FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 03-19-2011, 04:00 AM   #111
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2003
Location: Iceland
Posts: 761
Default

Quote:
Hi hjalti,

I thought it possible that an image on a pot or some writings on a tombstone or graffiti on a wall or a cache of letters from the First century could be dug up. We really haven't found anything that can definitely be said to be even from the Second century and tied to Jesus. I still check archaeological news every week, but my expectations are gone.
Right, it's of course possible that somebody could find a jar with "property of JC, master of the universe" written on it. But the fact that we haven't found something like this doesn't tell us anything about whether there was a Jesus or not, right?
hjalti is offline  
Old 03-19-2011, 04:45 AM   #112
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by hjalti View Post
Quote:
Hi hjalti,

I thought it possible that an image on a pot or some writings on a tombstone or graffiti on a wall or a cache of letters from the First century could be dug up. We really haven't found anything that can definitely be said to be even from the Second century and tied to Jesus. I still check archaeological news every week, but my expectations are gone.
Right, it's of course possible that somebody could find a jar with "property of JC, master of the universe" written on it.

"google jesus bowl"




Quote:
But the fact that we haven't found something like this doesn't tell us anything about whether there was a Jesus or not, right?

We dont seem to be able to find any Christic archaeology, and any Christic archaeology that we do find, upon closer examination, evaporates into a background pattern of similar facts, perhaps appropriately described as a "Chrestic" archaeology.
mountainman is offline  
Old 03-19-2011, 05:49 AM   #113
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Edmonton
Posts: 5,679
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Yellum Notnef View Post
Bart Ehrman should name his new book "The Jesus Boner" because these historical Jesus fanatics have a raging hard on over this. Such a peculiar fixation to waste ones time with.
So, why do you like to watch?
No Robots is offline  
Old 03-19-2011, 06:03 AM   #114
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Edmonton
Posts: 5,679
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
This doesn't make any sense. Anti-semitism has been a part of European Christianity for a couple of millenia.
I'm referring here to the rise of pseudo-scientific race hate.

Quote:
And everyone has tried to claim a part of Jesus - from Aryanist Christians to humanists to socialists to Jews to the American military.
The scholarly consensus is in favour of the Jews here.

Quote:
I think this mixes up cause and effect. Part of the reaction to the Holocaust was to emphasize the Jewishness of Jesus, especially by multi-cultural types interested in interfaith dialogue.
This may be true of non-Jews, but Jews themselves began the process of reclaiming Jesus long before the Holocaust. In fact, the Holocaust by-and-large interrupted the process. It appears now to be restarted.

Quote:
And mythicism is hardly the only "obstacle." There's the militarist Jesus favored by American conservatives and Mel Gibson, the hippie-cynic Jesus favored by hippies. Ehrman thinks of Jesus as a deluded, failed prophet.
Certainly there are still non-Jewish representations of Jesus, but these all have very little means to defend themselves against the Jewish representation. And, it seems to me, they have demonstrated very little interest in doing so. It is only the mythicists that seem to be aggressively promoting their own view of Jesus. The mythicists are able to claim a scientific and rational basis for their views, which frees them from the embarrassing charge that the others face that their arguments are based on faith.

Quote:
Chapter 6 contends that, while Jesus’ Judaism has been stressed with increasing force since the early 1970s, the image of Jesus that results still maintains his uniqueness, his distance from Judaism; as Crossley puts it, the historical Jesus is presented as “Jewish, but not that Jewish.”
But does Crossley even mention Jewish writers on this subject?
No Robots is offline  
Old 03-19-2011, 07:45 AM   #115
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: San Bernardino, Calif.
Posts: 5,435
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
Would you have us believe that the typical historicist feels differently about his own criticisms of mythicist writings?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Juststeve View Post
If by historicists you mean the mainstream scholars at major Universities, as far as I can tell they don't bother to criticize the mythicists, so I don't know how they would feel about their nonexistent criticisms.
Obviously, they won't feel anything about nonexistent criticisms.

Granted that most of them are silent, a few have not been. For just one example, I've read Van Voorst's Jesus Outside the New Testament, which includes an 11-page section on ahistoricism. He seems pretty clearly to think he has shredded that hypothesis to his own satisfaction. I personally find his argument to be mostly question-begging.

The point I hope I'm making is that in any debate on any subject, an advocate's opinion of his own argument is entirely irrelevant.
Doug Shaver is offline  
Old 03-19-2011, 10:23 AM   #116
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: New York, U.S.A.
Posts: 715
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Chaucer View Post

Do you think that serious evolutionary biologists waste their time when they challenge creationism?

Chaucer
Creationism is a live issue in the US with a powerful political constituency. Evolutionary biologists at one time tried to treat it as a fringe theory and ignore it, but learned that they had to take on creationists.
-- just as (a tiny number of) serious historians like Ehrman are finally seeing they'll have to do with mytherism. Creationism has gotten to the point where it threatens educational systems throughout my country, and ultimately our children's basic understanding of science and scientific research, and not just in Texas. Mytherism, via the Internet, may get to threaten our educational systems during the next generation or two, and ultimately our children's basic understanding of history and historical research, and not just on the web.

Serious evolutionary biologists finally woke up and smelled the creationist coffee and realized it was time to get off their ivory-tower asses and defend themselves before society as a whole got so monopolized by the creationist mindset that it might throw serious scientists into the brig for thought crimes against the creationist Reich. It's past time for serious professional historians to do the same now against mytherism. As religions recede further in the coming generation or two, that welcome development may be poisoned by rationalism's being swamped by a know-nothing-ness within its own ranks that would effectively criminalize serious history. Now that would be a tragedy.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Historicists have not been able to do this. There are no clear facts, and the methods that they use do not work consistently. Any person with a university education and a background in history can see how insubstantial the case for a historical Jesus is.
So long as the Antiq. 20 passage and Origen's plain citation of same at a point before christianity was even mainstreamed(!) is not taken as the empirical evidence that it is for an historical strictly human Jesus who preached elevation of the last in society and a coming kingdom of God and who was killed by Rome, historicists and mytherists will continue to talk past each other because mytherists are in total denial of all historical research and method in just the way that the creationists are in denial about the findings of science. Does that mean that serious evolutionary biologists should shut up? Clearly not. Liberty is at stake. We cannot let our children be brainwashed by fictions fueled by blatant pro-religious bias. The creationists may pay no attention to what the biologists tell them, but others will, and so that may turn the tide against the brainwashing creationists.

The time will come when rationalists will outnumber religionists. In fact, we're finally close to that in a few places in Europe and Scandinavia today. What a tragedy it would be if mytherists at that time continue to be in total denial of all historical research and method and all the findings coming from the professional secular historian community. Does that mean that serious historians should just shut up? Clearly not. Liberty is at stake. We cannot let our children be brainwashed by fictions fueled by blatant anti-religious bias. The mytherists may pay no attention to what the serious secular historians tell them, but others will, and so that may turn the tide against brainwashing mytherists of the future.

Chaucer
Chaucer is offline  
Old 03-19-2011, 10:49 AM   #117
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

Chaucer: no one is in denial about evidence. You have one phrase in Josephus, which Richard Carrier will show was an interpolation (once his paper is published.) You think that Origen shows that this was original to Josephus, but all Origen says is
Quote:
For in the 18th book of his Jewish Antiquities, Josephus bears witness to John as having been a Baptist ... and the same writer, although not believing in Jesus as the Christ, in seeking after the cause of the fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the temple ... says nevertheless (being, although against his will, not far from the truth) that these disasters happened to the Jews as a punishment for the death of James the Just, who was a brother of the Jesus who was called Christ, since they killed him despite his being supremely just.
But notice that Origen is not quoting Josephus here, because Josephus does not say anywhere that disasters happened to the Jews because of the death of James, and does not identify this James as James the Just. This is not the smoking gun that you seem to need.

For more, you will have to wait for Carrier's article.
Toto is offline  
Old 03-19-2011, 11:05 AM   #118
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2009
Location: England
Posts: 2,527
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Chaucer View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Chaucer View Post

Do you think that serious evolutionary biologists waste their time when they challenge creationism?

Chaucer
Creationism is a live issue in the US with a powerful political constituency. Evolutionary biologists at one time tried to treat it as a fringe theory and ignore it, but learned that they had to take on creationists.
-- just as (a tiny number of) serious historians like Ehrman are finally seeing they'll have to do with mytherism. Creationism has gotten to the point where it threatens educational systems throughout my country, and ultimately our children's basic understanding of science and scientific research, and not just in Texas. Mytherism, via the Internet, may get to threaten our educational systems during the next generation or two, and ultimately our children's basic understanding of history and historical research, and not just on the web.

Serious evolutionary biologists finally woke up and smelled the creationist coffee and realized it was time to get off their ivory-tower asses and defend themselves before society as a whole got so monopolized by the creationist mindset that it might throw serious scientists into the brig for thought crimes against the creationist Reich. It's past time for serious professional historians to do the same now against mytherism. As religions recede further in the coming generation or two, that welcome development may be poisoned by rationalism's being swamped by a know-nothing-ness within its own ranks that would effectively criminalize serious history. Now that would be a tragedy.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Historicists have not been able to do this. There are no clear facts, and the methods that they use do not work consistently. Any person with a university education and a background in history can see how insubstantial the case for a historical Jesus is.
So long as the Antiq. 20 passage and Origen's plain citation of same at a point before christianity was even mainstreamed(!) is not taken as the empirical evidence that it is for an historical strictly human Jesus who preached elevation of the last in society and a coming kingdom of God and who was killed by Rome, historicists and mytherists will continue to talk past each other because mytherists are in total denial of all historical research and method in just the way that the creationists are in denial about the findings of science. Does that mean that serious evolutionary biologists should shut up? Clearly not. Liberty is at stake. We cannot let our children be brainwashed by fictions fueled by blatant pro-religious bias. The creationists may pay no attention to what the biologists tell them, but others will, and so that may turn the tide against the brainwashing creationists.

The time will come when rationalists will outnumber religionists. In fact, we're finally close to that in a few places in Europe and Scandinavia today. What a tragedy it would be if mytherists at that time continue to be in total denial of all historical research and method and all the findings coming from the professional secular historian community. Does that mean that serious historians should just shut up? Clearly not. Liberty is at stake. We cannot let our children be brainwashed by fictions fueled by blatant anti-religious bias. The mytherists may pay no attention to what the serious secular historians tell them, but others will, and so that may turn the tide against brainwashing mytherists of the future.

Chaucer
igsfly:igsfly:igsfly:igsfly:igsfly:
maryhelena is offline  
Old 03-19-2011, 11:06 AM   #119
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: New York, U.S.A.
Posts: 715
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Chaucer: no one is in denial about evidence. You have one phrase in Josephus, which Richard Carrier will show was an interpolation (once his paper is published.) You think that Origen shows that this was original to Josephus, but all Origen says is
Quote:
For in the 18th book of his Jewish Antiquities, Josephus bears witness to John as having been a Baptist ... and the same writer, although not believing in Jesus as the Christ, in seeking after the cause of the fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the temple ... says nevertheless (being, although against his will, not far from the truth) that these disasters happened to the Jews as a punishment for the death of James the Just, who was a brother of the Jesus who was called Christ, since they killed him despite his being supremely just.
But notice that Origen is not quoting Josephus here, because Josephus does not say anywhere that disasters happened to the Jews because of the death of James, and does not identify this James as James the Just. This is not the smoking gun that you seem to need.

For more, you will have to wait for Carrier's article.
"[W]ho was a brother of the Jesus who was called Christ" is too similar to the turn of phrase found in Antiq. 20 to be a coincidence. I know that the mantra of the mythers is that no coincidence is too flagrant not to be embraced as pure coincidence only. But fortunately, serious historians don't labor under such delusions.

Chaucer
Chaucer is offline  
Old 03-19-2011, 11:28 AM   #120
Banned
 
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: Gone
Posts: 4,676
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by No Robots View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Yellum Notnef View Post
Bart Ehrman should name his new book "The Jesus Boner" because these historical Jesus fanatics have a raging hard on over this. Such a peculiar fixation to waste ones time with.
So, why do you like to watch?
Who doesn't gawk at the occasional car wreck? I peek over here every couple months or so to see if anythings changed and if anyone's changed their mind, but it's always the same bunch of you going around in circles.
Yellum Notnef is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 08:39 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.