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#11 | |||
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Presumably the learned and respectable opinion does not include Eusebius, who tells us they were different people. And Papias never calls this presbyter an apostle. Never even implies it. Quote:
What was the point of his 'pagan' if not to suggest non-Christian? Laying careful word traps is the tactic of lawyers. Oh, Monty was a lawyer. A lawyer and a Christian apologist..... If Bede really thinks it is the mark of a serious scholar to exclude Philo from a discussion of the historicity of Pilate, by putting in careful qualifiers so as to create 'plausible deniability' , then I suggest he starts writing his Big Golden Book of Christian Apologetics now. Montgomery wrote 'The documents at issue are not (pace the man on the Clapham omnibus) Josephus, Tacitus, Pliny the Younger, or other pagan references to Jesus,.....' So was Montgomery implying Josephus was a pagan.....? In one sentence, 'pagan references' includes a reference to Josephus, and when Monty refers to 'pagan historians' who mention Philo, we are supposed to suddenly realise that this excludes Jews..... And why would it exclude Jews? Why would a scholar like Montgomery want to exclude independent , non-Christian, Jewish references to Pilate from a discussion of his historicity? Just so he can make the straw man innuendo that sceptics say all references to Pilate are forged Christian references, as they are all only in connection with Jesus? Possibly...... ----------------------- PILATE Personally, I think there probably was one 19th-century nutcase , who denied Pilate existed, yet Montgomery wrote as though this was typical of sceptical thought, and he clearly did not want to name him. Perhaps he doesn't actually know of any. Even Montgomery's readers might wonder why he chose an obscure 19th century fruitcake as a worthy representative of sceptical thought. But perhaps not. Montgomery does write about Van Daniken as a sceptic, implying sceptics are no more rational than Van Daniken. |
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#12 | ||
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Even the SecWeb moderators at the time admitted they had failed to properly inform the participants of the ground rules. |
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#13 | ||
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Carrier is working on a PhD thesis. Perhaps you should wait for the book. The exact nature of Paul's beliefs is not such a burning issue with most people.
The Jesus Puzzle debate is still there for all to read. There were some problems in the initial assumptions, so I would not necessarily blame anyone, but you can see why Doherty left in his post which starts: Quote:
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#14 |
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Yeah... Doherty was pretty good with rhetoric anyway. He had some pretty good damage control going at that point!
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#15 | |
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What do you think of Trafford's claim 'After all, if all we were to read of John�s Gospel was the hymn of verses 1-18 we might not think that he thought Jesus really existed as a human being either.'? I remind you of part of John 1'10He was in the world, and though the world was made through him, the world did not recognize him. 11He came to that which was his own, but his own did not receive him. 12Yet to all who received him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God-- 13children born not of natural descent, nor of human decision or a husband's will, but born of God. 14The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth.' Where do you think Trafford got the idea that 'The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us', lets you conclude that Jesus never really existed as a human being, and we need the rest of John to tell us that? |
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#16 | |
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His offering to respond to criticism is pretty meaningless if he never makes the time to respond. Especially if his moderators are so willing to make excuses for him. And if you know he's too busy to respond to detailed criticism, why represent to the board that he's ready and willing to respond to it? "Burning issue" or not, he's the one who decided to write about it. This board is devoted to just this kind of subject. I posted a detailed response to his theory. I don't care if Carrier responds or not. I'm sure he is busy. But don't pretend he will when he doesn't. |
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#17 | |
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Meta: Yea, these are not drugs. They get old and expire. If something hasn't been updated it's still good. A lot of old works are still good. Ramsay is still worth quoting. but it's good to have to updates. As for the rest of it, I don't like Montgomery, but he's at least a scholar. What I don't like is the peusdo-scholarly subculture of the internet where anyone with a website is automatically an authority. wait a minute, I have a website. Hmmmm, I'll have to work that one out. |
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#18 | |
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Meta: At least he has a degree. It's begining to look to me like your concept of schlarship is anyone in the Jesus seminar is a scholar and anyone who isn't is isn't. |
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#19 | |
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Meta: If the US air force ran on as little iformation as you know about this stuff they would never get off the ground. The 19th century was the time of liberal doubt. Almost everyone expressed dobut about things like Pilate's existence. You call him a "fruitcake" because he did that, that shows how little you know about the history of Biblical scholaship, and yet you deem to make pronouncements about it as though you are yourself qualified to be thought of as a scholar. |
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#20 |
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Metacrock: find us a name of someone who thought that Pilate was a myth, and save the reputation of your fellow believers.
The nineteenth century may have been a time of "liberal doubt" as you call it, but it was not a period of doubting history in general. It was a period when scholars noticed the similarities between mythologies of various cultures, and concluded that Jesus was a myth because of these similarities. Similar observations were made about St. Peter and John the Baptist, but Pilate does not fit any mythic patterns. There is no reason for any scholar to think that Pilate was a myth. |
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