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Old 03-04-2006, 10:44 PM   #11
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I agree that Paul's Christology, whatever its actual specifics, would have required (for Jews) some compromosing of their monotheism.
Fortunately, that already existed. Go here and read Theme 21. Especially usful is the second article listed there, by Segal.

THEME 21: Divine Mediators Figures: Jewish and Christian Traditions
* Celestial Choirmaster: The Liturgical Role of Enoch-Metatron in 2 Enoch and the Merkabah Tradition (Andrei Orlov). pdf
* Some Observations about Paul and Intermediaries (Alan F. Segal).
* What Do We Mean by "First-Century Jewish Monotheism"? (Larry W. Hurtado).
* Moses as Heavenly Messenger in As. Mos and Qumran Documents (Jan Willem Van-Henten)
* Beholders of Divine Secrets: Mysticism and Myth in the Hekhalot and Merkavah Literature (Daphna Arbel).
* The High Priest as Divine Mediator in the Hebrew Bible: Dan 7:13 as a Test Case. Part I (Crispin H.T. Fletcher-Louis). pdf
* The High Priest as Divine Mediator in the Hebrew Bible: Dan 7:13 as a Test Case. Part II (Crispin H.T. Fletcher-Louis). pdf
* Early Christian Binitarianism: The Father and the Holy Spirit (Michel René Barnes).pdf
* Paul's Christology of Divine Identity (Richard Bauckham). pdf
* Was There a "Messiah-Joshua" Tradition at the Turn of the Era? (Robert Kraft).
* A Messiah in Heaven? A Re-evaluation of Jewish and Christian Apocalyptic Traditions (Cana Werman).
* A Methodology for Studying Divine Mediators (James R.Davila).
* The Son of Man (Crispin H.T. Fletcher-Louis).
* In Praise of Michael the Archangel (Robert Kraft).
* God's Right-Hand Man: A Comparative Study of Jesus Christ and Metatron (Jennifer E. Terry). pdf
* How do the Mediators Figures Illuminate Origins of Worship of Jesus? (James R. Davila).
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Old 03-04-2006, 10:44 PM   #12
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He never becomes an independent divinity. This is what Doherty is missing here.
He doesn't need to be for Doherty to be right.
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Old 03-05-2006, 04:40 AM   #13
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Originally Posted by Doug Shaver
So, first-century Christians were agreed that God was second in command to himself?
That came later. What I think happened is that following jesus execution, his disciples experienced visions of him as the "Risen One". Since ordinary people just did not do this sort of thing, that led them to conclude that Jesus was more than an ordinary man. They cast around for a way to explain Jesus, borrowing from the Old Testament. For example, in Philipians 2: 5 -11 Paul quotes what scholars believe to be an early Xtian hymn, "..bestowed on him the name that is above every other name, that at the name of Jesus every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father". This is a direct borrowing from Isaiah 45:23, where the one to whom every knee bows is Yahweh.

I have recently come across a book by a woman called Margaret Barker called the "The Great Angel", which sets out to show that Yahweh was originally a secondary divine being in the Court of EL, the High God. In later Judaism, El pretty much disappears and Yahweh comes to be regarded as the one true God. There may be she suggests, some rememberance of the earlier view, and Jesus comes to be regarded as the Old Testament Yahweh the "Great Angel" of the title of her book.

Clearly the trajectory that took Jesus from being a Palestinian Jew "a son of God" to being "God the Son" of later Trinitarianism did not stop there, but inbetween there was clearly a lot of fluidity, as is clear from the ferocious arguments in the 2nd century (and earlier) about the nature of Jesus, was he a real man or not? what kind of divine being was he?

All this later argument appears most probable if there was a real person to start with.
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Old 03-05-2006, 07:13 AM   #14
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That came later. What I think happened is that following jesus execution, his disciples experienced visions of him as the "Risen One". Since ordinary people just did not do this sort of thing, that led them to conclude that Jesus was more than an ordinary man.
Why? Since there was at least one case of that in Jewish literature. For example, Onias III came back to his followers in dreams, right there in Maccabees, which every Jew must have known.

Why would the disciples have ever accepted that he was the savior, if they had traveled all over Judea with him?

It's far more likely that Jesus' saviorhood was invented by someone who had never met him in the flesh, and had visions of him which they then interpreted in accordance with some already extant divine mediator religious belief/program.

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Old 03-05-2006, 08:23 AM   #15
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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
Why would the disciples have ever accepted that he was the savior, if they had traveled all over Judea with him?
Perhaps for the reasons that they chose to follow him to begin with.

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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
It's far more likely that Jesus' saviorhood was invented by someone who had never met him in the flesh
Or that belief in the resurrection was their way of salvaging their faith from the wreckage of the crucifixion.

BTW, have you ever read Leon Festinger's work When Prophecy Fails?
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Old 03-05-2006, 09:38 AM   #16
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Originally Posted by Vorkosigan
Why? Since there was at least one case of that in Jewish literature. For example, Onias III came back to his followers in dreams, right there in Maccabees, which every Jew must have known.

Why would the disciples have ever accepted that he was the savior, if they had traveled all over Judea with him?

It's far more likely that Jesus' saviorhood was invented by someone who had never met him in the flesh, and had visions of him which they then interpreted in accordance with some already extant divine mediator religious belief/program.

Vorkosigan
I am aware that visions were common. Generally however they were visions of individuals who were religiously significant, like gods. I was not arguing that it was the uniqueness of having visions that led to belief in him as more than human. It was that given that they believed that he was no more than a man, having visions of him would not be expected. In "Pagans and Christians" Robert Lane Fox gives examples of people having veridical visions of the gods in broad daylight. I think that the visions of Jesus were of this order. They maybe had dreams about him as well, but I think that both the Ot and the NT draw a distinction between the two.
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Old 03-05-2006, 10:20 AM   #17
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Margaret Barker. "The Great Angel: A Study of Israel's Second God, is reviewed here by Robert Price in the Journal of Higher Criticism.

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Educated at Cambridge, Margaret Barker is a math and religion teacher at the Ockbrook School in England. She is a Methodist preacher, the mother of two children, and she acts as a trustee for a refuge for battered women. She has been a member of the Society for Old Testament Study and recently served a term as the president of that society. While she remains outside the university world in order to "keep [her] academic freedom,"1 she states that "it has been my ambition to redraw the map of biblical studies."2 At this writing, she has published seven books and several journal articles. A survey of her titles introduces her themes: The Older Testament: The Survival of Themes from the Ancient Royal Cult in Sectarian Judaism and Early Christianity; The Lost Prophet: The Book of Enoch and Its Influence on Christianity; The Gate of Heaven: The History and Symbolism of the Temple In Jerusalem; The Great Angel: A Study of Israel's Second God; On Earth as It Is in Heaven: Temple Symbolism in the New Testament; The Risen Lord: The Jesus of History as the Christ of Faith; and The Revelation of Jesus Christ.

. . .

In her work Barker writes not as a dispassionate scholar but as one deeply involved and committed not just to understanding but to living Christianity and persuading others to commitment and action. Her faith commitments do not handicap a notable ability to think outside the boxes of both Christian and secular orthodoxy and to make startling suggestions based on rigorous reading.
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Old 03-05-2006, 04:43 PM   #18
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Reply to #11

Vorkosigan,

Great link! Thank you so much.
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Old 03-05-2006, 05:01 PM   #19
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Originally Posted by mikem
What I think happened is that following jesus execution, his disciples experienced visions of him as the "Risen One". Since ordinary people just did not do this sort of thing, that led them to conclude that Jesus was more than an ordinary man.
That, or some variation on it, is pretty much the conventional view among secularists and liberal Christians.

The problem is that we would expect documents tracking such a progression to begin with something like the gospels and to evolve over a few decades into the likes of Paul's writings. But the opposite seems to have been what actually happened.

The consensus dating of the gospels makes Mark almost contemporary with Paul -- within a generation or so, anyway. But I have yet to see any clear evidence that any gospel had to have been written during the first century. It does seem likely that some of the stories recorded in them were circulating not very long after Paul's time, but none of them is mentioned by any Christian author known to have written something before 100 CE.
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Old 03-05-2006, 06:28 PM   #20
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Fascinating. The book is on my Amazon wish list now. I'll probably grab it on my next book-buying spree.

In my own thinking, I have relied heavily on the argument from Jewish monotheism to make the case against Jesus' historicity. However, I don't see Barker's particular alternative providing much aid or comfort to the historicists. It's one thing to say that one more god would have been no big thing to Paul's Jewish contemporaries. It's quite another to propose that they would have seen that god in a certain charismatic rabbi. If I correctly understand Price's interpretation of Barker, the deification of any man was still hugely improbable.
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