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06-16-2004, 04:47 AM | #21 |
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Greetings all,
Sorry if I gave the impression of claiming these sceptics specifically argued Jesus did not exist. None of them quite did that. I just thought these early sceptics deserved a mention in response to the OP. Yes, I was wrong about Trypho before - but any discussion of early sceptics of Christian beliefs should include this work. Celsus certainly assumed Jesus existed - but so what? His detailed attack that the Gospels were fiction based on myth is tantamount to arguing Jesus was also myth. Porphry similarly called the evangelists "inventors, not historians" - surely casting doubt on the veracity of the Gospels also casts some doubt on the reality on Jesus. Julian saying Jesus has been "invented" also argues against a historical person. M. Felix is a very odd case - he seems to know of the incarnation and crucifixion stories, yet dismisses them as NOT being true Christian beliefs. Surely this argues against a historical Jesus. So, while its true we have no early witness arguing directly that Jesus was a myth, we DO have a variety of disagreements and doubts - * preachers of "OTHER Christs" * those who deny the resurrection and/or the incarnation * those who claim the Gospels were fiction * those who follow a Christianity without a Jesus * those who deny Jesus "came in the flesh" * those who claim Jesus was a phantom * those who claim Jesus was a spiritual entity all of which argue against a historical Jesus. Iasion |
06-16-2004, 05:05 AM | #22 | |
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Show me the evidence that the pagans of the times regarded Attis/Isis to have lived and died in a sublunar realm. |
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06-16-2004, 05:20 AM | #23 | |||
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06-16-2004, 05:32 AM | #24 | |
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06-16-2004, 06:14 AM | #25 | |
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06-16-2004, 04:52 PM | #26 |
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Greetings CA,
Yes, I did over-reach a bit there - or go off-topic perhaps I just thoughtTrypho's comments were relevant because he is the very earliest sceptic of Christianity. Iasion |
06-16-2004, 07:36 PM | #27 |
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It is interesting...
It is interesting that both of the Roman historians contemporary with Jesus mention him. They are Suetonius and Tacitus. I was reading this string and I noticed that they wern't mentioned. It surprised me. Plus, there were latter historians as well, such as Josephus. I know the reference to Jesus is normally dismissed as an addition by monks, but a much earlier manuscript dated at 300 A.D. (I believe from Arabia) was found. It includes the Jesus reference, even through it is from a different time and place. The Roman historians weren’t out to create history. True, they were biased, but then again, who isn't? I believe that a uniform bias is a testing factor to tell whether a document is authentic. Later insertions may not carry the bias or a different time of place. The cult of objectivity, you know, began in the modern age.
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06-16-2004, 08:02 PM | #28 | |
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06-16-2004, 08:08 PM | #29 | |
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06-16-2004, 08:10 PM | #30 | |
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Suetonius was the historian, again, decades after Christ was supposedly around, who claimed that Claudius expelled the Jews from Rome on account of the agitation caused by "Chrestus". But that's it! Nothing more. Chrestus is a common greek name - it most likely does not refer to Jesus at all - at least there is no evidence of it. The point is though, neither of these individuals were contemporaries of Jesus, and wrote histories, not of Jesus, but of later Christians of which there is no doubt. You might as well cite Pliny The Younger's exchange of letters with the Emporer Trajan. These are only proof that there were Christians by at least the latter part of the first century; they are not proof of Jesus or his existence. SLD |
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