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 11-03-2007, 12:07 AM   #51
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Mornington Peninsula
Posts: 1,306
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
You will find that one of the inscriptions used to bolster
these conjectured and theorised "senatorial christians"
will be the Prosenes inscription.

Have you ever examined the actual inscription?
It is massively conjectural to term it "christian".

Pete Brown
Apa-poly-logies for tardiness in replying. Got caught up in the excitement of the moment.

Lampe has an entire chapter 30 (p330-34) on Marcus Aurelius Prosenes and Other Members of Caesar's Familia, as well as a number of other single mentions. Also there is a Christian Persons in the City of Rome in the First Two Centuries index p510-12 detailing all pages where the
A. Historically probable: 100, of which 23 are women
B. Uncertain: 21, of which 4 are women
C. Legendary: 42, of which 19 are women
D. Visitors: 6+
are mentioned.
That is a fair few people to dispose of!

Yes, Lampe gives the inscriptions (in Latin), there are two. He discusses them, the sarcophagus and circumstances of Prosenes death, etc. Granted 'Christian' is problematic, but there is other good evidence.
What Prosenes's freed persons did after the death of their patron is in many ways unusual.
The second inscription "receptus ad deum", the sarcophagus, transporting the body back to Rome (rather than cremating him & sending an urn with ashes) ...
Whatever, a game of probabilities.
Quote:
Does the author give any sources for his 32 christian
senators other than Eusebius? What are they?
p148, n35. W.Eck, "Das Eindringen des Christentums in den Senatorenstand bis zu Konstantin d. Gr." Chiron 1 (1971) 388-91, 393-95 (including nn. 40 and 53) - bon chance!
youngalexander is offline  
Old 11-03-2007, 12:53 AM   #52
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Thanks YA, I have trimmed a little to concentrate
first of all on this example of the Prosenes inscription.

It is totally indicative of my plight.
Thanks for your digging this out of Lampe.

Quote:
Originally Posted by youngalexander View Post
Lampe has an entire chapter 30 (p330-34) on Marcus Aurelius Prosenes and Other Members of Caesar's Familia, as well as a number of other single mentions.

...

Yes, Lampe gives the inscriptions (in Latin), there are two. He discusses them, the sarcophagus and circumstances of Prosenes death, etc. Granted 'Christian' is problematic, but there is other good evidence.
What Prosenes's freed persons did after the death of their patron is in many ways unusual.
The second inscription "receptus ad deum", the sarcophagus, transporting the body back to Rome (rather than cremating him & sending an urn with ashes) ...
Whatever, a game of probabilities.

Take a look at this review of the Prosenes inscription:


The grave of Marcus Aurelius Prosenes--set up by several
of his own freedpersons (liberti)--reveals that this
imperial freedman had moved his way through the hierarchy
of imperial service, even holding several procuratorships
(senior positions of considerable influence) under Commodus.

Though nothing in the original inscription
suggests Christian identity
,
one freedman named Ampelius
later inscribed on the stone
the fact that Prosenes was

"welcomed before God"

(receptus ad deum) on March 3, 217,
an expression which may best
be explained in terms of Christianity.

(ICUR VI 17246; cf. Mazzoleni 1999: 153).


The phrase: "welcomed before God",
clearly, need not have been added
by a christian later hand.

What is "christian" about it?
Answer = "Nothing".

One of the other references that you will find'
that your author mentions, if he is going down the
path in citing stuff people have cited, is the
inscription to Basilides, in Rome.

The basis that this inscription is "believed christian"
hinges on the presence of the phrase "he sleeps".
If you dont believe me, have an independent look.

What you are reading is a sand-castle of conjecture.
The evidence it cites has been looked at the same
way for perhaps centuries. What other alternative
perspective on this evidence was there anyway?

I am not blaming anyone here. It is not a conspiracy
UFO over the Nullabor thesis. Its all about a different
interpretation of the evidence. Before there was no
alternative. Now I am offering an alternative, and
I am saying these citations are not necessarily
christian.

I feel I am reasonable in rejecting this, and dozens
like it (See the review) on the basis I have outlined.


Best wishes,


Pete Brown
mountainman is offline  
Old 11-03-2007, 04:38 AM   #53
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: .
Posts: 1,014
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Magdlyn View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by youngalexander View Post


That is a good question. I have always wondered that myself. I still do.

The answer clearly lies within the psyche of humanity. Yet consider this, if not Jesus, then necessarily someone else.


Not so. Jesus differs in comparison to his contemporaries in two significant aspects.
First, since he is a product of Jewish messianism, his proponents may lay claim to an ancient theological lineage with a written history.
Secondly, he himself is claimed to be historic.

Competing savior gods did not enjoy the combination of these advantages.

There are a raft of sociological and historic factors which follow but Christianity was clearly an idea whose time had come by the 2nd C.
Before our Jesus, other Jewish groups had messiahs, including Theudas, Judas the Galilean, and the Egyptian, also executed by the Romans. [Josephus, Jewish Antiquities 20.5.1, 18.1.1, 20.8.6]

This is confirmed by Acts, which discusses [Ch 5] the similarity between Jesus' story and those of Theudas, and Judas the Galilean; they are so similar that they can't be told apart -- only the "future" will tell if Jesus' story is different.


Jewish messiahs from around this time:

Jesus ben-Ananias
Simon bar-Giora
Carabbas
Theudas the Galilean
Judas the Galilean
Jesus ban-Sapphia
the Egyptian
Jesus bar-Abbas
Elymas bar-Jesus
Jesus Justus
the martyred Samaritan Messiah
Simon bar-Kokhba
[Robert Price, Deconstructing Jesus, page 246, 2000]

5 Jesuses! Hm.

For a while now I have been wondering whether the whole Historic Jesus V Mythical Jesus argument is not missing the fact that there may also actually have been Multiple Jesus, either by that name or even including strories of the "other Messiahs" .
I accept that this idea is just off the top of my head (i.e I can't be bothered to do any real research myself ) but it is an intruiging concept that may go part way to explaining some apparent contradictions in the whole "Jesus story" 2 possible dates of birth being the most obvious.
Of course Multiple Jesus /Messiahs is just as fatal for him being the Son Of God as the Mythical Jesus would be .
Lucretius is offline  
Old 11-03-2007, 05:10 AM   #54
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Mornington Peninsula
Posts: 1,306
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Thanks YA, I have trimmed a little to concentrate
first of all on this example of the Prosenes inscription.
Take a look at this review of the Prosenes inscription:


The grave of Marcus Aurelius Prosenes--set up by several
of his own freedpersons (liberti)--reveals that this
imperial freedman had moved his way through the hierarchy
of imperial service, even holding several procuratorships
(senior positions of considerable influence) under Commodus.

Though nothing in the original inscription
suggests Christian identity
,
one freedman named Ampelius
later inscribed on the stone
the fact that Prosenes was

"welcomed before God"

(receptus ad deum) on March 3, 217,
an expression which may best
be explained in terms of Christianity.

(ICUR VI 17246; cf. Mazzoleni 1999: 153).


The phrase: "welcomed before God",
clearly, need not have been added
by a christian later hand.

What is "christian" about it?
Answer = "Nothing".
Pete Brown
Well, not quite.
Paraphrasing Lampe p331
1. 'Receptus ad deum' was never used by pagans.
2. Similar expressions are found in Christian inscriptions of a later period (fourth and fifth centuries) (3)
Quote:
Granted the latter comparison is anachronistic, ...
(3) is a note on p331., you don't want to know (or at least I prefer to write this than cite it).

I must say MM, and I definitely do not wish to encourage you, but of all the nutty guys I have encountered, and that is quite a number - you certainly have the most difficult case to debunk. Bunk tho it is.:grin:
youngalexander is offline  
Old 11-03-2007, 05:18 AM   #55
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Mornington Peninsula
Posts: 1,306
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Lucretius View Post
For a while now I have been wondering whether the whole Historic Jesus V Mythical Jesus argument is not missing the fact that there may also actually have been Multiple Jesus, either by that name or even including strories of the "other Messiahs" .
I accept that this idea is just off the top of my head (i.e I can't be bothered to do any real research any proper research myself.
Well, that makes two of us. Except that I can well recall that there have been a number of threads and numerous posts re - what was it? Multiple Jesi.

Go and do your bloody homework.
youngalexander is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 09:49 PM.

Top

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