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12-29-2009, 04:24 PM | #111 | ||
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We should not forget that the existence of Nazareth was doubted long before relatively recent archaeological works and quite independently of archaeology. There is this reference in Drews from 1910:
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12-29-2009, 04:53 PM | #112 | |||
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12-29-2009, 05:08 PM | #113 | |
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I would encourage you to look at the evidence in some of the literature. If you start with Salm's book, you can easily check it up in the literature, as I have done in quite a number of cases. It is not valid to dismiss Salm without even being aware of his critique of the evidence, let alone how academic specialists have responded to his specific discussions of the evidence. Having read Salm's book, and many other articles and exchanges among scholars on Nazareth, I did feel a little qualified to write a lay review of a "scholarly" (in that it was written by a scholar) review of Salm's book. You can read it here. It is you who I would advise to go to the primary evidence. At least I have read some of the scholarly discussions about it in the literature, and I have read the author whom you dismiss without bothering to read. |
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12-29-2009, 05:17 PM | #114 | ||
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12-29-2009, 05:20 PM | #115 | |
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(I'm assuming you have more good grace than a certain JG on this forum who denies ever arguing one way or the other but merely "asks innocent questions".) |
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12-29-2009, 05:24 PM | #116 | ||
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12-29-2009, 05:33 PM | #117 | ||
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12-29-2009, 05:36 PM | #118 | ||
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But arguing from the evidence of the gospels does not cut it. It is the gospel evidence that we are questioning -- as has been done quite independently of archaeology. |
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12-29-2009, 06:07 PM | #119 | ||
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12-29-2009, 08:46 PM | #120 | |
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It is not a fact that the gospel authors did not want Nazareth to be the birthplace of Jesus. That is mere opinion, or fanciful or wishful guesswork. We have as much evidence that these authors wanted a Nazareth or Nazara or whatever to be a hometown of Jesus in order to explain and dismiss a cult term for early Christians or a branch of them. The whole argument about the authors being compelled to fit Nazareth into the narrative because they could not avoid doing so is just another case of applying the shonky "criterion of embarrassment". This is a bizarre "criterion" that can be used to establish almost anything you want as a "fact". (I have discussed this more fully here.) The fact that Nazareth is nowhere mentioned in any other literature of the period (see post #111) , and the fact that we read Nazareth in the gospel as a place that was required in order to fulfil a prophecy - these twin facts give us permission to at least seriously raise the question of the historicity of Nazareth. To doubt the historicity of Nazareth is not a loony thing. It is a perfectly reasonable exercise given these two facts. |
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