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07-09-2004, 04:20 PM | #71 | |
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07-10-2004, 04:08 AM | #72 | |
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Amaleq,
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07-10-2004, 06:21 AM | #73 | |
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Regards, Rick Sumner |
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07-10-2004, 11:12 AM | #74 | |
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If we assume that the author of Acts has inserted an actual quote from Gamaliel, you are correct that he could very well have been talking about somebody else. However, I think Toto has pretty well demolished the idea that this Gamaliel story has any basis in history. I think I was expecting too much from the author of Acts in assuming he would depict Gamaliel as describing Jesus as a different sort of Messiah from the others. |
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07-10-2004, 01:54 PM | #75 |
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In reference to the OP, we don't actually have anything that would constitute primary evidence of the central characters to begin with.
No archaeological evidence. No contemporary historical tracts. We don't even have solid anchors in the canon itself. When we address the problem of "best explanation", it includes explaining this lack of primary evidence. Bede, I suppose there is reason to be sceptical of Josephus insofar as he would perhaps be expected to put a Roman twist on things. But in comparison to the fantasies of virgin birth, the fabricated slaughter of the innocents, miracles of healing and etc. - Josephus is head and shoulders above Acts. At least his work is in fact credited to a real author in contrast to Acts. I see people excusing the lack of accredited authorship for Christian writings. But that just isn't true of Josephus and other historians of the time. What historian would give credence to anonymous writings? Spin, welcome back. |
07-10-2004, 02:25 PM | #76 | |
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07-11-2004, 05:23 AM | #77 | |
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07-11-2004, 09:31 AM | #78 | |||
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Obviously, if an analysis doesn't explain what it needs to then it has little/no value. There is no point of a theory that doesn't explain things. So, "explanatory power" gets a "doh" from me. It is stating the banal obvious. Historical methodology is about tools for analysing, and therefore explaining, what happened in the past. Explanatory power without historical methodology has no value in a historical pursuit, for ultimately it has no substance for its explanatory power. spin |
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07-11-2004, 09:36 AM | #79 | |
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spin |
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07-11-2004, 10:34 AM | #80 | |
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