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Old 11-13-2011, 02:27 PM   #111
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Examples abound today.

Bin Laden had mythical status among many.

The genesis of Scientology.

The genesis of a bunch of Inidan gurus and their American followers. The Bagwan and his Rajnesi cult. The cult like belief by weterners in the posession of speciasl wisdom by virutue of 'oreintal wisdom'.

From a biography of Gandhi, younger Europeans who came to India later in his life could not undertsand how the great man could be on a first name basis with those who were with him from earlier times. He had begun to attain a mythicsl statsus outside of izndia.

The defunct Japapnese emporer cult.

The absurd conservative mythification of Ronald Reagan.

The only difference is modern communications.

Did George Washington really chop down a cherry tree?
Are you implying that we will NEVER know if all these people did exist?

It is just baseless To claim "modern communications" is the only difference between chopping down a cherry-tree by Washington and that Jesus was FATHERED by a Holy Ghost, was God and the Creator, was on the Pinnacle of the Jewish Temple with Satan, Fed nine thousand people with 12 loaves and a few fishes, CURSED a tree so that it died, Instantly healed incurable diseases, walked on the sea, transfigured, resurrected and ascended.

Suetonius "Twelve Lives of the Caesars" even though about Emperors of Rome do NOT contain as much Mythology as even gMatthew alone.

And, you have already stated that "we will NEVER know" so I really don't understand how UNRELATED events about other characters will ever help.
Barring a credible detailed histroy discoverd in a sealed clay pot somewhere, we will never know.

Modern comminicatins makes it difficult for a JC type of myth to grow,

My point of George Washington is, myth or fact, and we can not know for sure. It is an obviously an exmaple of a current myth.


We can look at current religious events, like Scientology, to understand how the JC story started and grew. Is that too deep to fathom?
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Old 11-13-2011, 02:55 PM   #112
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...We can look at current religious events, like Scientology, to understand how the JC story started and grew. Is that too deep to fathom?
But, why must you assume without no way of knowing if your assumption can ever to shown to be historically accurate?

The Jesus story as it is found did NOT need an actual figure of history.

There is ZERO need to make assumptions when we have the Extant Codices.

People can only ADDRESS the evidence that they have.

The EVIDENCE that WE have SHOWS quite CLEARLY that it was NOT NECESSARY at all for Jesus to have existed.

In fact, a PUBLICLY KNOWN HUMAN Jesus RETARDS or DESTROYS the Credibility and Veracity of the NT.

It is FAR more reasonable that the Jesus stories were invented well AFTER the Fall of the Temple and were BELIEVED to be true than for the disciples of Jesus and Paul to have KNOWINGLY and PUBLICLY LIED for decades and then were EXECUTED for their own LIES which was ALREADY known by the Public to be false.

Based on gMark, it was a STORY of a Phantom that INITIATED the Jesus cult.
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Old 11-14-2011, 12:28 PM   #113
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You may be confusing Maya the Hindu Goddess of illusion with Maya the mother of the Buddha.

Andrew Criddle
Hi Andrew,
do you know of any mention of maya in Buddhist texts as obstacle to spiritual liberation ?

I understand the buddhist maya, as the 'primal' or the 'grand' illusion that accounts for the created world, but is not in itself the cause of evil. The buddhist mindset perceives the elements composing this world are essentially unreal like things appearing in a mock-show(Vajracchedika 32 a). It is passion or desire (raga) which excites evil through senses,; it is that which Mara thinks he owns.
Hi Jiri

Mayoi in Zen Buddhism may IIUC serve as an obstacle to spiritual liberation.

You are more familiar with this material than I am. Am I correct in my understanding ?

Andrew Criddle
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Old 11-14-2011, 03:21 PM   #114
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An example of another "prophet from around that time would be the one josephus called "the egyptian".
According to one account in Josephus he got 30,000 men together.



Here is a commentary on him. The exact details are suspect but we dont assume he is an invention of christian scribes or that he didnt exist in some form.
Whether the story in Wars of the Jews is true or NOT has NO bearing on the historicity of Jesus.

Jesus was described as the Child of a Ghost who walked on the sea and transfigured but there is NO such description of the Egyptian in Josephus.

There is simply NO source for HJ of Nazareth.

That is all.

There is NO figure of history that can substitute for Jesus.

If Jesus was a figure of history then we would expect some myth and some history.

Virtually everything about Jesus in the NT has NO historical value since they cannot possibly be history.

You are just making the same debunked assertions.

What people think of some UNRELATED story of an Egyptian in Josephus cannot help HJers.

Please, just find a credible source for HJ of Nazareth.
Jesus is just one of many mythical characters in a work of fiction. It's not like he is an exception to the rest of a work that is factual. Hardly. There was no Abraham, Moses, Joshua, etc. either. They are all fictional characters in a work of fiction. Behind it all is a mythical deity pulling all the levers like the Wizrd of Oz, and any sane person merely has to look behind the curtain and see that the whole yarn is as phony as can be.
Here's how c.361 CE Emperor Julian summarised the "Good News of Jesus" ....


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Originally Posted by The Historical Jesus Christ according to the Emperor Julian

"He that is a seducer, he that is a murderer,
he that is sacrilegious and infamous,
let him approach without fear!
For with this water will I wash him
and will straightway make him clean.

And though he should be guilty
of those same sins a second time,
let him but smite his breast and beat his head
and I will make him clean again."


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Would one search around for evidence to support the Wizard of Oz? What for?

Ammianus tells us that Constantius "obscured the plain and simple religion of the Christians with a dotard's superstition" in the years after his mafia-style execution of many family members. It's historical issues like these that deserve to be clarified.

Whatever it may have been before the appearance of Constantine, after Nicaea the centralised Roman state monotheistic cult cannot be separated from a racket of war, spread by the Divine authority of the emperor and the integrity of his army. The state religion was characterized during the 4th and 5th centuries by its persecution and intolerance, by its tourism trade and dealings with the bones of apostles and relics of saints and martyrs and by its distinctive architecture and imperial legislation. With very few exceptions, all post Nicaean christians may be classed as heresiologists - they were more concerned with classifying heresies and heretics for more than a generation after Nicaea than they were about agreeing on the canon of the books of the new testament and how Constantine's edition had to be slightly modified.
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Old 11-14-2011, 06:27 PM   #115
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Hi Andrew,
do you know of any mention of maya in Buddhist texts as obstacle to spiritual liberation ?

I understand the buddhist maya, as the 'primal' or the 'grand' illusion that accounts for the created world, but is not in itself the cause of evil. The buddhist mindset perceives the elements composing this world are essentially unreal like things appearing in a mock-show(Vajracchedika 32 a). It is passion or desire (raga) which excites evil through senses,; it is that which Mara thinks he owns.
Hi Jiri

Mayoi in Zen Buddhism may IIUC serve as an obstacle to spiritual liberation.

You are more familiar with this material than I am. Am I correct in my understanding ?

Andrew Criddle
We might be a bit at cross purposes, here, Andrew. My original reaction was to the poster who positioned 'Maya' as something of an equivalent in Buddhism to Satan in Judeo-Christianity. I did not think 'Maya' would be an agent or agency of that sort - but 'Mara' definitely would be.

With respect to Zen, mayoi seems to be the equivalent of the older concept of maya. In my feeble understanding (I am not an expert by any stretch), both would be something akin to Marxist false consciousness in that though an obstacle to liberation they are not a root cause but an effect of something else. Buddhism shares three of the five hindrances of the soul with Hinduism, afflictions which prevent it from achieving enlightment: raga (lust/desire), dvesha (aversion), avidya (ignorance).

In general, the problem of evil is complex in Buddhism, as it rejects dualism of any sort, and considers seeing something/someone as evil as sure sign of spiritual immaturity.

Best,
Jiri
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Old 11-14-2011, 09:13 PM   #116
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Well I guess that wipes out much of what ancient historians call history. Many ancient sources are suspect, and many are not exactly contemporary.
If you'd care to cite a specific instance that is, in your judgment, relevantly analogous, then we can discuss just how similar they really are.
An example of another "prophet from around that time would be the one josephus called "the egyptian".
According to one account in Josephus he got 30,000 men together.

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There was an Egyptian false prophet that did the Jews more mischief than the former; for he was a cheat, and pretended to be a prophet also, and got together thirty thousand men that were deluded by him; these he led round about from the wilderness to the mount which was called the Mount of Olives. He was ready to break into Jerusalem by force from that place; and if he could but once conquer the Roman garrison and the people, he intended to rule them by the assistance of those guards of his that were to break into the city with him.
[Flavius Josephus, Jewish War 2.261-262]
Here is a commentary on him. The exact details are suspect but we dont assume he is an invention of christian scribes or that he didnt exist in some form.
I am not assuming that Jesus was "an invention of christian scribes or that he didnt exist in some form."

With that in mind, would you please tell me the following:
1. What, in your opinion, are the relevant similarities between Josephus's account of the Egyptian and the gospel stories about Jesus?
2. Is there, to your knowledge, any other evidence -- outside of Josephus's writings -- pertinent to an evaluation of his report about the Egyptian?
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Old 11-15-2011, 03:53 PM   #117
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To be fair, Buddha's flesh doesn't play a big part in Buddhist theology.
That all depends, I think. The incarnation theological debate does not exist in Buddhism, AFAIK. But the carnal vs spiritual was very much at the heart of the dharma teachings with as sharp contrast as in Christianity.
Nicely clarified. I agree.

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Immediately after illumination Buddha is tempted by Mara who represents evil sensual impulses which were to cause the sage to remain imprisoned in the Samsara. Very much parallel to the temptation of Jesus, though more focused on carnal desires than princely grandeur that prince Gautama left behind.
Could some of the Christian ideas be due to more eastern influences? I have read that the ancient Greeks came in contact with Hindus in India and recognised in Krishna a similar figure to Heracles.

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Maya is the name of Buddha's mother; Mara is the tempting demon.
Sorry. Typo.

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I am not sure what you mean by 'cultish'.
I mean as in "agree with our dogma or burn".

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Both regarded women with certain amount of suspicion as distraction from men's spiritual purpose.
That mentality was present amongst non-Christian Greeks prior to Christianity. Socrates washed before his state-ordered suicide so that the women would not have to wash him after death. Since women generally dealt with dead bodies they were connected with death in the typical mindset of the time.
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Old 11-15-2011, 04:10 PM   #118
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I'm wondering what leads you to think the original stories weren't set in time or place?
One point that you probably know already, but I'll say it anyway just to be clear. I am not claiming that the gospels are not set in any particular time or place. They clearly are. I am talking about the stories and, to some extent, the pericopes which the gospel accounts wished to compile.

In the OP you'll notice one of the problems is geographical locations of stories. One story talks of pigs rushing into the sea, but is located in an area miles from the sea. The location of the story clearly wasn't important.

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When I think about it, I think, first, there appear to have been expectations in certain quarters that when the messiah came, it would herald the end of the world, or something on a par. Second, for early Christians, including the earliest on record, including Paul, the end of the world was about as nigh as it could be, if it hadn't already started. There is surely a connection between these two things which stories about a messiah from 'any old time sometime long ago' would not account for?
I think your concern here is in particular about the death which was, of course, central to Paul's theology. Now naturally if the stories aren't historical, there was no death for them to tell us about. -At least no singular death. The stories may be somewhat inspired by executions in general of members of the Jewish community. Or possibly even of the deaths during the fall of the Temple...- If there was no historical death, then those being told the story who took it as historical may be under the impression that it happened recently and they were not aware of it when it happened. I see no reason why everyone would know every single person who had been executed.

Just to clear up a point here, the gospels place most of the events in Jesus' life in remote locations like villages and the like. There are plenty of cases where it is said that there were very few people there or that no one listened to Jesus. This may well be the gospel writers' way of explaining why Jesus was not better known prior to his death.

Earlier I suggested that the central story of Jesus' death might orginate after the fall of the Temple. I say this because it would seem to be the perfect inspiration for the story. The execution of one man by the Romans somehow representing the plight of the people as a whole. His death acting as the atoning sacrifice which could no longer be done in the Temple. A story to change the sense of extreme loss into the possibility of new hope. - But as you say, it would seem all too recent to many who took it as historical fact, so no wonder that the gospel writers move it rather earlier.
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Old 11-15-2011, 04:18 PM   #119
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An example of another "prophet from around that time would be the one josephus called "the egyptian".
According to one account in Josephus he got 30,000 men together.
Well the very quotation you provided about this figure makes him a poor analogy with the example of Jesus. You quoted from a contemporary historian who was not a follower of the Egyptian who critiques the actions of the Egyptian himself rather than a movement he founded and their beliefs.

In spite of Jesus' supposed popularity, we have no such evidence for a historical Jesus.
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Old 11-15-2011, 06:29 PM   #120
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..Just to clear up a point here, the gospels place most of the events in Jesus' life in remote locations like villages and the like. There are plenty of cases where it is said that there were very few people there or that no one listened to Jesus. This may well be the gospel writers' way of explaining why Jesus was not better known prior to his death...
You are in error here. In the Gospels Jesus was WELL-KNOWN throughout Judea.

In gMark, in the very first chapter Jesus is claimed to be well-known.

Mark 1:28 -
Quote:
And immediately his fame spread abroad throughout all the region round about Galilee.
It is CRITICAL that you understand the written statements about Jesus.

1. Jesus was WELL-KNOWN as a miracle worker NOT as a Messiah of the Jews.

2. In the Gospels, It was ANOTHER person, NOT JESUS who was KNOWN as the Messiah when Jesus BARRED his disciples from telling any one he was Christ.

3. The OTHER Messiah, NOT JESUS was ALSO performing Miracles in the Gospels.

We have a MESSIANIC MONKEY-WRENCH in the Gospels. There was A KNOWN MESSIAH, NOT JESUS, who was ALSO performing Miracles when Jesus was NOT known as the Messiah.

Mark 9:38 -
Quote:
And John answered him, saying, Master, we saw one casting out devils in thy name, and he followeth not us: and we forbad him, because he followeth not us.

Luke 9:49 -
Quote:
And John answered and said, Master, we saw one casting out devils in thy name; and we forbad him, because he followeth not with us.
Based on the gMark and gLuke, any mention of Christ by non-apologetic sources cannot be assumed to refer to Jesus.
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