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12-26-2007, 04:50 AM | #101 | ||||||||||
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Paul certainly thought he was the son of God. He clearly implies that the leaders of the Jerusalem church were in substantial agreement with him on matters of such central importance. Therefore, the leaders of the Jerusalem church almost certainly believed Jesus was the son of God. If there was a historical Jesus, then those leaders had known him up close and personal. Quote:
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I'm not sure what a theological history is supposed to be. However . . . if your point is that the gospels were not even ostensibly biographical, even in part, then I guess I'm OK with that, since my position is that they do not in fact contain any biographical material -- i.e., they are works of fiction. Quote:
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12-26-2007, 06:13 AM | #102 | ||||||
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This is, arguably, mere nitpicking. The problem is that so much discussion of Christianity's origins forces just this kind of close analysis, precisely because it so much of the earliest writing was so circumlocutory. Quote:
It is no part of my argument that (premise) the gospels are apparently fiction and therefore (conclusion) Jesus was not real. My argument instead goes something like this:
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12-26-2007, 06:36 AM | #103 |
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12-26-2007, 08:29 AM | #104 | |||||||
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It seems to me that some (many?) Jews, under the influence of the overwhelming contrary evidence of the seemingly perpetual domination of Rome, were starting to doubt the traditional messiah expectations. If that was the case, we cannot hold the unique nature of any particular conceptualization against the possibility that it was held. Quote:
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I don't consider it incredible that a group of Jews might come to believe that their former, beloved leader was the same sort of personification they had read about in Scripture. Quote:
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Is it possible that, given the absence of any such explicit and unambiguous description connected to biographies, that you have incorrectly identified the genre of Mark and Matthew? It seems to me that only Luke makes any pretense of adhering to the conventions connected to biography/history. Quote:
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12-26-2007, 08:31 AM | #105 |
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The "real " evidence against the historial Jesus is the absence of evidence, that is, wherever one would expect the Jesus of Nazareth to be mentioned by non-apologetic writers, there is always a complete void.
The NT and the early apologetic writers made the claim that Jesus of Nazareth was the Messiah. Now this is a highly significant charge, so even if we disregard the view that this Jesus was the Son of the God of Moses, did miracles, and finally ascended to heaven, we are still left with a figure who should have been the most prominent Jew of the 1st century, the Messiah, the prophesied political-military leader of the habitable earth. In effect, Jesus of Nazareth would propel the Jewish nation into a Super Power. In the NT, it is claimed that John the Baptist was the fore-runner of Jesus, the Messiah, and that JtB preached about the coming of this Messiah and finally met him one day and baptised him. Now, if JtB did actually meet the true Messiah and baptised him, I would expect that wherever a Jewish writer mentions JtB, he would also, in passing, mention the Messiah. Josehus wrote about JtB without a word of the Messiah. Now, if Jesus was truly the prophesied Messiah, I would expect that if a Jewish writer wrote about the fulfillment of prophecies with respect to the Messiah, he would mention Jesus as the expected Messiah. Josephus wrote about the fulfillment of Daniel's prophecies up to and around 92 CE without a word of Jesus the Messiah, the expected political-military leader of the known world. If Jesus the Messiah was alive during the reign of Tiberius, I would expect that if a Jewish writer wrote about Tiberius, he would have remembered this Jesus, the physical ruler of the universe. Josephus wrote about Tiberius Caesar, yet he did not write about Jesus as the Messiah. And again, if Jesus of Nazareth was a political-military leader in the 1st century and did actually achieved this role, then I would expect Roman writers and historians to write about this Messsiah when they write about Tiberius. Suetonius wrote about the life of Tiberius without making mention of Jesus of Nazareth, the Messiah. Now, if there was a Messiah, a political-military leader, whether it was Jesus of Nazareth or not, I would expect historians and writers to make mention of this figure. Josephus, Suetonius and Tacitus all claim Vespasian was the Messiah, emperor, and also of Judea. See Wars of the Jews 6.5.4, The life of Vespasian by Suetonius and Tacitus's Histories 5.13. So, when the authors of the NT and apologetic writers make a claim that there was a Jesus of Nazareth who was the Messiah, it can be deduced, from a historical perspective, that such a scenario is most likely to be false. There is no known non-apologetic history of Jesus of Nazareth, that is the real evidence against his history. |
12-26-2007, 09:14 AM | #106 | |
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I'm going to jump in and help you, aa, before the other side pulls out Kenneth Kitchen's mantra about "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence." Kitchen is wrong. Absence of evidence is most assuredly evidence. It may not be "proof" of absence but it is most assuredly evidence. For example, the bible claims that Jerusalem in the 10th century was a glorious capital of an empire stretching from the Sinai to the Euphrates. Archaeologists, digging for more than 100 years have found no trace of such a city. What they have found for the 10th century is a shitty little hill town of perhaps 2,000 people, max. This is not "proof" that the bible tale is a silly story written down centuries after the fact....but it is certainly solid evidence. Likewise, the lack of any legitimate historical reference to Jesus and his magic tricks is also evidence if not proof. One might, if one wishes to extend the discussion, add in the fact that later christian writers were so embarassed by the fact that there were no historical references to their Jesus that they invented some. To me, that speaks volumes. If they had real references, why fabricate new ones? |
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12-26-2007, 09:23 AM | #107 | |
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In short, many Jews expected the messiah to be the son of God, the emperors was actually called the son of (the) god(s), and Christianity drew both on Judaism (in a positive, developing sense) and (IMVHO) on the emperor cult (in a negative, competitive sense). The math is elementary; calling any messianic figure the son of God is just a very natural move. Ben. |
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12-26-2007, 09:31 AM | #108 |
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I for one have found this thread to be very enlightening.
As a former-Baptist-minister-turned-atheist, I had pretty much dismissed questions about the historicity of Jesus. My belief in no god of any kind has more to do with the nature of faith v. reason. Who cares if there was or wasn't a HJ? Looking through this thread (TedM, I thought your question was difficult to read as well as asking for evidence for a negative), I have come to realize, with some surprise, that the evidence seems thinner than I ever realized, especially after reading about the Testimonium etc. Hmmm. So this thread has led me to the position that simply supports my understanding more fully:
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12-26-2007, 11:24 AM | #109 | ||
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Josehus, a Jew, in his writings, mentioned Jesus the son of Ananus, Jesus the son of Gamala, Jesus the son of Gamaliel, Jesus the son of Damneus, Jesus the son of Saphat, Jesus the son of Thebuthus and Jesus the son of Sapphias, yet we have virtually nothing on this Jesus the Messiah except he was crucified and raised from the dead on the third day. This Jesus, the Messiah, is not even properly introduced in the TF (AJ 18.3.3), there is no indication of the name of his father, an occupation or any specific acts of this Jesus is described. Now, take a look at how Josephus introduces and describes another Jesus, a loner and declared to be a madman. WJ 6.5.3, (Jesus the madman), "....... there was one Jesus, son of Ananus, a plebian and a husbandman...." AJ 18.3.3, (Jesus the Messiah), " Now there was about this time Jesus, a wise man if it be lawful to call him a man...." There is no real information about this Jesus, the Messiah, from the "TF", his reality is not even guaranteed or ascertained. The absence of any real information about this Messiah is highly critical in order to determine his historicity and this lack of detail is the real evidence against an historical Jesus. |
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12-27-2007, 10:49 AM | #110 | ||||||||||||||||
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I don't suppose you can refer me to an online source where I could verify that? Quote:
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Have you got a citation? Or must I read everything he's ever written to find out whether you RC? Quote:
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I infer the genre of Mark and Matthew from the totality of evidence that I am aware of pertaining to Christianity's origins. Mark's and Matthew's lack of sourcing is just one datum among all the others. Quote:
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We don't need to assume what Paul's eschatology was, because he tells us what it was. What you seem to be assuming, without explicitly saying so, is that all Christians of his time believed the same eschatology and reached the same conclusion about the futility of writing anything down about the founder of their religion. Quote:
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