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Old 12-07-2007, 09:07 AM   #41
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They all got their Jesus the same way, through reading him into the septuagint.
This demonstrably specious claim fails to explain why the "fit" with Scripture is so obviously forced so many times. And the most damning examples is the fundamental tenet of the faith (ie the crucifixion of Christ). There is no more obviously forced imposition of a claim already believed onto the text available.

If what you say is true, we would expect a perfect fit between Scripture and the story but that simply and clearly is not what we have.

I think it does...

Regardless of an HJ, the stories about this creature are based on a mangling of OT materials.

You will need to demonstrate exactly why such should not be considered the most likely possibility, since you state it is "demonstrably specious".

I await your evidence...
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Old 12-07-2007, 09:52 AM   #42
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This whole thing reminds me of the discussion of the witness statements at the beginning of the book of Mormon. No (rational) person would try and determine the nature of the angelic visitation or whether the witnesses had a group hallucination in which they saw the golden plates. [/I]
Mythra, I'm not necessarily trying to determine the nature of the visitations to the early Christians. I'm just trying to determine how the claim of visitations came about. That may entail determining the nature of the visitations/appearance experiences, or it may entail an explanation along the lines of lies being told, or stretches of the truth, urban legend, vying for positions of power, etc, etc. Whatever the line of explanation though, I think an attempt at filling in the details is worthwhile (even if only in a heuristic sense) so as to allow one to really asses its explanatory power, i.e. broad brush strokes - it's just some kind of urban legend or lie - aren't worth much IMHO.

GuruGeorge, Thanks for opinion that Paul was probably the only one who was genuinely visionary and the other guys simply "saw" an idea. In this case, Paul seems not to know of that difference; he seems to equate his appearance experience with all the others (1 Cor 15:5-8), and therefore seems to think they too had appearance experiences. I think your idea though does have a role to play. I keep going back to this all being some combination of individual hallucinations, dreams, "seeing the idea", followed by a sociological selection of those able to teach/preach (leadership qualities) for positions of authority and then some inflation of events like happens in urban legends - he appeared to the 12 at one time (if that is what is intended), he appeared to the 500 at one time, he appeared to all the apostles.

Kris
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Old 12-07-2007, 03:06 PM   #43
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This whole thing reminds me of the discussion of the witness statements at the beginning of the book of Mormon. No (rational) person would try and determine the nature of the angelic visitation or whether the witnesses had a group hallucination in which they saw the golden plates. [/I]
Mythra, I'm not necessarily trying to determine the nature of the visitations to the early Christians. I'm just trying to determine how the claim of visitations came about. That may entail determining the nature of the visitations/appearance experiences, or it may entail an explanation along the lines of lies being told, or stretches of the truth, urban legend, vying for positions of power, etc, etc. Whatever the line of explanation though, I think an attempt at filling in the details is worthwhile (even if only in a heuristic sense) so as to allow one to really asses its explanatory power, i.e. broad brush strokes - it's just some kind of urban legend or lie - aren't worth much IMHO.

GuruGeorge, Thanks for opinion that Paul was probably the only one who was genuinely visionary and the other guys simply "saw" an idea. In this case, Paul seems not to know of that difference; he seems to equate his appearance experience with all the others (1 Cor 15:5-8), and therefore seems to think they too had appearance experiences. I think your idea though does have a role to play. I keep going back to this all being some combination of individual hallucinations, dreams, "seeing the idea", followed by a sociological selection of those able to teach/preach (leadership qualities) for positions of authority and then some inflation of events like happens in urban legends - he appeared to the 12 at one time (if that is what is intended), he appeared to the 500 at one time, he appeared to all the apostles.

Kris
You should bear in mind that 1 Cor 15.5-7 is likely to be false, if Jesus was not a god, and died.

But consider this:

If Jesus was a mere mortal, his appearance to Cephas and the twelve would indicate he was still alive, therefore Jesus may have been alive when 1 Cor 15.5-7 was written. 1 Cor 15.5-7 is very likely to be false even in this scenario.
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Old 12-07-2007, 04:44 PM   #44
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If what you say is true, we would expect a perfect fit between Scripture and the story but that simply and clearly is not what we have.
I think it does...
You think there is a perfect fit between the story and the Scripture it purports to fulfill? You find none of the uses of Scripture strained? Really?

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Regardless of an HJ, the stories about this creature are based on a mangling of OT materials.
Please explain how "mangling" and "perfect fit" can describe the same relationship. They seem to be complete opposites.

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You will need to demonstrate exactly why such should not be considered the most likely possibility, since you state it is "demonstrably specious".
I already did. There is no crucified messiah to be found anywhere in Hebrew Scripture. It clearly must be imposed upon the text. Therefore, no story about a crucified messiah can be said to derived entirely from Scripture.

QED

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I await your evidence...
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