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Old 12-08-2009, 09:30 AM   #101
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...From my perspective, where the gospels are *not* intended to be historical in any sense, but are instead allegorical origins stories constructed from the Jewish scriptures, mystical Christ concepts, Josephus, and other contemporary 'pagan' ideas, the change from Mark to Matthew reflects a different theological perspective.

Mark reflects the Pauline concept where creation was made through Christ (Christ is "the artisan"). Matthew is later and reflects the trend toward historicizing Jesus, so Jesus now becomes the son of the creator with.
The biography of Jesus in gMark is NOT at all from the Pauline writings. It would appear the author of gMark used Hebrew scripture, The Septuagint or some similar source to invent his Jesus.

There is no information whatsoever in the Pauline writings that Jesus was a carpenter or a carpenter's son.
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Old 12-08-2009, 12:37 PM   #102
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Please name the far and wide myths about George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and Davey Crockett, so that we can compare them with the non-historical accounts of Jesus.
Walking ten miles to return a penny
chopping down a cheery tree
throwing a dollar across the Delaware River
wrestling a bear
standing alone against the Mexican Army
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How was George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and Davey Crockett conceived?
The same way Jesus was.

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Was not Jesus conceived through the Holy Ghost of God?
Duh. No. Spirits don't impregnate women.

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Did George Washington, Abraham Lincoln or Davey Crockett destroy a tree by simply talking to the tree?
Neither did Jesus... unless you believe everything you read...

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Did not Jesus destroy a tree by simple talking to it?
Of course, not.
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By what means did Washington, Crockett and Lincoln travel on the sea?
I don't know that they ever did.

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Did not Jesus walk on water during a storm at sea?
Of course not.
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Were Washington, Crockett and Lincoln ever seen talking with men dead hundreds of years earlier?
Certainly

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Was not Jesus seen with the resurrected Moses and Elijah when he transfigured?
No, of course not. No one claims that Moses and Elijah were resurrected.

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Did Washington, Crockett and Lincoln resurrect and seen by their close associates.
Not so much Crockett, but yes, they are regularly resurrected.

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Did not the close associates of Jesus see him in a resurrected state?
Awkward question... you apparently don't understand resurrection.
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Did Washington, Crockett and Lincoln ascend though clouds and witnessed by people who knew them.
I've seen pictures of just that, but no they did not.
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Was not the disciples present when Jesus went through the clouds?
Of course, not. Physical bodies do not rise into the air.

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You mean that Peter, the 1st bishop of Rome, did really attempt to walk to Jesus the water-walker?
metaphorically speaking... absolutely.

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You seem to be implying that there is very little truth to the Jesus stories. What are your corroborative sources of antiquity for the truth about Jesus?
There is loads and loads of truth... there just is a lot of exaggeration, metaphor and mythologizing.
Things don't have to be factual to be true... ever read a Rudyard Kipling "Just So" story or Aesop's Fables, or any other morality stories... Moses didn't talk to God face to face in front of a burning bush either.
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Old 12-08-2009, 12:41 PM   #103
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How does it matter? I am the son of my father... he was the son of his father... my great grandfather was a cabinetmaker... my grandfather was a teacher (who was also a carpenter), my father is an engineer (who is also a carpenter) and I am a teacher (who is also a rather less talented and skilled carpenter)... If someone wants to call me the son of a carpenter or a carpenter doesn't matter to me one lick.
It matters because the author of Matthew has altered the quote, and since the author of Matthew uses a written Mark (or a common written source), and since it is not a simple grammatical/copyist error, the author of Matthew did it with intent. Why?

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Are you trying to imply that "artisan" is a reference to God the creator?
From my perspective, where the gospels are *not* intended to be historical in any sense, but are instead allegorical origins stories constructed from the Jewish scriptures, mystical Christ concepts, Josephus, and other contemporary 'pagan' ideas, the change from Mark to Matthew reflects a different theological perspective.

Mark reflects the Pauline concept where creation was made through Christ (Christ is "the artisan"). Matthew is later and reflects the trend toward historicizing Jesus, so Jesus now becomes the son of the creator with.

So my position holds consistency even with details that are otherwise difficult to explain.

Your position requires handwaving these types of details away, and is thus more complex rather than simpler.
I have no problem with your interpretation at all. I understand that Mark, Matthew, Luke and John all had political motives to the way they wrote their "gospels".

There is little advantage to demanding that changes between the gospels to be intentional misrepresentations, they could be different perspectives, copy errors, mistranslations and / or intentional apologetics.
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Old 12-08-2009, 12:43 PM   #104
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Quote:
Originally Posted by spamandham View Post
...From my perspective, where the gospels are *not* intended to be historical in any sense, but are instead allegorical origins stories constructed from the Jewish scriptures, mystical Christ concepts, Josephus, and other contemporary 'pagan' ideas, the change from Mark to Matthew reflects a different theological perspective.

Mark reflects the Pauline concept where creation was made through Christ (Christ is "the artisan"). Matthew is later and reflects the trend toward historicizing Jesus, so Jesus now becomes the son of the creator with.
The biography of Jesus in gMark is NOT at all from the Pauline writings. It would appear the author of gMark used Hebrew scripture, The Septuagint or some similar source to invent his Jesus.

There is no information whatsoever in the Pauline writings that Jesus was a carpenter or a carpenter's son.
Which of course leaves you with the conclusion it was "invented".... how does that happen again?

and WHY? Why invent Jesus out of thin air? Do you have any other examples of this throughout history?
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Old 12-08-2009, 12:52 PM   #105
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There is little advantage to demanding that changes between the gospels to be intentional misrepresentations, they could be different perspectives, copy errors, mistranslations and / or intentional apologetics.
They are not misrepresentations, they are intentional reimplementations due to different theologies. That's *why* the gospels were rewritten. In this particular case, a copy error or mistranslation is really not possible, since both were originally penned in Greek, and we are talking about a wholesale rewrite of the quote and not just a simple error.

So we are stuick with trying to explain why the two authors disagreed. If Jesus was historical and 'the artisan' refers to an ordinary trade, then there is no theological overtone to Jesus vs. his father being the carpenter/mason/whatever. The HJ+fluff perspective requires just shrugging the shoulders.

The change only makes sense if there is a theological overtone to 'the artisan'. This is just one of many cases where there is the same problem...nuanced changes between the gospels that are too complex to be accidental, perplexing from the perspective of "the gospels are history + magic fluff", but which make perfect sense when they are understood to be fundamentally theological origins stories akin to the Pentateuch.
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Old 12-08-2009, 01:19 PM   #106
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Gday,

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and WHY? Why invent Jesus out of thin air? Do you have any other examples of this throughout history?
Are you fucking kidding?

You really, truly believe that there are NO examples in history of personages being invented?

Wow.


K.
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Old 12-08-2009, 08:21 PM   #107
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Gday,

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and WHY? Why invent Jesus out of thin air? Do you have any other examples of this throughout history?
Are you fucking kidding?

You really, truly believe that there are NO examples in history of personages being invented?

Wow.


K.
and yet... no examples?

Give me a list of let's say... one per century of written history... nah... one per millennium. So 4 or 5 such inventions of persons in history.
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Old 12-08-2009, 08:41 PM   #108
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aa5874;
Please name the far and wide myths about George Washington, Abraham Lincoln and Davey Crockett, so that we can compare them with the non-historical accounts of Jesus.
Walking ten miles to return a penny
chopping down a cheery tree
throwing a dollar across the Delaware River
wrestling a bear
standing alone against the Mexican Army
Now, these are the far and wide myths of George Washington, Abraham Licoln and Davey Crockett combined?

How does a story that a man cut down a cherry-tree makes him mythical when there is a birth and death certificate for the man?

You put forward a most absurd notion that historical and physical evidence are useless to determine the historicity of a character.


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You seem to be implying that there is very little truth to the Jesus stories. What are your corroborative sources of antiquity for the truth about Jesus?
Quote:
Originally Posted by kcdad
There is loads and loads of truth... there just is a lot of exaggeration, metaphor and mythologizing.
Things don't have to be factual to be true... ever read a Rudyard Kipling "Just So" story or Aesop's Fables, or any other morality stories... Moses didn't talk to God face to face in front of a burning bush either.
Your reponse is self-contradictory. You still imply there is little truth to the Jesus stories and you have not even named a single corroborative source for your Jesus.

Now how why do you think Moses could NOT talk to God face to face in a mythical fable?

IN mythical fables anything can happen.

In the mythical fables called the Gospels, Jesus can be the offspring of the Holy Ghost, be tempted by the Devil on the pinnacle of the Temple, bring dead people back to life, walk on water, transfigure with the once dead Moses and Elijah, resurrect and ascend to heaven and still come back to earth a second time for dead believers first.

Please tell me the loads of truth about Jesus?
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Old 12-09-2009, 07:16 AM   #109
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Give me a list of let's say... one per century of written history... nah... one per millennium. So 4 or 5 such inventions of persons in history.
Adam, Eve, Cain and his family, Abel, Noah and his family, Abraham and his family, Moses...

It's exceedingly unlikely that there is any historicity to any of these people whatsoever, even though they are described as existing in real places (excluding Eden), and the stories involve other real historical figures. They are characters playing theological roles in the Jewish foundational stories.
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Old 12-09-2009, 12:47 PM   #110
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Give me a list of let's say... one per century of written history... nah... one per millennium. So 4 or 5 such inventions of persons in history.
Adam, Eve, Cain and his family, Abel, Noah and his family, Abraham and his family, Moses...

It's exceedingly unlikely that there is any historicity to any of these people whatsoever, even though they are described as existing in real places (excluding Eden), and the stories involve other real historical figures. They are characters playing theological roles in the Jewish foundational stories.
Wow... couldn't get out of Genesis... well that was too easy. I dare you to find any serious scholar who thinks that the stories of Adam and Eve, Cain and Abel (which is part of the same story), or Noah are meant to be factual, historical and about real, living, specific, human beings... I don't know what your problem with Abram and Moses is...

Adam and Eve are symbolic representations of the the human race... the Hebrew word Adam means Mankind. It is an allegory, a parable. There was no such person Adam or Eve. Not even the most serious Jews think they were real people. It is an invention of the ignorant pagan Romans who took over the leadership of the Roman Church. (Cain and Abel are part of the Adam and Eve story representing the transition from a horticultural pastoral society to an agrarian one.) Noah, a Jewish interpretation of old Babylonian stories about creation, in the same way Job is such a Jewish adaptation of Mesopotamian folklore. Moses literally one who draws out" is possibly Amenmesse, as described here:
http://www.aldokkan.com/egypt/amenmesse.htm
You have to realize at the time there was no nation of Israel, no kingdom, no Hebrews no Jews... this is history retold many centuries later from a specific Judean perspective.

The challenge is to find examples of these fictional people in other sources... did any other culture ever do this?
Was Siddhartha a real person?
Krishna?
Mohammad?
Joseph Smith Jr.?
L. Ron Hubbard?

Do I really need to go through The Bible, allegory by parable, and explain it all to you?

Do I really need to go through The Bible and point out all of the historical figures in it such as Cyrus, Solomon, Herod, Paul, etc????
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