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Old 07-28-2009, 12:17 AM   #101
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I’m a big fan of going with the greatest probability as well but nothing I’ve mentioned seems improbable. I guy with a messiah complex that uses his own death to spread his message seems more likely than a non messiah figure being turned into one. Especially a figure that did nothing that was expected of the messiah. It would be one thing if his legend turned him from a regular guy into the messiah if he seemed to fulfill that role but he didn’t. So what seems more likely to you; that a person who thought he was the messiah was able to convince people he was so with a dramatic death or some people decided to just make him out to be the messiah even though he didn’t want that, nor did he do anything to deserve the title?

No, that is not the sole reason. There is also the reason that it would come off as an absurdity for Jesus to say such a thing.

Maybe that would be the fourth option for third person. It shows humility and keeps him out of trouble with the public to do it in third person.

So is the son of man to Jesus like the Helper in John? What type of figure was Jesus without the Messiah aspect to you, just a prophet or morality teacher? I guess he had to be a teacher of some type to have followers.
I suppose a big reason why I find the misquoting option more favorable is because we know that has already been done throughout the course of early Christianity. We know that Christians put words in the mouth of Jesus that Christians wanted to believe. That describes almost everything within the gospel of John and every gospel authored beyond that. You ask:

So what seems more likely to you; that a person who thought he was the messiah was able to convince people he was so with a dramatic death or some people decided to just make him out to be the messiah even though he didn’t want that, nor did he do anything to deserve the title?

With the first option, we must posit a weird thing about Jesus that is not otherwise evident. With the second option, we just have to posit the usual pattern. It is a tough call, though. I don't mean to say I think its obvious. My own explanation strikes me as ad hoc, and I wish I had a more consistent rule for making such judgments.

So is the son of man to Jesus like the Helper in John? What type of figure was Jesus without the Messiah aspect to you, just a prophet or morality teacher? I guess he had to be a teacher of some type to have followers.

Jesus apparently made himself out to be a prophet. It would be misleading to say just a prophet, because a prophet is nobody to take lightly in the Jewish religion. He was an apocalyptic prophet, and he proclaimed that the world as he knew it would come to a tumultuous end at the hands of the Son of Man commanding an army of angels from Heaven, and a new Kingdom of Heaven would be established on Earth, all within the generation of Jesus. He apparently said so in Mark 13 and the other synoptic gospels.
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Old 07-28-2009, 12:37 AM   #102
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Under the theory of Markan priority, it is assumed that Mark was the first Gospel written. On a side note, Markan priority theory is just as valid as Matthean priority theory.
That is incorrenct. Marcan priority is far more solid than Matthean priority for a multitude of reasons.

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For example, those who propose Mark was written first give a reason such as "Mark gives no birth narrative. This can be evidence Mark was written first and then Matthew and Luke added on the birth of Jesus story to give Jesus an earthly birth."

However, if one believes Matthew was written first, the reason can be just as valid: "Matthew starts his Gospel with the birth narrative. Mark, seeing as how there was already a birth narrative in place, saw no need to be redundant and just started with Jesus' earthly life."
If you look through a synopsis it is Matthew who abridges far more than Mark. THe problem is two-fold: Why did Mark omit the material he did that would have been congenial to his purposes and why did he make the expansions that he did instead of adding things like the Sermon on the Mount. Not only does he neglect to include things he should but he decides to expand things in Matthew.

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BOTH of these theories are believable and have the same amount of evidence for each theory.
No. You should look at Goodacre's article on Redactional Fatigue. In addition, Mark is more commonly the middle term in wording and order.

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But, if we assume Mark was written first, Jesus predicts the destruction of the temple if Mark was written circa 65 and the temple was destroyed until 70.
Mark was written first and prior to 70 C.E.

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But, there's another HUGE BUT, if Mark was written AFTER 70, then Jesus' prophecy can be explained away. But, this is troubling when we examine Luke.

The author of Luke is said to be the SAME AUTHOR as The Book Of Acts. In Luke's gospel, Jesus makes the same prediction. "So, it was written after the fact!" claims the skeptic. But, how valid is this?
Anyone can predict the fall of anything. Jesus may have been fed up with something and thought God would intervene. When Bishop Spong writes a book "Why Christianity must Change or Die?" if it does in fact die 100 years from now it does not a supernatural predictor of the future make him.

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If we then examine the book of Acts, it shows Paul going to trial. It does NOT talk about Paul's death even though Paul died sometime in the 60's. Why would the book of Acts speak of Paul going to trial and completely ignore his death if Acts and Luke were written around the years 80-100? if Luke and Acts were written very late as scholars say, there';s a HUGE MYSTERY why talk of Paul's death is left out.

If we allow ourselves to realize that the book of Acts only speaks of Paul going to trial and does not speak about his death, and that the Gospel of Luke contains Jesus' prediction about the destruction of the temple, we must then have no choice but to conclude that Luke AND Acts were completed sometime BEFORE Paul himself had passed away!

But, if this is the truth, then that means Jesus made a prediction that came true!
Good for him.

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So once again in summary, if Luke and Acts were written in 80-100, why didn't they talk about the death of Paul? Because both books were written BEFORE Paul died and BEFORE the destruction of the temple.
That is a good question. Luke may very well have been written early as a knowledge of current events is difficult to suppress. But scholars offer solutions to this.

Acts was not a story of Paul but a story of the spread of Christianity which climaxes with the symbolism of the great missionary coming to Rome, the capital of the Gentile empire. In addition, as Brown relays (Intro NT p 273), "Indeed, the relation espoused by the Paul of Acts 28:25-28 between the mission to the Gentiles and the failure of the mission to the Jews is so different from what Paul himself wrote in Rom 9-11 ca. 57/58 that it is hard to imagine a date in the early 60s for Acts.

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Old 07-28-2009, 02:58 AM   #103
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Originally Posted by Elijah View Post
I’m a big fan of going with the greatest probability as well but nothing I’ve mentioned seems improbable. I guy with a messiah complex that uses his own death to spread his message seems more likely than a non messiah figure being turned into one. Especially a figure that did nothing that was expected of the messiah. It would be one thing if his legend turned him from a regular guy into the messiah if he seemed to fulfill that role but he didn’t. So what seems more likely to you; that a person who thought he was the messiah was able to convince people he was so with a dramatic death or some people decided to just make him out to be the messiah even though he didn’t want that, nor did he do anything to deserve the title?

No, that is not the sole reason. There is also the reason that it would come off as an absurdity for Jesus to say such a thing.

Maybe that would be the fourth option for third person. It shows humility and keeps him out of trouble with the public to do it in third person.

So is the son of man to Jesus like the Helper in John? What type of figure was Jesus without the Messiah aspect to you, just a prophet or morality teacher? I guess he had to be a teacher of some type to have followers.
:constern01:


Good if someone can list what was sacrificed by Jesus. They do not even have to offer any proof - just let it be logical, moral, ethical and relative to what others sacrificed in that exact space-time.
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Old 07-28-2009, 05:53 AM   #104
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Mark was written first and prior to 70 C.E.
Mark was obviously written after the destruction of the temple as the rending of the temple curtain shows.


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Old 07-28-2009, 06:35 AM   #105
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I suppose a big reason why I find the misquoting option more favorable is because we know that has already been done throughout the course of early Christianity. We know that Christians put words in the mouth of Jesus that Christians wanted to believe. That describes almost everything within the gospel of John and every gospel authored beyond that. You ask:
I don’t know which of the early gospels, even the ones found in the Nag you could say you [u]know[u/] contain things he didn’t say. I’m sure there is but it’s hard to know for certain especially with things like John or Thomas which could be more accurate than the synoptics. The post-life appearances you could with confidence say were added in later and didn’t belong to him but beyond that there should be some evidence and reasoning beyond not believing he would say that or thinking that a prophecy about nearly inevitable events couldn’t be made. I don’t see how you can use probability when the data you are using to base the probability on is completely unverifiable.

With the first option, we must posit a weird thing about Jesus that is not otherwise evident. With the second option, we just have to posit the usual pattern. It is a tough call, though. I don't mean to say I think its obvious. My own explanation strikes me as ad hoc, and I wish I had a more consistent rule for making such judgments.

You lost me, sorry. I’m not sure what you consider the weird thing that is not evident and what is the usual pattern?

Jesus apparently made himself out to be a prophet. It would be misleading to say just a prophet, because a prophet is nobody to take lightly in the Jewish religion. He was an apocalyptic prophet, and he proclaimed that the world as he knew it would come to a tumultuous end at the hands of the Son of Man commanding an army of angels from Heaven, and a new Kingdom of Heaven would be established on Earth, all within the generation of Jesus. He apparently said so in Mark 13 and the other synoptic gospels.

So you consider some of the prophecy in the gospels to be real and not interpolation? Is it arranged so that the prophecies that came true no matter how probable or vague must be an interpolation and the ones that failed or haven’t came to fruition yet belong to the actual prophet?

Why would his followers think that a prophecy about the son of man coming at the end times needed to be retro fitted to the guy making the prophecy unless the end times prophecy had already came about? Did Paul consider him the Messiah or just a prophet that was letter edited to look like more than he was?
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Old 07-28-2009, 06:38 AM   #106
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Good if someone can list what was sacrificed by Jesus. They do not even have to offer any proof - just let it be logical, moral, ethical and relative to what others sacrificed in that exact space-time.
His life is the usual answer, which created a self-sacrifice meme, which spread to his followers, giving the movement credibility.
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Old 07-28-2009, 09:14 AM   #107
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Mark was written first and prior to 70 C.E.
Mark was obviously written after the destruction of the temple as the rending of the temple curtain shows.


spin
Certainly a viable possibility but just slightly after 70 C.E. (68 +/- 5) if correct but I disagree at any rate.

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Old 07-28-2009, 09:34 AM   #108
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Mark was obviously written after the destruction of the temple as the rending of the temple curtain shows.
Certainly a viable possibility but just slightly after 70 C.E. (68 +/- 5) if correct but I disagree at any rate.
You wouldn't have proposed the common conjecture if you did.

But there is no reason to date the text to near the fall of the temple, once your original assertion has been discounted.


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Old 07-28-2009, 09:47 AM   #109
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Certainly a viable possibility but just slightly after 70 C.E. (68 +/- 5) if correct but I disagree at any rate.
You wouldn't have proposed the common conjecture if you did.

But there is no reason to date the text to near the fall of the temple, once your original assertion has been discounted.


spin
Well if you date Matthew ca. 80-90 there is, granted Marcan dependence and time for the dissemination of Mark, along with an earlier Papian tradition, the failure of the details in Mark to correspond exactly to what occurred, the statement about "some standing here" and the lower density of Pharisaic material a good circumstantial case begins to built for a most probable dating.

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Old 07-28-2009, 04:39 PM   #110
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I suppose a big reason why I find the misquoting option more favorable is because we know that has already been done throughout the course of early Christianity. We know that Christians put words in the mouth of Jesus that Christians wanted to believe. That describes almost everything within the gospel of John and every gospel authored beyond that. You ask:
I don’t know which of the early gospels, even the ones found in the Nag you could say you [u]know[u/] contain things he didn’t say. I’m sure there is but it’s hard to know for certain especially with things like John or Thomas which could be more accurate than the synoptics. The post-life appearances you could with confidence say were added in later and didn’t belong to him but beyond that there should be some evidence and reasoning beyond not believing he would say that or thinking that a prophecy about nearly inevitable events couldn’t be made. I don’t see how you can use probability when the data you are using to base the probability on is completely unverifiable.

With the first option, we must posit a weird thing about Jesus that is not otherwise evident. With the second option, we just have to posit the usual pattern. It is a tough call, though. I don't mean to say I think its obvious. My own explanation strikes me as ad hoc, and I wish I had a more consistent rule for making such judgments.

You lost me, sorry. I’m not sure what you consider the weird thing that is not evident and what is the usual pattern?

Jesus apparently made himself out to be a prophet. It would be misleading to say just a prophet, because a prophet is nobody to take lightly in the Jewish religion. He was an apocalyptic prophet, and he proclaimed that the world as he knew it would come to a tumultuous end at the hands of the Son of Man commanding an army of angels from Heaven, and a new Kingdom of Heaven would be established on Earth, all within the generation of Jesus. He apparently said so in Mark 13 and the other synoptic gospels.

So you consider some of the prophecy in the gospels to be real and not interpolation? Is it arranged so that the prophecies that came true no matter how probable or vague must be an interpolation and the ones that failed or haven’t came to fruition yet belong to the actual prophet?

Why would his followers think that a prophecy about the son of man coming at the end times needed to be retro fitted to the guy making the prophecy unless the end times prophecy had already came about? Did Paul consider him the Messiah or just a prophet that was letter edited to look like more than he was?
You lost me, sorry. I’m not sure what you consider the weird thing that is not evident and what is the usual pattern?

The weird thing that you posit is that Jesus planned on his own death. The usual pattern that I posit is that Christians inserted things into his mouth.

So you consider some of the prophecy in the gospels to be real and not interpolation? Is it arranged so that the prophecies that came true no matter how probable or vague must be an interpolation and the ones that failed or haven’t came to fruition yet belong to the actual prophet?

Yes, generally, except for the no matter how probable or vague part. I make exceptions.

Why would his followers think that a prophecy about the son of man coming at the end times needed to be retro fitted to the guy making the prophecy unless the end times prophecy had already came about?

Cult followers do that kind of thing. They give as much prestige and credit as they can to the cult leader, often even more than the cult leader asks for.

Did Paul consider him the Messiah or just a prophet that was [later] edited to look like more than he was?

Paul considered him the Messiah (Christ), as did the authors of the synoptic gospels.
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