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Old 02-11-2009, 03:10 PM   #201
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No. My argument with Doherty is that no-one ever seems to have believed that their gods acted in a "fleshly sublunar realm". (That's not just my argument. Many others have made the same point.)
Not wanting to derail this conversation into a discussion of The Jesus Puzzle, but my question is how, in your view, did those cultures believe their gods acted out? Did they believe they really lived on Earth? Or did they acknowledge the gods were all spiritual or totally mythological?

Did those other cultures have manuscripts of stories where their gods ascended through layers of what they'd consider heaven? I think Earl points to works such as the Ascension of Isaiah to develop the mindset of the era. Though I could be off on that.
I'd recommend reading through these threads, where Doherty, me and others thrash out the issues. I'm happy to go over points raised, though probably better to do so in a fresh thread.
Plutarch, Doherty, Carrier and the world of myth
Reply to 3 of Carrier's claims against Muller regarding Doherty's thesis

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True enough. How is it even possible to know his works reached us as he intended when he sat to write? At the end of the day, what is it that he actually said?
IMO we may never know.

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The issue here is that Paul gives every indication that he believed that Jesus was a man on earth: "born of a woman, born under the law", "seed of Abraham", "come from the fathers [Israelites] according to the flesh". How do you reconcile these passages with a non-earthly Jesus? (I'll agree that they don't prove that Jesus was historical, merely that they seem to suggest that Paul thought that Jesus was on earth at some point).
If that is what Paul actually wrote. It would be helpful if he had taken his description of Jesus further.
True. But I don't think it is possible to reconcile those statements with a "non-earthly" Jesus. That doesn't make him historical, but it does knock out some versions of mythicism, including Doherty's.
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Old 02-11-2009, 08:37 PM   #202
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I suppose it is possible. It would be interesting to build a picture of Jesus based on how Paul describes him in his letters. What would such a Jesus look like? Born of a woman, as a Jew, sometime after Moses, in a lowly manner like a servant, then crucified by the rulers of that time and died sometime in Paul's past. On the night before he was given up, he shared a last meal, presumably with followers.
Why do you ignore the other descriptions of Jesus by the writer called Paul if you want to know how Jesus would have looked ?

Never forget that the writer wrote that he, Jesus, rose on the third day. The resurrection is the most important and critical factor of the description of Jesus if you really want to know what Jesus was like.

To understand the Jesus of the writer called Paul, everything that was said about the character must be taken into account.

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And that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day according to the scriptures:
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Old 02-11-2009, 11:57 PM   #203
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The fact that the Eucharist in the Didache is distinctively Christian and the fact that it lacks connection with the Last Supper account which can be found in the Gospels and in 1 Corinthians is actually an argument for the later invention of the Last Supper account.
There may be two issues here
1/ Is Paul's account of the Eucharist a later development ?
2/ Did the original version regard the Eucharist as instituted by Jesus ?
Even if 1/ is true 2/ could also be true.
It may be relevant that the Western text of Luke 21:17-20 presents an Eucharist instituted by Jesus but lacking many of the distinctively Pauline features and with some resemblances to the Didache version.

Andrew Criddle
But, the evidence from the Didache is in favor of 1/ to be true and 2/ to be false. The version in the Didache is certainly more primitive than the accounts from Luke and Paul.
The Didache characterizes the prayers over the eucharistic elements as part of the ritual of thanksgiving and to the original Jewish prayer introduces Jesus as servant of Father. The Didache is not unique in that innovation, because similar connection with the Jewish Messiah exists also in the Dead Sea Scrolls found at Qumrân. In The Messianic Rule exists the following text :
"And when they shall gather for the common table, to eat and to drink new wine, when the common table shall be set for eating and new wine poured for drinking, let no man extend his hand over the first-fruits of bread and wine before the Priest ; for it is he who shall bless the first-fruits of bread and wine, and shall be the first to extend his hand over the bread. Thereafter, the Messiah of Israel shall extend his hand over the bread, and all the congregation of the Community shall utter a blessing, each man in the order of his dignity."
So, if that connection existed long before supposed birth of Jesus, then it is a strong indication of fabrication.
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Old 02-12-2009, 06:58 AM   #204
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Not wanting to derail this conversation into a discussion of The Jesus Puzzle, but my question is how, in your view, did those cultures believe their gods acted out? Did they believe they really lived on Earth? Or did they acknowledge the gods were all spiritual or totally mythological?

Did those other cultures have manuscripts of stories where their gods ascended through layers of what they'd consider heaven? I think Earl points to works such as the Ascension of Isaiah to develop the mindset of the era. Though I could be off on that.
I'd recommend reading through these threads, where Doherty, me and others thrash out the issues. I'm happy to go over points raised, though probably better to do so in a fresh thread.
Plutarch, Doherty, Carrier and the world of myth
Reply to 3 of Carrier's claims against Muller regarding Doherty's thesis
Thanks, I'll read through them.


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IMO we may never know.
What a find it would be if someone were to discover manuscripts from the second century that mention Paul and others who purposely altered his texts for theological reasons. Some suspect Marcione may have altered Paul but if there was proof it would be remarkable.

As a side note, incidentally, this is one of the reasons I don't believe Satan or the devil exists. Surely he would be smart enough to plant such evidence that would lead to more controversy. I often thought, if he existed and was as cunning as portrayed, he would plant original manuscripts of Josephus that do not mention the TF at all. And other some such bits of evidence throughout the centuries.

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True. But I don't think it is possible to reconcile those statements with a "non-earthly" Jesus. That doesn't make him historical, but it does knock out some versions of mythicism, including Doherty's.
I don't know. I haven't really looked at them long enough to try and come up with a reconciliation. Keep in mind, though, how easy it is for apologists to reconcile the gospels (in their minds). Anything is possible.

I'm not sure if it completely knocks out Doherty's hypothesis. He makes a compelling argument, IMO.
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