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Old 03-13-2005, 10:04 AM   #81
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Originally Posted by ichabod crane
Because from the earliest Christian writings, the person of Jesus Christ, whether he is considered human, a divine spirit-being, a heavenly man, or a martian, is presented as being the messiah in terms of the Jewish Tanakh.
Q is arguably an exception to this.

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It's very hard to answer that question.
I agree and a credible answer will, IMO, help make an HJ the more likely explanation.
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Old 03-13-2005, 10:35 AM   #82
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Originally Posted by Killer Mike
Out of curiosity Im just wondering how "mythicists" explain the "great divide"?
The ones that immediately come to mind:

1) Given a layered Q, it may have originally existed as nothing but an anonymous collection of Cynic-style sayings that were later attributed to Jesus.

2) The whole text was about another guy, entirely. He may have had the rather ubiquitous name of "Jesus" and been used as a template for how Christians of the Gospel era believed their Jesus would have behaved.

3) There is no Q. (I'm not sure how that accounts for the Didache, though, since its Jesus appears to have more in common with that text than the Gospel depiction)

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I have a little skepticism in accepting people just out of the blue started telling such widely diverse stories about a non-existent man.
I would too but that isn't what is being suggested. Would you be as skeptical of the notion of people applying widely diverse interpretations of an idea or collection of pre-existing and somewhat related ideas (eg Son of God, dying/rising Savior, God's Wisdom, Suffering Servant, The Just Man)? After several decades, somebody decided to depict this Son in a narrative so as to better communicate his faith.
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Old 03-13-2005, 10:36 AM   #83
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Thanks for the clarification, Andrew.
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Old 03-15-2005, 05:00 AM   #84
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Originally Posted by Vork
Yes, except that they do so quite freely. It's not so much that they portray Jesus as the manifestation of Jewish hopes, as they are trying to cast him as such. But is the early Christian reading of the Tanakh a "jewish" reading and if so, what kind of Jew? There wasn't one Judaism that we can measure the Jesus of early Christianity against, but many.
But there was no one "Jewish" reading of the Tanakh; but still it is true that *regardless* of the reading of the Tanakh, every other non-Christian Jewish messianic movement centred around a real human individual.

Furthermore, we don't even have to confine ourselves to early Christianity. Do you concede that there were Jews who believed that Christ was the messiah say, in the early 2nd century (the Ebionites for example)? If so, we have a Jewish messianic movement. So the argument still holds as follows:

(Q) How many Jewish messianic movements, by whatever route they came into being, came into existence without a real human figure as their inspiration? (A) None.

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Originally Posted by Vork
Sure Julius Caesar was historical, but that doesn't help us read Shakespeare's intention. We can't move from knowlege of history to knowledge of intention. Different things entirely.
Assuming we can know intention, I don't see how that affects historicity. Shakespeare is a good example. His intention was not historical; but that doesn't make his writing entirely un-historical or contrived. Mark's intention was, I think, essentially to create propaganda that would persuade people to become Christians. But that doesn't mean it is devoid of history, and in fact, inclusion of some historical content might serve that purpose far better than mere invention. It also argues against an allegorical intent; if Mark is trying to persuade people to become Christians, surely he is going to write in a plain manner that they can understand, not demand some hidden meaning from his reader. Propaganda is not known for its allegory!

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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
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Originally Posted by me
Because from the earliest Christian writings, the person of Jesus Christ, whether he is considered human, a divine spirit-being, a heavenly man, or a martian, is presented as being the messiah in terms of the Jewish Tanakh.
Q is arguably an exception to this.
Clever point. I would have to check, but I'd be suprised if there were no messianic references in Q. Are you perhaps referring to a sub-component of Q or an "original" Q as distinct from, say, Q as found in the "Critical Edition"? But even if true, it doesn't escape the argument, for reasons I've outlined above. As long as later Christians did constitute a Jewish messianic movement, the argument still holds.
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Old 03-15-2005, 05:14 AM   #85
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Originally Posted by ichabod crane
But there was no one "Jewish" reading of the Tanakh; but still it is true that *regardless* of the reading of the Tanakh, every other non-Christian Jewish messianic movement centred around a real human individual.
Yes, but Christianity was a syncretic movement based on a heavily Hellenized Judaism that incorporated elements of mystery cults, including a sacred meal, cultic narratives, and so on. In other words, it wasn't a Jewish" messianic movement any more than the Taipings or Wovoka were "Christian."

In any case, were the objects of Jewish cults in the Second Temple period, such as Melchizeldek or Enoch or Moses, historical persons? Weren't they Divine mediator figures with cultic titles and divine powers? In other words, even taken as a purely "Jewish" phenomenon, there's plenty of precedent in the "Two Powers in Heaven" beliefs that the Jesus cult tapped into (and maybe even grew out of).

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Old 03-15-2005, 07:39 AM   #86
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I had no idea this thread was growing. Lets see...
AC,
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M Knibb is probably right that the references to Christ in AoI 6-11 are interpolations (they are absent from the Latin and Slavonic) but the original form of 6-11 is IMO late 1st century CE at the earliest and almost certainly Christian.
What is your basis for beleiving that there was "an original form of 6-11"?
Why is it missing in the Latin and Slavonic texts?

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AoI is IMO highly unorthodox with a Jesus who is not really human at all, but (at least in the present form of AoI) Christ takes on outward human appearance to live among humans on earth. This is probably docetic but not in any way mythical in the sense of Christ suffering only in a spiritual realm.
At what point does AoI say that "Christ takes on outward human appearance to live among humans on earth"?
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IMO this is not a good parallel at all.
Reasons?
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If AoI regarded Christ as dying in angelic form in a spiritual realm, then this would be contrary both to the present form of AoI
Its is because of this inconsistency that AoI was amended to give us the present form of AoI. I am glad you got it. Why interpolate a text if it is consistent with your theological understanding?
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This is IMO unlikely and even if true would make AoI almost useless as a guide to interpreting Paul who certainly didn't believe this.
So, now AoI becomes useless now because it is inconsistent with modern Christian Chistology?
KM,
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...It is "The Jesus Myth" Open Court Publishing Company, 1998...Im no bible scholar...
In other words, you cannot locate any passage that has Wells stating that there was a HJ. Thank you.
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I personally find it easier to believe there was some sort of historical figure and that stories about him began to circulate and eventually came to be written down, rather then to believe in a purely "mythical" idea. ...
What suits your personal taste is worthless to us. What we are interested in is evidence. Evidence. Evidence.

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My question from an interested bystander is simply why has Dohertys' work not taken hold within the mainstream of Bible scholarship?
Why hasn't the HJ theory by the "mainstream of Bible scholarship" taken hold within Doherty, Bob Price, Tim Freke, Michael Turton, Thomas L. Thompson, Richard Carrier, Jacob Aliet...?
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I mean why has not the John Dominic Crossens' and Helmut Koesters' of the world openly endorsed the purely mythical idea?
I mean why has not the Thomas L. Thompsons and Bob Prices of the world openly endorsed the purely Historical idea?

IC
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It seems clear that knowing someone kata sarka means knowing them as they are seen from an earthly, human perspective.
Search on kata sarka in this board please. It is a tired topic and even ardent critics like Rick Sumner no longer battle it. The reading you are giving has been characterized by Carrier, who has translated ancient texts, as "barely intelligible".

AC,
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This may possibly be relevant. I have no further information about its reliability http://www.bede.org.uk/gawells.htm
I thought you knew Bede better than that. Relying on an anecdotal story from him - without any supporting evidence, is stone crazy. Have you read about his alleged encounter with the author of The Jesus Mysteries? Hold your hat as you read his account in Holding's site. Search under Tweedledee and Tweedledum.

Vork asked:
Quote:
What makes you think Christianity began as a Jewish messianic movement?"
IC responded:
Quote:
Because from the earliest Christian writings
What are these earlist Christian writings?

In the CST (Common Sayings Tradition), there is no Jewish voice.
How do we know a Jewish voice?
N. T. Wright writes in The New Testament and the People of God: "Far more important to the first-century Jew than questions of space, time and literal cosmology were the key issues of Temple, Land, and Torah, of race, economy and justice. When Israel's God acted, Jews would be restored to their ancestral rights and would practice their ancestral religion, with the rest of the world looking on in awe, and/or making pilgrimages to Zion, and/or being ground to powder under Jewish feet."
Doherty writes:
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But where are all these Jewish preoccupations? There is not a murmur of them in Q1 or the parallel layer of Thomas. Where is the divine mandate, the will of the covenantal God of Judaism, the fate or role of the gentile, the restoration of Zion in a new Jerusalem? The Kingdom is referred to 17 times out of 132 sayings in Thomas, 10 times out of 101 sayings in Q, and 4 times out of the 37 sayings of the Common Sayings Tradition— always simply in terms of "God" or "the Father" or "the heavens." Since Jews were not the only race to speak of a Kingdom of God, not the only ones to call the highest God "Father", and certainly not the only ones to envision some 'new world' in a heavenly setting, none of these things can be said to have a clear Jewish fingerprint. The specifically Jewish elements enumerated above by Wright don't appear in these sayings. The prospect of divine intervention hovers in the background of all this counter-cultural expression, but there is nothing to exclusively identify it as proceeding from the Jewish Deity. And despite the emphasis in the prophets, Jews were not the only people in the ancient world to have a concept of social equality and justice. The Roman philosopher Epictetus in the late first century was a figure very like the Gospel Jesus in many ways, with a very similar program.
http://pages.ca.inter.net/~oblio/crossbr.htm
KM
Quote:
Out of curiosity Im just wondering how "mythicists" explain the "great divide"?
It was not a single divide. There was a "riotous diversity" of Christian cults and doctrine. From docetism, gnostic cults, cult of Naasenes (Hippolytus), the Nazarenes, the Ebionites, mythicist cults who believed in the son - an intermediary figure (shepherd of Hermas, Odes of Solomon) and so on. What we find in the Didache, the Epistle to Diognetus etc, are different Christological movements without a central HJ figure.

The HJ movement was orchestrated to beat all these other cults to one shape: a HJ. I believe Eusebius lists 19 cults. I am sure PhiloJay probably has them memorized...

The very fact that we had a 'seething mass of sects and salvation cults,' speaks against the existence of a central figure of Christianity.

No, there was no great divide. They were many. Dozens.
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Old 03-15-2005, 08:41 AM   #87
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Originally Posted by ichabod crane
Mark's intention was, I think, essentially to create propaganda that would persuade people to become Christians.
Based on a previous post, I think Vorkosigan agrees with you on this point. I asked about it then but I suspect my question got buried by subsequent posts (surely he wouldn't have ignored me. )so I'll repeat my question to both of you:

What is the basis for this conclusion? I see no evidence that Mark's story was intended to obtain converts. It seems to me to have been originally written, perhaps exclusively, for his fellow believers.

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I would have to check, but I'd be suprised if there were no messianic references in Q.
Prepare to be surprised. You will find a Wisdom Teacher, God's Wisdom Incarnate (implied), Apocalyptic Prophet and Son of God. Assuming a layered Q, this can be seen as a progressive development over time.

Quote:
As long as later Christians did constitute a Jewish messianic movement, the argument still holds.
Not if "a Jewish messianic movement" is an oversimplification of Christianity and I think it is no matter when in its history you are considering it. The evidence suggests it was never just "a Jewish messianic movement".
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Old 03-15-2005, 10:36 AM   #88
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Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman
I had no idea this thread was growing. Lets see...
AC,
Quote:
M Knibb is probably right that the references to Christ in AoI 6-11 are interpolations (they are absent from the Latin and Slavonic) but the original form of 6-11 is IMO late 1st century CE at the earliest and almost certainly Christian.
What is your basis for beleiving that there was "an original form of 6-11"?
Why is it missing in the Latin and Slavonic texts?
The Latin and Slavonic texts to which I'm referring are 6-11 without 1-5 they are mostly the same as Ethiopic 6-11 but with some important differences. One of which is the absence of the words Christ and Jesus. If this is the original then Christ and Jesus were probably omitted as being names that no-one not even Isaiah were to know in advance. (see various references in AoI to names not to be revealed).

There was certainly an original form of AoI 6-11 in the sense of the archetype to which the Ethiopic Slavonic and Latin all go back. How far this is a rewrite of an earlier version cannot really be determined.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman
At what point does AoI say that "Christ takes on outward human appearance to live among humans on earth"?
Ethiopic AoI has in section 11 a long passage about Christ's life on earth including 'And I saw how as a babe at Nazareth he sucked the breast like any other babe in order not to be recognized' Slavonic and Latin AoI lack almost entirely this passage but do have 'And I saw one like a son of man and he lived with men in the world and they did not recognize him.'
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman
Reasons?
I gave my resons why Inanna is not a good parallel in my previous post, basically it is not a story about incarnation at all.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman
Its is because of this inconsistency that AoI was amended to give us the present form of AoI. I am glad you got it. Why interpolate a text if it is consistent with your theological understanding?
Texts are interpolated for all kinds of reasons. IF the explicit references in AoI 11 to Christ's life on earth were missing in the original version of AoI 6-11, (they are present in a very abbreviated sense in the Slavonic and Latin and in an expanded form in the Ethiopic hence all our surviving sources have at least some reference to Christ's life on earth), then this probably implies some important difference in doctrine.

However it is methodologically unsound to propose that the original doctrine is one which is neither found explicitly in any plausible reconstructed form of the original text nor explicitly anywhere else.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ted Hoffman
So, now AoI becomes useless now because it is inconsistent with modern Christian Chistology?
No I said that if it originally meant something very different from Paul
(ie that Christ never took on human form at all but was killed in angelic form) then it would give little help in understanding Paul.

Andrew Criddle
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Old 03-15-2005, 12:06 PM   #89
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Originally Posted by andrewcriddle
Ethiopic AoI has in section 11 a long passage about Christ's life on earth including 'And I saw how as a babe at Nazareth he sucked the breast like any other babe in order not to be recognized' Slavonic and Latin AoI lack almost entirely this passage but do have 'And I saw one like a son of man and he lived with men in the world and they did not recognize him.'
.......................................
Texts are interpolated for all kinds of reasons. IF the explicit references in AoI 11 to Christ's life on earth were missing in the original version of AoI 6-11, (they are present in a very abbreviated sense in the Slavonic and Latin and in an expanded form in the Ethiopic hence all our surviving sources have at least some reference to Christ's life on earth), then this probably implies some important difference in doctrine.

However it is methodologically unsound to propose that the original doctrine is one which is neither found explicitly in any plausible reconstructed form of the original text nor explicitly anywhere else.
On reflection, I think I was rather negative in the above post, attacking proposals about what AoI is about without providing a better alternative.

So I'm going to say what I think happened during the development and rewriting of AoI.

Although I think the long section in Ethiopic AoI 11 about Christ's life on Earth is not original in its present form I doubt if the very brief passage in the Latin and Slavonic is the original form either.

a/ there seems to be a reference to the verses about the death of Christ in Ethiopic AoI 11 in the Greek Legend of Isaiah which appears to have used an early form of AoI as one of its sources. The Greek Legend also seems to refer to the Latin and Slavonic AoI 11 'and he lived with men'

b/ The passage in Latin and Slavonic AoI 11 'and he lived with men in the world and they did not recognize him' 'and they did not recognize him' seems to have come originally from a passage in Ethiopic AoI 11 about the crucifixion 'the adversary envied him and roused the children of Israel against him not knowing who he was and they delivered him to the king and crucified him'

Hence I think that the original form of AoI 11 had Christ crucified in human form on earth.

What I think is much more doubtful is the long previous section in Ethiopic AoI about Christ's birth and childhood.

a/ This long section interrupts the flow, has no parallel in the rest of AoI and no support outside the Ethiopic.

b/ This passage is almost certainly based partly on the late 2nd century Protevangelium of James whereas the original version of 6-11 is unlikely to be after 150 CE.

Therefore I think that the original AoI had a reference to Christ's death on earth but no reference whatever to any sort of human birth or childhood. It may have explicitly had Christ descending to earth and immediately taking on adult human form. (As in say Marcion's teaching)

In our present AoI this has been rewritten in the interests of orthodoxy to provide Christ with a human birth and childhood.

This is obviously speculation but hopefully constructive speculation.

Andrew Criddle
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Old 03-16-2005, 10:36 PM   #90
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Muller's critique will be handled in three parts. Part One is ready.

Riveting. Enrapturing. I am yet to read it thoroughly.

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