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Old 05-03-2012, 12:40 PM   #111
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Illogical nonsense, Mr. Mouse.
I would have thought, as someone with pretensions of being a scholar, that you wouldn't run around on message boards making clumsy attempts at calling people names. (And FWIW, a mouser is a cat, and the Gray Mouser is quite an interesting character.)

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I can refer to a group such as the Teamsters collectively. I can at another time separately refer to an individual member of the Teamsters. Does that make them “have nothing to do with each other”? I can refer to the Catholic priesthood collectively at one point in my correspondence. I can at another time refer to an individual and identify him as a Catholic priest. I might even use a slightly different phrase—perhaps just a different preposition—in the two cases. Does that make the two references “have nothing to do with each other”? The extent of your special pleading and your contortion of logic here is breathtaking, but it’s typical and understandable in those with an historicist agenda in the face of all evidence to the contrary and when one’s cupboard of meager support is so bare.
Prepositions can be important. For instance, in one of my favorite fantasy stories - "Lean Times in Lankhmar" by Fritz Leiber, one of the classic tales of Fafhrd and the Gray Mouser - the Gods of Lankhmar are starkly different from the Gods in Lankhmar. More importantly, the genitive in Greek is not demonstrated by a preposition, even though you continue to insist that this somehow is relevant. A technically accurate translation would be to use "the Lord's brother" for Gal 1:19 and "brothers in [the] Lord" for Phil 1:14.

But they have nothing to do with each other because the use of τον αδελφον του κυριου of Galatians is to distinguish one James from another, while the εν κυριω of Philippians is to characterize των αδελφων. You don't even address that, you just wave your hands and talk about prepositions as if you didn't know Greek.

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I have offered an analogy in my Jesus: Neither God Nor Man which would make perfect sense of Paul’s reference (if authentic) to James as one of the brethren of the Lord in Gal. 1:19 (note 28), but I assume of course that you have not troubled to read my book let alone try to come up with substantive rebuttals against it. The same, by the way, goes for TedM.
I read it when it was called The Jesus Puzzle, and found it interesting but remained agnostic, later deciding that mythicism is a trap. I have Jesus: Neither God Nor Man but haven't given it a solid read. If you insist I'll look at note 28 but I have no intent of flattering you by giving you a full rebuttal.

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The term “ad hoc” only applies when there is nothing in the rest of the evidence to which it could reasonably conform. The picture which the epistles create of the workings of the sect which Paul attached himself to allows my suggestion about the meaning of “brethren of the Lord” to make sense in context. Whereas as a reference to siblings and part of a large family, it has NO supporting context, because outside of that, there isn’t the slightest reference anywhere in the epistles to siblings of Jesus let alone a large family surrounding him, even when we would have every reason to expect there should be (as in the ascriptions to the epistles of James and Jude which you have no feasible argument against). That doesn’t bother you? That doesn’t call into question your smug reference to the “everyday sense” of siblings and family when you can’t call on a single example to support your claim about the two appearances of the same phrase? (In fact, the similarity of the phrasing makes it likely that both have the same meaning, which is something you seem to want to argue, and yet the very similarity of both phrases with Phil. 1:14 is something you will not countenance as being an argument for also meaning the same thing, because we all know that Phil. 1:14 does NOT mean siblings and this effect on the other two passages is something you refuse to accept.)
You seem to be incensed that someone is actually challenging your claims, which are unfortunately as flimsy as they come.

You keep talking about the epistles of James and Jude. James is dated as no earlier than the Gospel of Mark, and quite possibly later. Jude is dated as no earlier than the Gospel of John. Both are pseudonymous, and as such probably tell us less about the Christian church before 70 CE than the Gospel of Mark does. Yet you go after it like a dog after a bone - why?

And you keep using the term "the same phrase" which simply isn't true. No native speaker of Greek would have thought "τον αδελφον του κυριου" and "των αδελφων εν κυριω" are even basically the same phrase.

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And, by the way, in contradiction to your claim, wouldn’t your argument quoted above about Phil. 1:14 being in the plural and Gal. 1:19 in the singular necessitate 9:5’s “brothers of the Lord” to be a reference to a group of believers, while 1:19 is supposedly of a sibling? More (ad hoc) illogicality!
No. Again, 1 Cor 9:5 is being used to designate a subset of believers who have some special moral authority by calling them "οι αδελφοι του κυριου". Phil 1:14 is not using "εν κυριω" to differentiate a specific subset of believers - thus it is totally unrelated to either Gal 1:19 or 1 Cor 9:5 in sense.

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Furthermore, you and others keep insisting on an “everyday sense” for “brother” despite all the considerations which do not IN CONTEXT render this an everyday sense. No. 1, it’s OUR everyday sense, and you have made no case for carrying that sense over to the 1st century situation we are dealing with.
αδελφος is the Greek word for brother, in the sense of sibling. This is not even vaguely controversial, and if you want to make a claim against every Greek lexicon ever published, that in the 1st century it only carried the specialized meaning of a fellow believer, then that's your burden to carry.

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No. 2, nor to the context of the epistles themselves, which are full of the “everyday sense” of brother being a reference to a fellow-believer. THAT was THEIR everyday sense, but you can only ignore that and bleat in favor of your own.
No, that was the specialized, secondary sense in which the epistle writers used the term αδελφος. As a computer programmer I use the term "function" to refer to a specific type of subroutine that I write, which returns a typed value. If I say the word "bodily function," I'm not using the specialized sense. Nothing about using a secondary sense of a word precludes someone from using it in the primary, everyday sense.

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No. 3, you don’t consider the phrase itself, which does not give us an “everyday sense” by saying “brother of Jesus”.
The whole reason we're having this debate is that it's quite obvious that Paul means something different by his use of the inflectional forms of αδελφος in Gal 1:19 and 1 Cor 9:5, as the sense Paul normally uses doesn't work here. It makes no sense to make "the brothers of the Lord" a special moral authority if "brothers" simply means all fellow-believers.

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No. 4, you ignore, deny, any connection to the very similar phrase in Phil. 1:14 which to any neutral observer would suggest a similar meaning.
No, they wouldn't, and for very obvious reasons of context that you ignore while talking about ME bleating.

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If a prosecutor’s case against a defendant is very powerful on a lot of points: motive, opportunity, witness, abundant physical evidence, and yet there is one or perhaps two anomalies in the case, a discrepancy in a piece of evidence or a witness’s uncertainty on a certain point, what does a good prosecutor do? Does he acknowledge defeat in the face of the defence attorney who jumps on those one or two anomalies shouting that they make mincemeat out of the prosecutor’s entire case? Or does he try to find a reasonable explanation for the apparent anomaly, one that makes sense in the context of his case as a whole. The justice system is full of situations like that. Historical research is full of situations like that.
In the American justice system - at least in theory - one or two anomalies can bring down an otherwise powerful case. It's why we have a standard of "reasonable doubt." I don't like how the system works in practice, but in theory I think this is a very fine standard. For what it's worth, though, your theory is riddled in anomalies, and the base case is interesting but hardly "very powerful." You get even more bogged down in κατα σαρκα than you do in your problem of αδελφοι, but that's probably for a separate topic.

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But only in the field of NT research where the existence of Jesus is being debated does a defence attorney think to claim that his one or two paltry ‘anomalies’ should win the day, that the prosecutors are not only crazy but charlatans, that their postulated explanations for those anomalies are not only worthless but render them agenda-driven hacks who need to be driven out of town on a rail. That kind of stuff, Mr. Mouse, doesn’t convert a jury to your position. And that’s what we are here for, not to slug it out in a boxing ring and see how much blood we can draw from the opponent, but to influence the judgment of the onlooking jury. If you truly think that your constant parroting of your one or two points, your constant reliance on the same arguments (which are hardly arguments at all but simply beating the point to death), while failing to engage with the mythicist counters and explanations, if you think that is winning over an impartial jury, you’re only deceiving yourself. And it isn’t the historicist peanut gallery here that constitutes the jury. Of course, you yourself serve as part of the peanut gallery for other historicists when they take the stand. All of you create one vast echo chamber, but what is echoing about is precious little.
I've been posting here because I'm bothered by how much of a mythicist echo chamber this board can be, and as an atheist who formerly had strong mythicist sympathies (I have your books, after all), I think some of the misconceptions running rampant here are worth challenging.

But it's telling that you think that a theory with known and well-discussed holes in it, with some patchwork explanations, should carry the day. It certainly explains why you don't advance your theories in scholarship, where they'd be ripped to shreds on your handling of problems like Gal 1:19 and κατα σαρκα.

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It’s been like that for years. I’ve seen it all. You guys never change. You continue to refuse to seriously grapple with the mythicist case, especially my own, except on the most superficial and repetitious level, showing far more ignorance than understanding.
I took mythicism very seriously for a number of years. I never found a mythicist explanation that was fully intellectually satisfying, although I sort of took it "on faith" that the main character of the Gospels didn't exist. Now, on a review of the evidence, I've had to say that the mythicist case is the less probable by a long shot.

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P.S. I hope you won’t mind that I do my best to bow out here and stop wasting my time. My response to Bart Ehrman’s book on Vridar (instalment 9 coming up, I believe), and elsewhere in future publication, should be taking up that time and will prove far more productive.
Sure, have fun. I have to say I'm a bit disappointed, though. I had thought more highly of you when I read The Jesus Puzzle, and I'd hoped that you'd have something a little better than all this vituperation to offer.
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Old 05-03-2012, 01:24 PM   #112
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Originally Posted by TedM View Post

I agree with you. The reference in Gal 1:19 distinguishes James in a way that the writer does NOT do with John or Cephas, or anybody else in the entire book. This begs the question: what was the distinction? Most logically, it is that of a biological relationship....
Even Apologetic sources REJECT your claim.

Examine the Apocalypse of JAMES.
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It is the Lord who spoke with me: "See now the completion of my redemption. I have given you a sign of these things, James, my brother. For not without reason have I called you my brother, although you are not my brother materially....
Thanks for the quote. Gnostic dialogue. It is of little historical value IMO other than to reflect gnostic thinking a century or more after James lived, though some snippets of truth may remain. The 'brother' comment reflects gnostic belief: Jesus was not material so he could not possibly have had biological brothers. It therefore is worthless as far as finding the truth is concerned.


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First of all you have NOT established the veracity of the Galatians writer and also you have NOT established by any credible dated text for Galatians.

Galatians in P 46 has been DATED by Paleography to the 3rd century.
I'm not an expert but last I read no expert would agree with you that Galatians was originally written in the 3rd century. This means you are way out of the box on this. Not saying you are wrong, but the experts seem fairly unanimous in saying that Galatians was the first work written by a real person, Paul, in the very earliest days of Christianity--ie around 40-50 AD.

As far as being reliable historically, the experts conclude that it is highly reliable whereas the gnostic text you quote above is highly unreliable.

I won't get into any more discussion with you on this because I think you have requirements that make progress impossible.
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Old 05-03-2012, 01:44 PM   #113
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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
.....only in two places does Paul reference 'brothers of the Lord' or 'Lord's brothers'. This refers to a relationship between the Lord and the person. It does not refer to relationships between believers--the 'brethren', 'our brethren', as it Paul's meaning elsewhere, when clear. SO there are five problems.

1. Paul references a relationship differently here than anywhere else
no problem

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2. Paul doesn't refer to John and Cephas as 'brothers of the Lord' in the same book (or even chapter) even though there is no other distinction made.
no problem

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3. Tradition, and Gospels, have a different prominent James so it makes sense to make a distinction.
big problem: there is no scriptural tradition of James, the brother of Jesus as a head of the church. While Mark (6:3) and Matthew (13:55) record a brother of Jesus, Luke and John do not ! Luke unfortunately, is the author of Acts - so if Luke did not of a Jesus brother by the name of James, the James who emerges in 12:17 as the head of the church could not have been Jesus' brother.

another big problem: there is no early direct evidence from within patristic and other documents that James the Just was related by blood to Jesus. This tradition was not known to Gospel of Thomas (GT 12), to the author of the epistle of James, Ignatius, Irenaeus, Tertullian, and either of the Clements.

The only churchman in the second century TMK who apparently believed Jesus and James the Just (and Simeon of Jerusalem who succeded him) were related by blood was Hegesippus. Nothing of his work survived but we know of him from Eusebius, who himself described James the Just as 'one of the alleged brothers of Jesus' (H.E. 1.12). Origen knew the tradition but was skeptical that Paul' s brother of the Lord was actually meant to point to physical brotherhood of the two, but says, and this everyone seems to have overlooked in the debate (including myself - just found it in my old notes):

Paul, a genuine disciple of Jesus, says that he regarded this James as a brother of the Lord, not so much on account of their relationship by blood, or their being brought up together, as because of his virtue and doctrine. [Contra Celsum 1.47]

Obviously, Paul does not say that anywhere; this is Origen's interpretation, as the formulaic "brother of the Lord" did not seem to him as possibly having to do with kinship.

At any rate, this piece of evidence should put Ted's (and LOM's) arguments out of business. The idea that Paul would use "brother of the Lord" to denote kinship is not something that seems problematic only to modern "mythicists".

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4. Tradition gives Jesus brothers from multiple source, including James.
the big question is when the 'family connections' to Jesus started to bubble as monarchcal claims in the church.

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5. There is no record anywhere of a 'brothers of the Lord' group.
this is probably because the "apostles" in the original function disappeared after the Jewish War, and the "brothers of the Lord" became the "apostles" of the gospels and Acts.

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The weight of the evidence, the big picture, squarely refutes your minority position.
What evidence ? I ain't got nothing on the big guy. :wave:

Best,
Jiri
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Old 05-03-2012, 01:58 PM   #114
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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
The reference in Gal 1:19 distinguishes James in a way that the writer does NOT do with John or Cephas, or anybody else in the entire book. This begs the question: what was the distinction? Most logically, it is that of a biological relationship.
Now tell us all, Teddest of Ms, where do you find Paul using αδελφος to indicate a biological relationship amid the more than 80 exemplars of the word in his letters? What you find is that Paul overburdeningly uses αδελφος to indicate not a biological connection, but a religious one. Your "most logically" has no basis whatsoever.

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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
If it is being a member of a brotherhood, one can hardly imagine that Cephas and John were not also members, but Paul writes about each of them without making that distinction.
You're basing this assertion on what?? Paul mentions James as brother of the lord once and never again. We also find a generic plural and no specific names mentioned with it. And you don't know whether John was or was not a brother of the lord. What you do know is that brothers of the lord and apostles had elevated positions within the wider religious community, as per 1 Cor 9:5, enough to elicit some envy from Paul.

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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
We also have a reason for the distinction--there was another prominent James in the Gospels and Acts-John's biological brother. So whenever anybody referenced James it would have made sense to indicate which James in some way.
The fact that there is no James mentioned in Acts that is a brother of the lord works against the term being biological. It would have been a remarkable thing to qualify this James, yet Acts is silent. In fact, when the gospels mention Jesus' family rejecting him and being rejected by him, there is no knowledge that this James would pick himself up and become the head of the Jerusalem community. We have to wait for Hegesippus to give us the James in Gal. 1:19 as the biological brother of Jesus.

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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
Gal 1:19 almost certainly references a biological relationship.
And that assertion is just as empty as when you first made it.

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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
...If it was because there really was a 'brothers of the Lord' group than was not biologically related to Jesus, then we must ask whether it is reasonable to conclude that such a powerful label given to the very earliest Christian leaders could have been dropped as it pertained to Peter and John and transitioned into a biological meaning for James and Jude, without ANY inkling of such a tradition ever having existed, or such transition having occurred? And why--why would they do this for James and not the others? Seems an unlikely scenario.
That wouldn't be conclusion driven bias, would it? You talk of Peter as though you know that Paul used Cephas to mean Peter. You can't conceive of the notion that such a term as "brother of the lord" could refer to a group within the Jerusalem church that did not include all the apostles. Given the few times that Paul uses the term, you don't have enough to make any generalizations such as that he wouldn't use it for John.

If there was such a group of elevated status in Jerusalem before the Jewish war as Paul indicates, then the war which had such devastating effects on the society could easily have put an end to the group.

Generalizations such as these of yours here based on obviously insufficient data are bound to get nowhere.
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Old 05-03-2012, 02:09 PM   #115
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It makes no sense to make "the brothers of the Lord" a special moral authority if "brothers" simply means all fellow-believers.
That's how Paul generally uses the term αδελφος, ie as fellow-believers. Any special authority comes from them being αδελφοι του κυριου, ie they aren't ordinary believers but those members of the believing community indicated as του κυριου.
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Old 05-03-2012, 02:12 PM   #116
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big problem: there is no scriptural tradition of James, the brother of Jesus as a head of the church. While Mark (6:3) and Matthew (13:55) record a brother of Jesus, Luke and John do not ! Luke unfortunately, is the author of Acts - so if Luke did not of a Jesus brother by the name of James, the James who emerges in 12:17 as the head of the church could not have been Jesus' brother.
Of course, Markan priority means that this was not an insertion. The James brother of the Lord in Gal 1:19 does not need to be James the Just in Acts - but it certainly lines up with James being listed among Jesus's brothers in Mark. We can speculate on why Luke and John are missing these links, but Luke 8:19-21 does refer specifically to the brothers of Jesus (in the sense of "mother and brothers").

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another big problem: there is no early direct evidence from within patristic and other documents that James the Just was related by blood to Jesus. This tradition was not known to Gospel of Thomas (GT 12), to the author of the epistle of James, Ignatius, Irenaeus, Tertullian, and either of the Clements.

The only churchman in the second century TMK who apparently believed Jesus and James the Just (and Simeon of Jerusalem who succeded him) were related by blood was Hegesippus. Nothing of his work survived but we know of him from Eusebius, who himself described James the Just as 'one of the alleged brothers of Jesus' (H.E. 1.12). Origen knew the tradition but was skeptical that Paul' s brother of the Lord was actually meant to point to physical brotherhood of the two, but says, and this everyone seems to have overlooked in the debate (including myself - just found it in my old notes):

Paul, a genuine disciple of Jesus, says that he regarded this James as a brother of the Lord, not so much on account of their relationship by blood, or their being brought up together, as because of his virtue and doctrine. [Contra Celsum 1.47]

Obviously, Paul does not say that anywhere; this is Origen's interpretation, as the formulaic "brother of the Lord" did not seem to him as possibly having to do with kinship.

At any rate, this piece of evidence should put Ted's (and LOM's) arguments out of business. The idea that Paul would use "brother of the Lord" to denote kinship is not something that seems problematic only to modern "mythicists".
It's an interesting question, but the trend seems to be that there was a tendency, as the Church moved toward a particular position in which Mary was exalted, that the Fathers were engaged in some degree of historical revisionism and introduced a good bit of the confusion intentionally. Let's not forget that Origen was a man who thought that sex was so sinful that he castrated himself; his objection seems tendentious. But it does stand in direct opposition to our Gospel texts, and I think we can safely say that if Matthew and Mark were edited after Origen it would have been to remove, not insert, the brothers of Jesus.
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Old 05-03-2012, 03:58 PM   #117
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Originally Posted by graymouser View Post
Of course, Markan priority means that this was not an insertion. The James brother of the Lord in Gal 1:19 does not need to be James the Just in Acts - but it certainly lines up with James being listed among Jesus's brothers in Mark. We can speculate on why Luke and John are missing these links, but Luke 8:19-21 does refer specifically to the brothers of Jesus (in the sense of "mother and brothers")...
Your statement is catergorically erroneous. Only in Galatians and ONLY once in the entire Canon is a character called the Lord's brother and that is Galatians 1.19--There is ZERO "attestation" in the Canon of an apostle called James the Lord's brother.

And further, Apologetic sources claimed James the Just is the same character in Galatians 1.19.

De Viris Illustribus 2
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James, who is called the brother of the Lord, surnamed the Just, the son of Joseph by another wife, as some think, but, as appears to me, the son of Mary sister of the mother of our Lord........

.......He it is of whom the apostle Paul writes to the Galatians that “No one else of the apostles did I see except James the brother of the Lord,”....
It is most astonishing that you DISCREDIT Apologetic sources, the very sources up on which you rely for your "history".

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Originally Posted by graymouser
....It's an interesting question, but the trend seems to be that there was a tendency, as the Church moved toward a particular position in which Mary was exalted, that the Fathers were engaged in some degree of historical revisionism and introduced a good bit of the confusion intentionally. Let's not forget that Origen was a man who thought that sex was so sinful that he castrated himself; his objection seems tendentious. But it does stand in direct opposition to our Gospel texts, and I think we can safely say that if Matthew and Mark were edited after Origen it would have been to remove, not insert, the brothers of Jesus.
Again, once you introduce Origen as evidence that Jesus was human then Origen's statement about Jesus MUST, MUST be examined.

In "Against Celsus" 1, Origen claimed that Jesus was born of the Holy Ghost and that It was expected that people would make INVENTIONS because they did NOT believe the miraculous birth of Jesus.

Against Celsus 1.32
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It was to be expected, indeed, that those who would not believe the miraculous birth of Jesus would invent some falsehood.
The HJ argument is just invalid. There was NO source to support an historical Jesus from the start.

HJers are using sources of a WELL-KNOWN character described as the Lord, Messiah, Savior and Son of God.

There is NO little known preacher in Galatians or the Gospels.
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Old 05-03-2012, 06:11 PM   #118
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Ok spin. At the risk of getting caught up again with time consuming exchanges, I'll respond to your message..

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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
The reference in Gal 1:19 distinguishes James in a way that the writer does NOT do with John or Cephas, or anybody else in the entire book. This begs the question: what was the distinction? Most logically, it is that of a biological relationship.
Now tell us all, Teddest of Ms, where do you find Paul using αδελφος to indicate a biological relationship amid the more than 80 exemplars of the word in his letters? What you find is that Paul overburdeningly uses αδελφος to indicate not a biological connection, but a religious one. Your "most logically" has no basis whatsoever.
My 'most logically' had nothing to do with how Paul uses the word in his other writings, though that is a worthy point to discuss, and I will. My 'most logically' had with what I said following using the term:

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This begs the question: what was the distinction? Most logically, it is that of a biological relationship. If it is being a member of a brotherhood, one can hardly imagine that Cephas and John were not also members, but Paul writes about each of them without making that distinction. We also have a reason for the distinction--there was another prominent James in the Gospels and Acts-John's biological brother. So whenever anybody referenced James it would have made sense to indicate which James in some way.
The above addresses the question of why Paul might have applied the phrase to James and not John or Cephas.

Ok, onto Paul's use elsewhere: First, the usage of the same word to mean a spiritual brother in Christ does not increase the likelihood that the word means a spiritual brother of the Lord. Are you suggesting that there is another word Paul would have used had he been referring to a biological relationship? The same word is used throughout the NT to mean a biological relationship. So, it is of no value to point out that Paul uses the same word to only mean a spiritual relationship.

What you are not pointing out is the difference in the phrase. In ALL of the other cases where Paul uses the term he is clearly referring to a spiritual relationship between fellow believers in Christ--that is the relationship they have to each other: 'our brethren', 'my brethren', or just 'brethren'. As far as the relationship to God, believers are not 'brothers', they are sons. God is father. So, the term 'brother of the Lord' is highly unusual and would not apply to a fellow believer. If it did Paul would have used it more than 2 times. So, the appeal to Paul's use of the word elsewhere is of no value. The reasonable conclusion is that Paul was using it to distinguish James from other fellow believers. But he also does this in 1 Cor. without making a clear distinction. He presupposes that his readers KNOW that he is referring to something other than a spiritual relationship between fellow believers.

Absent knowledge of a special group that were considered 'brothers' and not 'sons' of God, it is most reasonable to assume a biological relationship.


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Quote:
Originally Posted by TedM View Post
If it is being a member of a brotherhood, one can hardly imagine that Cephas and John were not also members, but Paul writes about each of them without making that distinction.
You're basing this assertion on what??
The context, spin. Paul just got done mentioning Cephas when he mentioned James, the Lord's brother. Why in the world would he have done that if not to make a distinction for James that was unnecessary for Cephas?:

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18 Then three years later I went up to Jerusalem to [j]become acquainted with Cephas, and stayed with him fifteen days. 19 But I did not see any other of the apostles except [k] James, the Lord’s brother.
We must conclude that Cephas was not the Lord's brother but James was. Yet, Cephas was one of the 3 pillars! And, from 1 Cor 9 we conclude that apostles and Cephas were not considered brothers of the Lord:

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Do we not have a right to take along a believing wife, even as the rest of the apostles and the brothers of the Lord and Cephas?
Who gets to be not a son but a brother of the Lord if not apostles and Cephas? This 'special group' was special indeed! But how? Wouldn't the most logical reason be the simplest explanation that distinguishes one group of believers from another: a biological relationship?



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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
We also have a reason for the distinction--there was another prominent James in the Gospels and Acts-John's biological brother. So whenever anybody referenced James it would have made sense to indicate which James in some way.
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The fact that there is no James mentioned in Acts that is a brother of the lord works against the term being biological.
Something is missing in Acts. James appears out of nowhere, so the introduction has been lost to history. However, Acts does mention Jesus' brothers: Again, it doesn't say 'fellow brothers, or my brothers, or the brethren':
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These all with one mind were continually devoting themselves to prayer, along with the women, and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with His brothers.
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In fact, when the gospels mention Jesus' family rejecting him and being rejected by him, there is no knowledge that this James would pick himself up and become the head of the Jerusalem community.
They don't talk about the future leader at all. They talk about Peter a lot but nothing on James. One might think this is as intentional as Act not introducing James. Something was going on which clouds the issue as far as the gospels and Acts are concerned. But they all say Jesus had brothers, and a couple mention a James.

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We have to wait for Hegesippus to give us the James in Gal. 1:19 as the biological brother of Jesus.
Or Josephus.


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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
...If it was because there really was a 'brothers of the Lord' group than was not biologically related to Jesus, then we must ask whether it is reasonable to conclude that such a powerful label given to the very earliest Christian leaders could have been dropped as it pertained to Peter and John and transitioned into a biological meaning for James and Jude, without ANY inkling of such a tradition ever having existed, or such transition having occurred? And why--why would they do this for James and not the others? Seems an unlikely scenario.
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That wouldn't be conclusion driven bias, would it? You talk of Peter as though you know that Paul used Cephas to mean Peter. You can't conceive of the notion that such a term as "brother of the lord" could refer to a group within the Jerusalem church that did not include all the apostles. Given the few times that Paul uses the term, you don't have enough to make any generalizations such as that he wouldn't use it for John.

If there was such a group of elevated status in Jerusalem before the Jewish war as Paul indicates, then the war which had such devastating effects on the society could easily have put an end to the group.
You have 'sons' of God, not brothers. You have Paul using the term for James and unspecified non-apostles. You have Paul clearly not applying the term to the other apostles, Cephas, or John. You have Jewish traditions in Hegessippus and Josephus that say Jesus had a brother named James. You have the gospels and Acts all saying Jesus had brothers, whether they were directly brothers or cousins. You have the reasonable idea that the first Church leader was related to their crucified leader--to carry on the torch. And, you have the common sense usage of 'brother' to mean a biological relationship.

Against that you have a theoretical group that didn't include the apostles or Cephas, who had advanced beyond being sons of God to being 'brothers of the Lord' in a spiritual sense, who were so spiritually special and important that Paul and everyone else failed to discuss their importance or even allude to it.

Big picture? They were relatives.
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Old 05-03-2012, 06:42 PM   #119
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Originally Posted by Solo View Post
big problem: there is no scriptural tradition of James, the brother of Jesus as a head of the church. While Mark (6:3) and Matthew (13:55) record a brother of Jesus, Luke and John do not ! Luke unfortunately, is the author of Acts - so if Luke did not of a Jesus brother by the name of James, the James who emerges in 12:17 as the head of the church could not have been Jesus' brother.
Of course, Markan priority means that this was not an insertion. The James brother of the Lord in Gal 1:19 does not need to be James the Just in Acts - but it certainly lines up with James being listed among Jesus's brothers in Mark. We can speculate on why Luke and John are missing these links, but Luke 8:19-21 does refer specifically to the brothers of Jesus (in the sense of "mother and brothers").
What are you saying ? It is not clear.

Best,
Jiri
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Old 05-03-2012, 06:44 PM   #120
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Originally Posted by TedM View Post
You have 'sons' of God, not brothers. You have Paul using the term for James and unspecified non-apostles. You have Paul clearly not applying the term to the other apostles, Cephas, or John. You have Jewish traditions in Hegessippus and Josephus that say Jesus had a brother named James. You have the gospels and Acts all saying Jesus had brothers, whether they were directly brothers or cousins. You have the reasonable idea that the first Church leader was related to their crucified leader--to carry on the torch. And, you have the common sense usage of 'brother' to mean a biological relationship....
You are arguing from BOTH sides. On one side of the mouth you discredit the Jesus story and the other you conveniently accept your discredited sources as historically accurate.

The very gospels claimed Multiple times that Jesus was born of the Holy Ghost, see Mathew 1.18 and Luke 1, so it does NOT matter if anyone claimed to be the brother of Jesus.

In Josephus "Antiquities of the Jews" 19.1, Gaius the Emperor declared he was the BROTHER of Jupiter.

Antiquities of the Jews 19.1
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He also frequented that temple of Jupiter which they style the Capitol, which is with them the most holy of all their temples, and had boldness enough to call himself the brother of Jupiter.
It is the ACTUAL nature of Jesus that is significant just like it mattered with Jupiter.
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