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Old 03-18-2007, 03:18 AM   #21
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I see you did respond. My point is that there does not appear to be much precedence within Judaism for following a non-existent messiah, and that there were Christians before Paul came on the scene.
Joshua, Samson, Wisdom wandering the streets preaching, the suffering servant. And then all you need is a messianist with that undergrowth who decides that they missed the messiah's coming.


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Old 03-18-2007, 03:51 AM   #22
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It depends on the Jesus and it depends on the god.
Please expand.

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Is that a necessary criterion for something?
Why, yes it is. You see, most gods weren't described as living on earth, with few exceptions.

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And when you try to get before those works, do you get anything other than traditions? Considering something as real doesn't make it real. Writing about something as real doesn't make it real. Unless some ancient text drops you into realia, you don't usually take it on face value.
I'm sorry, spin, did you have a point here?

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Paul was apparently writing before the non-Pauline traditions we have, so they are secondary to Paul. Our man who was swept up into the third heaven can fantasticate however he likes, but can it get us closer to any reality behind the Jesus tradition? He never met the guy of his own admission -- except of course in a vision. And that certainly doesn't make him real.
Antedating Paul does not make them secondary to him. Q is most conservatively dated with Paul, and liberally to before Paul. Paul speaks of a James tradition which antedates him. Lost, it still exists. Hand waving it all you want doesn't make it disappear.

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The mormons disagree with you.
Which ones? All of them? The most informed? What about Mormon scholars?

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Anyone OT3 and above would disagree with you.
Anyone OT3 is certifiably insane. Your honor, Tom Cruise... I rest my case.

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When you get far enough into this sort of stuff you'll believe it whatever the case. Of course Xenu can have existed. Otherwise why would they believe?
Because L. Ron Hubbard wrote it down and said it was so. Because we have earlier works which were only science fiction...by the same author. And because when you get down to it, it's logically, physically, and scientifically impossible, while Jesus ain't so.

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Did I doubt the existence of Muhammad, Adams, or Hubbard?
But I smell an anti-Christian bias by singling out Jesus and not Mohammed.

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Hey, I can find the differences when someone's looking at the similarities as well. The topic is dissonance between the fact that someone can report an entity and the existence of that entity. Plainly you have missed the point, otherwise you wouldn't have fallen down this track of eking some difference or other. You need a bigmac to lift your performance.
Put some cheese on it.

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Your judgment was impared. You want to create existence from plausibilty. And that is plain silly.
No, I just deny existence based on implausibility, and then give ancient texts their proper credit until evidence is procured to the opposite.

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Point missed yet again. Non-entities can be reified whether you like the fact or not. It doesn't matter whether someone believes in them or not. It is sufficient that someone believed they existed, which plainly Tertullian and Epiphanius did. You don't need reality behind a figure to give them life.
You're arguing apples and oranges.

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So you can get back beyond the founder into Ur-tradition. Why can't you do that with mainstream christianity?
Because the evidence ain't that simple. We don't merely have some tradition which grew out of a mistaken identity. We have the encapsulation of an actual person whose disciple later deified. There's precedence, and no amount of "it doesn't have to be" can excuse the evidence. Deal with it.

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Gnosticism is a very different kettle of fish. It cannot be dated with regard to the apparent birth of Pauline christianity. It would seem that Paul dealt with aspects of it.
Aspects of gnosticism and gnosticism as a religion itself (which in itself is a challenged notion) are two different things. Not everything gnostic had to have a separate tradition than Orthodox Christianity.

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Impressive! You can't see the relevance of knowing that you don't need to have experienced the claimed originator to believe in the person. When you try to eke out existence and you can't see that there is no need for that existence at all, it means you need to start again from scratch with your analysis.
I never said there wasn't a need for it, and for the record, the post you replied to doesn't say that either. I think you imagined that into there.
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Old 03-18-2007, 03:52 AM   #23
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And no mystery is greater than to see a Jewish puritan like James (who would not even take a bath) to worship a pagan Platonic entity molested some place above earth.
Trouble is, we only have Paul's side of the story.

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Paul's mystical Jesus ...would have been radically rejected by both James and Peter[Cephas?]
Not according to Paul.

Whatever Paul believed, James & Cephas also believed. Or, at least something acceptably like it, according to Paul.
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Old 03-18-2007, 03:53 AM   #24
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Originally Posted by spin View Post
Joshua, Samson, Wisdom wandering the streets preaching, the suffering servant. And then all you need is a messianist with that undergrowth who decides that they missed the messiah's coming.


spin
Can this messianist of yours be verified the way Jesus cannot? Otherwise, that's a clear double-standard.
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Old 03-18-2007, 04:09 AM   #25
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Can this messianist of yours be verified the way Jesus cannot? Otherwise, that's a clear double-standard.
As Jesus cannot be verified in any historical sense, what do I have to do with the messianist?


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Old 03-18-2007, 04:24 AM   #26
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As Jesus cannot be verified in any historical sense, what do I have to do with the messianist?


spin
In other words, your theory is built upon the faithful assumption that this religion, Christianity, had to have a founder, who, in your opinion, was some messianist who thought he "missed the messiah's coming", but there's no textual support for him, no archaeological evidence for him, and no outside corroborating evidence from secular historians.

Odd, huh?
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Old 03-18-2007, 04:33 AM   #27
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In other words, your theory is built upon the faithful assumption that this religion, Christianity, had to have a founder, who, in your opinion, was some messianist who thought he "missed the messiah's coming", but there's no textual support for him, no archaeological evidence for him, and no outside corroborating evidence from secular historians.

Odd, huh?
Paul missed the messiah. Odd, huh?


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Old 03-18-2007, 05:05 AM   #28
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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
Please expand.
Just add water. Some jesuses were gods. Some gods walked on the earth.

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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
Why, yes it is. You see, most gods weren't described as living on earth, with few exceptions.
Why concentrate on the novelties?

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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
I'm sorry, spin, did you have a point here?
It was called historical methodology.

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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
Antedating Paul does not make them secondary to him. Q is most conservatively dated with Paul, and liberally to before Paul. Paul speaks of a James tradition which antedates him. Lost, it still exists. Hand waving it all you want doesn't make it disappear.
You don't know when or if Q was written. A James tradition doesn't necessarily antedate Paul, but what relevance is an undefined messianist in your argument here. What did this James actually believe? You just don't know.

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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
Which ones? All of them? The most informed? What about Mormon scholars?
Were there any scholars back in Paul's time?

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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
Anyone OT3 is certifiably insane. Your honor, Tom Cruise... I rest my case.
Sanity has not been talked about before in this thread, your honor. Defense is trying to introduce new and irrelevant materials.

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Because L. Ron Hubbard wrote it down and said it was so. Because we have earlier works which were only science fiction...by the same author. And because when you get down to it, it's logically, physically, and scientifically impossible, while Jesus ain't so.
When you cherrypick the Jesus you feel comfortable with.

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But I smell an anti-Christian bias by singling out Jesus and not Mohammed.
This is only you muddying the waters. I was looking at the focus of the religion, not the perceived originator.

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Put some cheese on it.
Along with your overdose of ketchup.

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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
No, I just deny existence based on implausibility, and then give ancient texts their proper credit until evidence is procured to the opposite.
So Jesus walking on water being implausible you deny, or Jesus raising Lazarus you deny, then you invent another Jesus. Very convenient.

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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
You're arguing apples and oranges.
You're avoiding responding to the issue:
Non-entities can be reified whether you like the fact or not. It doesn't matter whether someone believes in them or not. It is sufficient that someone believed they existed, which plainly Tertullian and Epiphanius did. You don't need reality behind a figure to give them life.
Unless you can get to the realia of your writer to give him some measure of reliability, you are talking rot.

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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
Because the evidence ain't that simple. We don't merely have some tradition which grew out of a mistaken identity. We have the encapsulation of an actual person whose disciple later deified.
You make things easy when you assume your conclusions. To do so, you cherrypick your source texts to get the figure you want in order to retroject him into the text as "the encapsulation of an actual person whose disciple later deified." That's convenience store religion.

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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
There's precedence, and no amount of "it doesn't have to be" can excuse the evidence. Deal with it.
Just cut the crapology and supply me with some evidence to deal with.

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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
Aspects of gnosticism and gnosticism as a religion itself (which in itself is a challenged notion) are two different things. Not everything gnostic had to have a separate tradition than Orthodox Christianity.
Do the Jesus aspects of gnosticism come from a real person or do the plausible aspects of Jesus came from gnosticism, or do they both come from earlier traditions? What were the other gospels that Paul knew about? Paul's religion is different from them, like it is different from the "Jerusalem church". How different?

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Originally Posted by Chris Weimer View Post
I never said there wasn't a need for it, and for the record, the post you replied to doesn't say that either. I think you imagined that into there.
We are trying to get to origins here. You assume your origin and then work from it. I can't afford that luxury. The fact that you don't need to "experience[..] the claimed originator to believe in the person" must be considered in the discussion, as you are working from the fruits of people who had no first hand experience of the reputed originator of the religion.


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Old 03-18-2007, 07:29 AM   #29
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20th and 21st century Jews did not give up their religion when they figured out that there was no Exodus. There is much more to Judaism than some facts of history.

Christianity is rather unusual in requiring the belief in certain historical facts as part of its foundation.
I don't think that is true. Much of the NT scholarship (theologically oriented) at the break of the 20th century was quite resigned to the finding that most of Jesus, if not all of him, was mythical. Bultmann had an antidote to abandonment of Christianity with finding it was just another myth: look at Jesus existentially.

The idea that someone who died some two thousand year ago for your or my flawed nature seems preposterous to a modern mind. But it isn't once you admit that our nature is flawed, that we are corruptible. All of us. Then look at Paul again and try to clean him of the pile of pious drivel heaped on him later. What do you get ? A self-admitted fool who held that the world and life were a brutal joke unless one finds a God that had love. Paul's God did not send his Son to the world to be killed. He sent him "for sin", to deal with our flawed nature. God sent his Son in the likeness of a foolish blasphemer who thought he could forgive sins and create God's kingdom on earth (actually in Israel, but the cosmopolitan Paul took a more general view). And the powers of this earth killed him for it. They killed him but could not kill the idea of universal brotherhood that God told Paul the fool represented. They could not kill the spirit. This original Christ of Paul can withstand any historical revision.

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Old 03-18-2007, 09:05 AM   #30
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Paul missed the messiah. Odd, huh?


spin
So you're alleging that Paul founded Christianity. I wonder what the heck were the pillars then...?
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