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07-25-2007, 11:58 AM | #11 | |||||||||||||||||
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07-25-2007, 12:24 PM | #12 | |
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07-25-2007, 12:27 PM | #13 | ||
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07-26-2007, 01:24 AM | #14 | ||
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Gurugeorge - excellent op.
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As I have said elsewhere it is a huge assumption to think xianity has ever believed in an HJ - A pope did call that a heresy. They believe explicitly that Jesus Christ is the Son of God - fully man - fully god. May we please take these beliefs seriously at face value? Then by definition the xian Jesus is mythical - a godman who can walk on water and resurrect. It then becomes a second question - are we looking at an equivalent to an emperor being deified like Augustus or myth all the way down? The evidence is very strongly myth all the way down. |
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07-26-2007, 02:16 AM | #15 | |||||||||||
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Also, one ought to be suspicious of the orthodox critique of "secret knowledge", it could be just sour grapes. There's evidence in the Epistles of stuff that must have been taught that's not taught openly in the Epistles themselves (the "prophecy", "knowledge" and "faith", that are involved in Christian get-togethers, the thing about the "Third Heaven"), but the very fact that they're alluded to in the letters shows that knowledge wasn't necessarily secret in the sense of reserved for a few. What I think Gnostics meant by "secret" was "self-secret" - i.e. you can talk about it quite openly and verbosely (as, after all, the Gnostics did!), but people won't understand what your referent is unless they've had the relevant experiences themselves. But this was misunderstood by the proto-orthodox to mean some kind of reserved, secret knowledge for a few. Quote:
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I mean, it all makes perfect sense - what's not to like? As I said, of course I do understand that coherence alone doesn't establish truth, but I think if people did research with a picture like this in mind, the evidence would be seen in a new light and make much more sense. Quote:
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07-26-2007, 02:31 AM | #16 | ||
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What I'm toying with is, again, taking the Gnostic (and Marcionite) understanding more seriously, and viewing Luke (or rather some kind of gospel that was later turned into Luke) as being earlier. (It's acknowledged that there's at least some material in Luke that's earlier, and the lack of organisation compared to Mark might itself be a sign that Mark is a reworking of something earlier.) But even if we take Mark as earliest, it's still possible it could be no earlier than 130 CE and that would fit in with my story. At any rate, I think the gospels that were floating around early on were probably sketchier, and that they subsequently developed into something like the gospels we know (plus others). My basic, outline wrt the gospels is that they are various attempts to fill in the gap that suddenly exists when the Jewish Messiah is construed as an entity that's been and done his work, instead of an entity that's to come in the future and do his work. That's the basic "twist" I see the original Christians as having invented, that plus the combination with the growing idea of an intermediary between the individual and divine (a function of cosmopolitanisation in the Hellenistic period - i.e. local cults are less isolated, seen more relativistically, so there's a search for something that links the individual to the divine, rather than the local group to the divine). So there's this cute temporal inversion, that's the Big Idea. But that Big Idea invites speculation - "well if he's been, when did he come? and where exactly?" I think initially the idea may have been pretty loosely interpreted, either in a fairly distant past (e.g. Hebrews, perhaps a la Wells) or recent past (probably the Jerusalem crew and Paul) and may even be wholly spiritual (sublunar) a la Doherty. But for reasons I'm not clear on, the story as an initiatory understanding (i.e. an understanding that encapsulates theological, visionary and mystical aspects of this new Christ idea) starts to crystallise from "once upon a time" into "in the fairly recent past". Eventually a basic "sketch" that makes sense to all Christians of various types then (probably not many of them around at that stage) develops (whatever proto-gospels were floating around from 50-70 CE, probably Luke-like). It's after the diaspora that the story starts to take on a realistic, sort of nostalgic weight. I think the first gospels as we know them to form were Mark closely followed by Matthew (post 130 CE). Even at that stage, it's probably fair to say that many of the Christians who used those gospels viewed them more mythically than "hard" historically in the way the proto-orthodox thought of them. It's the proto-orthodox take on the gospels (necessitated by their attempt to trump the Pauline/visionary/proto-Gnostic apostolic succession, in order to gain political and psychological ascendancy over their fellows) that interprets the story in a historically "hard" way (i.e. in a way that makes him definitely a human being - who was also God - linked to human beings linked to human beings linked to human beings .... linked to contemporary proto-orthodox bishops). But I'm well aware that this is terribly vague, sketchy and speculative, and has far less backing from scholarship, to my own mind, than the broader historical outline of my OP. |
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07-26-2007, 03:56 AM | #17 | |
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Clearly Jesus was real to the early Christians, and "historical" at least in a mythical sense (like "Dionysus born of Semele" or Hercules), either in a vague or recent past (and this doesn't contradict Doherty's "sublunar" angle given the fuzziness of myth); but to show either that they believed he was historical in our sense (as the orthodoxy believed), or that he actually was historical in our sense, are different matters, and are not at all shown clearly by the evidence. It's possible, and the evidence can be read either way with a bit of "epicyclic" maneouvering, but HJ-ers are so used to that kind of maneouvering that they don't see it as "epicyclic", and don't see that the "myth all the way down" (with a fuzzy range of historicity in various kinds of Christianity) is the simpler, more likely explanation. |
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07-26-2007, 09:14 AM | #18 |
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Sorry, I don't have a lot of time today, but...
I'm not the one pushing alternative theories here, am I? You've set yourself up with the burden of proof. Now, if you were to ask me about the Gospel of Matthew or Catullus, then we can get started. |
07-27-2007, 06:16 AM | #19 | |
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07-27-2007, 08:13 AM | #20 | |||
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Earl Doherty |
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