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Old 01-11-2008, 09:08 PM   #11
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnnySkeptic
If lots of early Christians were persecuted, would that make Christianity more believable?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
If you truly think I believe that then you should be asking me if I'm a Jew not a Christian. Over the years they seem to have cornered the market on persecution.
I suggest that you pay better attention to what I write. I asked you the question because I do not know what your position is, and yet you started out by saying "If you truly think......." If I already knew what your position was, why would I have asked you the question? I cannot make any sense at all out of your reply. If you don't mind, please answer the question that I asked you. A simple "yes" or "no" will do if that is all that you want to say.
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Old 01-12-2008, 12:20 AM   #12
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Johnny Skeptic:

Quote:
I suggest that you pay better attention to what I write. I asked you the question because I do not know what your position is, and yet you started out by saying "If you truly think......." If I already knew what your position was, why would I have asked you the question? I cannot make any sense at all out of your reply. If you don't mind, please answer the question that I asked you. A simple "yes" or "no" will do if that is all that you want to say.
You asked me if I thought that early church persecutions would make Christianity more believable. The fact that members of a young religious movement were persecuted proves nothing about the authenticity of that religious movement's message. In answer to your question, no. The only thing the persecutions prove is that Nero was a loon. Most people already knew that though.

But let's stop playing around. You asked me that question because you think that I'm secretly trying to defend Christianity against the mean mean atheists on an atheist forum. If you wanted this discussion to be purely about the history you wouldn't have asked me what my religious beliefs were. This constant litmus testing is annoying and I don't understand why you think it has any bearing on discussions ranging from Nero's reign to physician assisted suicide. It is getting tiresome.

Quote:
If you mean do liars know when they are telling lies, the answer is "yes." History is full of reasonably provable lies, and that does not include a veritable plethora of lies that we do not know about, and a veritable plethora of innocent but inaccurate revelations, and a lot a deliberate fiction that was written for entertainment. Dr. Jonathan Roth of San Jose State University is one of my sources. He said that writers of antiquity frequently used hyperbole and exaggeration, including Tacitus.
I am not disputing what Dr. Roth said about writers of antiquity. I just think it is dangerous to disregard those writings when we have so few sources to begin with.

Quote:
That will not do. You need to post where your got your information from, such as an Internet web site, or a book.
Suetonius:
"Punishment by Nero was inflicted on the Christians, a class of men given to
a new and mischievous superstition." [Lives of the Caesars 26.2]

Tertullian:

"Consult your annals, and there you will find Nero the first
emperor who dyed his sword in Christian blood, when our religion
was but just arising at Rome ; but we glory in being first dedicated
to destruction by such a monster: for whoever knows that enemy
of all goodness will have the greater value for our religion, as
knowing that Nero could hate nothing exceedingly, but what was
exceedingly good." (Apology)

"The apostles, in obedience to their Master's
command, went about preaching through the world, persecuted
by the Jews to the last degree, but suffering victoriously, in full
assurance of the truth ; but at length the infidels taking the advan-
tage of the barbarous Nero's reign, they were forced to sow the
Christian religion in their own Christian blood." (Apology)

[www.tertullian.org]

Clement of Alexandria

"We have still to
add to our chronology the following, -- I mean the
days which Daniel indicates from the desolation of
Jerusalem, the seven years and seven months of
the reign of Vespasian. For the two years are added
to the seventeen months and eighteen days of Otho,
and Galba, and Vitellius; and the result is three years
and six months, which is "the half of the week," as
Daniel the prophet said. For he said that there were
two thousand three hundred days from the time that
the abomination of Nero stood in the holy city, till its
destruction."

[Stromata book 1]


My problem is not in your opinion that the persecutions under Nero were minimal. My problem is merely with the definitive nature with which you speak. We have few sources to draw from on this period. Since the few sources that we have are contradictory we should be a little more hesitant to speak with such certainty.

You may be correct in your belief and you certainly have an educated basis for it. However, the jury is still out on the issue and will probably be out until the end of time. Here are a few sources that are as non-commital as I have been.

"We have no idea how many Christians lost their life under the Neronian persecution, but Historian Harold Mattingly tells us that Nero's persecution 'lasted several years, was not confined to Rome but was practiced throughout the Empire, and cost the lives of a very large number [of Christians].'" [from http://www.boisestate.edu/history/nc...y210/nero.htm]

"As the new religion exploded, Roman authorities abandoned their usual policies of toleration. The first recorded persecution were under Nero, after a terrible fire in Rome which Nero was accused of setting himself (he hated the city). Nero imposed horrible penalties upon his Christian scapegoats, including crucifixion and burning alive.

Nero's persecutions were not really religious in orientation — the Christians were just a convenient target. They were regarded by the non-Christian Roman populace with suspicion for variety of reasons. Initially, they were predominantly from the lower classes, and the aura of mystery surrounding the religion led to misunderstandings. The "this is my body" ceremony of the Eucharist was taken to be meant literally, i.e., that the Christians were cannibals who ate babies (a charge which would later be repeated by Christians against the Jews in the Middle Ages). "Love one another" also provoked misunderstandings of a sexual nature. "

[http://www.loyno.edu/~seduffy/christianity.html]

Interestingly enough, it seems that this discussion has been going on for far longer than you or I have been alive and I think this article lends credence to my belief that we should be more hesitant to speak so definitively.

Link to a NY Times letter from 1898 from L.D. Burdick on Persecutions under Nero
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Old 01-12-2008, 01:28 AM   #13
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnnySkeptic
If you mean do liars know when they are telling lies, the answer is "yes." History is full of reasonably provable lies, and that does not include a veritable plethora of lies that we do not know about, and a veritable plethora of innocent but inaccurate revelations, and a lot a deliberate fiction that was written for entertainment. Dr. Jonathan Roth of San Jose State University is one of my sources. He said that writers of antiquity frequently used hyperbole and exaggeration, including Tacitus.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
I am not disputing what Dr. Roth said about writers of antiquity. I just think it is dangerous to disregard those writings when we have so few sources to begin with.
Well, if there are only a few sources, Christians should not use them to make a case that large numbers of Christians were persecuted.

Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnnySkeptic
That will not do. You need to post where your got your information from, such as an Internet web site, or a book.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
Suetonius:

"Punishment by Nero was inflicted on the Christians, a class of men given to
a new and mischievous superstition." [Lives of the Caesars 26.2]
But that does not say anything about large numbers of Christians.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
Tertullian:

"Consult your annals, and there you will find Nero the first
emperor who dyed his sword in Christian blood, when our religion
was but just arising at Rome; but we glory in being first dedicated
to destruction by such a monster: for whoever knows that enemy
of all goodness will have the greater value for our religion, as
knowing that Nero could hate nothing exceedingly, but what was
exceedingly good." (Apology)

"The apostles, in obedience to their Master's
command, went about preaching through the world, persecuted
by the Jews to the last degree, but suffering victoriously, in full
assurance of the truth; but at length the infidels taking the advan-
tage of the barbarous Nero's reign, they were forced to sow the
Christian religion in their own Christian blood." (Apology)
Again, that does not say anything about large numbers of Christians.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
[www.tertullian.org]

Clement of Alexandria

"We have still to
add to our chronology the following, -- I mean the
days which Daniel indicates from the desolation of
Jerusalem, the seven years and seven months of
the reign of Vespasian. For the two years are added
to the seventeen months and eighteen days of Otho,
and Galba, and Vitellius; and the result is three years
and six months, which is "the half of the week," as
Daniel the prophet said. For he said that there were
two thousand three hundred days from the time that
the abomination of Nero stood in the holy city, till its
destruction."

[Stromata book 1]
Again, that does not say anything about large number of Christians.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
My problem is not in your opinion that the persecutions under Nero were minimal. My problem is merely with the definitive nature with which you speak. We have few sources to draw from on this period. Since the few sources that we have are contradictory we should be a little more hesitant to speak with such certainty.

You may be correct in your belief and you certainly have an educated basis for it. However, the jury is still out on the issue and will probably be out until the end of time. Here are a few sources that are as non-commital as I have been.

"We have no idea how many Christians lost their life under the Neronian persecution, but Historian Harold Mattingly tells us that Nero's persecution 'lasted several years, was not confined to Rome but was practiced throughout the Empire, and cost the lives of a very large number [of Christians].'" [from http://www.boisestate.edu/history/nc...y210/nero.htm]
But Harold Mattingly is only one source.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
"As the new religion exploded, Roman authorities abandoned their usual policies of toleration. The first recorded persecution were under Nero, after a terrible fire in Rome which Nero was accused of setting himself (he hated the city). Nero imposed horrible penalties upon his Christian scapegoats, including crucifixion and burning alive."

Nero's persecutions were not really religious in orientation — the Christians were just a convenient target. They were regarded by the non-Christian Roman populace with suspicion for variety of reasons. Initially, they were predominantly from the lower classes, and the aura of mystery surrounding the religion led to misunderstandings. The "this is my body" ceremony of the Eucharist was taken to be meant literally, i.e., that the Christians were cannibals who ate babies (a charge which would later be repeated by Christians against the Jews in the Middle Ages). "Love one another" also provoked misunderstandings of a sexual nature. "

[http://www.loyno.edu/~seduffy/christianity.html]

Interestingly enough, it seems that this discussion has been going on for far longer than you or I have been alive and I think this article lends credence to my belief that we should be more hesitant to speak so definitively.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstrac...659C94699ED7CF
I believe that my sources are much better than your sources. I believe that most people at this forum will agree with me. I assume that the collective education and reseach of my sources far outweighs the collective education of your sources.

Please be advised that in order to defeat Christians who claim that large numbers of Christians were persecuted, since they are the claimants, I do not have to reasonably prove that large numbers of Christians were not persecuted. Rather, they have to reasonably prove that large number of Christians were persecuted.

You originally said:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
It seems a little unfair to discount all contemporary evidence for Christian persecution that comes from Christian sources. While a little exaggeration is to be expected, wouldn't they know most about the extent of the killings. Discounting the large amount of evidence because it comes from the supposed victims themselves doesn't seem like the best way to examine this issue.
Now you said:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
My problem is not in your opinion that the persecutions under Nero were minimal. My problem is merely with the definitive nature with which you speak. We have few sources to draw from on this period. Since the few sources that we have are contradictory we should be a little more hesitant to speak with such certainty.
First you said "Discounting the LARGE amount of evidence because it comes from the supposed victims themselves doesn't seem like the best way to examine this issue," but now you say "We have FEW sources to draw from on this period. Since the few sources that we have are contradictory we should be a little more hesitant to speak with such certainty." Which is it, a large amount of evidence from the supposed victims themselves, or a few sources that are contradictory?

Who are "the supposed victims"?

Are you not aware that history is full of lies, deceptions, and innocent but inaccurate revelations?

Regarding "we should be a little more hesitant to speak with such certainty," since it is Christians who are the original claimants, you should be telling that to them, not to me. I have no problem with neither side making any claims, but you can bet that many Christians will not do that. The supposed persecutions of large numbers of Christians is highly touted by many Christians who claim that the persecutions of large numbers of Christians greatly adds credibility to Christians. "World Christians Trends" is a large book. It was written by two conservative Christians. The authors claim that the persecutions of large numbers of Christians is the best evidence that the Gospel message is true.

You said:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
There is something of a consensus among both secular and Christian historians.
What consensus of secular historians are you referring to? The only historian that you mentioned was Harold Mattingly. He is not a consensus. Is he a skeptic?

That fact that a number of prominent Roman Catholics opposed claims of large numbers of persecutions, including a Pope and a Cardinal, all of whom had nothing to gain from their opposition except to save their integrity, proves that my sources are much better than your sources are. Those Roman Catholics sources would probably not have opposed claims of large numbers of persecutions without have very good reasons for doing so.

Any at rate, I win because my sources are much more credible and more numerous than your sources are, and because my sources come from both sides of the aisle, and because since I am not the original claimant, I do not actually have to reasonably prove anything, especially since you said "We have few sources to draw from on this period. Since the few sources that we have are contradictory we should be a little more hesitant to speak with such certainty." I am happy to be hesitant. Are you and Christians happy to be hesitant to and not talk about persecutions anymore?

You ought to know that the party who should be the most hesitant is the party who is the ORIGINAL claimant, who in this case are Christians. My comments are a reply to PRIOR claims by Christians.
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Old 01-12-2008, 09:28 AM   #14
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Message to Champion: If you reread my opening post, you will see that I started this thread in response to the following statements by rhutchin, who is a Calvinist:

Quote:
Originally Posted by rhutchin
Christians seem to be passionate for no real reason. They have nothing to gain and voluntarily forgo many of the world's "pleasures" for no apparent gain.
Quote:
Originally Posted by rhutchin
The apostles faced ridicule and abuse and death to tell others about Jesus. Why?
Those statements obviously deal with persecution and martyrdom. You said:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
I am not disputing what Dr. Roth said about writers of antiquity. I just think it is dangerous to disregard those writings when we have so few sources to begin with.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
We have few sources to draw from on this period. Since the few sources that we have are contradictory we should be a little more hesitant to speak with such certainty.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
However, the jury is still out on the issue and will probably be out until the end of time.
Does what you said not apply to what rhutchin said as well? The issue of the deaths of the disciples has been debated at this forum in the past. As far as I recall, the consensus what that the jury is still out regarding that issue.

Regarding rhutchin's claim that Christians "have nothing to gain and voluntarily forgo many of the world's pleasures for no apparent gain," what do you have to say about that? In "The Rise of Christianity," Rodney Stark says:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rodney Stark

Moreover, the fruits of this faith were not limited to the realm of the spirit. Christianity offered much to the flesh as well. It was not simply the promise of salvation that motivated Christians, but the fact that they were greatly rewarded here and now for belonging. Thus while membership was expensive, it was, in fact, a bargain. That is, because the church asked much of its members, it was thereby possessed of the resources to ‘give’ much. For example, because Christians were expected to aid the less fortunate, many of them received such aid, and all could feel greater security against bad times. Because they were asked to nurse the sick and dying, many of them received such nursing. Because they were asked to love others, they in turn were loved. And if Christians were required to observe a far more restrictive moral code than that observed by pagans, Christians – especially women – enjoyed a far more secure family life.

The dynamics of stigma and sacrifice have the following direct and formal consequences (Iannaccone 1992). First: "By demanding higher levels of stigma and sacrifice, religious groups induce higher average levels of member commitment and participation." Second: "By demanding higher levels of stigma and sacrifice, religious groups are able to generate greater material, social, and religious benefits for their members."
A comfortable eternal life certainly does not compare favorably with "no apparent gain," especially considering that the brief human life span is but a speck of time as compared with eternity. If the Bible did not offer present and eventual gain, few people would be Christians.
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Old 01-13-2008, 10:04 PM   #15
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Johnny Skeptic Post #1

Quote:
Well, if there are only a few sources, Christians should not use them to make a case that large numbers of Christians were persecuted.
It isn't unfair of Christians to make such a case. Tacitus supports them in it. They shouldn't be sure of their case though. You shouldn't be sure of yours either.

Quote:
[response to suetonius quote] But that does not say anything about large numbers of Christians.
Suetonius refers to them as a "class of men" suggesting a group of some size. He also knows something of who they are.

Quote:
Again, that does not say anything about large numbers of Christians.
Tertullian puts Nero at the head of the list of Christian persecutors alongside the names of violent emperors who lived in better documented times.

Quote:
[Clement of Alexandria] Again, that does not say anything about large number of Christians.
In the passage I posted, Clement was trying to find a place for Nero's persecution within a violent prophecy in the book of Daniel. If Clement had believed Nero's persecution was merely a few executions of scapegoats then the event would most likely been considered to inauspicious to consider part of something as major as the book of Daniel.

Quote:
I believe that my sources are much better than your sources. I believe that most people at this forum will agree with me. I assume that the collective education and reseach of my sources far outweighs the collective education of your sources.
I suppose I could dig for more University's that disagree with you until our computers are blue in the face. But I won't do that. The fact that over a hundred years ago there were still arguments over this exact issue is evidence enough that there is uncertainty as to the scope of Nero's persecutions.

Quote:
Please be advised that in order to defeat Christians who claim that large numbers of Christians were persecuted, since they are the claimants, I do not have to reasonably prove that large numbers of Christians were not persecuted. Rather, they have to reasonably prove that large number of Christians were persecuted.
You are half right. Christians must also stop speaking with such overconfidence with regards to what they believe Nero did. But the burden of proof lays squarely with you. The Christians have the sources on their side. You have a strong argument from silence and the belief that Tacitus now isn't exactly what original Tacitus was back in the day. It seems to me that you are the one without direct sources. You must prove that their sources are false.

If we were talking about the supposed 'Massacre of the Innocence' things would be different.

Quote:
First you said "Discounting the LARGE amount of evidence because it comes from the supposed victims themselves doesn't seem like the best way to examine this issue," but now you say "We have FEW sources to draw from on this period.
In my argument I thought I'd discount the Christian sources for Nero's persecution. Many of them have been corrupted and we should be hesitant to use them. We have few sources that are marginally reputable, and even they are under some suspicion. Comments like "Nero's persecutions were on a grand and horrific scale" are just as unfounded as "Nero's persecutions are mainly exaggerations and myth". We don't know if either is true.

Quote:
Since the few sources that we have are contradictory we should be a little more hesitant to speak with such certainty." Which is it, a large amount of evidence from the supposed victims themselves, or a few sources that are contradictory?
See above.

Quote:
Who are "the supposed victims"?
The Christians. Not the Christians hundreds of years after the fact of course.

Quote:
Are you not aware that history is full of lies, deceptions, and innocent but inaccurate revelations?
I am aware that history is full of lies, deceptions and inaccuracies. History is also full of unanswered questions.

Quote:
Regarding "we should be a little more hesitant to speak with such certainty," since it is Christians who are the original claimants, you should be telling that to them, not to me. I have no problem with neither side making any claims, but you can bet that many Christians will not do that.
If I hear someone on this board say it I'll tell them. I joined this discussion late so I'm kind of at a disadvantage as to who claimed what and when.

Quote:
The supposed persecutions of large numbers of Christians is highly touted by many Christians who claim that the persecutions of large numbers of Christians greatly adds credibility to Christians. "World Christians Trends" is a large book. It was written by two conservative Christians. The authors claim that the persecutions of large numbers of Christians is the best evidence that the Gospel message is true.
Persecution proves nothing about a religion but how genuinely its adherents believe it's truth. Personally, I don't care what "World Christians Trends" says, but if the amount of persecution a religion faces is a litmus test for which religion is the best then the Jews win hands down.

Quote:
What consensus of secular historians are you referring to? The only historian that you mentioned was Harold Mattingly. He is not a consensus. Is he a skeptic?
The fact that Universities with respected historians have taught it for over a hundred years while very well educated and respected historians, like the ones you referenced, have also disputed it for over a hundred years has got to show something about the nature of this debate.

Quote:
That fact that a number of prominent Roman Catholics opposed claims of large numbers of persecutions, including a Pope and a Cardinal, all of whom had nothing to gain from their opposition except to save their integrity, proves that my sources are much better than your sources are. Those Roman Catholics sources would probably not have opposed claims of large numbers of persecutions without have very good reasons for doing so.
I was under the impression that the men you quoted below were refering to the silly stories about saints taming lions, converting thousands, and stopping bullets with their hands.

Quote:
Any at rate, I win because my sources are much more credible and more numerous than your sources are, and because my sources come from both sides of the aisle, and because since I am not the original claimant, I do not actually have to reasonably prove anything, especially since you said "We have few sources to draw from on this period. Since the few sources that we have are contradictory we should be a little more hesitant to speak with such certainty." I am happy to be hesitant. Are you and Christians happy to be hesitant to and not talk about persecutions anymore?
I have many things to say about the above paragraph. First of all, what do you mean "win". This isn't a game, or a fight, or a war. This is a discussion. Second of all, your sources from "both sides of the aisle" intrigue me since you didn't mention which Catholic Encyclopedia you are referring to. All the "Catholic Encyclopedia's" I found said things profoundly different. Thirdly, I'm glad you're hesitant, that's all I wanted to accomplish. We just need to view the area in question as if it is grayer than some people like to believe it is. Lastly, in answer to your question, the Christians have ample evidence for incredibly violent persecutions committed by the emperors who followed Nero. So, we can be sure to hear plenty from Christians on persecution with or without Nero's involvement.

Quote:
You ought to know that the party who should be the most hesitant is the party who is the ORIGINAL claimant, who in this case are Christians. My comments are a reply to PRIOR claims by Christians.
The Christians have the evidence. You have the many many well informed aspersions to cast. You are the one who must show that Tacitus is untrustworthy with regards to what he reported on Nero's actions after the great fire of Rome. You must prove the evidence to be untrustworthy.

If you insist on speaking on this topic as if it is a game then I think it is quite equitable to call this one a draw. You are right though, Christians should ease up on this one.

Quote:
That fact that a number of prominent Roman Catholics opposed claims of large numbers of persecutions, including a Pope and a Cardinal,
Which pope and which cardinal? You of all people should know that the title of 'Pope' or 'Cardinal' lends nothing to the credibility of the person in question.

Johnny Skeptic Post #2

Quote:
Does what you said not apply to what rhutchin said as well? The issue of the deaths of the disciples has been debated at this forum in the past. As far as I recall, the consensus what that the jury is still out regarding that issue.
I would have to lean toward the Christian view on this one. I am skeptical of the phantastical means by which the apostles died. But I think it's fair to say that they didn't die of natural causes. Admittedly, I haven't studied this issue very thoroughly, but I'd be interested in hearing what you think became of Paul?

Quote:
Regarding rhutchin's claim that Christians "have nothing to gain and voluntarily forgo many of the world's pleasures for no apparent gain," what do you have to say about that?
I think that Christianity, if true [an elephant sized 'if'], grants ample motivation for its followers. The early Christians had everything to gain. They had a guaranteed ticket to the heavenly city.

Quote:
A comfortable eternal life certainly does not compare favorably with "no apparent gain," especially considering that the brief human life span is but a speck of time as compared with eternity.
Agreed.

Quote:
If the Bible did not offer present and eventual gain, few people would be Christians.
Even the Apostle Paul wouldn't have been. I think he had a pithy quote on that subject somewhere.

Quote:
In "The Rise of Christianity," Rodney Stark says:
Moreover, the fruits of this faith were not limited to the realm of the spirit. Christianity offered much to the flesh as well. It was not simply the promise of salvation that motivated Christians, but the fact that they were greatly rewarded here and now for belonging. Thus while membership was expensive, it was, in fact, a bargain. That is, because the church asked much of its members, it was thereby possessed of the resources to ‘give’ much. For example, because Christians were expected to aid the less fortunate, many of them received such aid, and all could feel greater security against bad times. Because they were asked to nurse the sick and dying, many of them received such nursing. Because they were asked to love others, they in turn were loved. And if Christians were required to observe a far more restrictive moral code than that observed by pagans, Christians – especially women – enjoyed a far more secure family life.

The dynamics of stigma and sacrifice have the following direct and formal consequences (Iannaccone 1992). First: "By demanding higher levels of stigma and sacrifice, religious groups induce higher average levels of member commitment and participation." Second: "By demanding higher levels of stigma and sacrifice, religious groups are able to generate greater material, social, and religious benefits for their members."
I don't know if I trust this source. I was under the impression that Christianity wasn't "expensive". As a matter of fact, wasn't its early rise partially due to it being cheap and available to people of any class? I do agree that it called upon its followers to do charitable acts and the emphasis put on caring for the "widows and orphans" within the church must have been quite the hook. However, I'd be interested in seeing Mr. Starks sources for that statement on Christianity being "expensive".
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Old 01-13-2008, 10:36 PM   #16
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It has not been established what Christians Nero persecuted. It is unlikely that these Christians were followers of Jesus, since Jesus of Nazareth appears to have been fabricated after Nero died in 68 CE.

There may have been many versions of Christians, including the followers of Simon the magician whose followers, according to Justin Martyr, were called Christians.

Quote:
Originally Posted by First Apology 26
All who take their opinions from these men are, as we before said, called Christians
.

It is therefore not imperative that Christians mean followers of Jesus of Nazareth.
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Old 01-13-2008, 11:20 PM   #17
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion View Post
Johnny Skeptic Post #1

Quote:
Well, if there are only a few sources, Christians should not use them to make a case that large numbers of Christians were persecuted.
It isn't unfair of Christians to make such a case. Tacitus supports them in it. They shouldn't be sure of their case though. You shouldn't be sure of yours either.
..

Suetonius refers to them as a "class of men" suggesting a group of some size. He also knows something of who they are.
..

Tertullian puts Nero at the head of the list of Christian persecutors alongside the names of violent emperors who lived in better documented times.
..

In the passage I posted, Clement was trying to find a place for Nero's persecution within a violent prophecy in the book of Daniel. If Clement had believed Nero's persecution was merely a few executions of scapegoats then the event would most likely been considered to inauspicious to consider part of something as major as the book of Daniel.
I note the optimism with which you use texts preserved by christians scribes, as though you can assume their reliability and the reliability of their dating.

You cite the christian content in Tacitus, when the passage itself is under question for its veracity as part of the text written by one of the best orators of his time. We've looked at the passage and found that it is a change in general topic uncharacteristic of Tacitus. It uses some very ugly Latin. It makes a bad mistake regarding Pilate's rank, when Tacitus has shown that he knew the situation in Palestine well. There are sundry other problems, but you feel free to cite it as though it's kosher.

Suetonius refers to matters of public order, when suddenly there is stuff about the execution of christians. Another really coherent bit of writing.

Citing 1 Clement begs a secure dating rather than the hopeful rubbish that has been used in the past, for without 1 Clement there is little in favor of the reputed Neronian persecution.

The state of assumptions about texts needs to be investigated before we blithely accept undated texts or interpolations.


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Old 01-13-2008, 11:23 PM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnnySkeptic
In "The Rise of Christianity," Rodney Stark says:

"Moreover, the fruits of this faith were not limited to the realm of the spirit. Christianity offered much to the flesh as well. It was not simply the promise of salvation that motivated Christians, but the fact that they were greatly rewarded here and now for belonging. Thus while membership was expensive, it was, in fact, a bargain. That is, because the church asked much of its members, it was thereby possessed of the resources to ‘give’ much. For example, because Christians were expected to aid the less fortunate, many of them received such aid, and all could feel greater security against bad times. Because they were asked to nurse the sick and dying, many of them received such nursing. Because they were asked to love others, they in turn were loved. And if Christians were required to observe a far more restrictive moral code than that observed by pagans, Christians – especially women – enjoyed a far more secure family life.

The dynamics of stigma and sacrifice have the following direct and formal consequences (Iannaccone 1992). First: "By demanding higher levels of stigma and sacrifice, religious groups induce higher average levels of member commitment and participation." Second: "By demanding higher levels of stigma and sacrifice, religious groups are able to generate greater material, social, and religious benefits for their members."
Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
I don't know if I trust this source. I was under the impression that Christianity wasn't "expensive". As a matter of fact, wasn't its early rise partially due to it being cheap and available to people of any class? I do agree that it called upon its followers to do charitable acts and the emphasis put on caring for the "widows and orphans" within the church must have been quite the hook. However, I'd be interested in seeing Mr. Stark's sources for that statement on Christianity being "expensive".
How expensive Christian membership was does not have anything whatsoever to do with how many Christians were persecuted.

I suggest that you buy a copy of the book and read it. It is highly acclaimed, and got lots of excellent reviews from the media and from a number of Bible scholar. Rodney Stark has a Ph.D. in sociology, has written over fifty books, and has been a college professor. Stark if is careful and consummate researcher. His bibliography in the book is very extensive. You ought to read the book before you criticize it.

I suggest that you try to contact Stark and ask him whatever you wish.
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Old 01-13-2008, 11:49 PM   #19
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Quote:
Originally Posted by JohnnuSkeptic
I believe that my sources are much better than your sources. I believe that most people at this forum will agree with me. I assume that the collective education and reseach of my sources far outweighs the collective education of your sources.
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Originally Posted by Champion
I suppose I could dig for more universities that disagree with you until our computers are blue in the face.
I suppose that you can't. Unless you do, I win. I posted a number of contemporary prestigious secular sources. How many contempoary prestigious secular sources did you post?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
But I won't do that. The fact that over a hundred years ago there were still arguments over this exact issue is evidence enough that there is uncertainty as to the scope of Nero's persecutions.
Regarding Nero's persecutions, first of all, since that issue is still under dispute, it is not useful to Christians. Second of all, even if Nero persecuted some Christians, no one knows how many to the nearest hundred, thousand, or ten thousand.

Although you basically claimed that how many Christians were persecuted does not make Christianity any more rational, many conservative Christians disagree with you. For instance, "World Christian Trends" is a large book that was written by two conservative Christians. The book makes a big deal out of persecutions, and it makes all kinds of questionable claims large numbers of Christians who were persecuted. The book basically says that the large numbers of Christians who were persecuted is the very best evidence that Christianity is the one true religion.

Rhutchin said:

Quote:
Originally Posted by rhutchin
The apostles faced ridicule and abuse and death to tell others about Jesus. Why?
Many conservative Christians feel the same way. Don't you know that?

Have you ever stated at the IIDB whether or not you are a Christian? If so, what did you say? If you refuse to answer my question, that will be adequate proof that you are a Christian. There would not be any reason for you to be evasive unless you are a Christian. If you are a skeptic, if you win this debate, what will you have accomplished that you believe will help skepticism? If you win this debate, you will have significantly helped to promote fundamentalist Christianity. Even if I believed that large numbers of Christians were persecuted, I would never consider helping fundamentalist Christians promote one their most important issues.

If you are not a fundie, you are a great asset to them. This is the third time that you and I have had a debate where you argued like the vast majority of fundies argue. It is interesting to note that you withdrew from the other two debates when you know that you were in trouble. If you would like to debate those issues some more, just let me know. I am sure that fundies would like for you to help them some more, assuming that you are not a fundie, which I do not assume.

Just out of curiosity, do you believe that homosexuality is sinful or immoral?
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Old 01-14-2008, 12:16 AM   #20
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Originally Posted by JohnnySkeptic
Please be advised that in order to defeat Christians who claim that large numbers of Christians were persecuted, since they are the claimants, I do not have to reasonably prove that large numbers of Christians were not persecuted. Rather, they have to reasonably prove that large number of Christians were persecuted.
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Originally Posted by Champion
You are half right.
No, I am completely right.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Championi
Christians must also stop speaking with such overconfidence with regards to what they believe Nero did.
Good.

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Originally Posted by Champion
But the burden of proof lays squarely with you.
No it doesn't. Logically, he who asserts first must defend first. Some Christians first asserted centuries ago that large numbers of Christians were persecuted. It is not up to me to reasonably disprove those claims. It is up the Christians to reasonably prove those claims.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
The Christians have the sources on their side.
No they don't. You said "I just think that the fact that there is something of a consensus among both secular and Christian historians has got to count for something," but as far as I know, you posted only one single contempory source, who is Harold Mattingly, and you did not say whether he is a Christian or a skeptic. If you posted some other contemporary sources, I am not aware of it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Champion
You have a strong argument from silence and the belief that Tacitus now isn't exactly what original Tacitus was back in the day. It seems to me that you are the one without direct sources. You must prove that their sources are false.
That is false. The evidence is on my side. Consider the following from my post #7:

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Originally Posted by Britannica 2002 Deluxe Edition

[Nero] became infamous for his personal debaucheries and extravagances and, on doubtful evidence, for his burning of Rome and persecutions of Christians.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Microsoft Encarta 2002 Encyclopedia

In July 64, two-thirds of Rome burned while Nero was at Antium. In ancient times he was charged with being the incendiary, but most modern scholars doubt the truth of that accusation. According to some accounts (now considered spurious), he laid the blame on the Christians (few at that time) and persecuted them.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rodney Stark and Marta Sordi ("The Rise of Christianity")[/quote

Indeed, commenting on Tacitus’s claim that Nero had murdered “an immense multitude" of Christians, Marta Sordi wrote that “a few hundred victims would justify the use of this term, given the horror of what happened." (1986:31). The truth is that the Roman government seems to have cared very little about the "Christian menace." There was surprisingly little effort to persecute Christians, and when a wave of persecution did occur, usually only bishops and other prominent figures were singled out. Thus for rank-and-file Christians the threat of persecution was so slight as to have counted for little among the potential sacrifices imposed on them.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Dr. Jonathan Roth, Ph.D., San Jose State University

Tacitus frequently uses.......hyperbole. A good example is in his description of various emperors killing members of the Senatorial opposition. He implies that large numbers are involved, but when one counts up the numbers, they are only a few dozen at most. All ancient writers use exaggeration and hyperbole.

We seldom have a source other than Tacitus, so it is difficult to check his statements.

.......remember that history was considered literature and meant for entertainment. Tacitus is always thinking about making his stories more interesting and readable.
http://users.drew.edu/ddoughty/Chris...s/tacitus.html

Quote:
Originally Posted by Professor Darrell Doughty

Tacitus' Account of Nero's Persecution of Christians. Annals 15.44.2-8

This passage is often cited by Christian scholars as an early witness by a Roman historian to the presence of the Christian movement, as evidence for the existence of a historical Jesus, and as evidence for persecution of Christians by the Romans. It is a text, therefore, that requires careful and critical examination.

The text is full of difficulties, and there are not a few textual variations in the mss tradition (e.g., "Christianos" or "Chrestianos" or even "Christianus"? -"Christus" or "Chrestos"?) -- which at least reflects the fact that this text has been worked over.
It is most embarrasing to you that some prominent Roman Catholic sources disgree with you, including a Pope and a Cardinal. You certainly cannot get away with claiming that they had anything to gain by exposing what they believed were lies. They valued their honesty and integrity more than they did promoting claims that would have helped build the Christian church. They wanted to build the Christian church with what they believed was truth, not with lies.

Consider the following:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joseph McCabe

According to the Catholic writers, and even the official liturgy of their Church, the Roman community of the first three centuries was so decked and perfumed with saints and martyrs that it must have had a divine spirit in it. Now the far greater part, the overwhelmingly greater part, of the Acts of the Martyrs and Lives of the Saints on which this claim is based are impudent forgeries, perpetrated by Roman Christians from the fourth to the eighth century in order to give a divine halo to the very humble, and very human, history of their Church.

This is not merely a contention of "heretics and unbelievers." It is not even a new discovery. The legends of the martyrs are so gross that Catholic historians of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries frequently denounced them.
Have you got it now? "The legends of the martyrs are so gross that Catholic historians of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries frequently denounced them."

Quote:
Originally Posted by Joseph McCabe

Pope Benedict XIV, of the eighteenth century, a scholar who by some mischance was made a Pope, was so ashamed of the extent to which these forgeries permeate the official ritual of his Church that he entered upon a great reform; but the cardinals and monks obstructed his work, and the literature of the Church still teems with legends from these tainted sources. In fact, many of these forgeries were already notorious in the year 494, when Pope Gelasius timidly and haltingly condemned them.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Joseph McCabe
Dr. Garres has shown that there were hardly any put to death in the whole Empire, least of all at Rome, under Maximin.
Quote:
Originally Posted by JosephMcCabe
A short account of the havoc which modern scholars have made of the Acts of the Martyrs is given by a Catholic professor, Albert Ehrhard, of the Vienna University, and will cause any inquiring Catholic to shudder. [4] Dr. Ehrhard mentions a French work, L'Amphithèâtre Flavien, by Father Delehaye, a Jesuit, and calls it "an important contribution to the criticism of the Roman acts of the martyrs." It is a "criticism" of such a nature that it dissolves into fiction all the touching pictures (down to Mr. G. B. Shaw's Androcles and the Lion) of the "martyrs of the Coliseum." It proves that no Christians were ever martyred in the Amphitheatre (Coliseum). The English translation of Father Delehaye's Legends of the Saints (1907) gives an appalling account of these Roman forgeries. Another scholar has, Professor Ehrhard admits (p. 555), shown that "a whole class" of these saints and martyrs are actually pagan myths which have been converted into Christian martyrs. The whole literature which this Catholic professor surveys is one mighty massacre of saints and martyrs, very few surviving the ordeal. These fictions are often leniently called "pious fancies" and "works of edification." Modern charity covers too many ancient sins. These things were intended to deceive; they have deceived countless millions for fourteen centuries, and in the hands of priests they deceive millions to-day.
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Originally Posted by Catholic Encyclopedia
The chief problem, therefore, for modern critics is to discover the literary history of the Acta which have come down to us. It cannot be denied that some attempt was made at the very first to keep the history of the Church's martyrs inviolate. The public reading of the Acta in the churches would naturally afford a guarantee of their authenticity; and this custom certainly obtained in Africa, for the Third Council of Carthage (c. 47) permitted the reading of the "Passiones Martyrum cum anniversarii dies eorum celebrentur". There was also an interchange of Acta between different Churches as we see from the "Martyrium S. Polycarpi" and the "Epistola Ecclesiæ Viennensis et Lugdunensis". But it is not known to what extent those customs were practised. And during the persecutions of Diocletian there must have been a wholesale destruction of documents, with the result that the Church would lose the accounts of its Martyr's history. This seems to be especially true of Rome, which possesses so few authentic Acta in spite of the number and fame of its martyrs; for the Romans had apparently lost the thread of these traditions as early as the second half of the fourth century. The poems of Prudentius, the Calendaria, and even the writings of Pope Damasus show that the story of the persecutions had fallen into obscurity. Christian Rome had her martyrs beneath her feet, and celebrated their memory with intense devotion, and yet she knew but little of their history.

Under these circumstances it is not improbable that the desire of the faithful for fuller information would easily be satisfied by raconteurs who, having only scanty material at their disposal, would amplify and multiply the few facts preserved in tradition and attach what they considered suitable stories to historical names and localities. And in the course of time it is argued these legends were committed to writing, and have come down to us as the Roman legendarium. In support of this severe criticism it is urged that the Roman Acta are for the most part not earlier than the sixth century (Dufourcq), and that spurious Acta were certainly not unknown during the period. The Roman Council of 494 actually condemned the public reading of the Acta (P. L., LIX, 171-2). And this Roman protest had been already anticipated by the Sixth Council of Carthage (401) which protested against the cult of martyrs whose martyrdom was not certain (canon 17). St. Augustine (354-340) also had written: "Though for other martyrs we can hardly find accounts which we can read on their festivals, the Passion of St. Stephen is in a canonical book" (Sermo, 315, P. L., XXXVIII, 1426). Subsequently in 692 the Trullan Council at Constantinople excommunicated those who were responsible for the reading of spurious Acta. The supposition, therefore, of such an origin for the Roman legends is not improbable. And unfortunately the Roman martyrs are not the only ones whose Acta are unreliable. Of the seventy-four separate Passions included by Ruinart in his Acta Sincera, the Bollandist Delehaye places only thirteen in the first or second class, as original documents. Further study of particular Acta may, of course, raise this number; and other original Acta may be discovered. The labours of such critics as Gebhardt, Aubé, Franchi de Cavalieri, Le Blant, Conybeare, Harnack, the Bollandists, and many others, have in fact, not infrequently issued in this direction, while at the same time they have gathered an extensive bibliography around the several Acta. These must therefore be valued on their respective merits. It may, however, be noticed here that the higher criticism is as dangerous when applied to the Acts of the Martyrs as it is for the Holy Scripture. Arguments may of course, be drawn from the formal setting of the document, its accuracy in dates, names, and topography, and still stronger arguments from what may be called the informal setting given to it unconsciously by its author. But in the first case the formal setting can surely be imitated, and it is unsafe therefore to seek to establish historicity by such an argument. It is equally unsafe to presume that the probability of a narrative, or its simplicity is a proof that it is genuine. Even the improbable may contain more facts of history than many a narrative which bears the appearance of sobriety and restraint. Nor is conciseness a sure proof that a document is of an early date; St. Mark's Gospel is not thus proved to be the earliest of the Synoptics. The informal setting is more reliable; philology and psychology are better tests than dates and geography, for it needs a clever romancer indeed to identify himself so fully with his heroes as to share their thoughts and emotions. And yet even with this concession to higher criticism, it still remains true that the critic is on safer ground when he has succeeded in establishing the pedigree of his document by external evidence.
Further regarding your comment "I just think that the fact that there is something of a consensus among both secular and Christian historians has got to count for something," is that a deliberate lie about secular scholars being part of a consensus, or do have some evidence to back that up?
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