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07-20-2010, 01:15 PM | #61 | |||
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The Pauline corpus and other first-century Christian writings, taken in their entirety, are evidence against a historical Jesus. That is not going to change, even if irrefutable conclusive proof of his historicity were to be discovered tomorrow. Quote:
It seems to me you're conflating how many Jesuses there could have been with whether early Christians at different times and places could talking about different Jesuses. You're assuming that they must have all been talking about the same Jesus. I'm not making that assumption. It is a fact that, ever since the Council of Nicea (or sometime not long before), Christians have insisted that all their canonical writings have always referred to the same Jesus. That is because, for that same period of time, Christians have assumed certain things, based on a particular interpretation of those writings, about how their religion got started. Among the things they have assumed is that Paul and the gospel authors (a) were talking about the same Jesus and (b) believed the same things about that Jesus because (c) they got their information about Jesus ultimately from the same sources, i.e. Jesus' disciples and others who had known the man during his earthly sojourn. It does not follow that Christianity actually originated that way. Parsimony in no way forces the assumption that Christians could not have been mistaken, for all these centuries, about how their religion got started. The question of whether Christians have been correct in what they have believed about their origins ever since the Council of Nicea. If Paul's writings were the only evidence pertaining to early Christianity that had survived into modern times (no gospels, no Josephus, no Tacitus, etc.), we would not be discussing JtB because nobody nowadays would ever have heard of him. What Christians would be claiming about Jesus is anybody's guess, but no responsible scholar would claim to have any definite notion of when or where he lived, what his teachings were, who crucified him, or why they did it. |
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07-20-2010, 06:24 PM | #62 | ||||
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And that is precisely what the Pauline writings are about. Not, John the Baptist, not Jesus on earth but the resurrected Messiah who was given a name above every other name, the Creator of heaven and earth, equal to God, whose resurrection was for the REMISSION of the sins of ALL mankind. The Pauline writers made John's baptism obsolete. In the Synoptics, John preached this. Mr 1:4 - Quote:
1Co 15:17 - Quote:
The Synoptic Jesus did not even teach his disciples that without the resurrection they would have no remission of sins. And these are some of the last words of Jesus in gMatthew. Matthew 28.19 Quote:
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07-21-2010, 07:41 AM | #63 |
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07-21-2010, 09:04 AM | #64 | |||
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But, you MUST care and you do care about the Synoptics and what is written in them.. That is precisely why you have read them and tried to analyze or understand them. Please don't try and give the impression that you "don't care what the synoptics say." Who are you trying to fool? It MUST be that the Synoptics are EXTREMELY significant and it can be seen that they show almost ZERO influence of the Pauline writings. The name John the Baptist cannot at all be found in the Pauline writings and a Pauline writer claimed he was NOT sent to baptize yet Jesus in the Synoptics claimed his disciples were SENT to BAPTIZE in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost. 1Co 1:17 - Quote:
Mt 28:19 - Quote:
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07-21-2010, 11:48 AM | #65 | ||||||
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I know I keep on saying this, but we should be thinking about probability, not possibility. The evidence is a subjective medium, and absolutely anything can have any interpretation that you prefer. Any interpretation is possible. The relevant question is not how you expressed it. The relevant question is which general explanation fits best. Quote:
Abe’s Summary of the Slam-Dunk Evidence for the Historical Jesus Quote:
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Since I have thought about the problem more, I think an analogy may be best. In paleontology, there are two camps that differ about the ancestors of birds. One camp, the majority camp, believe that birds descended from theropod dinosaurs. Another camp (the slim minority) believe that birds descended from the clade Avicephala, which have bird-like heads. The debate rests largely on the decision of which ancestral clade has the closest similarities to early birds. If it is an evolutionary thing, then we much more expect the changes to be small, not large. Hell, even if the changes can be sudden and large, as in the evolutionary steps of religions can be, we still expect small changes much more than large changes, because that has been the most common pattern of history. If we have seeming evidence on top of that, that the difference in the two Jesuses were small and not large (see the link at the top of this post), doesn't that make the explanation even more parsimonious? Quote:
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07-21-2010, 10:20 PM | #66 |
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07-21-2010, 10:29 PM | #67 | ||
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Who are trying to fool? Quote:
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