04-2010, 04:56 AM   #73
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Originally Posted by stephan huller
Anyway I am rushing out the door but my friend Hermann Detering did publish an article of mine at his site a while back

http://www.radikalkritik.de/Huller_Peregrin.htm
Thanks for the reference. Here's a quote from your article:

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Originally Posted by stephan huller

Pionius identifies for us that Polycarp was of Semitic extraction and quite likely a Jew. (my emphasis)
Ok, so we begin to learn about your source of information:

Who was "Pionius"?

Here is a quote from Roger Pearse, summarizing J.B. Lightfoot's historic study of the patristic authors:

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This text has come down to us in a single Greek manuscript in Paris, shelfmark Bibl.Nat. 1452, also known as the Medicean manuscript, which dates to the 10th century. It contains various lives, martydoms and eulogies of saints for the month of February. The Life of Polycarp occupies folios 182a-192b, -- although some leaves are wrongly ordered so that they run 182, 185, 183, 184, 187, 188, 186, 189, 190, 191, 192 --, and is assigned to Feb. 23. It is followed immediately by a copy of the genuine Letter to the Smyrnaeans which describes the martyrdom of Polycarp.

The text is imperfect as given in this, the only manuscript. In chapter 3 a list of early bishops of Smyrna is promised, but never appears. In chapter 12 there is a promise to include Polycarp's Letter to the Philippians but this is not found. In chapter 20 we are told that Polycarp's explanations of scripture will appear later, but they do not. The document seems to be mutilated at the end, and a wide lacuna is present between chapters 28-29. Various words are also missing.
So, Stephan, your source of information, upon which you base your theory, is a tenth century compilation, with various lacunae. One wonders whether or not someone a few hundred years earlier(Marcus Aurelius), had mentioned either Polycarp or Polonius? Here is a counterweight: finger in the pie--Eusebius.

avi
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Old 08-04-2010, 05:26 AM   #74
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Originally Posted by Russellonius View Post
I think we're using more similar methods than you recognize. I just can't see coming up with theories that do not attempt to explain the cross and the blood and how they make the New Covenant different from the Old. Those are parts of the data set and close to the core. There are similarities between the covenants, too. I have said that among the similarities are that the Christians were zealous for the One God and the voice of the prophets. The big difference is that Christians were not zealous for the Law.

I don't mean to cause you frustration. I'm beginning to see how you (and Stephan) could think that Alexandrian developments in allegorizing Judaism could have contributed to the origin. It's not something I have studied much because I didn't think that was where the action was. We find Logos in Philo and gJohn. I need to look into this more.
As I wrote earlier, I can't see that the symbolic blood/wine drinking of the New Covenant is in anyway a rejection of the Old Covenant. I made the point regarding a re-interpretation of the Old Covenant - a spiritual interpretation - that allows for the OT to retain it's 'good' elements while dropping those elements that were considered to be archaic - animal sacrifices. The blood issue, as in Acts, remains as an entrenched ''law' that the New Covenant had no 'authority' to negate.

So, where does this leave us?

I can suggest that the Old and the New Covenants reflect two different contexts - a literal, historical context and the new spiritual context. That's the easy part. But does not answer the question of why the symbolic drinking of blood was going to be acceptable within that spiritual context. What we need is the missing link, the switch over that allowed for a symbolic use of blood to not be offensive.

The gospel Jesus on the cross the switch over? Hardly. What significances is there in a gentle Jesus who preached for around a year, upset a few people with his theological ideas and ends up crucified. There is only theological interpretations possible from such a scenario - whether Jesus was historical or mythological. But the 'Law' was historical - at least in the sense that the Jews had a set code of right conduct. The question is - could the 'Law' have had, or was seen to have had, within a historical setting, a re-interpretation in a purely spiritual context; a change in focus from the literal historical context to a spiritual context. The gospel storyline suggests that this was so. The question then becomes - if not the gospel Jesus - then who, where and when. I don't think a literary interpretation of the gospel Jesus story is going to answer these question. It's back to the history books.

Russell, I think perhaps this blood issue is getting off topic here - I'll put up a new thread later re the Hasmonean connection in all of this...
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Old 08-04-2010, 08:11 AM   #75
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Originally Posted by Clivedurdle View Post

Probably the main function of the Library of Alexandria was rewriting Homer for modern times. And what do we find about the gospel of Mark?

Quote:
This is an incredible book that must be read by everyone with an interest in Christianity. MacDonald's shocking thesis is that the Gospel of Mark is a deliberate and conscious anti-epic, an inversion of the Greek "Bible" of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, which in a sense "updates" and Judaizes the outdated heroic values presented by Homer, in the figure of a new hero, Jesus (whose name, of course, means "Savior"). When I first heard of this I assumed it would be yet another intriguing but only barely defensible search for parallels, stretching the evidence a little too far—tantalizing, but inconclusive. What I found was exactly the opposite. MacDonald's case is thorough, and though many of his points are not as conclusive as he makes them out to be, when taken as a cumulative whole the evidence is so abundant and clear it cannot be denied. And being a skeptic to the thick, I would never say this lightly. Several scholars who reviewed or commented on it have said this book will revolutionize the field of Gospel studies and profoundly affect our understanding of the origins of Christianity, and though I had taken this for hype, after reading the book I now echo that very sentiment myself
http://www.infidels.org/library/mode...erandmark.html

Add a very significant Jewish population that were clearly evolving very differently in a separate part of the Greek Empires.
Inheriting the trade of ruined Tyre and becoming the center of the new commerce between Europe and the Arabian and Indian East, the city grew in less than a generation to be larger than Carthage. In a century, Alexandria had become the largest city in the world and for some centuries more, was second only to Rome. It became the main Greek city of Egypt, with an extraordinary mix of Greeks from many cities and backgrounds. Nominally a free Hellenistic city, Alexandria retained its senate of Roman times and the judicial functions of that body were restored by Septimius Severus after temporary abolition by Augustus.

Alexandria was not only a center of Hellenism but was also home to the largest Jewish community in the world.
Other than collecting works from the past, the library was also home to a host of international scholars, well-patronized by the Ptolemaic dynasty with travel, lodging and stipends for their whole families. As a research institution, the library filled its stacks with new works in mathematics, astronomy, physics, natural sciences and other subjects. It was at the Library of Alexandria that the scientific method was first conceived and put into practice, and its empirical standards applied in one of the first and certainly strongest homes for serious textual criticism. As the same text often existed in several different versions, comparative textual criticism was crucial for ensuring their veracity. Once ascertained, canonical copies would then be made for scholars, royalty and wealthy bibliophiles the world over, this commerce bringing income to the library. The editors at the Library of Alexandria are especially well known for their work on Homeric texts. The more famous editors generally also held the title of head librarian.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Alexandria

Alexandria could have been the most stimulating place to live in the world before the decline of the Roman imperium.
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Old 08-04-2010, 07:50 PM   #76
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Avi,

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So, Stephan, your source of information, upon which you base your theory, is a tenth century compilation, with various lacunae. One wonders whether or not someone a few hundred years earlier(Marcus Aurelius), had mentioned either Polycarp or Polonius? Here is a counterweight: finger in the pie--Eusebius.
The text in question is called 'the Life of Polycarp' and it is usually dated to the fourth century. If we can't use information from a fourth century document to make sense of a second century story how can any sense be made of Christian history? (besides of course the nihilistic - 'it's all bullshit' approach of some at this forum).

There has to be some middle ground between saying a tradition is one hundred percent reliable because the eyewitness was standing there with a camcorder and a tradition is worthless because an eyewitness wasn't standing there with a camcorder.

I think that you deliberately set the bar so high because you really aren't interested in the subject matter. It really is unrealistically high. Is the sacking of Troy complete bullshit because there probably wasn't a historical 'Homer' and the Iliad was passed along by word of mouth for centuries before being written down? Is everything Plato wrote about Socrates 'complete bullshit' because used the dialogues to introduce his own ideas?

Where does this end? It seems to be so utterly nihilistic. As I said before, if you aren't willing to reconstruct history with what has survived, why not find something else to do? I don't understand where this all leads to besides a never ending chorus of 'it's all bullshit.'
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Old 08-05-2010, 07:23 AM   #77
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Originally Posted by stephan huller
Where does this end? It seems to be so utterly nihilistic. As I said before, if you aren't willing to reconstruct history with what has survived, why not find something else to do? I don't understand where this all leads to besides a never ending chorus of 'it's all bullshit.'
Correct me if I err, here, Stephan, but, I don't recall employing any scatological terminology to impeach your article.

Perhaps your tone and choice of vocabulary reflect a kind of contempt for my submissions to the forum, well, no problem, if so.

One would hope that the discourse, if not polite, would at least focus on the issues, rather than the personalities or lack of skill of the individuals submitting comments.

The issue here, in this subthread, is your explanation that your conclusion about Polycarp was based upon the writings of Pionius, a mysterious chap with only one extant document attributed to him, a document at best described as comprising lacunae and interpolations.

I am not asking you to recant your theory, I am simply asking that you acknowledge the thinness of your documentary support.

The issue, in my opinion, is not how little I know, or how little I care, about various issues. I don't perceive myself as the issue. Maybe I misjudge the extent to which I have caused grievous harm to you, or to others.

The issue, in my opinion, is the degree of optimism we acknowledge, in regarding as valid, this person's, or that person's theory about any topic.

In this instance, in a thread supposedly devoted to Alexandrine Christianity, you introduced, what appears to me to be a tangent, discussing your theory that writings attributed to Polycarp, Ignatius, Irenaeus, and Clement, (none of whom, to the best of my knowledge, lived in Alexandria) ought to be re-evaluated as possibly representing only one or perhaps two authors, rather than four.

Your theory is neither uninteresting, nor without considerable sympathy on the forum, but, it does seem, through my rosy spectacles, as if it has little to do with elaborating how Christianity spread in Alexandria.

Your response to my complaint about the pallor of your sources, strikes me at least, if no one else, as quite inappropriate, not at all what I had anticipated, though, not so very different, in hindsight, from your earlier response to another comment I had offered on this same thread:
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Originally Posted by stephan huller
Anyway I am rushing out the door ...
avi
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Old 08-05-2010, 08:10 AM   #78
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When someone writes an article, it's like making a dinner for guests. I've invited you into my home and laid the table for you. If the person has just popped a meal in the microwave, you have the right to say that you don't like eating food out of the microwave because you think it might cause cancer. But if you come over as a guest and the host has spent hours trying to make you dinner you owe that person the courtesy of at least showing proper consideration and politesse. Saying that the mashed potatoes didn't look good because they came out the wrong color and not touching any of the rest of the food might upset the host.
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