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|  02-20-2007, 03:15 PM | #1 | |
| Banned Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Palm Springs, California 
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				 |   Quote: 
 Therefore, pointing out that the gospel writers got stuff wrong doesn't imply that they were fabricating narratives entirely. You seem to have concluded ab initio that the gospel writers aren't writing history, and then conclude that therefore since the got stuff wrong, they weren't writing history. Needless to say, there is a double standard here. | |
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|  02-20-2007, 03:20 PM | #2 | |
| Banned Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Palm Springs, California 
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 What does it mean for a story, that involves a million decisions of what to put in, what to leave out, and in what order, to be "accurate." Most historians are more interested nowadays in the social usage of historical discourse, and not in its putative relationship to events that we only know about because of the texts themselves. | |
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|  02-20-2007, 06:52 PM | #3 | |
| Contributor Join Date: Mar 2002 Location: nowhere 
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				 |   Quote: 
 spin | |
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|  02-20-2007, 11:58 PM | #4 | |
| Banned Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Palm Springs, California 
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				 |   Quote: 
 The theological claims are of course not subject to empirical support one way or another. The Jesus movement clearly was an event grounded in the existence of a man who clearly made certain claims that propelled the religion of Christianity forward. The claims purportedly made by the Jesus characterized in the gospels are consistent with that historical tragectory. | |
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|  02-21-2007, 01:42 AM | #5 | |
| Contributor Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: outraged about the stiffling of free speech here 
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				 |   Quote: 
 [edited to snip some statements which will get us nowhere] | |
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|  02-21-2007, 11:57 AM | #6 | |
| Veteran Member Join Date: Jun 2001 Location: secularcafe.org 
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				 |   Quote: 
 From Apollo to Christ 2nd century apologists I suppose none of that can be counted as "unbiased" since it contradicts your opinion? | |
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|  02-21-2007, 03:09 PM | #7 | |
| Banned Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Palm Springs, California 
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 If you are refering to artifacts which include texts, like coins, that's a different matter. | |
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|  02-21-2007, 03:10 PM | #8 | |
| Banned Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Palm Springs, California 
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|  02-22-2007, 01:06 AM | #9 | |
| Contributor Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: outraged about the stiffling of free speech here 
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|  02-22-2007, 08:08 AM | #10 | ||||
| Veteran Member Join Date: Sep 2000 Location: Yes, I have dyslexia.  Sue me. 
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				 |   Quote: 
 These are biased accounts; they are, at best, written by cult members about their cult mythologies. Not only are they fictional in the sense that they recount conversations the authors could not possibly have been around to dictate, but the second anyone writes about a dead god resurrecting from the grave or healing the blind, or "miraculously" turning water into wine, etc., is the second they are ipso facto writing mythology, no matter how strongly their claims may be that they are not as you point out, if indirectly: Quote: 
 But this is simply disengenuous as there is no way one can consider the recounting of a conversation with Satan, for example, in the desert to be historically accurate reportage; or the personal "discussion" Jesus has with God, where he throws himself to the ground and asks that his burden be taken from him, etc. At best, these are myths; fictionalized imaginings from later, biased authors, pure and simple and cannot be considered anything other. Quote: 
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