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01-06-2010, 09:45 PM | #81 | ||||||||
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The gospel narrative rounds off the John the Baptist/Elijah introduction by having Jesus (as per Malachi) "cleanse" the temple. The whole point of the gospel narrative is to have Christ cast out the sinners. The starting point is the prophecy, and the narrative is built around that. The story assumes a small temple for it to work. By taking this event and setting it out of its context and placing it in a historical or real topographical setting only destroys the original story. All sorts of things then have to be creatively imagined to make something work, such as Jesus causing only a minor hiccup for a few minutes, etc. This is fine, but it is neither gospel story nor 'historical record'. Quote:
This may be an imaginative reconstruction to adapt some details from the gospel into a "historical backdrop", but it is not the gospel story. The gospel has Jesus in synagogues and with Pharisees (both anachronisms in pre 70 ce Galilee) and being forced into wilderness areas and across lakes by hordes coming to him within cities and villages. Quote:
Gospels don't have anyone chasing Peter or the disciples, period. They flee, but not because they are chased. The reason they flee is because their shepherd is struck/taken. The whole scene is to dramatize a prophecy. Strike the shepherd and the sheep will be scattered." That's what the authors had in mind and that's how they wrote it. By trying to imagine "historical reconstructions" we lose sight of the story's roots and destroy it, putting something else quite different in its place. If the narrators did have Peter and co being chased, and the prophecy tagged on as an afterthought, then I would be prepared to see some sort of historical core. But all we have is a story from first to last built around the prophecy. It is not history. The exception to this proves the rule. The only one who is chased is the young man who flees naked -- thus fulfilling that Amos prophecy. As for multiple attestation, no way. We have one story that is adapted by three other evangelists. Quote:
Religious festivals that I have seen are generally happy occasions. People love to catch up with friends and old contacts. Quote:
The mere fact that we have to close the gospel narrative and close our eyes and creatively re-place our characters and events in another time and place (out of the gospel and into our 'historical reconstructed' world) only demonstrates how unhistorical the gospel narratives really are. We don't have to do that with histories and documents informing us about Julius Caesar or Alexander, etc. We should feel a little uncomfortable making an exception for a biblical story. |
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01-07-2010, 07:22 AM | #82 | |||
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"So what IS Paul's source? Did Paul receive this bit of tradition in a revelation? What does "from the Lord" mean? The same thing in meaning that today's preachers declare when they say,"the Lord spoke to me". It's all in their imagination. IOW's, they make this shit up in their thoughts and speak it as "coming from the Lord". You're right, I think. Paul didn't start the division within Judaism, it was Peter. Paul merely picked up the stick[cross] and ran with it to the Gentiles. The Jews would not accept which was not permitted to them, but Paul knew that Gentiles were ignorant of Jewish scriptures. It was an easy manipulation, or conspiracy, or both, and one thought to providing security to the Jews at Jerusalem, now called Israel. |
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01-07-2010, 03:44 PM | #83 | |
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01-08-2010, 05:14 AM | #84 | |
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Well,I don't think it was Peter either. By the time of Paul, Christianity already exists from Rome to Jerusalem with many points in between. It was well-established. There's a church in Rome, churches in Galatia...not all of these were founded by Paul, the so-called apostle to the Gentiles. We already have competing factions--Apollos, the Judaizers. Christianity seems to have been around longer than what the Gospel stories can account for (if we are accepting a traditional dating of Paul and I should note here that we have very few firm dates on any of this material. You will see bible scholars and apologists repeatedly refer to Gospels as written from 80 to 100 with no evidence at all that they actually existed before the turn of the century). |
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01-08-2010, 01:48 PM | #85 | ||
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You just may be right on that point. All it seems, we have to go on is Jewish tradition and it included places of worship for Gentiles wherein the bible story mentions "the Law of Moses" was read to the Gentiles each Sabbath day. The Jesus character mentions lots more disciples other than the 12 he chose to remain at Jerusalem. And then there's John the Baptist's role as preacher before Jesus. Jesus told John, "it has come to us to fulfill all these things", so therein is a connection that provides room for Christianity some time before Jesus came on the scene. What were these Christians(not then named as such) then doing? Were they waiting for the Solar Equinox to give "the sign" of their Messiah's appearance? Maybe the "star in the East" has clue to do with these ancient astrologers/astronomers. Was "the Christ" sign simply a part of the Zodiac in its "season" that they calculated for that time and place? If people followed "the star" charting then it looks like that is just what was happening. |
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01-08-2010, 02:14 PM | #86 | ||
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Jn.17:9 is a clue to Gentile exclusion - "I pray not for the world (the world outside Judaism was Gentile), but for them[Jews] which thou hast given me, for they are thine." (predistination) Compare Mt.13:11, 22:3-4, 19:28 |
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