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05-28-2007, 07:25 AM | #41 | ||
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05-28-2007, 09:55 AM | #42 | |
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I'm not sure which of the following statements you are disagreeing with a/ Celsus puts various hostile statements about Jesus in the mouth of a Jew. b/ These statements are probably based on an earlier Jewish source of some kind c/ These statements, although hostile, and from a non-Christian source, assume the historicity of Jesus. That is all I meant to claim, could you clarify which parts of it you question ? Thanks Andrew Criddle |
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05-28-2007, 11:11 AM | #43 | |
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The Christ who in the days of Tiberius was, by a previously unknown God, revealed for the salvation of all nations, is a different being from him who was ordained by the Creator God for the restoration of the Jewish state, and who is yet to come. http://www.bluffton.edu/~humanities/1/celsus.htm ...[Celsus] accuses [Jesus] of having "invented his birth from a virgin," and upbraids Him with being "born in a certain Jewish village, of a poor woman of the country, who gained her subsistence by spinning, and who was turned out of doors by her husband, a carpenter by trade, because she was convicted of adultery; that after being driven away by her husband, and wandering about for a time, she disgracefully gave birth to Jesus, an illegitimate child, who having hired himself out as a servant in Egypt on account of his poverty, and having there acquired some miraculous powers, on which the Egyptians greatly pride themselves, returned to his own country, highly elated on account of them, and by means of these proclaimed himself a God."... |
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05-28-2007, 11:17 AM | #44 | |
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You also claim that the idea of a fleshy sublunar realm was widespread in this time period and culture. Then, when Mark wrote his historicist gospel, it almost overnight wiped out all Christ-mythicist Christians, converting them instantly to historicist Christians, and there is no unambigous reference to the original spiritual Christians anywhere in the record in an era where there was no internet to instanteously transmit information. While anything is possible, history is about what is recontructing from our sources what probably happened, and this scenario strikes me as highly unlikely. |
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05-28-2007, 11:18 AM | #45 | |
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The question I asked had nothing properly to do with whether Matthew is to be trusted at this point; I covered that when I said that it is one thing to provide reasons to ignore the passage. No, my question went to putting all the data on the table before making sweeping claims. Surely you cannot have ignored this passage simply because we find this Jewish tradition only in a Christian author, Matthew. That is true also of the Jewish traditions in Celsus, which we find only in the Christian author Origen. So, again, why did you make such a claim without even nodding your head to the Matthean passage? Ben. |
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05-28-2007, 12:01 PM | #46 |
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I want to keep my original inquiry separate from the actual merits of the case with Matthew 28.15, since my question had to do with the data only; this post will deal with my interpretation of those data.
Earl writes of the Matthean story of the guard at the tomb (emphasis mine): I realize that at the conclusion of the scene, Matthew says, “And this story has been widely spread among the Jews to this day.” But that line is part of the scene. If the scene is non-historical, then that line is a fabrication.This is, of course, a false dilemma. Earl wishes the Jewish story that the disciples stole the body to stand or fall with the story of the guards at the tomb. But it does not work that way. How can (one of) the middle position(s), namely that Matthew (or somebody) invented the story precisely in order to answer the Jewish charge, go ignored here? Robert Price writes (emphasis mine): Hans von Campenhausen once suggested that just as Matthew's tomb guards (Matthew 27:62‑66; 28:4, 11‑15) were added by that evangelist as a kind of co‑opting rebuttal of a Jewish charge that Jesus' disciples stole his body, even so John's garden and gardener details represent an attempt to anticipate and refute another anti‑Christian slur, namely that a disinterested third party, the gardener, removed the body.There is no need here to go into the matter of the Johannine gardener and the fascinating tradition that grew up around him; I just wanted to point out that this middle position that Earl shows no awareness of is indeed out there. I seem to recall (and shall try to look up) where G. A. Wells derives the story of the guards from a similar back-and-forth banter between Christians and their Jewish detractors. IOW, there is nothing nonskeptical about buying into the middle position, that Matthew was aware that some Jews argued that the disciples had stolen the body and either invented or used the story of the tomb guards to counter this argument. The conditional statement, then, that Earl sets up (if the scene is nonhistorical, then that line is a fabrication) is simply not valid. It is quite possible for the scene to be an invented reaction to the reality of the charge. I personally doubt very much that Matthew has invented a Jewish charge here. If the Jews were not charging that the apostles had stolen the body, why invent the charge at all? Why give ammunition to the opposition? Indeed, the whole story of the guard appears on its face to be a giant defense against ammunition already being used. We know that Jewish opponents of Christianity at some point began speculating about what had happened to the body of Jesus; the gardener story became popular, and Robert Price goes so far as to say (emphasis mine): The earliest extra‑biblical occurrence of the garden‑burial tradition is in Tertullian's De Spectaculis, XXX, where the late‑second-century theologian is wistfully envisioning his Christ‑rejecting Jewish opponents' terror at the Parousia of Christ: "This is he whom his disciples have stolen away secretly, that it may be said he is risen, or the gardener abstracted that his lettuces might not be damaged by the crowd of visitors!" Thus we can be certain that by about a century after John's gospel was written Jews offered these two alternative theories on why Jesus' tomb might have been found empty.I think Matthew simply reflects an early version of these Jewish charges. The story of the guards at the tomb is frequently dismissed by skeptics and historians alike as clumsy apologetics; if Earl is right, however, the story is not apologetical at all! I personally find that hard to believe. Ben. |
05-28-2007, 02:27 PM | #47 |
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I have now looked up the story of the guards in G. A. Wells, as promised. I personally own only one of the Wells books, namely Who Was Jesus? This snippet comes from pages 38-39; Wells is referring to and summarizing, apparently with some measure of approval, the P. W. Schmiedel article, Resurrection and Ascension Narratives, in the 1903 Encyclopedia Biblica:
Schmiedel shows how such stories as the sepulchre guard (unique to Matthew) and the empty tomb could have arisen in stages in perfectly good faith. He imagines a Christian confronted with the charge that the disciples had stolen the body. The obvious retort would be: "The Jews, we may be quite certain, saw to the watching of the sepulchre; they could very well have known that Jesus had predicted his rising again on the third day". Another Christian, hearing this, might take it not for conjecture, but for a statement of fact, and pass it on as such.Notice that the very premise of this scenario is that that hypothetical Christian is confronted with, and attempting to refute, the very real charge that the disciples had stolen the body. This is G. A. Wells. We already saw that Robert M. Price regards it as certain that by the time of Tertullian the Jews were indeed offering this as one of two solutions to the problem of the empty tomb. Price also appears to regard Matthew as rebutting (by means of the guard story) a very real charge; he appears to do so both indirectly through the suggestion of von Campenhausen, as per my last post, and directly as follows: If this story [from John about the gardener] is intended as an apologetical device it is a poor one. Matthew's intent to defend resurrection faith, by contrast, is at least clear.I agree with Price; the Matthean attempt is indeed clear. The story of the guards is a transparent rebuttal of the charge that the disciples had stolen the body. We need not believe that the story is true, nor that the charge is as old as the resurrection event itself, nor even that the charge was as widespread as Matthew makes out; had he polled the Jewry of the entire Mediterranean basin? But that the charge itself was real and contemporary to Matthew is by no means an acritical leap; critics such as Price and Wells seem to have no trouble reading Matthew 28.15 for what it is worth. Now, even if one rejects this charge as a Matthean fabrication, as Earl apparently does, what gives one the right to skip clean over the middle position as if it did not even exist? I find the twin omissions of both ancient and modern sources a trifle troubling. Earl claims that no Jewish spin on any HJ tradition survives before Lucian and Celsus, but does not bother to mention Matthew, not even to dismiss him; then, after I have brought Matthew up, and in order to dismiss him, Earl quotes himself (if the scene is nonhistorical, then that line is a fabrication) committing the fallacy of the excluded middle, completely ignoring the completely logical medial position of modern writers such as Wells. Ben. |
05-28-2007, 02:45 PM | #48 | |
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I will make some short responses to various things, in no particular order. The first is Ben's reaction to my dismissal of Matthew's Guard at the Tomb.
I didn't nod in its direction because I assumed it was pretty clear to all but die-hard historicists that this episode was very unlikely to be factual, being restricted to Matthew. Maybe I should have at least dropped a word about it. But Ben argues for the integrity of that final line about the Jews having come up with the excuse that the disciples had stolen the body, and argues thus for a "middle ground." Quote:
As for the reference to the gardener in John, this is made far too much of. I very much doubt that John has any intention of countering some “The gardener did it!” claim by the Jews. The reference is far too weak and indirect (unlike Matthew’s sequence) for that. I think even Price has gotten carried away on this point. I read it simply as a bit of color by John, having Mary simply not recognize Jesus at first and mistaking him for the gardener; her recognition then has even more emotional impact. It’s a nice touch, worthy of a writer of fiction. Consequently, it is a valid deduction, in regard to Matthew, that “if the scene is nonhistorical, then that line is a fabrication”. (For which Matthew is to be particularly faulted. It is one thing to provide a sequence in the Gospel which, if not identifiably midrashic, still serves a purpose in an allegorical story. It is another for the evangelist to intrude himself with an editorial comment and give the reader an obvious lie!) So why did Matthew include the guard at the tomb if there was no such spin in the real world? Well, in one way it is "apologetics". Within Matthew's storyline. In enlarging on Mark's 'novel', Matthew decided that this idea (the accusation that the disciples stole the body) would be something that would occur to the reader, just as it occurred to him, and he decided to include a reproof against it by having the guards bribed to use such an excuse. For that, he needed to place the guards there in the first place, something no one else did. (Again, minus the "lie", it's a nice touch for a fictional account.) Incidentally, for those of you who reject a Q and have Luke copying Matthew, why did Luke not carry that element over into his Gospel? Particularly if the final line and Ben's "middle ground" were true--and surely Luke would have known of such a spin--it is unthinkable that he would reject and delete Matthew's entire guard sequence as a useful counter to such a spin. Earl Doherty |
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05-28-2007, 03:04 PM | #49 | |||
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And a bit of miscellany here…
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I have hardly presented it that Mark “almost overnight wiped out all Christ-mythicist Christians, converting them instantly.” Anyone who knows anything about my position and scenario knows that I have represented the process as taking decades if not close to a century, as proceeding unevenly in terms of time and location, as involving diverse circles and threads of development. I am simply going to ignore ignorant (ignorant, because they reflect a stubborn unwillingness to even understand and consider the mythicist case) responses like this in future. Quote:
As for Jiri… Quote:
Earl Doherty |
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05-28-2007, 03:04 PM | #50 |
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In the interests of complete accuracy, I wish to comment on something that Price writes in his article:
The earliest extra‑biblical occurrence of the garden‑burial tradition is in Tertullian's De Spectaculis, XXX, where the late‑second-century theologian is wistfully envisioning his Christ‑rejecting Jewish opponents' terror at the Parousia of Christ: "This is he whom his disciples have stolen away secretly, that it may be said he is risen, or the gardener abstracted that his lettuces might not be damaged by the crowd of visitors!" Thus we can be certain that by about a century after John's gospel was written Jews offered these two alternative theories on why Jesus' tomb might have been found empty.Price finds two contemporary Jewish slurs on the resurrection of Jesus here, first that the disciples stole the body, and second that a gardener took the body away. The purpose of the article is to trace the latter, so a little clumsiness on the former might be forgiven Price. I personally think that the reading Price seems to be making, that Tertullian was independently aware of a contemporary Jewish charge that the disciples had stolen the body, requires nuancing. If it turns out that Jews contemporary with Tertullian were indeed saying that, so be it; I have no problem with the notion itself, but I do not think that we can necessarily automatically presume as much from Tertullian alone. Here is a more complete quotation of Tertullian in On the Spectacles 30.6, where he is writing of the taunt he will raise against certain pagans at the advent of Jesus: Hic est ille, dicam, fabri aut quaestuariae filius, sabbati destructor, Samarites, et daemonium habens. hic est quem a Iuda redemistis. hic est ille harundine et colaphis diverberatus, sputamentis dedecoratus, felle et aceto potatus. hic est quem clam discentes subripuerunt ut surrexisse dicatur, vel hortulanus detraxit, ne lactucae suae frequentia commeantium adlaederentur.Notice that, while the charge that a gardener removed the body comes seemingly out of nowhere (though it seems obviously based on the Johannine account and Price traces its development expertly), the charge that the disciples stole the body might actually have come straight from Matthew, unchanged, since the rest of the charges (son of a carpenter, sabbath-breaker, demon-possessed, Samaritan, betrayed by Judas, and so forth), appear also to come from straight from the pages of the gospels. IOW, it is possible that Tertullian has, with the exception of the gardener, simply summarized charges against Jesus from the gospels rather than passing on charges that he himself has heard from contemporary Jews. OTOH, it is also just possible that Jews contemporary with Tertullian were in fact scouring the gospels for exactly these sorts of charges, and that Tertullian had in fact heard them in debate. The easy possibility of either option is what makes me say that the argument requires a bit more nuancing. Ben. Post-script: Justin Martyr has this to say in Dialogue 108.2: Και ου μονον ου μετενοησατε, μαθοντες αυτον ανασταντα εκ νεκρων, αλλ, ως προειπον, ανδρας χειροτονησαντες εκλεκτους εις πασαν την οικουμενην επεμψατε, κηρυσσοντας οτι αιρεσις τις αθεος και ανομος εγηγερται απο Ιησου, τινος Γαλιλαιου πλανου, ον σταυρωσαντων ημων, οι μαθηται αυτου κλεψαντες αυτον απο του μνηματος νυκτος, οποθεν κατετεθη αφηλωθεις απο του σταυρου, πλανωσι τους ανθρωπους λεγοντες εγηγερθαι αυτον εκ νεκρων και εις ουρανον ανεληλυθεναι κατειποντες δεδιδαχεναι και ταυτα απερ κατα των ομολογουντων Χριστον και διδασκαλον και υιον θεου ειναι παντι γενει ανθρωπων αθεα και ανομα και ανοσια λεγετε.This too may derive from Matthew, but it is interesting that Justin lapses into the first person plural (as if the Jews themselves were talking) in the middle of what is otherwise in the second person plural (addressing the Jews face to face). |
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