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Old 07-25-2007, 11:58 AM   #11
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Originally Posted by gurugeorge View Post
Because the context of this discussion is "if there was a mythical Christianity what happened to it?"
Gnosticism is not "mythical" Christianity.

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Why don't we have more early Christian material in general? (Oops!)
We have much more than early Gnostic material. We especially have Paul who has insight into first century Christianity outside his own, and it's nothing like Gnosticism. In fact, it's the opposite. It's Judaism.

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I never thought Thomas was fully Gnostic. Heavily mystical, but not necessarily a product of full-blown Gnosticism. But how about "proto-Gnostic"? - as proto-Gnostic as the Paul we have that has survived?
Moreso. For Paul, it's the resurrection that saves. For Oxy. Thomas, it's the secret words. But the content is much more in line with proto-Orthodox than the real Gnostics.

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You make me feel like poor old Ben Smith, with his constant pained reminders to people to check the OP We're positing MJ here.
What you posited and what you later made out to be your argument are two different things.

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The Samaritan connection ties in with the "Simon Magus" of Acts being a Samaritan, and the Simon Atomos mentioned by Josephus being a Samaritan.
What connects the two?

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The idea of Acts is to split their actual founder into two fantasy founders - a Judaised Paul who could feasibly make up with the Jewish Christian Peter-who-knew-Jesus-as-a-person, and a supposed nasty magician founder of their repressed visionary-originated "dark side" - their sister proto-gnostic movements that are developing into Gnosticism.
What evidence is there of that?

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Perhaps you didn't. How about the 19th century stuff, how about Wells, none of that detailed enough for you? Or perhaps you haven't read them enough either.
Unlike Doherty, Wells has published in reputable journals. Just not enough of his theories.

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It's too early for you to expect what you seem to want in order to convince you.
That's the truest thing you said, in more ways than one.

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I think enough detailed work has been done by all these MJ-ers to make a plausible "proof of concept", to make the idea not quite as ridiculous as you seem to think.
I said the Dutch Radicals were out of touch with reality, not that all this was ridiculous. I find the evidence strongly in favor of an HJ, and often wonder why good evidence for MJ isn't used?

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As I've said, the idea is to propose that we take the Gnostic self-description seriously and see what happens if we do - see if it gets rid of the qualm of "if there was a mythicist Christianity what happened to it?" If you're unwilling to entertain the idea, fair enough, but there's no particular reason why you shouldn't.
But that's not mythicism ala Doherty or even Wells. It's Gnosticism. You're being unclear here.

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Does he have more going for him than Paul?
Obviously not - he's left no writings!

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I don't know why the mass of biblical scholarship sticks to HJ, it's probably because the field of biblical studies is an ongoing academic discourse that originates in a religious tradition that takes the existence of a historical Jesus for granted, and that still has a lot of Jesus freaks in it (or at least, still has many highbrows who think something about the tradition is worth keeping alive).
Michael Grant anyone?

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In reality there's no actual justification for a separate academic field of biblical studies, as opposed to specialist sub-fields within the study of ancient history and religion.
I disagree! Biblical Studies examines the unique position of early Christianity and early Judaism in its surrounding environments. It's more of a study of the cultural impact of those two religions than what BS was back in the heyday. You ought to look into what Hector Avarlos has said, tho.

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Put it this way: if the scholars and academics who studied the Bible were merely specialists in the broader fields of the the study of ancient history and religion (like academics who study Zoroastrianism or Buddhism), I very much doubt the HJ position would be strongly represented.
Many are! Many programs, like U. Chicago, is actually ANE programs. Bible courses even at the undergrad level in major institutions all have some component of comparativism included.

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It might have a few adherents, but they'd probably be the ones considered the cranks.
Funny thing to hear coming from a non-specialist.

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In the broad view, it seems to me that, sensing its doom, what is essentially the crank field of biblical scholarship merely retreated, amoeba-like, from the implications of the real digging that was starting to happen towards the end of the 19th century, and regrouped for much of the 20th. It won't be able to keep the lid on the fragility of the HJ idea much longer.
This is a joke.

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How about you tackle my sources, since you're so all-fired keen on nitty-gritty work? Read Detering's essay for a start.
Nah, I have real work to do. HJ is a distraction. Maybe soon, though. And yes, amice, I've read Detering.
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Old 07-25-2007, 12:24 PM   #12
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We have much more than early Gnostic material. We especially have Paul who has insight into first century Christianity outside his own, and it's nothing like Gnosticism. In fact, it's the opposite. It's Judaism.
There are problems with this assertion. Most importantly, Gnosticism was a Jewish movement (see here).
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Old 07-25-2007, 12:27 PM   #13
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We have much more than early Gnostic material. We especially have Paul who has insight into first century Christianity outside his own, and it's nothing like Gnosticism. In fact, it's the opposite. It's Judaism.
There are problems with this assertion. Most importantly, Gnosticism was a Jewish movement (see here).
Yes, well, it wasn't classicaly defined by Judaisticism. It wasn't akin to the Ebionites, whom I think are the descendents of the James group.
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Old 07-26-2007, 01:24 AM   #14
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Gurugeorge - excellent op.

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CW: Gnosticism is not mythicism
My reaction was Pagels - the Gnostic Paul - would find this debate very interesting. I actually do not see much if any difference. Why are they not very similar?

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HJ
Which model HJ would that be we are discussing today?

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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Old 07-26-2007, 02:16 AM   #15
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Because the context of this discussion is "if there was a mythical Christianity what happened to it?"
Gnosticism is not "mythical" Christianity.
Well it depends on how you look at it. I think the kind of early mythical Christianity Earl is talking about is what developed into Gnosticism. If we take the Gnostics version of apostolic succession seriously then there's a line from Paul to Gnosticism. (Incidentally this might also somewhat address Earl's qualms about "what happened to Pauline Christianity in the interm"?)

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We have much more than early Gnostic material. We especially have Paul who has insight into first century Christianity outside his own, and it's nothing like Gnosticism. In fact, it's the opposite. It's Judaism.
I disagree, I think the only real difference between Paul's proto-Gnosticism and the Jerusalem community is the universalism. To me it looks like the same visionary revision of the Messiah idea, only Paul thinks it's for everybody. It's a development or outgrowth of Judaism/Samaritanism - but even Pharisaic Judaism wasn't how it's described in the gospels (one of the clues showing they must mostly be post-70, maybe even post-130). Judaism may have even been less "monotheistic" (in some ways) at that time.

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Moreso. For Paul, it's the resurrection that saves.
OK, but not just the sheer fact of some supposed resurrection in the flesh of someone who'd lived shortly before him; rather, a resurrection the devotee has to enact somehow. The resurrection he's talking about is clearly a spiritual matter. (If you can point out much of a difference between Paul's discussion of resurrection in Corinthians and the Epistle to Rheginus, please do so. They seem to be pretty much the same kind of resurrection.)

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.

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For Oxy. Thomas, it's the secret words. But the content is much more in line with proto-Orthodox than the real Gnostics.
Well I don't know about that, but yes I agree it's not got as much Gnosticism as the Coptic version.

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What connects the two?
Why are you asking me? You've read Detering's essay haven't you? :devil1:

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What evidence is there of that?
I mean that's a function such a split would fulfil. Bear in mind this is against the background of evident distress amongst the proto-orthodox (starting from, e.g. Ignatius), the signs of struggle against something already established wherever they go, talked about by W Bauer.

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I said the Dutch Radicals were out of touch with reality, not that all this was ridiculous. I find the evidence strongly in favor of an HJ, and often wonder why good evidence for MJ isn't used?
Go on then, you've finally said something interesting - what is the good evidence you see that's not being used?

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But that's not mythicism ala Doherty or even Wells. It's Gnosticism. You're being unclear here.
I may be being unclear in my exposition, but I think I've stressed several times that I'm talking about the morphing and mitosis of one thing into other things: first the split between the Jerusalem Jews-only (disappointed-apocalyptic/proto-Gnostic) version of Christ and Paul's universalised (definitely proto-Gnostic, mystical, visionary) version which he spread all over the area, then the early splitting off of one of those proto-Gnosticisms, into proto-orthodoxy (taking a hardened historical view of the cultic entity because it's useful for them in order to establish a better sense of "apostolic succession" than the other Christians have), then the development of the other proto-Gnosticisms into sundry Gnosticisms (becoming less Jewish, taking on more and more Hellenistic, Asian and Egyptian elements); then the rise of proto-orthodoxy; the decline of the original Jewish forms and their morphing into Ebionites; the eventual acceptance of most Gnostics of the proto-orthodox "apostolic succession" and the subsequent morphing of Gnosticism into docetism; the end of docetism.

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.

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I disagree! Biblical Studies examines the unique position of early Christianity and early Judaism in its surrounding environments. It's more of a study of the cultural impact of those two religions than what BS was back in the heyday. You ought to look into what Hector Avarlos has said, tho.
That's what I was thinking of actually.

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Many are! Many programs, like U. Chicago, is actually ANE programs. Bible courses even at the undergrad level in major institutions all have some component of comparativism included.
That's good to hear.

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Nah, I have real work to do. HJ is a distraction.
Oh I get it, everybody else has to work like a bitch to satisfy your preference for nitty-gritty evidence, and if they don't they're obviously know-nothing idiots, but you're exempt because you "have real work to do"? :notworthy:
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Old 07-26-2007, 02:31 AM   #16
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And this is why "The Man Himself" is invented, this is why a spiritual myth with a few fleshly aspects is gradually hardened into a god-man living in Palestine round 0-30 CE.
The earliest “biographical” version we have of a live HJ is Mark. Mark, one might say, set the stage for all subsequent biographies.

Mark is ANTI-Peter. And, as read by some, is Pauline in its theology.

How does this fit with your reconstruction?

To create what you’re calling a “hardened historical Christ” as a means of solidifying apostolic succession to the Peterines, one would expect exactly the opposite of what we find in Mark.

Mark snubs the human Christ’s followers, not glorifies them.

DQ
Hehe, well you picked up on the one glaring (gaping? ) abyss in my story. I didn't mention the gospels at all and where they fit in. I think this is difficult because I don't fully trust the way the gospels are viewed at the moment, because so much of how they are viewed is tied in with Acts being understood as pretty good history.

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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Old 07-26-2007, 03:56 AM   #17
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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.
Agreed. Gstafleu has some good distinction about this.

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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Old 07-26-2007, 09:14 AM   #18
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Sorry, I don't have a lot of time today, but...

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Oh I get it, everybody else has to work like a bitch to satisfy your preference for nitty-gritty evidence, and if they don't they're obviously know-nothing idiots, but you're exempt because you "have real work to do"? :notworthy:
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.
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Old 07-27-2007, 06:16 AM   #19
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Sorry, I don't have a lot of time today, but...

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Oh I get it, everybody else has to work like a bitch to satisfy your preference for nitty-gritty evidence, and if they don't they're obviously know-nothing idiots, but you're exempt because you "have real work to do"? :notworthy:
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.
Re. "burden of proof", see the other thread
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Old 07-27-2007, 08:13 AM   #20
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I don't know why the mass of biblical scholarship sticks to HJ, it's probably because the field of biblical studies is an ongoing academic discourse that originates in a religious tradition that takes the existence of a historical Jesus for granted, and that still has a lot of Jesus freaks in it (or at least, still has many highbrows who think something about the tradition is worth keeping alive).
Michael Grant anyone?
And here is a good example of the depth of serious research which historians like Michael Grant indulge in to arrive at the opinion that an HJ existed. From my website article "Alleged Scholarly Refutations of Jesus Mythicism":

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A typical example is historian Michael Grant, who in Jesus: An Historian’s Review of the Gospels (or via: amazon.co.uk) (1977), devotes a few paragraphs to the question in an Appendix. There [p.200], he says:

“To sum up, modern critical methods fail to support the Christ-myth theory. It has ‘again and again been answered and annihilated by first-rank scholars’. In recent years ‘no serious scholar has ventured to postulate the non-historicity of Jesus’—or at any rate very few, and they have not succeeded in disposing of the much stronger, indeed very abundant, evidence to the contrary.”

One will note that Grant’s statement about answering and annihilating, and the remark about serious scholars, are in quotes, and are in fact the opinions of previous writers. Clearly, Grant himself has not undertaken his own ‘answer’ to mythicists. Are those quoted writers themselves scholars who have undertaken such a task? In fact, they are not. One referenced writer, Rodney Dunkerley, in his Beyond the Gospels (1957, p.12), devotes a single paragraph to the “fantastic notion” that Jesus did not actually live; its exponents, he says, “have again and again been answered and annihilated by first-rank scholars,” but since he declares it “impossible to summarize those scholars’ case here,” he is not the source of Grant’s conviction. Nor can that be O. Betz, from whose What Do We Know About Jesus? (1968, p.9) Grant takes his second quote. Betz claims that since Wilhelm Bousset published an essay in 1904 exposing the ‘Christ myth’ as “a phantom,” “no serious scholar has ventured to postulate the non-historicity of Jesus.” This ignores many serious presentations of that very idea since Bousset, and evidently relies on defining “serious” as excluding anyone who would dare to undertake such a misguided task.

Betz goes on to provide a paragraph outlining “non-Christian sources” which “permit no doubt as to the actual existence of Jesus of Nazareth.” They include, of course, Josephus, Tacitus, Pliny the Younger and Suetonius, whose unreliability for such a purpose has been thoroughly discussed in my book, The Jesus Puzzle and on this website—and will be further discussed in the present article. Even in this cursory outline, Betz inserts all sorts of qualifiers: that the sources are “few and far between” and come at least two generations after Jesus; that the Testimonium Flavianum of Josephus “is no longer in its original form but must have been revised by a Christian hand. Nevertheless it is quite possible that at this point Josephus spoke of Jesus…” In regard to Suetonius, he says: “ ‘Chrestus’ doubtless means Christ…though apparently Suetonius had only a vague notion of the actual facts.” Betz goes on to refer to the Jewish Talmud, a compilation produced centuries later whose description of Jesus is widely off the supposed historical mark. Betz admits, “These statements reveal little historical knowledge,” yet “…they indicate no doubt whatever about the genuine existence of Jesus.”

One supposes that, for Grant, such timeworn and superficial ‘answers’ to the Jesus Myth represent ‘annihilation,’ but one can perhaps forgive mythicists for begging to differ. Superficiality, reluctant qualifications, distortion of evidence, lack of imagination for thinking outside the box, and the appeal to constant “no doubt” assumptions, are part of the approach of all such refutations, including the most recent, as we shall see. And they bring the same questionable approach to their support for the contention that Jesus did exist and that the Christian record, especially the Gospels, can be relied upon to demonstrate that fact.

Grant himself, not a New Testament scholar, is prey to the same restricted and simplistic thinking that refuters of the myth theory often themselves betray. He too [p.199] appeals to the idea that “Judaism was a milieu to which doctrines of the deaths and rebirths of mythical gods seems so entirely foreign that the emergence of such a fabrication from its midst is very hard to credit.” This, of course, ignores the fact that an exclusive form of ‘mainstream’ Judaism that might have had such an attitude was not yet established, especially outside Palestine and in the pre-70 period; this has been acknowledged by critical New Testament scholarship for several decades now. Grant also urges applying the same criteria to the record of Jesus that historians apply to other ancient writings whose authors, like the evangelists, describe events often in differing terms; this ignores the significant and even fundamental differences involved between the two categories. The very fact that no one has ever postulated the non-existence of Julius Caesar or Alexander the Great, despite the legendary elements accreting to such figures in their histories during ancient times, demonstrates this inherent difference—a fact which cannot be blithely put down, as so many do, either directly or by insinuation, to some kind of anti-Christian or anti-religious motivation on the part of mythicists. Discrediting the messenger has always been one of the weapons in the arsenal of anti-mythicist writers.
And if you want to get some idea of the quality of argument put forward by those historians/biblical scholars who have devoted some serious effort to defending the HJ over the course of the 20th century, see that website article. The paucity of rational, scientific and effective defense by the few that have made that attempt will amaze you.

Earl Doherty
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