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02-05-2008, 12:26 PM | #21 | |
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02-05-2008, 01:12 PM | #22 | ||
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02-05-2008, 01:13 PM | #23 | ||
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02-05-2008, 01:15 PM | #24 | ||
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The extant non-apologetic historical sources cannot account for "Jesus Christians" in the first century. Jesus appears to have been fabricated in 2nd century and then deliberately mis-placed in the 1st. |
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02-05-2008, 01:16 PM | #25 | |||
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It's not very current. Wandering sage isn't taken as serious. Chris Zeichmann had to try to defend the Cynic hypothesis. Anti-Roman apocalyptic is far more current.
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You have to posit people with extra motives to construct a Messiah, horribly so, out of scripture to predict this...for what reason? |
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02-05-2008, 01:16 PM | #26 |
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02-05-2008, 01:38 PM | #27 | ||
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The "genuine" Pauline epistles are generally dated to the middle of the first century, but we have had several threads here where we tried to find the basis for this dating, and it is quite conjectural. We have no clear evidence that the Pauline epistles existed before the second century. In short, given two hypotheses: A. Christianity arose after 70 C.E. and the destruction of the Temple, and constructed a history for its movement backdated to 30 C.E. or B. Christianity arose around 30 C.E. and did not start to record its history until after 70 C.E. or make any impression on Roman or Jewish authorities - and then recorded a fairly mythologized version of that history. I would think A is simpler. |
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02-05-2008, 01:43 PM | #28 | |
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02-05-2008, 01:44 PM | #29 |
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rephrasing the question
What I was really wondering was if there has been any attempt to explain the rise of Christianity in terms of the broader historical and cultural (include sociological, psychological, and any other pertinent ological) context of post 70 events. Responses so far seem to confirm that there is no obvious factual reason that would make such a question a nonsense.
The sort of study I'm imagining would include an approach to the texts similar to how Copenhagen School (the so called minimalists) attempted to locate the biblical texts in the archaeological and political-social-ethnic etc contexts that made the most sense of both their production and contents. e.g. the requirements of identity for peoples who were part of a mass deportation, the social structures required for the production of such a literature, etc. The sort of thing that comes to mind with the New Testament texts is the notion of a replacement identity - reclaiming the Jewish scriptures and heritage for an alternate "people of God" identity, for example. That such a notion should take off at all would seem to me to be best explained in a context where old identities had been suddenly and traumatically lost -- including those of diaspora Jews -- with the events of 70 c.e. Neil |
02-05-2008, 01:50 PM | #30 |
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Abomination of desolation - Hadrian?
Xian as a generic term for messianist or cult of perfumers? |
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