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08-14-2004, 04:45 AM | #11 | |
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08-14-2004, 06:04 AM | #12 | |
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Vinnie |
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08-14-2004, 06:27 AM | #13 |
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Why do you reject marcan priority?
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08-14-2004, 07:07 AM | #14 | |
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Please share with us the interesting insights you gathered and what, IYO, are the weak points in the mythicist case? Are you now in a position to explain to us why Tatian, in Apology to the Greeks c.160 had as his main focus, the Logos. Why when he expounds on The Doctrine of the Christians, he focuses on the creative power of the Logos in bringing about the universe, its being the first-begotten of the Father through whom the world was made. Why Tatian never mentions that there was an incarnation of the Logos. Why Tatian uses expressions like 'God taught', never 'Jesus said', or 'Christ taught'. Why the names 'Jesus', 'Christ' and 'Christian' don't appear in Apology. Why, when Tatian talks about Christians belief in the resurrection, he never mentions Jesus or christ, or that Jesus resurrected. And why the same author, a decade or so later, in Diatessaron c.175, references the gospels and a historical Jesus emerges in his theology? Why does The Epistle of Mathetes to Diognetus state that "God did not, send to men any servant, or angel to the Christians"? Didn't the author know that Christianity was founded by a man called Jesus who was sent by God? Why does the author, who is a Christian, write lengthily about The Manifestation of Christ and never once mentions the name Jesus or Mary or Nazareth? Isn't it odd? Why do your own methodologies focus only on Jesus' sayings and not on his personality - was Jesus a radio? If we set out a methodology to determine the historicity of say Nebuchadnezzar, would we focus only on his speech? Why is it that a clear identity of a HJ is missing in the first strata (Thessalonians, 1 Corinthians, Galatians, and Romans - where the words "son of God", Pilate, Joseph and Mary,[terms which appear in the latter strata] are markedly absent)? Is it just a coincidence? These are just some of the questions mythicists ask and offer answers to them. Could you explain why Paul believed archons killed Jesus and not Pilate? Or have you, like Rick, already made up your mind on the matter and dont want to discuss it? Offa, Where can we read your arguments against Markan priority in favour of another one? Kirby, If its not too late, give the book to Gakusei Don. |
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08-14-2004, 08:25 AM | #15 | ||||||||
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Well, I'm not Vinnie, but I'll have a go.
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My questions: Ireneaus wrote that Tatian didn't show any heretical inclinations after Justin Martyr died. After that, Tatian became a gnostic, who believed that the HJ was formed like an angel, rather than born. Why didn't anyone notice that Tatian didn't believe in a HJ? Tatian's "Address to the Greeks" was well received and used widely by Christians over the next few centuries. Why didn't anyone notice that it wasn't about their HJ? Why was it so well received by HJers? In "Address to the Greeks", Tatian refers to Justin Martyr (of whom he was a student) as "the most admirable Justin", and, in fact, says that Crescens (a rival philosopher) tried to have both Tatian and Justin killed. How could Tatian have known Justin, but not have known the names "Jesus" or "Christ"? Why was Tatian regarded as a student of Justin, if he didn't believe in a HJ at the time? Why does Tatian refer to Justin denouncing demons as "robbers" (just after saying "Yield to the power of the Logos")? Why does Tatian's Address echo so many of the topics from (the HJer) Justin's writings? Justin himself also refer to Jesus as the Logos that took shape and became a man in his First Apology. How could his student Tatian get it so wrong? Given the internal and external evidence, what other conclusion can be reached but that Tatian was a HJer, who for some reason decided not to use the words "Jesus" or "Christ" in his apology to the Greeks? (Remember, we have examples of Tertullian and Ignatius doing the exact same thing). |
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08-14-2004, 09:03 AM | #16 | |||||||||||||
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Your argument is challenged by Justin Martyr's First and second Apologies where a HJ is mentioned. Quote:
So you have asked a wrong question. Its like asking whether "the son" in Shepherd is a MJ: he is simply an intermediary heavenly figure. He also says God never sent anyone to Christians. We can say that the man was a heavenly man like Philos, or Shepherd's "the son" who are not placed on earth. But what is important is that the incarnation never took place on earth. He was trying to distinguish christian deities from those of the greeks like Hercules and the rest. Quote:
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THE CHRISTIANS WORSHIP GOD ALONE CHRISTIANS' BELIEF IN THE RESURRECTION. So, yes, he is talking about Christians. http://www.earlychristianwritings.co...n-address.html I don't know whether he believed in a mythical christ. The important thing is that he conceived christianity without an earthly saviour figure and presented it as such to the Greeks. To speak about christianity (at least as presented in the NT) without mentioning Jesus is like speaking about the whitehouse without mentioning the word "president". The ransom soteriology, the salvific death etc etc and hallmarks of christianity. Yet here we find whole documents of numerous pages without even the name "Jesus" appearing once. Quote:
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Doherty explains: "In both pagan and Jewish parlance, the word archontes could be used to refer to earthly rulers and those in authority (as in Romans 13:3). But it is also, along with several others like it, a technical term for the spirit forces, the "powers and authorities" who rule the lowest level of the heavenly world and who exercise authority over the events and fate (usually cruel) of the earth, its nations and individuals. That invisible powers, mostly evil, were at work behind earthly phenomena was a widely held belief in Hellenistic times, including among Jews, and it was shared by Christianity. J. H. Charlesworth (Old Testament Pseudepigrapha, p.66) puts it this way: "Earth is full of demons. Humanity is plagued by them. Almost all misfortunes are because of demons: sickness, drought, death and especially humanity's weaknesses about remaining faithful to the covenant (with God). The region between heaven and earth seems to be almost cluttered by demons and angels; humanity is often seen as a pawn, helpless in the face of such cosmic forces." Doherty continues:"Ignatius uses the term archon in a thoroughly angelic sense (Smyrneans 6:1). Origen regarded the archonton of 2:8 as evil spiritual beings, and so did the gnostic Marcion. Modern scholars like C. K. Barrett (First Epistle to the Corinthians, p.72), Paula Fredriksen (From Jesus to Christ, p.56), and Jean Hering (The First Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians, p.16-17, a brief but penetrating analysis), have felt constrained to agree. Delling in the Theological Dictionary of the New Testament (I, p.489) notes that the spirit rulers are portrayed by Paul as "treating the Lord of glory as prey in ignorance of the divine plan for salvation." They operated in the spiritual realm, which S. Salmond (The Expositor's Greek Testament, Ephesians, p.284) describes as "supra-terrestrial but sub-celestial regions." Paul Ellingworth, A Translator's Handbook for 1 Corinthians, p.46, states: "A majority of scholars think that supernatural powers are intended here." S. G. F. Brandon (History, Time and Deity, p.167) unflinchingly declares that although Paul's statement "may seem on cursory reading to refer to the Crucifixion as an historical event. . .the expression 'rulers of this age' does not mean the Roman and Jewish authorities. Instead, it denotes the daemonic powers who . . . were believed to inhabit the planets (the celestial spheres) and control the destinies of men. . . . Paul attributes the Crucifixion not to Pontius Pilate and the Jewish leaders, but to these planetary powers." Quote:
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I think that at the time he wrote Address to the Greeks, they may have just been acquainted and Tatian was yet to soak in Justinian theology. Quote:
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We have no reason to believe he was a HJ. In fact, IIRC, he talks about why the son has delayed in coming. Quote:
You cannot have the subtitles I have put above and fail to merely use the name Jesus or Christ when talking about Christians. You cannot talk about the Christian concept of resurrection without mentioning Jesus. From the gospels, its a concept that Jesus taught and exemplified. I think this is very basic and in no need of an argument. |
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08-14-2004, 10:00 AM | #17 | ||||||||||||
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So, you have no evidence that Tatian's Apology has anything to do with Christianity. Is that correct? Quote:
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You talked about a skeptical approach on Ebla, JA. How would a skeptic approach this topic? Quote:
Even if you were right, as a working hypothesis it is unfalsifiable, and useless. It is also ridiculous, given the trouble the HJers of the time took to combat Marcionism and list heresies. Quote:
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JA, you've buried yourself into this hole really deep. Give my regards to China. |
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08-14-2004, 03:15 PM | #18 |
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Bernard Muller wrote a substantial rebuttal to Doherty's book and web site. I apologize to Bernard that I have not yet returned the favor by reviewing his web site. Muller's review is posted here:
http://www.didjesusexist.com/doherty-muller.html Patrick Narkinsky (nope, he doesn't post here AFAIK) also volunteered to review the book. I think he's working on it, and I should probably e-mail him when my computer is working again. I would be very happy if Gakusei Don wrote a review of Doherty's work to be published on my web site! Gakusei Don, please send an email to kirby@earthlink.net with your mailing address so that I can give you the book to review. best, Peter Kirby |
08-16-2004, 03:50 AM | #19 | |||||||||||||||||
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This is the leg your argument needs to stand on. Yet you cannot construct it in the face of Justin Marty's Apology among others. Thus, you have no premise to proceed from. I can however examine your argument mutatis mutandis. Quote:
Tatian was Justins 'disciple' thus necessarily a Christian. He openly reveres Moses above Homer. He also refers to himself as a Christian in the Address to the Greeks when he used "us". Thus Address to the Greeks, is, without a shadow of doubt, about Christians/Christianity and expounding and juxtaposing Christian beliefs alongside those of the Greeks. Quote:
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He also states: Quote:
We are hereby confronted by a Christian apologist in the 2nd century who had not yet come in contact with the gospel tradition that Justin later bequathed him and culminated in the Diatessaron. Quote:
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2. Paul was fairly familiar with world politics, to use the term "the rulers of this age" he would have meant all the rulers in the world conspired to Kill Jesus, which would have been nonsensical. 3. Archons in Paul must be read in the context of other passages like the Phillipians passage where Jesus was a god who came down to earth. Its also clear that Paul got references from Isaiah (Isaiah's ascenscion) regarding the dying and rising of Christ) and the sublunar realm where demons killed Jesus. To read it otherwise, is to read it out of context. 4. Paul's claim that he died and ressurected with Christ supports the idea that he believed that Christ's death was a spiritual one. 5. Paul clearly states that a physical body cannot resurrect/go to heaven. This argues against the (death and) resurrection of a Physical, flesh and blood man. As Kirby notes, Ellingworth states that "A majority of scholars think that supernatural powers are intended here." A Translator's Handbook on Paul's First Letter to the Corinthians, p. 46 Kirby, Quote:
Lack of cogent responses to my five points above leaves the issue in favour of a Dohertian interpretation. Quote:
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My response: Why and whether anyone noticed is irrelevant to the issue at hand. Maybe they were busy farming. It also follows that the fact that nobody noticed is irrelevant to the question about whether or not we should notice. So, at best, its a red herring. Quote:
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Kirby, Quote:
1. As Vork obderved, Muller uses 'heaps of rhetoric, using words like "drifts" and "obsessively" to evoke emotional rather than rational responses in the reader' Vork notes that Muller uses 'conclusory rhetoric like: "Does that make sense?" Of course not!" as if this were an argument'. Unfortunately, 'Muller does not tell us why the ideas do not make sense' 2. "Bernard's arguments contain misunderstandings and misinterpretations." etc etc. Check it out in the link below: http://www.iidb.org/vbb/showthread.p...herty+rhetoric |
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08-16-2004, 09:45 PM | #20 | |
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