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Old 11-03-2008, 08:29 AM   #11
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The term "mental" was a term I choose to use because I think it makes the distinction from "extra-mental", which Craig does use, more clear. I believe Craig uses the terms "extra-mental" and "visions". This is just semantics.

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Old 11-03-2008, 08:35 AM   #12
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I am not sure of your point here. Craig is trying to use the NT as a historical source, and would prefer not to be forced to defend obvious fantasy like Stephen looking into the sky and seeing god himself. He wants to claim that some sightings of Jesus were phenomema that need a historical explanation.

I think the idea that these appearances were historical, as opposed to later literary invention, is highly suspect.
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Old 11-03-2008, 08:54 AM   #13
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Toto,

Your missing the point. I too think the post-Pauline-conversion appearances (noted in my opening post) are all literary inventions (even though I think some of the pre-Pauline-conversion appearances were originally based in real life hallucinations and dreams that were then later legendized). The question at hand is, does the NT differentiate between extra-mental appearances up to and including Paul's conversion appearance, and mental appearances after? If it does, Craig's point is that this distinction is unexplainable if the appearance traditions were never based on anything more than hallucinations/dreams because in this case, why weren't all of the post-Pauline-conversion appearances legendized into extra-mental events just like all of those that occurred earlier were?

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Old 11-03-2008, 12:42 PM   #14
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Originally Posted by 2-J View Post
.................................................. .....................
Consider an appearance that you claim was clearly only in the mind of Paul:-

Quote:
1Meanwhile, Saul was still breathing out murderous threats against the Lord's disciples. He went to the high priest 2and asked him for letters to the synagogues in Damascus, so that if he found any there who belonged to the Way, whether men or women, he might take them as prisoners to Jerusalem. 3As he neared Damascus on his journey, suddenly a light from heaven flashed around him. 4He fell to the ground and heard a voice say to him, "Saul, Saul, why do you persecute me?"
5"Who are you, Lord?" Saul asked.
"I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting," he replied. 6"Now get up and go into the city, and you will be told what you must do."
7The men traveling with Saul stood there speechless; they heard the sound but did not see anyone.
Now, in this passage we are told that "a light from heaven flashed around him". Imagine if there was nobody with Paul at that time. By your logic, it would seem that we must assume that there really was a flash of physical light. After all it is described in as concrete terms as the things in the Stephen episode and revelation, add to this on the face of it we are simply told there was a flash of light so just as in the case of Stephen and John which are similarly pithy, it would be natural to assume a physical event occurred.

Of course we know that the flash of light was private to Paul and thus not a publicly observable event (however, as a tangent, why couldn't there really have been a flash of light, and it was just a (further) miracle that stopped the others from seeing it? but nevermind). But the only reason we know that is because we are told that others were in the vicinity and should have been able to observe it, but didn't. There is nothing in the description itself that differs substantially from the Stephen episode and John.
It may be worth noting that there are apparently puzzling discrepancies between the accounts in Acts 9, Acts 22 and Acts 26 as to just what Paul's companions did and did not experience.

Andrew Criddle
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Old 11-03-2008, 01:51 PM   #15
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Toto,

...The question at hand is, does the NT differentiate between extra-mental appearances up to and including Paul's conversion appearance, and mental appearances after? If it does, Craig's point is that this distinction is unexplainable if the appearance traditions were never based on anything more than hallucinations/dreams because in this case, why weren't all of the post-Pauline-conversion appearances legendized into extra-mental events just like all of those that occurred earlier were?

Kris
Craig is constructing a slippery, legalistic argument for treating the "extra-mental" appearances as evidence. It doesn't really work.

Why weren't all of the post-Pauline-conversion appearances turned into extra-mental events? (Note that Stephen's vision is pre-conversion.)

It is very important to Craig's argument to claim that the earliest appearances were not "hallucinations." He has deliberately chosen this word, rather than "visions" as part of his debating strategy. He wants to prove that there is a modern materialist basis for his faith, or at least give modern scientifically minded people a rationalization for their belief.

But - visions of Jesus were and are common among Christians, up to this day. I would suggest that visions of Jesus were the norm, which moderns would interpret as "mental." But at some time in the second century, when the spirtual Jesus was historicized, the gospel writers felt the need to add a few "extra-mental" episodes, along with claims that they were witnessed by many people, as part of their invention of the historical basis for Christianity. For all we know, the "mental" appearances of Jesus were part of the earliest tradition, and the "extra-mental" were much later additions. The Revelation of John could not have been written much earlier than Luke, if at all, under the standard dating.

"Hallucination" is a modern word, useful to those of us who know that events inside one's head need not have any basis in reality. In the ancient world, Christians would not necessarily have discounted visions as hallucinations. But Craig is somehow lacking in that sort of faith.
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Old 11-03-2008, 02:05 PM   #16
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Toto,

Thanks for the correction on Stephen's vision being pre-Paul-conversion!

So if I understand you correctly, you agree that the NT differentiates between extra-mental appearances up to and including Paul's conversion, and those after being only in the mind of the percipient. And, again if I understand you correctly, you think that differentiation is simply the result of the earliest hallucinations being legendized and those later not being so legendized?

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Old 11-03-2008, 02:17 PM   #17
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I would not include Paul's visions as "extra-mental." In one version, people saw the bright light, but did not hear voices, in another they heard the voices, but did not see the light. Acts has little pretense here of a verifiable extra-mental event.

I do not think that the earliest visions were legendized - they were always visions. I think that some of the gospel writers constructed stories where Jesus rose from the dead in bodily form, but I see no reason to think that they even thought that they were writing history.

Note that Mark (also John) has a few appearances to individuals that could have been mental; Matthew has Jesus appearing to groups of disciples, and Luke ups the ante and has Jesus talking to groups of disciples and eating fish with them and showing off his wounds.

Summary of post-resurrection appearances

Is there any indication of a historical basis to any of this? There was nothing to legendize. Only in William Lane Craig's fertile imagination is there anything that need to be explained.
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Old 11-03-2008, 07:08 PM   #18
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Thanks as always for your opinion Toto! --- Kris
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Old 11-05-2008, 07:42 AM   #19
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Craig appears to be relying on sources like . . . .
OK. This seems to be a time when I put 2 and 2 together and got 22. I didn't recall his crediting anybody else in the article that I read, and I hadn't seen that hypothesis in any other apologetic sources I'd come across.
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Old 11-05-2008, 07:50 AM   #20
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Just curious, if Craig's and Wright's argument is groundless, what do folks here think Paul meant when he said that Jesus appeared to him "last of all" (1 Cor 15:8)?
I think all it means is that whatever he thought an appearance was, it happened to everybody else that it happened to before it happened to him.
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