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Old 04-04-2012, 08:11 PM   #71
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I have to go but the point is that we can never prove what was or wasn't true outside of the literary intentions of the original gospel writer. But as it stands all evidence points to Mark in his original gospel preserved originally in Alexandria and now lost - a kind of meta-gospel which featured stories which are now found in Matthew, Luke and John - the literary intention was to show Jesus as a God.
Steven, this was not the intention of the writer of GMark. Diogenes was dead on when he rebuked you earlier in the thread. Mark's Jesus is Adoptionist and is meant to represent, in allegorical form, the experience of the new believer in accepting Jesus and casting off his new identity.

But right or wrong here is not important. Having a meltdown and then spewing hacks on people who like and respect you is something that later you will regret. Speaking as an expert in such behavior with much experience of that signature stupidity.... Stop making the stupid comments about mythicists' character and motivation. It isn't making you friends or increasing your own self-respect. If you don't like the HJ/MJ debate, don't stick your nose in it.

I speak as someone who reads all your posts and admires the effort and insight you bring to the forum and to what you write. I always read them even though I do not have enough mastery of the topic to comment intelligently. Please stop attacking your friends and allies.

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Old 04-04-2012, 08:18 PM   #72
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Good points. I always thought given the tale as it is it was iinevtibale he would die young, so to speak.

In one of the gospels Jesus' party appears to be armed when he is taken into custody.

There would certainly have been politicial corruption, influence pedaaling, and collaboration between Roman adminstrors aand Jewish upper crust. Jews with money could have conspired with Romans to eliminate the man.
The Temple authority at that time was appointed by the Romans, so there was much collusion. The populace despised the priests as collaborators at the time, and the Temple authority would have had no problem with helping to arrest and hand over troublemaker.
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Old 04-04-2012, 08:27 PM   #73
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of taxes ?

lets see

tax war probably killed memebers of jesus family in Galilee when he was a child.
jesus is question about taxes a few days before he was kiled
jesus preached to tax collecters to stop ripping the people off
jesus has a tax collector as a follower
jesus tip's over the bank tellers tables calling them thieves
jesus is claimed to be perverting the nation, tax doging and claiming to be king in which he claims isnt of this world.
jesus is put on a cross a day later
a tax war claims the temple, not long after jesus death.
Jewish or Roman taxation? The JC of the tale never went agianst Rome. He was in the face of the Jews.

' Give to Ceasar what is Ceasar's and god what is god's '.

But another good point. Antoher reason why he could have been crucified in the tale. In the gospels he does mostly seem to be on the outskirts and in one case says to keep his locastion secret. A man on the run?

I don't remember JC being given the third degree on taxes by the Romans.

jesus never paid his tax, he sent peter fishing, he surely didnt pull a coin out of his purse and pay, nor even out of a fishes mouth.


first if you learn the anthropology of the time you would know he was questioned about the poll tax, not the temple tax.

but remember this, jesus was a poor peasant who lived below poverty, he went from town to town preaching and healing for scaps of food.

he is said to have even told his followers to leave their beggar bowls behind.

he traveled with no money, and told his followers to ditch all their belongings. No property and no money, means no taxation. He's beating the romans at their own game.


against the jews, well of course. we are only left with a biased roman view


take into account the lack of more taxation in the gospels are due to the roman audiences it was written for not painting a villians picture, and this was all common knowledge back then to jews and romans.



he wasnt a man on the run, no one cared about a poor broke jew from a backwater village.



being a poor jew with no tax money to pay temple fee's and poll taxes, is one thing, but then to start preaching to tax collectors against roman taxation was a money issue

tipping the table in the temple was a money issue.

messing with roman money on payday would get you put on a cross without a trial or a blink of a eye. Pilate came into town to haul back his tax collections from the holiday event and to make sure with Caiaphas that it went off without a hitch.


spirituality didnt matter as much as money to poor desperate illiterate jews, and his fight against the corrupt roman infected temple and the non violent fight against over roman taxation was what made him popular.

NOT the roman version of what really happened
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Old 04-04-2012, 08:29 PM   #74
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Good points. I always thought given the tale as it is it was iinevtibale he would die young, so to speak.

In one of the gospels Jesus' party appears to be armed when he is taken into custody.

There would certainly have been politicial corruption, influence pedaaling, and collaboration between Roman adminstrors aand Jewish upper crust. Jews with money could have conspired with Romans to eliminate the man.
The Temple authority at that time was appointed by the Romans, so there was much collusion. The populace despised the priests as collaborators at the time, and the Temple authority would have had no problem with helping to arrest and hand over troublemaker.

with the emphasis that this was the biggest payday for the temple and romans for the year.

this was not a time to try and stop or slow this down. Had jesus started a riot, it would have cost romans dearly.
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Old 04-04-2012, 08:32 PM   #75
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Good points. I always thought given the tale as it is it was iinevtibale he would die young, so to speak.

In one of the gospels Jesus' party appears to be armed when he is taken into custody.

There would certainly have been politicial corruption, influence pedaaling, and collaboration between Roman adminstrors aand Jewish upper crust. Jews with money could have conspired with Romans to eliminate the man.
The Temple authority at that time was appointed by the Romans, so there was much collusion. The populace despised the priests as collaborators at the time, and the Temple authority would have had no problem with helping to arrest and hand over troublemaker.
That I did not know about Romans apointing temple priests. I'd assume Rome was also skimming the profits?

I know supporting temple worship with materials like animals for sacrifce was big bisiness. A documentary painted a pictiue of temple workers carrying in a sream of livestock and carrying out a stream of bloody caracses. Emphasis on bloody and bloodstained.

It adds to the image of a traditional Jewish prophet.
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Old 04-04-2012, 08:35 PM   #76
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Causing a ruckus at the Temple during Passover, all by itself, would be enough to get somebody crucified. Not because they were a threat to "Rome," but because they were a threat specifically to the Romans in Jerusalem. The Romans were tremendously outnumbered in the city by thousands to one during passover. They were paranoid about riots. Josephus tells us they were paranoid about riots and kept extra guards on the Temple wall during passover. Anyone who looked like they might rile up the crowd or get a riot going was removed and killed without any compunction.

The Gospels also say that the Romans charged Jesus with claiming to be the Messiah - i.e. the 'King of the Jews" which would also be an ipso facto seditious claim to make. This part may or not be true (it's possible. Romans killed would be messiahs all the time, and its possible they affixed some kind of facetious placard to that effect), but stirring up shit at the Temple, all by itself, would be enough to by a crazy Galilean doomsayer a date with a tree, though.
except the temple incident is shadowed by OT passages that mirror some of the jeuss story so it leave the temple incident with not as much historicity as we would like.


As well, you could not have tipped over a table as the table would have had its own guard or guards, not to mention the teller would have wrestled him down.


plus he would have never escaped the temple, my only thought is the crowd was so large it gave him a chance to escape normally not afforded

that gave the temple guards a chance to catch him at nightfall and avoid a complete riot in teh day ruining the big payday for the temple and romans controlling it.
The Gospels say he was caught at the bottom of the Mount of Olives, which is at least historically accurate as to where Pilgrims camped during festivals. The Mount of Olives is right across the Kidron Valley to the east (it was basically a slope "behind" the Temple relative to its orientation on the Temple Mount). This lower slope was basically a tent village during Passover. It would make sense that this is where they would go to look for a fugitive. I think it also makes sense that they might let him escape from the Temple courtyard on his own rather than trying to wade into a potentially hostile mob. Jesus was already supposedly someone known as a regular in the courtyard, so it probably would have been no big deal to wait until dark and go get him more quietly.

I think of it as being akin to a familiar street preacher, someone basically regarded as harmless, going to Mall of America every day and preaching at people passing by, then one day just going nuts, knocking over a couple of kiosks and sprinting out into the parking lot. Rather than bother chasing him, they just send somebody to the mission they know he stays at. Nowadays, somebody like that would get sent to a hospital for examination. Pilate had a much more truncated path to resolving such an individual's case.
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Old 04-04-2012, 08:39 PM   #77
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I don't understand why we have to assume that Mark was not Jewish based on the evidence of a corrupt copy of his gospel circulating among the orthodox. Why is a white guy interested in the destruction of Jerusalem? Why's he so interested in the Jews? In Jewish writings? Expectations? It seems counter intuitive.
The majority of us here are not religious at all, yet have an interest in discussing Jewsh religion.

Human curiosity, invention, and literary license have not changed that much. We are displaced 2000 years, but we are the same basic humans. Look at ourselves for insight back then.

You are rather pasionatly engaged in a theological debate about myths, history, and origins. I expect an age old human passion and passtime.

Didn't Aristotle or Herodotus mention Atlantis?
No, that was Plato.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantis
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Old 04-04-2012, 08:44 PM   #78
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jesus would have been invisible in the sea of people

self proclaimed messaihs and preachers would have numbered in the thousands



I agree with what Diog has posted except I toss between how much they would let someone mess with money in the temple and get away with it, and a escape due to crowds.


so little historicty that can be dug from this, I wish there was more.
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Old 04-04-2012, 08:46 PM   #79
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The majority of us here are not religious at all, yet have an interest in discussing Jewsh religion.

Human curiosity, invention, and literary license have not changed that much. We are displaced 2000 years, but we are the same basic humans. Look at ourselves for insight back then.

You are rather pasionatly engaged in a theological debate about myths, history, and origins. I expect an age old human passion and passtime.

Didn't Aristotle or Herodotus mention Atlantis?
No, that was Plato.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Atlantis
Point being myths have always been part of the cionversation.
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Old 04-04-2012, 08:53 PM   #80
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This all reinforces my view there was an HJ. Or that the name or persona of JC became a generic name for a character to which a number of anechdotal stories were attached and embellished.

Given the liklihod of many Jews pissed off at Rome and a general plausibility for some of the stories, the question would then ssem to be where the ressurection got injected into the story.

It was added, or an HJ really thought he was son of god on a mission.
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