Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
02-27-2010, 10:47 AM | #121 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Mondcivitan Republic
Posts: 2,550
|
Correction
Loomis,
Oops! Too early and too little coffee. I said Quote:
I was thrown off by the form "Iesoun" you keep posting. IHSOUN is the accusative form of the word, used when the name is the object of a sentence. It is the custom among one and all to refer to Greek nouns in the nominitave case, in this case IHSOUS (Iesous), unless you are quoting something in the original Greek. DCH |
|
02-27-2010, 01:14 PM | #122 | |||||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Mondcivitan Republic
Posts: 2,550
|
Loomis,
You say Quote:
Quote:
I can direct you to a really good example of this kind of Christian "adoption and adaptation" of Jewish works. In books 7 & 8 of the Apostolic Constitutions (ca. 150-300 CE) are sixteen prayers that appear to have been remnants of Jewish synagogal prayers, very similar to prayers in the present day Jewish Prayer Book, and may derive from the Jewish liturgy as practiced in Alexandria. These prayers are full of interpolations that introduce Christian catch-phrases and passages of Christ doctrine. See the translation and commentary by D R Darnell in J H Charlesworth's Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, volume 2, pages 671-697. Quote:
I might have overstated things when I said he is a kind of Joshua redivivus. The author of S.O. V.256-259 may have simply borrowed the imagery to emphasize that the coming messiah would be a conqueror like Joshua was believed to have been. It seems to be a Christian who thought it should refer to Jesus Christ, which Christian see as a different kind of messiah. DCH |
|||||
02-27-2010, 09:53 PM | #123 | ||
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 11,525
|
Quote:
We can't simply pretend that what we have are unmolested copies of the originals. Quote:
|
||
02-27-2010, 10:33 PM | #124 | |
Contributor
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 18,988
|
Quote:
The PAULINE writings must be proven to be from the 1st century before this character whose conversion found in Acts is fictitious can be used as some sort of contemporary. It is very critical that PAUL'S history be confirmed or that an historical source external of the Church be located to date Paul. What PAUL thought or wrote about Jesus may be of no historical significance if he was nowhere in the 1st century. Why did the Church canonise Acts of the Apostles with a most fictitious conversion of Saul/Paul? People who knew the Pauline writer and were his converts would have known that his conversion was fiction as found in Acts, not once but three times. Why did the author of Acts refuse to write about the death of Paul once he was martyred? Why was Acts of the Apostles written in a manner so that it would appear that it was written before the death of Paul? Paul is a most questionable character. I refuse to accept Paul as a contemporary of Jesus until some one can show he did exist in the 1st century using credible external non-apologetic sources. How did PAUL manage to meet people who are most likely to have been fictitious characters How did the Church not know that more than one person was using the name Paul to write Epistles? Jesus cannot be historicised by fictitious characters. It must be demanded that Paul's history be ascertained before he can be used as a contemporary. |
|
02-28-2010, 12:36 AM | #125 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 5,706
|
Quote:
|
|
02-28-2010, 12:38 AM | #126 | ||||
Contributor
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: MT
Posts: 10,656
|
Quote:
And, the human nature of Jesus is not something obscure in the writings of Paul, not if you take what seems to me the most plausible interpretations. Paul repeatedly makes a point about the crucifixion of Jesus, as well as the cross of Jesus. That was a well-known method of Roman execution at the time, and it was earthly, physical and human. There is no evidence to suggest that it was spiritual, as mythicists otherwise may claim. They don't seem to claim that they are mere interpolations, as they would for the even more direct statements of Paul, but, if you combine the unlikely interpolations with the unlikely interpretation of a "crucifixion," then you only compound the relative implausibility of the entire theory. You "solve" the problem in only the most trivial amateurish sense. You can make any theory consistent like that. Quote:
|
||||
02-28-2010, 12:53 AM | #127 | |
Contributor
Join Date: Sep 2002
Location: MT
Posts: 10,656
|
Quote:
|
|
03-01-2010, 06:33 PM | #128 | ||
Contributor
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 18,988
|
Quote:
In the Pauline writings it can be found where the writer claimed he was not the Apostle of a man but of Jesus Christ who was raised from the dead. There is further evidence where it can be found where the writer claimed he was not taught by man but by the revelation from Jesus Christ, the same who was raised from the dead. In Colossians, a Pauline writer described Jesus as the Creator of heaven and earth. Colossians 1.12-16 Quote:
|
||
03-01-2010, 11:59 PM | #129 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jun 2007
Location: Australia
Posts: 5,706
|
Not forgetting of course the brain explosion he experienced on the road to Damascus.
|
03-02-2010, 05:01 AM | #130 | |
Regular Member
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Houston, Texas
Posts: 246
|
Quote:
I hear this sort of thing all the time, especially in this forum, and I must confess that I don't quite understand the reasoning. I realize I'm a bit late to this dance, and worse yet, I am a fundamentalist without an advanced degree in Biblical Studies, Historiography, or Ancient Languages. So I decided to review Paul's letters, starting with Romans (generally accepted as authentic), his first in the canon, and got no further than this: "Paul, a bondservant of Jesus Christ, called to be an apostle, separated to the gospel of God which He promised before through His prophets in the Holy Scriptures, concerning His Son, Jesus Christ, our Lord, who was born of the seed of David according to the flesh, and declared to be the Son of God with power according to the Spirit of holiness, by the resurrection from the dead" (Rom. 1:1-4). Evidently the emphasized portion has been described as cryptic, or perhaps ambiguous, by some, but it is commonly used by Paul in reference to physical realities (except when speaking of the flesh as the "sinful nature," which clearly Paul would not say of Christ, let alone in the context of his birth and resurrection by the "Spirit of holiness"). It seems to me, then, to indicate a theological point on the part of Paul, that Jesus, though Lord and Messiah, was born into the world as a flesh-and-blood man. That is, he was both Son of David and Son of God. Paul was the apostle to the Gentiles (Greeks), and his decidedly theological message centered on Jesus' fundamental identity, so he had little need to rehash the various historical circumstances of the life of Jesus (other than his becoming a man for the purpose of salvation). Besides, it may well be that his audience was already immersed in the writings and oral traditions that made up the Gospels. At the same time, Paul was keenly aware of proto-Gnostic movements afoot at the time, as his apologetic addresses to the Corinthians and Colossians indicate. As direct witness to the overwhelming power of Christ he was nonetheless reminding the Romans of Jesus' genuine humanity (historicity) in the introduction to his theological magnum opus. For this reason and others, I don't buy Bultmann's miracle = myth assumption, which leads to the history-or-myth dichotomy that dominates discussions of Jesus like this one. To me it makes more sense to say that an ongoing, seemingly unresolvable disupute over Historical Jesus vs. Mythical Jesus offers indirect evidence of an original, Traditional Jesus. In other words: The church councils were right all along. The apostolic writers as a group (and especially John), along with the early church fathers, took great exception to docetism, which could be roughly defined as the belief that the physical-historical element of the Incarnation story was a myth, or at least illusory. So… why would anyone think that strident anti-mythicists were really mythicists at some deeper level? If they were not mythicists, is it reasonable to suggest that they should have gone out of their way to anticipate 21st century historical criticism and formulate a preemptive "response"? To me, trying to demonstrate that Jesus wasn't a myth is like trying to prove that we aren't all currently living in The Matrix: http://www.simulation-argument.com/matrix2.html |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|