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06-14-2006, 12:54 PM | #81 | |||
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To a few comments by Chris Weimer:
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Incidentally, I forgot to correct earlier that my response to Jeffrey Gibson on Romans 1 took place on the JesusMysteries list (in 2001, I think), not on Crosstalk. I guess my posting to Mahlon Smith missed being archived by a month. Maybe I'll type it out over the next few days just to satisfy the curiosity that some seem to feel. All the best, Earl Doherty |
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06-14-2006, 12:56 PM | #82 | |
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Myth, anthropology, psychology, sociology and non xian religions are studied together without thinking about it, but there seems to be this assumption that xianity(and the other abrahamic religions?) are a special case, where the techniques and tools used for all other religions - what is the relationship to myth, to the society, the politics, the economics, the psychologies - somehow do not apply. Xianity does look like a predictable outcome of the beliefs and fantasies and ways of thinking and communicating of the time and place. |
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06-14-2006, 01:01 PM | #83 |
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Reflecting on the Davies post on XTalk mentioned by Earl, as well as recent comments by Loren Rosson III on his blog to the effect that he expects to see more Earl Dohertys, it occurs to me that not only the Jesus Myth, but Doherty's particular brand of the Jesus Myth is an inevitably. It is the only natural conclusion to be drawn from much--perhaps even most--contemporary scholarship. By applying their own criteria uniformly, instead of arbitrarily, it is the only natural result. It is the only logical conclusion reached by what has become normative criteria for inauthenticity. It pained me to reach this conclusion (thought I did so some time ago), having argued the contrary for some time, but that doesn't make it any less true. Earl uses the same negative criteria to reach his conclusion that Mark is 100% fiction that Crossan does to reach the conclusion that it's 80%.
Loren Rosson is right. We will see more Earl Dohertys. IMO it is inevitable--he will not be the only one to follow it through to that end. Though, of course, Schweitzer beat Loren to the punch by a century or so: thoroughgoing eschatology or thoroughgoing skepticism. A 1911 review of Schweitzer's masterpiece suggested that Wrede was the end result of that skepticism. He wasn't. Earl Doherty (or at least his paradigm) is. Whether or not the academy should engage the Jesus-Myth will (relatively) soon be a non-issue. Regards, Rick "Thoroughgoing Eschatology" Sumner |
06-14-2006, 01:03 PM | #84 | |
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Stephen |
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06-14-2006, 01:04 PM | #85 | |
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I don't know where or in response to what that posting you offer from Kilmon came from, but isn't it always the case (or too often, at least), that condemnations like that always speak in generalities? I've seen that so many times. Could Kilmon not have taken the time and effort to offer me one example of all those "problems" and "sweeping statements" I am guilty of? Comments like that are basically a cop-out. All the best, Earl Doherty |
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06-14-2006, 01:14 PM | #86 |
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These are just dishonest tactics. You seem not to klnow much about scholarship and want to impute problems with others. Remove the log in your eye. You cannot hope to be taken seriously by citing opinions of people given centuries after what they are commenting on. You don't even have any way of showing that these Latin fathers were separate witnesses. You just believe that they are right. You have nothing beyond your beliefs and their opinions.
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06-14-2006, 01:18 PM | #87 | |
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A religion grows out of its time, a Christ figure is the key motif. People try to explain these ideas to others, they use play techniques. Over time the lead character is assumed to represent someone who existed - a mythical christ becomes a lead character becomes a human in Palestine. Schweitzer has only discused various model jesi starting from the assumption there was one! |
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06-14-2006, 02:16 PM | #88 | |
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06-14-2006, 02:32 PM | #89 | |
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06-14-2006, 02:34 PM | #90 | |
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