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06-19-2011, 09:26 AM | #31 | ||||
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Also in that Jesus was not a human figure and therefore was without sin but can only be raised as the last man to leave home like a captain on his ship since his disciples (eidolons or deckhands) are his wherewithal to be raised = as in the swine allegory. Mankind proper is without sin as sin belongs to the human condition only wherefore then man is redeemable without sin and thus holy and pure. Sin is an illusion without substance as is hate and darkness so that love and light can be life eternal in the beauty of truth where opposites are no longer (as also the sea is gone in Rev.21). |
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06-19-2011, 10:01 AM | #32 | |
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Case, typically, was simply applying his own contemporary Christian mindset to the documents, the standard practice in traditional scholarship. As for the rest of Case’s “case” against mythicism, why don’t you read about it in my website article “Alleged Refutations of Jesus Mythicism”? After all, it’s free of charge, Abe. No excuse for not checking it out. (The entire article might be very eye-opening about the case against mythicism which traditional scholars have managed to mount over the last century.) |
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06-19-2011, 11:22 AM | #33 |
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David Friedrich Strauss
Here is Albert Schweitzer's take on the Mythical approach of Strauss (Life of Jesus, German 8 editions 1835-1864):
[T]he critical study of the life of Jesus … falls, immediately, into two periods, that before Strauss and that after Strauss. The dominant interest in the first is the question of miracle. What terms are possible between a historical treatment and the acceptance of supernatural events? With the advent of Strauss this problem found a solution, viz., that these events have no rightful place in the history, but are simply mythical elements in the sources.It looks to me that the father of systematic search for mythical elements in the Gospels pretty much restricted its application to supernatural elements that can not be rationally explained. While it appears that he did accept a historical Jesus, he made no attempt to put it in chronological order, seeing the individual pericopes independently of one another. Who, exactly, developed a completely Mythical Jesus and when? Schweitzer attributes it to J M Robertson, Christianity and Mythology (1900). Robertson considered it a retelling of the Indian Krishna Myth. DCH |
06-19-2011, 01:08 PM | #34 | ||
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06-19-2011, 04:56 PM | #35 |
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Drews lists earlier mythicists in the intro to The Christ Myth. Apparently quite a number of people hit upon the insight.
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06-19-2011, 05:48 PM | #36 | |
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We sometimes forget that Eduard Meyer was, at least in Germany, the first non-theologian to write a scholarly history of the origins of Christianity, and this happened only in 1921. |
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06-19-2011, 05:51 PM | #37 | |||
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06-19-2011, 09:27 PM | #38 | |
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This makes it much more likely that Matthew putting such things in Jesus' mouth is a secondary development (with some help from Q) with no dependence on him in the Didache (anyway, the "Two Ways" has obviously been spliced onto the original Didache, just as it has been onto the original epistle of Barnabas). As for the very similar wording with passages in Matthew, scholars like Helmut Koester have long ago opined that this could be a case of 'assimilation' of texts, scribes being familiar with a well-known version of certain verses will consciously or unconsciously alter the wording of another text to conform with it. Earl Doherty |
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06-19-2011, 09:44 PM | #39 |
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Does the Didache have any parallels to "The Shepherd of Hermas"?
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06-20-2011, 07:43 AM | #40 | ||
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I have no problem admitting that plenty of ahistoricist arguments are based nothing but naked hostility toward Christianity, but I don't use any of those arguments. Neither does Robert Price, who endorses ahistoricism while remaining probably the best atheist friend Christianity ever had. |
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