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09-17-2005, 11:00 AM | #21 |
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I think a lot of what the OP is describing comes from the fact that quite a few skeptics of the bible were at one time fervent believers. Once they become non-believers there seems to be a need among some to purge.
One doctrine I was taught as a Christian was called “Iconoclastic Arrogance.� The doctrine was prompted by how people put a pastor or teacher on a pedestal, but once the pastor or teacher’s clay feet are discovered the idolater becomes and iconoclast and lashes out. I think it was a perceptive teaching… It also applies to the bible, IMO. You have to admit that the pedestal that the bible is put on is quite high… in most Christian circles, that is. |
09-17-2005, 11:12 AM | #22 | |
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09-17-2005, 11:23 AM | #23 | |
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09-17-2005, 01:36 PM | #24 | |||||
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I include Finkelstein in the same category as these other three. He has his own ideas as to the stratigraphy of the region; time will see whether they pan out or not. I do think that Dever and others like him have some unwarranted bitterness towards Finkelstein. The views of Thomson, Lemche, and Davies, however, are not like these mainstream figures. I have read some of their stuff, and I just don't buy it. The Persian and Hellenistic dating of the entire body of Hebrew scriptures simply ignores 300 years of biblical criticism, Hebrew linguistics, Levantine archaeology, and general anthropological principles. Their writing gives off the impression of being overtly ideological. I have no clue if its meant that way, but that's the impression it gives off. On the other hand, I do apologize for the anti-Semitism statement. I never said they were anti-Semitic, just that their writing can be taken that way, as some of it (at least to my eye) assumes the presence of a Jewish conspiracy, 2500 years ago. Quote:
1'. [.....................].......[...................................] and cut [.........................] 2'. [.........] my father went up [....................f]ighting at/against Ab[....] 3'. And my father lay down; he went to his [fathers]. And the king of I[s-] 4'. rael penetrated into my father's land[. And] Hadad made me—myself—king. 5'. And Hadad went in front of me[, and] I departed from ...........[.................] 6'. of my kings. And I killed two [power]ful kin[gs], who harnessed two thou[sand cha-] 7'. riots and two thousand horsemen. [I killed Jo]ram son of [Ahab] 8'. king of Israel, and I killed [Achaz]yahu son of [Joram king] 9'. of the House of David. And I set [.................................................. .....] 10'. their land ...[.................................................. .....................................] 11'. other ...[.................................................. ....................... and Jehu ru-] 12'. led over Is[rael.............................................. .....................................] 13'. siege upon [.................................................. ..........] Lines 8-9 state, "...and I killed [...]yahu son of [...] king of the House of Dwd." The claim that Dwd refers to the Egyptian god Thoth, or to some hitherto unknown deity named Da'ud, simply doesn't make sense in context. The line right above it says he killed the king of Israel; given the context, "King of the House of Dwd" would most likely refer to the king of Judah. In context, whoever's "house" it is would be most likely be the founder of the dynasty. Quote:
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09-17-2005, 02:52 PM | #25 | ||
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However, if you're proven right about the Mesha Stele and the Tel Dan Inscription, then I'll bet you that bottle that the bytdwd was intended by its forger(s) to be a mention of the historical David (TM). Stephen |
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09-17-2005, 05:22 PM | #26 | ||
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09-17-2005, 06:57 PM | #27 | ||
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Of those who have decided to defend the "the Bible is shit" position, I've noticed that most have nothing or almost nothing to say about the Bible itself. The criticism almost completely centers around the people who read and apply the Bible to intellectualy absurd and morally deplorable ends. But, as some have already pointed out on this thread, this is not a valid criticism of the Bible itself. It is a criticism of those who abuse Biblical literature.
Also, if we are going to measure the value of the Bible by the deeds it has inspired, I think it is revealing that certain people choose only to discuss the atrocities and absurdities that have resulted from it, and freely ignore the numerous charities and acts of compassion that have resulted from people applying Biblical ethics. Personally, I neither blame the inquisition, the holocaust, the crusades, or any other number of religiously based atrocities on the Bible. By the same token, I don't credit acts of compassion or religious charities to the Bible. I believe these are all things that more or less would have occurred irrespective of whether or not the books of the Bible were ever written and compiled. The Bible didn't invent greed. It didn't invent land grabbing. It didn't invent racism. All of these things simply would have developed and fostered under some different banner. Conversely, the Bible didn't invent charity, nor did it invent altruism. Two responses that went beyond merely lambasting fundamentalists were from Pope in the Woods (which I think is an hysterical monicker) and Skeptic Boy Lee (whose anagram, ironically, is "SBL"). Quote:
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09-17-2005, 08:38 PM | #28 | ||||||||
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And Finkelstein is slowly becoming more accepted because they cannot get away from the fact that a lot of his wayward positions are based on such solid archaeological evidence. He's only relatively recently had the minimalist slur revoked. Quote:
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On the ideological front, it's interesting to note that one person labeled minimalist, Keith Whitelam, attempted to show that modern analysis was itself ideologically biased. This attempt is what got him labeled minimalist. And to be labeled minimalist can mean being threatened, insulted, and disturbed in various ways -- all because one attempts to take as scholarly an approach as possible, a task which is never fully possible because there are always concerns which interfere. Quote:
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One needs to explain why despite the fact that only the nobility was taken into exile, the returnees came back to an empty land. This notion of an empty land is a fabrication to disinherit the Jews who weren't hauled off into exile on the various occasions by Nebuchadnezzar. and who stayed where they were born and continued their daily lives as best as they could. spin |
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09-17-2005, 10:01 PM | #29 | |||
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Archaeology is broken up into the Paleolithic, Mesolithic, Neolithic, Bronze Age, and Iron Age. These are not biblical periods. The entire history of Israel takes place in the Iron Age and the very late Bronze Age. The Patriarchs, exodus, etc. that I referred to are biblical stories. They have nothing to do with archaeological periods. Quote:
We know what Hebrew sounded like in the Persian and Hellenistic periods. It was a lot more Aramaized than Iron Age Hebrew. It was more distinct than Iron Age Hebrew. The Hebrew used in Genesis could easily be considered a dialect of Phoenician. The Hebrew used in Ezra could not. The term "Biblical Hebrew" refers to the language used in most of Genesis throughout most of the Pentateuch and Deuteronomistic History. The language in Ezra and Chronicles is known as Second Temple Hebrew. They are different stages of the language. It would be like comparing our English to Shakespeare's English. And what you are saying is that assigning an approximate date based on this is not valid. Anthropological principles refer to the processes of cultural evolution. The Hebrew of the Pentateuch is primarily earlier than the Hebrew of Ezra. To Lemche, this apparently means nothing. Oral tradition apparently means nothing; it is no longer valid for the Bible to be a collection of myths, stories, and laws; now it has to be political propoganda by the Persian-period version of Zionists. Parsimony in evaluating archaeological evidence means nothing; an inscription that refers to btdwd can't possibly refer to a David, because we don't want it to. It has to refer to Thoth or some deity named Da'ud. Never mind that there is no known temple to Thoth in the area, and that there is no known deity named Da'ud anywhere. And anyway, if it does refer to David, it's automatically a fake, since we've decided that David was invented by the returning Jews in order to justify taking the land. I'm sorry. Nobody's asking you to believe the Bible is accurate history. But you're going out of your way to make the origin of the Bible as late and shady as possible. Quote:
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09-17-2005, 10:48 PM | #30 | ||||||||||||||||||||
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There are no archaeological analyses which do not pay some lipservice to a literary work of unknown dating. Quote:
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(But Ezra and Nehemiah were originally two separate books. Both written much later than you muse. Josephus, while having access to a vast assortment of books, only knew Nehemiah's memoir and the version was very different from that found in the canonical book. Josephus also knew the Vorlage to 1 Esdras before it was changed to Ezra and a part removed from there and included in the newly formed canonical Nehemiah. Despite the claims for the importance of Ezra earlier than the Pharisaic period, that importance is not recognized by anyone as it isn't acknowledged by anyone.) Quote:
"by the waters of Babylon there we sat down and wept when we remembered Zion" Even that was written in Yehud. Note the word "there" $m distances the writer from Babylon. Quote:
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