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Old 10-26-2007, 11:28 AM   #21
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Jesus Emerged Victorious, Why?
-Didn't he get himself killed ? Ah, my level of argumentation is simply astonishing...
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Old 10-26-2007, 09:42 PM   #22
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I always have found it strange that among all the Messiahs wandering around at the time of Jesus, why is it that he emerged to be the "founder" of the religion to eventually alter all of history and rule the west. I ask this question because there might be a piece I am missing, but he wasn't much different than any other "savior" at the time. The claim he is the only one who preached non-violence is not true as well, everything was common back then. So, why him?

I appreciate if someone could clear this up a bit, I might just be missing knowledge of his rise.

P.S. I'm only 14.
Read The Life of Apollonius of Tyana, first published
in the Greek c.220 CE by the author Philostratus, and miraculously
saved from the monumental destruction of literature attributable to
the despotic regimes of christian emperors of the fourth century.

It may be one of the pieces you are seeking. Certainly needs
to be digested if one is serious about the issue of the relative
historicity of various Messiahs in the first century of
the Egypto/Graeco/Roman empire.


Best wishes,


Pete Brown
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Old 10-26-2007, 11:35 PM   #23
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Originally Posted by jkmartin View Post
I always have found it strange that among all the Messiahs wandering around at the time of Jesus, why is it that he emerged to be the "founder" of the religion to eventually alter all of history and rule the west. I ask this question because there might be a piece I am missing, but he wasn't much different than any other "savior" at the time. The claim he is the only one who preached non-violence is not true as well, everything was common back then. So, why him?

I appreciate if someone could clear this up a bit, I might just be missing knowledge of his rise.

P.S. I'm only 14.
To begin with, there were only two probable outcomes...either one candidate would succeed, or none would. Let us consider the consider the former.

Within a field of relatively equal candidates, the winner would not necessarily stand out as the obviously best candidate, so looking for reasons would not promise any great revelations. Perhaps it was only because he had better preachers (AKA apostles).

On the other hand, perhaps the Christ at the center of Xtianity was never a single historical person. What if he was a composite of several of the candidates with a retrofitted historical biography built from a combination of prophecy to be fulfilled, stories/sayings of local holy men, and the personal savior/sacrificed diety motif that Paul and others preached. In which case, none of the historical characters actually turned out to be the Christ.
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Old 10-27-2007, 02:00 AM   #24
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Likewise, on the political front, Christianity became a way of overthrowing the status quo and overthrowing long time entrenched political families.

When you look at the laws that were written in the 4th-6th centuries, what you see is that they made it so that only Christians could pass on inheritance, only Christian could own certain property, only Christians could effectively own slaves, only Christians could engage in certain business.

The result was a massive redistribution of wealth and transfer of property from the long-time ruling and elite families to the Roman state and the Church and to new families.

This was much like the Communist revolution, where large amounts of property were transfered from private ownership into state collectives, and largely Catholic Church collectives.

This had major mass appeal among the poor, and became a political tool for undermining the entrenched political families.

If you were an emperor or governor, then, you wanted to become Christian in order to protect your wealth,and you wanted to write and enforce these laws as a way of undermining your political enemies.
Thanks for an interesting post.

I think there may be two issues here.

The financial disabilities suffered by lay Pagans compared to lay Christians from say 400 onwards probably encouraged conversion to Christianity among the entrenched political families rather than the replacement of committed pagans by a new Christian secular elite.

On the other hand the increased resources and status of the church did allow Christian clergy from outside the establishment to achieve positions of social power and influence as bishops abbots etc.

Andrew Criddle
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Old 10-27-2007, 05:14 AM   #25
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As for Paul (what the last poster mentioned), it is certainly true that Paul played a role in spreading the popularity early on, but in that is extremely minor compared to the Gospels. If the Gospels were never written, Christianity would not exist today.
So, you are saying that Paul's ministry and letters had little to no impact on the gospels themselves? I think we have to draw at least some connection between Paul and the four cannonical gospels.

What do you think of this statement? If Paul had not existed, the gospels would not have been written, and therefore Chrisitinity would not exist today.
That was certainly not what I was saying, in fact I just got through writing an article/book showing that the Gospel of Mark is based on the Pauline letters:

http://www.rationalrevolution.net/ar...ospel_mark.htm

But if that step had not taken place, if a STORY about Jesus had never been written, then Christianity wouldn't exist today.

To use an example that has already been used, its like talking about James Bond.

James Bond began as a series of novels. If no James Bond movies had ever been made, James Bond would have still been a popular and well known figure in the 1950s, but its almost certain that James Bond wouldn't be the household name that it is today without the movies.

Without the movies the James Bond character would be one more of the thousands of largely unknown literary protagonists that are known mostly by a small number of paperback readers.

The movies, however, took James Bond to a whole new level.

Same with "Jesus".

The Gospels are what launched "Jesus" to widespread fame and what "immortalized" him.

Without the Gospels, Paul's movement would have just been one of thousands of other similar ones in the region and would have never become widely popular, and surely wouldn't be known today.
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Old 10-27-2007, 10:03 AM   #26
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James Bond began as a series of novels. If no James Bond movies had ever been made, James Bond would have still been a popular and well known figure in the 1950s, but its almost certain that James Bond wouldn't be the household name that it is today without the movies.
I think we are agreeing with each other. All I'm saying is...

No Paul = No Gospels = No Christianity.

or to use your example....

No Ian Fleming = No James Bond = No JB Movies (or Chitty Chitty Bang Bang!) = No JB popularity
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Old 10-27-2007, 11:47 AM   #27
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Hi Malachi,

...

In the same way, Christianity has been marketed to wealthy aged widows who enjoy its anti-sexual, yet romantic (love-thy-neighbor) morality, sophisticated costumes and eloquent ceremonies. By marketing towards wealthy widows over the last eighteen hundred years, each individual church assures itself of free secreterial, advertising and cleaning help, constant weekly contributions, and big windfalls when the prime market customers die off. The widows also relate well to the character of the dead/risen "son," Jesus Christ, as many of them have sons who have died or now ignore them. They like to think of him as their own only, loving, and obedient son.

One might also examine many Churches' secondary marketing to repressed gay males. It is from this pool that the churches gets many of their best and most skillful ideological workers (not to mention great architects and interior decorators).

Warmly,

Philosopher Jay
<smacks head> It is all so clear now!
Seriously though. Jesus on the cross in his loin cloth. No one's gonna persusde me that's not a homoerotic fantasy.
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Old 10-27-2007, 12:45 PM   #28
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Christians backed the right horse in the Civil War that Constantine won. He rewarded them. It had nothing to do with "Jesus."

Give someone the power to torture and kill people and he could have millions of them worshipping a toaster in a few years.

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Old 10-28-2007, 12:23 AM   #29
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Originally Posted by Malachi151 View Post

Likewise, on the political front, Christianity became a way of overthrowing the status quo and overthrowing long time entrenched political families.

When you look at the laws that were written in the 4th-6th centuries, what you see is that they made it so that only Christians could pass on inheritance, only Christian could own certain property, only Christians could effectively own slaves, only Christians could engage in certain business.
...

This had major mass appeal among the poor, and became a political tool for undermining the entrenched political families.
I think there may be two issues here.

The financial disabilities suffered by lay Pagans compared to lay Christians from say 400 onwards probably encouraged conversion to Christianity among the entrenched political families rather than the replacement of committed pagans by a new Christian secular elite.

On the other hand ...
Andrew Criddle
According to Peter Lampe From Paul to Valentinus: Christians at Rome in the First Two Centuries p148-50
In the 3rd & 4th C most Christian aristocrats were women and the majority of Christians were still lower class.
For the third century one can identify at most 32 individuals of senatorial rank as Christians; 22 of them are female ...
Roman aristocratic families were still in the post-Constantine period the last bastion of paganism.
At the end of the 4th C he cites the "old noble Roman family of the Ceionnii" whose male members held high posts, married Christian women but remained pagan. The daughters & granddaughters were raised Christian, married Christians, but the sons remained pagan.
The Christian mothers, sisters, and neices could not change the pagan spirit of the family, which held the male members of the family together.
Lampe also calls attention to the (not Ceionnii) private family catacomb on the Via Latina which has Christian frescoes in immediate proximity to pagan mythological scenes - see Jas Elsner Imperial Rome and Christian Triumph: The Art of the Roman Empire AD 100-450 p218, fig. 144.

The pagan spirit held on tenaciously well into the 6th C.
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Old 10-28-2007, 03:33 AM   #30
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14 and claims to be an athiest. I remember 14 - that Bright awareness.
I think that he deserves better answers than we have thus far provided.

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I always have found it strange that among all the Messiahs wandering around at the time of Jesus, why is it that he emerged to be the "founder" of the religion to eventually alter all of history and rule the west.
That is a good question. I have always wondered that myself. I still do.

The answer clearly lies within the psyche of humanity. Yet consider this, if not Jesus, then necessarily someone else.

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I ask this question because there might be a piece I am missing, but he wasn't much different than any other "savior" at the time.
Not so. Jesus differs in comparison to his contemporaries in two significant aspects.
First, since he is a product of Jewish messianism, his proponents may lay claim to an ancient theological lineage with a written history.
Secondly, he himself is claimed to be historic.

Competing savior gods did not enjoy the combination of these advantages.

There are a raft of sociological and historic factors which follow but Christianity was clearly an idea whose time had come by the 2nd C.
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