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Old 06-10-2013, 09:09 AM   #31
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Thanks, that helps. I suppose there is an ancient Grecco-Roman work of fiction that would be closely analogous to the first gospels? Like the Odyssey maybe?
There is actually a body of literary criticism comparing elements from the gospels to the novels of the time, in particular the story of Chaereas and Callirhoe. These novels have elements like crucifixions of innocent people, empty tombs, etc. But no one claims that the gospels are exactly like those novels.

Dennis McDonald has pointed out the many parallels between Homer and Mark.
Cool. If you were to pick a single ancient story that is most analogous to the first gospel, what would it be? Would it be Callirhoe?
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Old 06-10-2013, 09:22 AM   #32
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I take it by "fiction" you mean purely for the purpose of entertainment? Like, they drank and caroused with some lively gospel reading or something?
JW:
Fiction = not historical


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Old 06-10-2013, 09:24 AM   #33
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I take it by "fiction" you mean purely for the purpose of entertainment? Like, they drank and caroused with some lively gospel reading or something?
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Fiction = not historical


Joseph
OK, thanks for clearing that up. That is the definition accepted commonly among mythicists. I got the wrong idea since you brought up the field of Literary Criticism.
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Old 06-10-2013, 09:26 AM   #34
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No that would not be my definition.

Fiction, or storytelling, is an important social activity. It is used to provide moral instruction and vital cultural information.
Thanks, that helps. I suppose there is an ancient Grecco-Roman work of fiction that would be closely analogous to the first gospels? Like the Odyssey maybe?
There is actually a body of literary criticism comparing elements from the gospels to the novels of the time, in particular the story of Chaereas and Callirhoe. These novels have elements like crucifixions of innocent people, empty tombs, etc. But no one claims that the gospels are exactly like those novels.

Dennis McDonald has pointed out the many parallels between Homer and Mark.
We already know that the Jesus cult of antiquity argued that the Father of Jesus was a Ghost so it just a waste of time for ApostateAbe to claim Jesus was just a man.

We have "Tertullian's "On the Flesh of Christ".

On the Flesh of Christ
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As, then, before His birth of the virgin, He was able to have God for His Father without a human mother, so likewise, after He was born of the virgin, He was able to have a woman for His mother without a human father.
We cannot continue to entertain known debunked claims by ApostateAbe.

Over 1600 years ago Christian themselves publicly declared Jesus had NO human father.

We already know that Jesus was a product of Mythology.
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Old 06-10-2013, 09:27 AM   #35
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So, JoeWallack, what style of literature do you take the gospels to be? I think we may have discussed this before. An epic? What work of fiction do you take to be most analogous to the first gospel?
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Old 06-10-2013, 09:47 AM   #36
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So how do we explain these things? For almost all scholars, the best explanation is plain: Jesus was a follower of JtB. The cult of JtB is actually attested by Josephus (Jewish Antiqities 18.5.2), having a doctrine of baptism at odds with Christianity ("...not in order to the putting away of some sins, but for the purification of the body..."). The full explanation is that Jesus really was baptized by JtB, it was a well-known fact that Christians found embarrassing because they competed with the cult of JtB, so each gospel spun it in their own favor, each in their own unique way, always making sure that JtB was a great but secondary figure. This hypothesis is reinforced by a quote of Jesus in Matthew, saying, "...among those born of women no one has arisen greater than John the Baptist...", something a cult follower would say of the cult leader.

How do mythicists explain this? The spin and embarrassment of the gospels (especially the later gospels) is much too plain to ignore, so they may grant at least the point that Christians were embarrassed by the belief in the baptism. It is still possible that it is a mere myth that somehow came about and it became embarrassing only later. It is not so often that mere myths become embarrassing to the cult, however. Rather, it is the rule for historical realities. No matter. Robert Price floats the idea that the character of JtB could have been inspired by the Semitic fish god Dagon (as does Arthur Drews), and possibly the baptism was inspired by Zoroaster immersing himself in water and being met by an archangel. The possibilities are endless, and Robert Price is indiscriminate with them.
Abe, this is a typical case of scholars (1) imputing to the text information it does not contain (2) and basing their analysis on the assumption of a Historical Kernel.

The usefulness of the Historical Kernel approach is twofold: first, it can never be refuted, because it is an axiom brought to the text rather than a conclusion from the text. It grows or shrinks based on our creativity with the "evidence" of the text. If we can demonstrate that a pericope is created out of the OT, well, perhaps we can say the saying goes back to Jesus. If we can show both saying and structure are derived, we can maintain, faithlike, that something happened. The way the Historical Kernel is used in NT research, 2000 years from now Historical Frodo researchers will use the idea that the Merry was called a Prince of the Halflings while in Minas Tirith to show that Merry was actually a human from a noble house.....

Which brings us to the second point: the Historical Kernel with its built-in assumption that Jesus was a real human person enables us to avoid demonstrating historicity on a pericope by pericope, event by event basis.

Abe's usage here is dead on. Abe, you need to show us that there is some historical basis to this passage, not assume it and then troll through the texts selectively for evidence.

In point of fact nowhere is it stated that Jesus was a disciple of JtB. Indeed, in GMark we have a nearly Dohertian silence, for JtB is mentioned several times, including in a long passage in Mk 6, but Jesus is never presented as having any relationship with him. JtB's disciples are mentioned in Mk 6, but Jesus is not classed with them. Again in Mk 6 the people say Jesus is JtB returned, but any connection between the two is not mentioned. The writer of Mark clearly reveres JtB and is not embarrassed by the Jesus-JtB connection, so there is no reason for him not to have mentioned that Jesus was JtB's follower....

The other reasons to think the Baptism passage contains no history are abundant. On its face it is insane (all the people of Judea and Jerusalem come out to be baptized??). JtB is presented as Elijah. Etc.

It could be that Jesus was JtB's disciple, but there is no evidence for it. It is more likely, as the NT affords evidence (acts 19, for example), that there were followers of JtB who were unaware of JC. It seems more likely that the passage is written to subordinate JtB (and his followers) to JC (and his followers). Especially since one of the oddities of Acts 19 is that it gives the impression that Paul thinks the followers of JtB were Xtians....

Vorkosigan
Vorkosigan, I think you can be a part of the conversation I am having with JoeWallack. It didn't cross my mind that there was such a plurality of opinion that the gospels are a fictional genre. I kinda took it for granted that most of us take the gospels as something intended to be believed. What work of literature do you take to be most analogous to the first gospel? The Odyssey? Callirhoe? The Hobbit?
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Old 06-10-2013, 10:06 AM   #37
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JW:Fiction = not historical

Joseph
OK, thanks for clearing that up. That is the definition accepted commonly among mythicists. I got the wrong idea since you brought up the field of Literary Criticism.
This thread has become a bit hard to follow, and some of Abe's posts do not seem to be serious (who has ever claimed that fiction is only for entertainment?)

Mythicists do not use a special definition of fiction. Fiction is commonly understood to be non factual. You may make other distinctions, but it's not clear why those would be an issue here.

JoeWallack accused Abe of engaging in what was essentially Literary Criticism, and pointed out that, by those criteria, the gospels look more like fictional works.
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Your Argument from Embarrassment is a Literary Criticism argument. If you are looking at Literary Criticism than you also have to look for evidence of fiction (which has been explained to you in detail many times here). The extent of the Impossible/Improbable specifically in the Baptism story and in "Mark" in general is exponentially better evidence for fiction than your Argument from Embarrassment. So only considering Literary Criticism, the better explanation is fiction. You need the supposed External evidence to try and help you here.
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Old 06-10-2013, 10:12 AM   #38
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I just re-read this, and realized it doesn't say they didn't know of Jesus at all. It says they didn't know of his Holy Spirit Baptism. I thought there was a passage in Acts that indicated that there were JTB followers who had never heard of Jesus, but I can't find it. Apollos, in the prior chapter, sounds similar to those mentioned in ch 19: Apollos, mentioned in the prior chapter as being 'aquainted only with the baptism of John' was preaching about 'things concerning Jesus'. He too may have been well aware of Jesus, but not fully understanding the idea of 'baptism of the Holy Spirit' through Jesus.
Actually, it does say that he didn't know Jesus at all before Priscilla and Aquila fixed him up. That is the whole point of the passage. Apollos seems to have known the prophecies and the teaching of John about the way of the lord (remember the citation of "prepare the way of the lord"?). So what he knew about the messiah was what John had taught. He didn't know about the christian messiah, Jesus. He knew nothing about Jesus's teaching of the baptism of the holy spirit, only about John's baptism. That is why Priscilla and Aquila had to take him aside, so that he could teach the way of the lord more accurately. Not just what John taught about the messiah, but about Jesus directly. This allowed him to show that Jesus was the messiah (18:28).

This passage shows the theological debt christianity owed to the spread of the Johannine religion after John's death and shows that there was an alternative messianism in circulation that taught about the coming messiah, that one had to prepare for. It would seem that Priscilla and Aquila took Apollos's preaching of the messiah to come as teaching about Jesus, which would suggest a partial absorption of the Johannine religion into early christianity.
There is a textual issue in Acts 18:25. The later manuscripts the TR the KJV etc read that Apollos spoke and taught accurately the things concerning the Lord. The earlier manuscripts NA etc read (probably correctly) that Apollos spoke and taught accurately the things concerning Jesus.

If Jesus is original here it does seem to indicate that Apollos knew somewhat about Jesus being the messiah.

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Old 06-10-2013, 10:21 AM   #39
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Toto, the issue I have is the seeming tendency to dismiss the early Christian writings as "fiction" without attempting to make any sense of them. The first problem is that even fictional works bear some relevance to history, often including historical people, places and events. The second problem is that it seems improbable on the face that the gospels are any sort of fictional genre. That is why I am asking what work of literature is most closely analogous to the gospels. Each genre has a certain set of patterns, and those patterns don't seem to apply to the gospels. There are no romantic entanglements. There are no heroic battles. But there is a lot of boring preaching and a series of miracle stories in no relevant order, all seemingly intended to persuade someone to join a cult. The first passage of the gospel of Luke is explicit in that intention. It seems a bizarre hypothesis, then, to claim that they are some sort of fictional genre. Maybe that is why the question remains unanswered: what work of literature is most analogous to the first gospel? I get the feeling that any answer would seem somewhat silly if it is not an ancient Grecco-Roman biography such as The Life of Apollonius of Tyana.
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Old 06-10-2013, 10:30 AM   #40
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We have gone through this many many times--Jesus was pure Myth.

The Jesus cult of antiquity argued that their Jesus was born of a Ghost so it makes no sense whatsoever to argue that Jesus was just a man because there was NEVER any evidence to contradict the Jesus cult writers in any century.

1. gMark--Jesus was the transfiguring sea water walking Son of a God

2. gMatthew--Jesus was born of a Ghost

3. gLuke--Jesus was the product of a Ghost

4. gJohn--Jesus was the Logos and God the Creator.

5. Acts--Jesus ascended in a cloud.

6. The Pauline Corpus--Jesus was the Son of God and made a quickening Spirit.

7. The Non-Pauline writings--Jesus was the Son of a God.

8. Ignatius--Jesus was a God born of a Ghost.

9. Aristides--Jesus was a God who lived in the daughter of man.

10. Justin Martyr--Jesus was the Son of a God born without sexual union.

11.Irenaeus--Jesus was the Son of a God born of a Ghost.

12. Tertullian--Jesus was the Son of a God and produced by a Ghost.

13. Origen--Jesus---It was born of a Ghost.

14. Eusebius--Jesus, God and the Holy Ghost are one and the same and was always God and always with God.

The 'history' of Jesus is a Ghost story of a Son of a God--pure pristine Mythology.
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