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01-13-2009, 01:41 AM | #101 |
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Pat, if you’re having a hard time understanding what made Jesus so special that he was mythicized, (beyond the possibility of any miracles) you should consider that there is some historical core to the gospels and that maybe there was a guy with a death wish who sacrificed his life and told his followers to do the same, which they did (According to the tradition.) Jesus’ sacrifice convinced Stephen, Stephen’s imitation of that sacrifice convinces Paul, then the martyrs in Rome convince some in Rome, and then pretty soon you have an emperor swearing to the authority of a nobody Jew who preached of a new day coming or whatever you consider the good news to be. That is a pretty good reason to get revered above others and why his claim to messiahship gets taken more seriously. The working class finally gets to champion one of their own.
Just my opinion on why homeboy got mythicized. |
01-13-2009, 07:17 AM | #102 | |
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"Against Hierocles" contradicts your claim. Apollonius was regarded or presented as a man, yet divine with extraordinary powers of miracles perhaps surpassing Jesus who was presented in Against Hiercoles, also as a God. Apollonius even became a priest of Aesclepius when he was just a boy. Now, the parallels of Jesus and Apollonius are similar with respect to supposed miraculous events, however, their origins are presented as complete opposites. Jesus is presented as a creature begotten of God, truly a God, that became man, and Apollonius was born man, truly a man, who had powers of the divine. If you think that I claimed Jesus existed, I must have meant Jesus existed as a myth. I know of no creature that was presented as truly born God, and truly equal to God, and presented as born of a virgin, that is not regarded as a myth. According to Trypho, in Justin Martyr's Dialogue with Trypho, Jesus was presented similar to the monstrous phenomena or fables of the Greeks. The healing method of Jesus was similar to those of the mythical God Serapis, when a blind man claimed that the mythical God Serapis promised to make him see, if Vespasian would SPIT in his eyes. It is true Jesus existed, but as a MYTH. Appolonius, if it can be confirmed that he did indeed exist, was deified. but his existence has no bearing whatsoever on the creature who was born of a virgin. |
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01-13-2009, 07:46 AM | #103 | ||
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Ben. |
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01-13-2009, 09:07 AM | #104 | |||
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Why do you believe Apollonius was a man? Please, on some other thread. |
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01-13-2009, 09:33 AM | #105 |
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01-13-2009, 10:36 AM | #106 | |
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Just saying Apollonius was a man, may indeed be totally false, since you are now claiming to contradict Eusebius and Hierocles. |
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01-13-2009, 10:36 AM | #107 | |||
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01-13-2009, 10:46 AM | #108 | |
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The position you find yourself in with regard to Apollonius (no contemporary evidence, indications of fictionalization and embellishment) is the position historians of antiquity find themselves in virtually all the time. Figures for whom there is solid contemporary evidence and few indications of embellishment or agenda are the rare ones. Ben. |
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01-13-2009, 10:47 AM | #109 | |
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I take it you really do not know whether Apollonius existed or not. Ben. |
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01-13-2009, 11:01 AM | #110 | |
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Is this another of your (my) claims along the lines of the one you (I) made about how in his Plutus Aristophanes proclaims Ascelpius to be the son of Zeus? me |
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