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Old 07-01-2004, 07:04 AM   #21
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Originally Posted by Magdlyn
I am just going to have some fun with this.

Jesus is said to have his beard pulled during his trial. I do not read any refs to his length of hair. I think this is just an assumption from what we imagine Galileean fisherman and carpenters looked like 1 CE. (I understand however the 1st representation of X has him in the short Roman hairstyle, clean shaven. But ya gotta allow for artistic lisence.)

Osris is depicted as bearded. The wigs the Pharaohs wore were, of course "long."

Dionysus' effigy on the "tree" is shown to be long haired and bearded.
All very good, except that F&G say on a different website that Jesus wasn't portrayed as having long hair and a beard until the 8th C. As F&G explain here:
Quote:
The historical figure of Jesus has been so central to Western culture that it is hard to question his existence. As soon as we hear his name we can see him in our mind's eye, in his flowing white robes, with long hair and a beard. Yet this picture of Jesus was not created until the 8th century. Early portrayals of Jesus show him clean-shaven with short hair and wearing a Roman tunic. St Paul says that long hair disgraces a man, so presumably his image of Jesus was not the same as ours.

Quote:
GDon >>>"Jesus turns water into wine at a marriage on the same day that Osiris-Dionysus was previously believed to have turned water into wine at a marriage".

This is a similarity that would be hard for Christians to explain. See if you can find it from the references that F&G give.


OK, that one I cna't do off the top of my head. I will look it up later and get back to you.
Good, I'll look forward to what you find out.

Quote:
GDon >>>If you get a chance, look at their claim in their Conclusion list at the end of Chap 3, where they say:
"Jesus is hung on a tree or crucified, as is Osiris-Dionysus". Then try to work out where they actually present evidence that Osiris-Dionysus was hung on a tree or crucified.


I will try to later in the day. Hung on a tree, easy tho. Lots of tree refs in much mythology. Dionysus' image is hung on a pole. Osiris' casket ends up in a tree/column. Goddesses were also associated with trees. Myrrh, Isis, Asherah's "poles", just to name three.
But that's not what F&G are claiming, which is "Osiris-Dionysus was hung on a tree or crucified". I'd be interested if you can find where they give any evidence for that.

Quote:
I ask again, why did F&G push it tho, to suggest other gods were crucified?
Why do they claim that Jesus was portrayed with a beard and long hair in their book, then as clean-shaven and short hair on a website? My guess: they don't care. What percentage of people who read their books do you think actually look into their claims?
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Old 07-01-2004, 09:02 AM   #22
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Celsus,
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Emphasising parallels without discussing the differences is something no responsible scholar should do.
How do you know this?

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Care to say anything else about my post? Or make the case that F&G are, in fact, good scholarship? ... I'll get out my copy of F&G as soon as someone makes a case that they are to be taken seriously.
I do not believe it would serve the interest of any one of us here if you were to get a copy of TJM (or read one if you already have a copy): it would only help you because your opinion of TJM is based on hearsay.

So, with due respect, I don't think anyone here is obliged to make any case that F & G are to be taken seriously. We don't have such a responsibility and would appreciate it if you ceased acting like its up to anyone here to persuade you to read the book.

Its your private choice and I am confident a majority of us here do not give a tinkers ass whether or not one who calls a book 'new age sewage' opens up their minds and examines a book they have formed an opinion about.

The best you can do is hang around threads like this and hope you learn some more about the thesis and form an opinion as you obviously have, or search the web, or make a request to a TJM proponent or their advertising manager to supply you with reasons why you should take F & G seriously.

Advertising your unwillingness to purchase the book doesn't argur well and, IMO, is not needed here. It smacks of immaturity and self-importance. And I am sure you are none of those, so why give a bad image?

Lets focus on the subject please and not bring in other factors like how we intend to spend our money or time and derogatory characterizations of materials we have not read.
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Old 07-01-2004, 09:23 AM   #23
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Originally Posted by Jacob Aliet
Celsus,

How do you know this?
Because Albright made the same mistake through the 1930s-60s with the Nuzi and Mari tablets, and it wasn't till T.L. Thompson corrected him in 1974(!) in a comprehensive monograph that this was recognised as the question begging it was.
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I do not believe it would serve the interest of any one of us here if you were to get a copy of TJM. It would only help you because your opinion of TJM is based on hearsay
I suggest you don't presume what I have or haven't read. For your information, I have read TJM, and it's the Thorson's 2000 edition. So for example, the first footnote of the book reads "Gospel of Thomas, 62" which of course, is appallingly bad, since there's no indication which edition of GThomas they're refering to, since that would help greatly, or if it is a verse, which division of chapters/verses they're refering to. And then it doesn't help that the Gospel of Thomas is mentioned nowhere else in the book but for p.145 (according to the index, which should have mentioned the first page) with a brief mention, since it's possibly the most important Gnostic text we have. So all that from just the first footnote of the book. Can you see why it doesn't deserve a serious treatment?
Quote:
So, with due respect, I don't think anyone here is obliged to make any case that F & G are to be taken seriously. We don't have such a responsibility and would appreciate it if you ceased acting like its up to anyone here to persuade you to read the book.

Its your private choice and I am confident a majority do not give a tinkers ass whether or not one who calls a book 'new age sewage' opens up their minds and examines a book they have formed an opinion about.

The best you can do is hang around threads like this and hope you learn some more about the thesis and form an opinion as you obviously have, or search the web, or make a request to a TJM proponent or their advertising manager to supply you with reasons why you should take F & G seriously.

Advertising your unwillingness to purchase the book doesn't argur well and, IMO, is not needed here. It smacks of immaturity and self-importance.
You should have saved your breath, since I have read the book, and have it right here. But I suppose you did succeed in making me pull it off the shelf.

Joel
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Old 07-01-2004, 09:31 AM   #24
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Originally Posted by Magdlyn
I guess you and GD are pretty angry. Dirty paving stones and poop imagery.

I am open to dissecting TJM, as should be obvious. Slinging around scatological refs is not aiding in the deconstruction. It was fun at first, but need we extend it?

I admit, I am not a trained scholar, so am asking for your patience. If the discussion makes you too mad, you can skip it! I'm not trying to be an a--hole.
Au contraire, I'm not angry in the least. I just like the way "New Age" and "sewage" run together in a sentence, and use it every opportunity I get. But anyway, follow the discussion with Jacob and me if you want to watch a nice little ruck.

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Old 07-01-2004, 09:40 AM   #25
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If further proof is required, Jacob, this is a review I'd written a long time ago (probably late 2002) which I donated to Secularlife.org en masse with a whole bunch of other reviews early last year. Needless to say, other than the descriptive portions of the review, I would distance myself from the entire first paragraph today (and my views have changed considerably such that I'd distance myself from practically all those reviews today, as an embarassment).

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Old 07-01-2004, 05:56 PM   #26
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Reply from Mr. Freke (with his permission):

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Hi Diana,

Thanks for this invitation. It is good to see someone actually taking up the arguments, albeit I feel they have missed our point somewhat. I would love to say I will go through and refute these criticism. (Although I have to also say that I am sure the book is far from perfect and some criticisms may well be valid.) But this is simply not possible at the moment. Peter and I are writing a new book to an incredibly tight deadline and I don't even have much time for my family right now – so please forgive me for not entering into this debate. I will forward your emails to Peter in the hope he may find some time to take part.

As a general reply I would say this. The strength for me of the Jesus Mysteries thesis lies in its ability to comprehensively explain a large amount of otherwise troubling facts. It does not rely on any individual pieces of evidence. We may well be wrong on some details – although I am not aware presently that we are. It brings together a large amount of research – mainly done by others – in a new and coherent way, which makes a lot more sense to me than the idea that Jesus was actually a Godman who was born of a virgin, walked on water, died and resurrected etc. It is a question always of competitive plausibility.

As for the style of the book. It is written as a popular book, not an academic book. Some people don't like that – but most do. It is designed as an argument. After all we are attempting to question some very deep assumptions. I am sure it will not be the last word on the matter. I hope not anyway.

In love

Tim Freke
d
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Old 07-01-2004, 07:44 PM   #27
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Originally Posted by diana
Reply from Mr. Freke (with his permission):

It is good to see someone actually taking up the arguments, albeit I feel they have missed our point somewhat.
Yes, I've seen this answer by them on other websites as well. Since I am actually questioning the evidence that underlines their argument, I can't see how I've "missed the point".

Quote:
The strength for me of the Jesus Mysteries thesis lies in its ability to comprehensively explain a large amount of otherwise troubling facts. It does not rely on any individual pieces of evidence.
Yes, they've used that one before, as well. That's why I decided to look through an entire section ("Death of the Godman"). If the individual pieces nearly all fail, then the whole thing falls apart.

Quote:
We may well be wrong on some details – although I am not aware presently that we are.
Well, for starters, they have Jesus as having long hair and a beard in their book (which they claim is a similarity to Osiris-Dionysus), but on their website they claim that Jesus was clean-shaven and beardless (link provided previously), and also claim that Jesus wasn't portrayed as having long hair and a beard until the 8th C CE. So which is it, F&G?

Quote:
As for the style of the book. It is written as a popular book, not an academic book. Some people don't like that – but most do. It is designed as an argument. After all we are attempting to question some very deep assumptions.
Nothing wrong with writing a popular book. All I ask is that it be accurate. "After all"? I'm not sure how it follows that attempting to question deep assumptions requires a popular book rather than an academic book.

I had to laugh at their use of "troubling facts" and "deep assumptions". They use similar language throughout TJM. Nothing better than inviting the reader to believe that they know something that the rest don't know! F&G are good at preaching to the converted.

Thanks for that, Diana.
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Old 07-02-2004, 09:00 AM   #28
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Originally Posted by GakuseiDon
Nothing better than inviting the reader to believe that they know something that the rest don't know! F&G are good at preaching to the converted.
I agree with you that the "dots" they're connecting should be accurate--which is why I've requested evidence above and beyond "everybody knows" and "scholars said/knew" in another thread recently concerning this book. However, I think if their aim was to make their readers question old assumptions--an admirable goal, IMO--they have accomplished that.

They've succeeded in raising the question in my mind. I am not convinced, but I am intrigued enough to research the matter further. I can't expect a popular book to do more.

The issue of Jesus' hair/beard length is quite insignificant, IMO. There are far more important things to question, such as interpretation of symbolism and how we know what the various stages of mystery initiation were and what they were called, etc. But that may just be me.

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Old 07-02-2004, 09:43 AM   #29
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However, I think if their aim was to make their readers question old assumptions--an admirable goal, IMO--they have accomplished that.
Trouble is Diane, that creationists and fundies can (and do) say the same thing. Would you honestly be so sympathetic towards F&G if they were YECs asking people to think outside the evolutionist box? Especially after so much stuff that they said had been proven false.

People should be judged by whether they are telling the truth, not whether their ideas are unusual/appealing.

Yours

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Old 07-02-2004, 11:53 AM   #30
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Originally Posted by Bede
Trouble is Diane, that creationists and fundies can (and do) say the same thing. Would you honestly be so sympathetic towards F&G if they were YECs asking people to think outside the evolutionist box?
I don't see what that's troublesome, Bede. I applaud anyone who can provoke others to question their own assumptions.

If they--or anyone--forwarded a theory that was internally consistent and did not clash with scientifically-demonstrable facts, of course I would be sympathetic. What I'm seeing with the theory they've forwarded in TJM is that it explains many things that have never made sense to me in any context. I still want more substantiation for the "facts" they're resting that theory on. Considering that they wrote a popular book, the fact that they haven't provided the scholarly research/substantiation that I require does not mean it does not exist or that their theory is bullshit.

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Especially after so much stuff that they said had been proven false.
I don't know that "so much stuff" is an accurate assessment. Have you read the book? Just because evidence X, Y and Z has been disproven doesn't mean that the evidence A - W isn't still enough to convict the defendant.

Remember, Darwin said a lot of stuff that has been proven false. This does not disprove his theory, though.

I think what we should be focusing on is whether the theory is flawed or whether the evidence is inconclusive. The YEC theory has the insurmountable problem of contradicting all the myriad scientific evidence concerning the age of the earth. It isn't a matter of there even being evidence for it, let alone whether that evidence is conclusive or not. The "theory" (dogma, actually, as theories perforce are falsifiable) is thus shit, as it requires you to ignore science and learning and just believe. In the case of TJM, though, we're met with a theory that conceivably fits recorded secular history (as we know it thus far), and we must examine the evidence to determine whether there is enough to substantiate the theory.

Quote:
People should be judged by whether they are telling the truth, not whether their ideas are unusual/appealing.
I was judging a popular book, and how it presents a theory. In so doing, I had to make a judgment call on what the authors' intent was, and whether or not I thought they'd met that goal.

I agree that people should be judged by whether or not they are telling the truth, but theories should be judged on their own merits, regardless of whether the most trusted person in the world or a chronic liar suggests them.

d
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