![]() |
Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
![]() |
#471 | |||
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 1,289
|
![]() Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Jeffrey P.S. Forgive me for asking, but what you write above makes me wonder: Have you been sleeping with Yuri? |
|||
![]() |
![]() |
#472 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2005
Location: Tallmadge, Ohio
Posts: 808
|
![]() Quote:
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
#473 | ||
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 1,289
|
![]() Quote:
My understanding of what qualifies something as a rant is that it has to be an "harangue: a loud bombastic declamation expressed with strong emotion" So far as I can see, what I wrote was a calm and precice and emotionless statement of fact. If anyone here is engaged in ranting, it's you Ted. Quote:
Isn't it the case that what Mjers claim vis a vis what is stated in 1 Cor 2:6-8 not just that ARCHONTES are demons, but that when the ARCONTES/demons crucified Jesus they did not do it not on earth and through human intruments? And is it not the case that if they admit that Paul thought humans somehow took part in it, and that it took place on earth, then the idea that it was a purley "spiritual" event that "took place" in a heavenly realm falls to the ground? Jeffrey Gibson |
||
![]() |
![]() |
#474 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,435
|
![]() Quote:
“…they did not do it not on earth…” ????? “And is it not the case that if they admit…” Who is “they?” MJers? What MJer, let alone myself, “admits” that Paul thought humans somehow took part in it? Does he mean scholars like Brandon? I’ve said clearly that this is the case. Is he claiming that because Brandon believes that Paul thought humans somehow took part in it (even though Paul never says a word in that direction), this destroys the mythicist argument? Because Brandon et al. think that Paul thought so? That’s equivalent to saying that because Brandon believes there was an historical Jesus, the mythicist case “falls to the ground.” It’s nothing more than the old appeal to authority. I hope this is not an indicator of the extent of logical thought Jeffrey is capable of. What I am saying is that Brandon and everyone else is reading that additional thought into Paul’s words illegitimately, words that, as Brandon makes clear, speak entirely in terms of the rulers and demon spirits in the heavens, that “Paul attributes the Crucifixion, not to Pontius Pilate and the Jewish leaders, but to these planetary powers….Paul had lifted the Crucifixion completely out of its historical context…” The idea that such powers worked through earthly leaders and that it was those earthly leaders who actually crucified Jesus, is nowhere to be found in Paul. That is Brandon reading such an idea into Paul, overriding his clear recognition of what Paul was saying. And has anyone asked themselves (including Brandon) why Paul would do such a thing? Not only Paul, but all the rest of the early Christian writers, who similarly have nothing to say about earthly rulers and an earthly crucifixion? What strange twist of the mind (and of so many of them) causes such a cosmic translation of an earthly event, wherein the earthly dimension of it is completely lost sight of, never worked into the picture? Would anyone like to offer an explanation for this ‘mystery’? Earl Doherty |
|
![]() |
![]() |
#475 | ||
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 1,289
|
![]() Quote:
You speak for him -- that is to say, you try to tell us what he thinks and what he claims -- all the time. Quote:
You should have been speaking not of a neighbour of Gould and Eldredge (who may or may not actually know them, let alone try to make piublic their claims), but of anybody who takes it upon him/herself to represent, popularize, and defend Gould's and Eldredeg's views, as you have done with Earl's.. And yes, such a person can damage (and demonstrably has damaged) the theory they are trying speak for and defend -- or at least make people think that the theory is has little worth and is to be rejected. Just look at what Haeckel and Spenser did in the minds of the genreal public to Darwin's theory of "natural selection". Jeffrey Gibson |
||
![]() |
![]() |
#476 | ||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: Ontario, Canada
Posts: 1,435
|
![]()
Before I comment on Rick Sumner’s posting, this will notify everyone that my Rebuttal on Alleged Refutations of the Jesus Myth is now up on both sites. It is in three parts, a total of 43,000 words (don’t say I didn’t warn you), starting with:
Refutations1 and Refutations1 As I also comment along the way on Christopher Price’s article (on Bede’s site) “A History of Refutations of the Jesus Myth,” I would appreciate it if someone would let him know of this article, as I am quite sure he will want to have a look at it… Rick, In your posted ‘response’ to my views on 2 Peter: You argue in Hebrews 12:27’s use of dnlow: Quote:
Your vast number of so-called contrary examples of the use of dnlow are in contexts which cannot entail ‘revelation.’ I never said that the verb itself cannot be used in other contexts. In looking at my passage in the 2 Peter article, I see that I need to make that clearer, that in the context of this epistle the reference should be taken as one imparted through revelation, and not by a human Jesus speaking to Peter. You say “it is clearly assumed that the audience knows what he is referring to,” by 1:14. I can see no reason why you say it makes no sense without the readers’ prior knowledge. They may have it, they may not. The writer, pretending to be Peter, is declaring that he will soon be leaving them, and adds that he has been told/revealed this by Christ. There is no assumption, or necessity, either way. It is virtually an aside. His reference to himself reminding his readers of “these things” is about what he has said in the previous chapter. By demanding that Matthew, Mark and Luke should have referred to such a tradition, if it existed, is locking yourself into the standard paradigms that Gospels and epistles inhabited the same common world. The forger of 2 Peter is in a line back to the Pauline-Petrine cult embodied in the epistles. The Gospel writers come from the Galilean Kingdom-preaching line of things and their line of contact to legendary apostles of the Christ may not be as thorough as some epistolary writers. (Actually, it’s only that of Mark, since everyone else is in all likelihood dependent on Mark for any ‘knowledge’ of figures like Peter.) In any case, you offer a pretty slender reed to base a claim of knowledge of the Gospel of John by 2 Peter, when nothing else in the entire epistle suggests such a thing. In fact, there is nothing in the epistle beyond this verse which suggests a knowledge of any Gospel, and several indications that such a knowledge is clearly lacking. None of these which I outline (under “A Second Century Silence”) do you address. For example, if the writer can speak of a Gospel prediction that Jesus had told Peter of his death, why when he says in 2:1 that “you will have false teachers among you,” does he not equally include mention that Jesus himself had prophesied this very thing? You dispute my claim about “gnwridzw” by coming up with an example of it used in a different way. Then we get the throwaway line that “it is a common term, sometimes used in relation to "divine mystery." Very common indeed: Ephesians 1:9 “making known to us the mystery…”, Eph. 3:3 “made known to me the mystery by way of revelation…”, and 3:5, 3:10 “the wisdom of god made known to the rulers in the heavens…”, Col. 1:27 “God made known the mystery…” So is it or is it not widely used in the sense of “making known a divine mystery” and how is that different from your admission that it is “used in relation to divine mystery”? You list all of the “differences” I point out between the Transfiguration in 2 Peter and that in the Synoptics, and then think to dismiss them all by pointing to one similarity: the words of God spoken on the mountain. This can hardly tip the scales. It’s from the Psalms. If Mark is reworking for his “historical” scene a tradition about a vision to early apostles including Peter, his inclusion of the Psalm verse will be natural, and 2 Peter’s use of the same verse hardly indicates a reliance on Mark, especially as the words are nowhere near identical between the two. You never do answer the question of why, if 2 Peter is drawing on the Gospels’ Transfiguration scene, it omits so many key elements. And yes, indeed, all the other Gospel accounts are dependent on Mark. As I said earlier, it is Mark who had the cross-over contact with the epistolary side of things. It is he who created the syncretism between the Kingdom-preaching world of Q and the cultic world of the epistles. That’s what made him unique and why it was he who was responsible for the composite story which produced Christianity as we know it. The rest simply took up his ball and ran with it. How or why he did that, what unique position he was in to do it, is the great question, which I speculate on in chapter 19 of The Jesus Puzzle. But that uniqueness renders it unremarkable that no other Gospel writer was familiar with the 2 Peter tradition. They moved in different circles, and everything they created was ultimately dependent on Mark and their discovery of him, to which they added the teaching content of the Q document (which said nothing, by the way, about Peter or any other apostle). And yes, Mark is largely drawing on scripture to narrate the event, because midrash is the method he uses throughout the entire Gospel to craft its features. But this does not preclude its inspiration coming from a (perhaps vaguely) known tradition about a vision to Peter and other apostles. That tradition gives Mark his setting on the mountain, the hearing of the heavenly voice. Even the writer of 2 Peter has drawn on scripture to give his scene substance. The “honor and glory” of verse 17 comes from Psalm 8:5, something Mark does not use. If 2 Peter is drawing on Mark, how could he possibly leave out the references to the presence of Moses and Elijah? Your claim that 2 Peter knows of Mark’s scene is clearly rendered “implausible,” to use your own term. And you fail to address my comments on verse 16. Why would this writer, anxious to impress on his readers “the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ,” use as an example of the latter the scene of Transfiguration, and not the much more powerful example of his bodily resurrection? (Many mainstream commentators have asked the same thing.) That is truly an example of the “implausible.” You also fail entirely to address my observations about the following verse 19 which I will reproduce below. Sorry, Rick, but your rebuttal to my article is nowhere near adequate. Perhaps it is not surprising that when I talk of ‘overwhelming’ evidence in the epistles against an historical Jesus, you fail to see it. As to why that is, and why the vast majority of NT scholars don’t see it either, I think my just-posted article on the so-called refutations of Jesus Mythicism should provide some insight. (And into which side is afflicted with “overactive imaginations and inflated self-worth.”) Quote:
|
||
![]() |
![]() |
#477 | ||||
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 1,289
|
![]() Quote:
Surely it's the latter since it seems that you had no problem in making sense of and understanding that what I meant to say was "... they did not do it on earth". Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
But thanks for proving my points that 1. "the mythicist (or at least Earl's) interpretation" of the ARCHONTES mentioned in 1 Cor 2:6-8 is not just that they are "demons", but 2. that they are demons who carried out Jesus' crucifixion (a) without human aid, (b) at no specific time in human history, and (c) in a heavenly not an earthly realm, and 3. that there is not a single one of the scholars whom Earl (or Peter Kirby) lists -- and, notably, not a even among those who do actually believe that the ARCHONTES spoken of in 1 Cor 2:6-8 are demons -- who supports that interpretation. Jeffrey Gibson |
||||
![]() |
![]() |
#478 | |||||||||||||||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Calgary, Alberta Canada
Posts: 2,612
|
![]() Quote:
I've taken the liberty of snipping some portions of your "post," mostly those that seem to be simple reiterations of points we're in agreement on (such as dependence on Mark). Quote:
You've acknowledged that this is true--I noted in my posting that it was included in my discussion because it remains on your website, and thus should for purposes of completeness. If you would care to instead suggest the converse--that it does place it "without much doubt" in the realm of revelation, then the passages I cite are more than pertinent. There is no epiphany in the vast majority of the examples I cite (Josephus, again, was especially fond of using the term to refer to anything observed). Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
You cannot use the premise that 2Peter does not know the gospels as an argument against 2Peter's knowledge of the gospels. Quote:
Quote:
It does not matter if the story has been fundamentally altered on every level (and it has been, many times). If the shoes are red, it is silly to suggest that it does not know, directly or indirectly, Judy Garland as Dorothy Gale. Likewise here, I don't need to explain silences to make my case, all I need to do is show that 2Peter knows the shoes were red. Quote:
That's two strawmen for two lexical arguments. One must wonder if you read my "response" thoroughly enough to justify your apparent belief that they deserve scare quotes. It begins to look like you just "read" it. Quote:
And you confuse "dependent on Mark" with "directly dependent on Mark." The version 2Peter knows is, on the basis of the words employed, quite clearly Matthew or Luke's. Quote:
I argue why the other gospel authors don't know it--they don't know it because John made it up. You offer no substantial rebuttal to that. What it boils down to is that the prophecy of Peter's death is distinctive to the context of John 21--there is no reason to suggest that it ever existed outside of it. Quote:
Quote:
You need to establish a non-Markan core--something that is best understood outside of the Markan narrative--to create the necessity for the extra entity. Quote:
Quote:
And I didn't address it because it isn't necessary to do so, for the reasons noted above--he knows the shoes were red. Thus he knows Judy Garland's Dorothy, not Baum's. This type of cut and paste scholarship, postulating a new lost source or tradition for everything we can't thoroughly explain, died with Streeter. By way of analogy (and another I've pointed to on my 'blog), Star Wars was definitely influenced by The Wizard of Oz. The fact that key elements from the latter are missing does nothing to negate that. Quote:
Quote:
ETA I'm genuinely curious as to if/how you plan on handling Paul. The argument from the "revelation" of the "gospel" or "mystery" constitutes a not-insignificant portion of your negative argument (the oft referenced Argument From Silence), and constitutes a large portion of your argument from "revelatory language," one of the few positive arguments you assemble. Regards, Rick Sumner |
|||||||||||||||||
![]() |
![]() |
#479 | |
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2005
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 1,289
|
![]() Quote:
1. that virtually everything you state here about the Ascension of Isaiah is untrue, and 2. that premises upon which you base your claim that the statements in chapter 11 of Ascension of Isaiah are later clarifications of what is stated in chapter 9, are invalid. In the first place, your claim that "there is no reference to earthly rulers ..., let alone to any earthly content" in the statement in Chapter 9:14 that “the god of that world will stretch out his hand against the Son, and they will lay their hands upon him and hang him upon a tree, not knowing who he is. And thus his descent, as you will see, will be concealed even from the heavens so that it will not be known who he is” is belied by the fact that that statement is prefaced in vs. 13 by "The LORD will indeed descend into the world in the last days, (he) who is to be called Christ after he has descended and become like you [i.e., Isaiah] in form, and they will think that he is flesh and a man" (Knibb p. 170). So, contrary to what you claim, it is noted, even in Chapter 9 and especially at vs. 14, that the the God of that world's (i. e. of the earth and where humans live) stretching out of his hand against the Son is something that will (indeed, is to, and can only) take place not only on earth but [B]after[b] the Son's incarnation. In the second place, your statement that according to 9:14 it is "Satan and his demons in the heavens", who do the "hanging" spoken of there overlooks not only (a) the fact that this hanging upon a tree is spoken of in vs. 14 as something that is at the time of this speaking a future event -- and, more specifically, something that will not occur until after the Son takes on flesh, but (b) that the referent of "they" in vs. 14's phrase "they will lay their hands upon him and hang him upon a tree"" is not, as the context of the verse and major textual witnesses to it show, to Satan and his demons in the heavens. There is no mention of Satan's "demons in the heavens" in the either vs. 14 or in the verses immediately preceeding vs. 14. Nor is there any mention anywhere in Chapter 9 that "the God of that word" (the earth) (who here BTW is not deemed Satan) has any demons under his control in any realm, earthly or heavenly. So it is highly unlikely that "Satan and his demons in heaven" is the referent of "they" But more importantly, as is shown by the 2nd Latin and Slavonic witnesses to this text, which have "and he will hang him upon a tree and kill him" and "and they will hang ... and he will kill him", the original (Greek) text of vs. 14 was not read and understood by those who were familair with it as conveying this sense. Rather it was read and understood as conveying something quite different vis a vis who the referent of the "they" was (and most likely what we find said in this regard later in Chapter 11), as well as vis a vis how many agents were responsible for the hanging and the killing. In the third place, your claim that Chapter 11 is not only later than Chapter 9, but is a Christian interpolation into an older text of the Ascension of Isaiah, designed to "clarify" and make more orthodox what was said about the son and his hanging in Chapter 9 (have I read you correctly on this?), has, so far as I can tell, little to no scholarly or lingustic support. For as Knibb (see p. 143) and virtually all other Ascension of Isaiah scholars who take into account the Ethiopian MSS tradition and the witness of Latin 1 (e.g. R.H. Charles) note, the whole of Chapters 6-11, including chapter 9, is a Christian work that not only is a non composite literary unit, but one which stems from one hand. So not only are the two Ascension of Isaiah passages that you claim are "contrasting" not so; They do not in any way illustrate the "point" you are trying to make. On the contrary, they show that your "point" has no legs to stand on, based as it is upon selective quotation from, and a misreading and misrepresentation of, what the Ascension of Isaiah actually says. Jeffrey Gibson |
|
![]() |
![]() |
#480 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: Ottawa, Canada
Posts: 2,579
|
![]() Quote:
Doherty's way of handling the texts is facile and demeaning to the faith. Surely, he must have heard by now that most of the supernatural "events" relate to known medical issues. One can read about them in Sunday newspapers. Paul's revelation was a real thing (internally) that most certainly did not relate to interpreting texts (see 1 Cr 12-14 - interpreting relates to the works of pneuma). Paul started to preach his gospel because he was ill (Gal 4:13). And just in case anyone here can't find an exeget who could explain to your satisfaction the meaning of 1 Cr 2:1-5, try this for something new in the debate: very commonly it is asserted that the disease is a greater torture than any other, that the patient would far far rather endure any bodily pain than disorder of the mind (Emil Kraepelin, Manic-Depressive Insanity and Paranoia, Edinburgh 1921, p 22.) This is how Christianity was born, Mr Doherty, in a desperate cry of a sick man whose brain went haywire (as it always does after epiphany, 2 Cor 12), filled with the thought of God, and the cry for God, which envisioned an obscure, confused, despised and brutalized peasant seer from Galilee, whom he as Saul considered a deluded fool and whose unruly followers he persecuted, as a double of God’s one and only progeny. And how did he get that idea ? His brain told him that God destroyed him the way he destroyed Jesus, by making him mad first !!! Saul was then crucified mystically along Jesus (Gal 2:20, Rom 6:6), for Paul to reveal the mystery of the resurrection and spread the gospel of love. And an interesting thing happened: out of Paul’s manifestly insane schema sprang a creed of active, acted, benevolence, a creed that has never been surpassed by any, religious or secular, for depth of conscience and unfeigned love of humanity. Did this Paul's God not create a beacon of hope to guide humanity for two millennia ? Does the fact that Paul also believed unsoundly that his love was compulsory, change a thing ? No, of course, it doesn’t change a thing! For one, nearly all of those first Christians Paul recruited came in as volunteers: not because God ordered them, but because they felf sorry for, and were intrigued by the man’s who was shaking and going bonkers in front of them, and talking gibberish they could not comprehend. Most came because they needed Paul. They were won by his selfless dedication and sincerity. Whatever he really was, he did not come to them dealing cheap thrills, trinkets or charms. Jiri Severa |
|
![]() |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|