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Old 06-08-2006, 12:15 AM   #621
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Originally Posted by Didymus
Possibly. But that wasn't my point. Can you cite any 1st or 2nd century evidence that Palestinian Jews of that period knew anything about the Jesus described in the gospels?
I never said I could. But what you said was that the ben Pandera legend was evidence that the Palestinians Jews didn’t know who Jesus was supposed to be and that there were no Christians in first or second century Palestine. And it isn’t. Indeed, if there were no Christians in first or second century Palestine, what would have led to Jews in first or second century Palestine recounting the ben Pandera legend? It seems to me that the fact that they even told the story implies that they must have heard something about Jesus, although I don’t know what it was specifically.
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Originally Posted by Didymus
As far as I can tell, they had no knowledge of his ever existing, despite their proximity to the alleged feedings, healings, exorcisms and other public miracles. You would think that they would have heard eyewitness reports, wouldn't you?
You are confusing two separate issues. If there were no miracles (and I hope it’s clear that I don’t believe in them), then there would be no eyewitness reports of them. The possibility I’m canvassing is a non-miracle-working flesh-and-blood Jesus. What sort of reports would you expect to find of that sort of Jesus?
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Originally Posted by Didymus
Nonetheless, and notwithstanding Luke's reports of mass conversions after the resurrection, there is no archeological, paleographic or epigraphic evidence of Christianity in Palestine until the church at Megiddo, which dates to well into the 3rd century. And it is of Byzantine origin!
Again, what sort of archaeological, palaeographic, or epigraphic evidence would you expect to find? Are you suggesting that there can’t have been any Christians if there weren’t any church buildings?
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Originally Posted by Didymus
Perhaps his lack of presence is the reason why they didn't "believe in him." Or can you offer a better explanation?
I’m not insisting on which is the better explanation. All I’m saying is that there are alternative explanations. Note that it isn’t necessary to assert the ahistoricity of Mohammed, or of Joseph Smith, to explain ‘disbelief’ in them. And note also that the people who told, or made up, the ‘ben Pandera’ story didn’t assert the ahistoricity of Jesus.
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Old 06-08-2006, 12:20 AM   #622
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Originally Posted by Didymus
So are you saying that Paul didn't respect the Pillars' authority or knowledge of Jesus' teachings, even though they had actually witnessed, day after day for three years, his words and deeds?
Yes, that is precisely the possibility I am canvassing. It seems possible to me that Paul was deeply dishonest, a dissembler and deceiver (possibly also a self-deceiver). If he was consciously and deliberately spreading a message at variance with that of the Pillars, he would want to do as little as possible to draw attention to their superior knowledge of Jesus and the superior authority that might derive from it. But it's still possible that he found making some sort of limited reference to his contact with them either strategically advisable or impossible to avoid.
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Old 06-08-2006, 12:50 AM   #623
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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
I have no idea where you obtained any of the above I have placed in red. It certainly isn't from me.

Replace it with: "...the Messiah was sent by God to be sacrificed to provide salvation rather than by force as we've always thought."

If you follow Doherty, this Messiah was executed in the sublunar realm.

If you follow a view more like Wells, this Messiah was executed some time in the past.

If you follow the traditional view, this Messiah was their former leader.
OK, sorry for the misunderstanding. I think I now have a somewhat clearer idea of what you're saying.

You seem to be saying that there are different possible versions of this story, some which include a historical flesh-and-blood Jesus and some which don't. And you also seem to be saying that you don't attach much importance to the difference between the two. Well, you may even be right about that. But I still think that that is the difference this thread is about. So I want to look a little more closely at the version of the story which does not includ a historical flesh-and-blood Jesus.

Now, how is that supposed to work? As far as I can make out, it must be something like this:

There's a group of Jews who have gathered together to study why the Messiah has not come. One of them announces that he's had an inspired vision, which has revealed to him that the Messiah will not be a flesh-and-blood martial hero (as previously generally believed). Instead, he will be or has been an immaterial spiritual manifestation who will be or has been the victim in a mystical sacrifice which will ensure redemption.

This scenario still gives essentially the same problem I mentioned before. Having repudiated the doctrine of a flesh-and-blood Messiah in favour of a spiritual and immaterial one, the new religion soon after reverts to the doctrine of a flesh-and-blood Messiah and completely purges all reference to the original repudiation of that doctrine.

I acknowledge that the version of your story that includes a historical Jesus doesn't have the same problem. But if you admit the version with a historical Jesus, then you admit a historical Jesus!
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Old 06-08-2006, 02:36 AM   #624
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There's a group of Jews who have gathered together to study why the Messiah has not come. One of them announces that he's had an inspired vision, which has revealed to him that the Messiah will not be a flesh-and-blood martial hero (as previously generally believed). Instead, he will be or has been an immaterial spiritual manifestation who will be or has been the victim in a mystical sacrifice which will ensure redemption.

This scenario still gives essentially the same problem I mentioned before. Having repudiated the doctrine of a flesh-and-blood Messiah in favour of a spiritual and immaterial one, the new religion soon after reverts to the doctrine of a flesh-and-blood Messiah and completely purges all reference to the original repudiation of that doctrine.

I acknowledge that the version of your story that includes a historical Jesus doesn't have the same problem. But if you admit the version with a historical Jesus, then you admit a historical Jesus!
Far too clear cut!

There were large groups of diasporic Jews - essenes, with sub sects and sub cults. One ( might be several independently!) of these sub groups - like a cancerous growth, fixated on the concept that their mediator god - remember the Judaic god is exhausting emotionally because he is perfect and holy - was part god part man and this evolved into fully god fully man - an old idea - in genesis the gods lay with women and had children.

I suppose a search for these god genes would be evidence for the Lord Jesus Christ - not of his existence directly but of other god genes in humanity. Or maybe it is easier to note the fascinating similarities with all other myths, legends, hero stories religions and superstitions!

The statements in Genesis about gods laying with women are now testable genetically!
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Old 06-08-2006, 03:56 AM   #625
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Originally Posted by Clivedurdle
Far too clear cut!
Well, you can do what you like, but when I'm evaluating explanations I don't treat vagueness as a positive feature.
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Originally Posted by Clivedurdle
There were large groups of diasporic Jews - essenes, with sub sects and sub cults. One ( might be several independently!) of these sub groups - like a cancerous growth, fixated on the concept that their mediator god - remember the Judaic god is exhausting emotionally because he is perfect and holy - was part god part man and this evolved into fully god fully man - an old idea - in genesis the gods lay with women and had children.
Well, perhaps. But this looks to me like a different idea from the one I was discussing (the one Amaleq13 put forward), because it doesn't appear to involve any visions.
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Old 06-08-2006, 05:59 AM   #626
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Originally Posted by J-D
Well, you can do what you like, but when I'm evaluating explanations I don't treat vagueness as a positive feature.Well, perhaps. But this looks to me like a different idea from the one I was discussing (the one Amaleq13 put forward), because it doesn't appear to involve any visions.
I've stated my clear position in favour of visions and other hallucinogenics in various places.

Vagueness is not a correct way to look at this, I am attempting to get the gestalt, the overview clear before focussing down. Premature attempts at focus have led to the major errors i see with HJists. They are too certain!
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Old 06-08-2006, 09:42 AM   #627
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Originally Posted by J-D
You seem to be saying that there are different possible versions of this story, some which include a historical flesh-and-blood Jesus and some which don't.
I started out my participation in this discussion focusing specifically on offering insight into collective hallucinations countering the notion that the alleged appearances required or were only explicable given a historical Jesus.

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And you also seem to be saying that you don't attach much importance to the difference between the two.
No, I contend that the alleged resurrection appearances can be explained by the same psychological phenomenon regardless of whether Jesus was historical or not.

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Now, how is that supposed to work?
I think one crucial factor you left out is that this group believed it found evidence in Scripture that a resurrected Messiah should have been expected all along. I think a strong but not, IMO, conclusive argument can be made that this processed followed the resurrection experiences and that seems to me to clearly favor an historical Jesus. I also think that an MJ theory requires that the Scriptural "discovery" preceded the experiences.

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Instead, he will be or has been an immaterial spiritual manifestation who will be or has been the victim in a mystical sacrifice which will ensure redemption.
I think the sacrifice has to be understood to have taken place prior to the discovery in all scenarios.

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This scenario still gives essentially the same problem I mentioned before. Having repudiated the doctrine of a flesh-and-blood Messiah in favour of a spiritual and immaterial one, the new religion soon after reverts to the doctrine of a flesh-and-blood Messiah and completely purges all reference to the original repudiation of that doctrine.
I think "soon after" is a misleading. You have to take into account distance (from Jerusalem), change in membership (from Jewish) and the first Jewish War (massive disruption and discontinuity even within traditional Judiasm) rather than simply counting years between the onset of the movement and the onset of the change of focus from the risen Christ to the living man who became the risen Christ.

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But if you admit the version with a historical Jesus, then you admit a historical Jesus!
I've never denied that it was a possibility. I would think that identifying myself as "agnostic" pretty much requires that assumption.
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Old 06-08-2006, 10:12 AM   #628
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Originally Posted by jjramsey
No, not at all. Rather, I am saying that Turton's model of Mark's use of the LXX is inadequate to explain, for example, the looser OT allusions that look like the byproduct of someone who wasn't trying to echo the OT but happened to do so unconsciously because of his/her familiarity of OT stories--which is what I'd expect from a Jewish Christian creating or expanding on oral tradition.
Do you really think that all those allusions to scripture just found their way into Mark's gospel by accident? Or through his subconscious?

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Nor does it explain well some very forced applications of the OT that look like implied post hoc proof-texting.
And you don't think Mark himself would have have engaged in some "very forced applications of the OT"? Do you think that constructing a plausible gospel from ancient texts would be easy? Are you claiming that the great majority of Markan passages don't reflect OT scripture? Or what?

Again, what is your hypothesis? And what evidence do you have to support it? Most particularly, aside from your speculations that Mk could have been taken from the oral tradition, what evidence do you have of a pre-Markan oral tradition?

What I don't understand is this: Why would you assume the source for a Markan passage is oral tradition when you have a) no evidence of a pre-Markan oral tradition and b) a corresponding OT passage staring you in the face?

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First off, I am not assuming that Paul is neglecting anything. He is writing letters addressing local church problems, not delivering history lessons.
Okay, "omitting." If you can't address the real issue, find a word to quibble about!

As I have said repeatedly, Mark's readers would have regarded the Pillars' role as Jesus' companions as previously unknown information that Paul didn't record. If they accepted Mark's Jesus as historical, they would have thought, just as you do, that Paul had his reasons.

Once again, have you really read Paul's epistles? I am astonished that you would thrice characterize them as "letters addressing local church problems." I think I can safely say that no reputable theologian, church historian or bible scholar would deprecate them in that way.

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Actually, what I am saying is that there is no reason to suspect that letters troubleshooting church problems would necessarily mention details unrelated to their purpose. If they do, that is unexpected good luck, but still unexpected.
Paul himself made no such weak excuses. He never said anything like "There is an Egyptian papyrus crisis, so we must leave aside some details like the three years our Lord preached in Galilee, the trial of our Lord before Pilate and his crucifixion by Roman soldiers. Instead, I send greetings from my fellow laborers Timothy and Lucian and Jason and Sosipater, my kinsmen."

And so on. But you seem to think that Paul was thinking in exactly that manner.

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Originally Posted by Didymus
And disrespect the chosen companions and hearers of Jesus in full view of his congregations?
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Ahem.


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Originally Posted by jjRamsey
See Galatians 2:11-13:

"But when Cephas came to Antioch, I opposed him to his face, because he stood self-condemned; for until certain people came from James, he used to eat with the Gentiles. But after they came, he drew back and kept himself separate for fear of the circumcision faction. And the other Jews joined him in this hypocrisy, so that even Barnabas was led astray by their hypocrisy."
So how is that showing respect for Peter's authority? Or acknowledging Peter's familiarity with the teachings of Jesus?

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Old 06-08-2006, 11:28 AM   #629
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Originally Posted by J-D
But what you said was that the ben Pandera legend was evidence that the Palestinians Jews didn’t know who Jesus was supposed to be and that there were no Christians in first or second century Palestine. And it isn’t.
No, I didn't say that the ben Pandera legend was evidence that the Palestinian Jews didn't know who Jesus was supposed to be.

Read what I actually said:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Didymus
Not only did Palestinian Jews not accept his divinity, there's no evidence that they even knew who he was supposed to be! To the contrary, as we see in the ben Pandera legend about Jesus being the illegitimate son of a Roman soldier. That, among other things, suggests to me that neither the founders of Christianity nor the first Christians lived in Palestine.
Italics added.

I stand by what I said. There is a lack of evidence to support a) the commonly held Christian belief that first century Jews knew about the Jesus of the gospels and rejected him for theological reasons, and b) the belief that there was a thriving Jewish Christian community in Palestine at any time before the third century.

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Christians in first or second century Palestine, what would have led to Jews in first or second century Palestine recounting the ben Pandera legend?
Ominous reports about the heretical cult of Christians from their friends and relatives in the Diaspora.

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The possibility I’m canvassing is a non-miracle-working flesh-and-blood Jesus. What sort of reports would you expect to find of that sort of Jesus? Again, what sort of archaeological, palaeographic, or epigraphic evidence would you expect to find?
That depends, not on whether he worked miracles or didn't, but on whether he was believed by Palestinian Jews to have have done so.

If no Palestinians regarded Jesus as divine, I wouldn't expect to find anything, regardless of whether the "real" Jesus was historical or mythical.

It's my contention that Palestinian Jews "rejected Jesus" because they didn't believe existed, let alone perform miracles. They had heard of no such person from their local compatriots, and had no reason to believe rumors from the Diaspora about such a messiah in their own backyard.

It's my belief that first century Christianity was a cult of the Diaspora. It was created from afar by Greek-speaking messianic Jews who had only a scant knowledge of Palestinian geography and history and who used a Greek translation (the Septuagint) of the Torah as their primary source of information about their savior. Their audience consisted of other messianic Jews, God-fearers and Pagans, none of whom lived in Palestine. With the possible exception of Luke, none of the 2nd century church fathers were Jewish; by that time, it had become a wholly gentile religion.

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Are you suggesting that there can’t have been any Christians if there weren’t any church buildings?
Of course not! House churches were used until the Romans began to liberalize their policy toward Christians in the late third century.

The ben Pandera legend doesn't claim that Jesus was not a historical figure, and there's no attestation to that effect from 1st or 2nd century Jews. On the other hand, it certainly doesn't acknowledge the Jesus of the gospels as historical. And it does suggest ignorance of gospel beliefs.

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Old 06-08-2006, 03:18 PM   #630
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Originally Posted by Didymus
I stand by what I said. There is a lack of evidence to support a) the commonly held Christian belief that first century Jews knew about the Jesus of the gospels and rejected him for theological reasons...
Didymus
It would appear to me that there is actually evidence for the opposite:

http://cc.usu.edu/~fath6/Nazarenes.htm

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The Messianic Milieu

Christianity has its roots in a time of messianic ferment in Judea. Opposition to Roman rule was widespread among those who regarded the Hellenic influence that this brought to Palestine a threat to the purity of the Jewish religion. A number of leaders arose during the period from 4 BCE through 66 CE who claimed prophetic status as a redeemer of Israel from foreign rule. Some of these declared themselves to be the promised Davidic Messiah, the annointed King sent by God to overthrow the Romans and set up the new Jewish kingship in Jerusalem. The death of Herod triggered more than one of these revolts. One of these messiahs mentioned by Josephus was Simon of Perea, a former royal servant of King Herod. After setting fire to the palace in Jericho, he was captured by the Roman commander Gratus and beheaded. Athronges, the shepherd of Judea, was another of those who sought the throne by claiming himself the Messiah after the death of Herod. His followers fought a guerrilla was for some time against the Romans, but were finally defeated.
In Acts 5:36, the well-respected Pharasee Gamaliel, grandson of Hillel, advised caution against those who wished to kill Peter and the other Apostles who had preached that Jesus had been sent to Israel by God. Gamaliel did this by recounting two cases of failed messianic movements: "Then he said to them, `Fellow Israelites,' considere carefully what you propose to do to these men. For some time ago Theudas rose up, claiming to be somebody, and a number of men, about four hundred, joined him; but he was killed, and all who followed him were dispersed and disappeared. After him, Judas the Galilean rose up at the time of the census [by Cyrenius during the reign of Herod's son Archelaus] and got people to follow him; he also perished, and all who followed him were scattered. So in the present case, I tell you, keep away from these men and let them alone; because if this plan or this undertaking is of human origin, it will fail; but if it is of God, you will not be able to overthrow them--in that case you may even be found fighting against God!'" Luke, a Gentile Christian writing in Antioch about 90 CE has the sequence of the revolts by Theudas and Judas reversed. We learn from Josephus that of Judas the Galilean occurred shortly after the death of Herod in 4 BCE, while Theudas' revolt did not occur until about 45 CE during the governorship of Cuspius Fadus (44-46 CE).

In Antiquities of the Jews, Josephus gives us more details about Judas of Galilee, whom he identifies as the son of Hezekiah the "brigand chief". Hezekiah had been killed by Herod, as one who claimed to be the promised King, and Judas continued in his father's footsteps. Immediately after the death of Herod the Great in 4 BCE, he had launched a revolt in Sepphoris, where his followers broke into the armory to obtain weapons. Judas installed a man named Sadduc (derived from Zaddik, meaning "Righteous One") as their High Priest to depose the Herodian High Priest. This marked the beginning of the Galilean sect whose members were also known as Zealots. Herod's palace was burned, and the revolt led to 75 years of guerrilla warfare. Judas, himself, was killed early in the revolt, and his sons, Jacob and Simeon, were captured and crucified by the Romans as Zealot leaders around 46-48 CE during the famine of that period.

Josephus recounts that during the Procuratorship of Pontius Pilate there was an anonymous Samaritan who gathered a following whom he led to Mount Gerizim. He promised that he would show his followers "the holy vessels buried at the spot where moses had put them" (Antiquities 18.85-87) on the mountain. Pilate sent a band of calvary and footment who intercepted the procession at the village of Tirabatha, killed many of the followers, and took many others prisoners. Pilate placed a sentance of death on the Samaritan, who had escaped.

During the governorship) of Festus (52-60 CE), there were a number of messiah figures. The best known was an anonymous Egyptian Jew "made himself credible as a prophet and rallied about thirty thousand dupes and took them around through the wilderness to the Mount of Olives. From there he intended to force an entry into Jerusalem, overpower the Roman garrison and become ruler of the citizen body, using his fellow-raiders" (Josephus, Jewish War 2.261-262). Roman troops killed most of his followers, although he himself escaped and was not heard from again. Of the others, Josephus' unfriendly account declared, "Deceivers and impostors, under the pretence of divine inspiration fostering revolutionary changes, they persuaded the multitude to act like madment, and led them out into the desert under the belief that God would there give them tokens of deliverance. Against them Felix, regarding this as but the preliminary insurrection, sent a body of cavalry and heavy-armed infantry, and put a large number to the sword' (Jewish War 2.258-260).

In 62 CE, another messiah, Jesus the son of Ananias, was arrested. He was lucky in that the Romans decided that he was only mad and released him. In 66 CE, there was another outbreak of messianic revolt. According to Josephus, "What more than all else incited them to the war was an ambiguous oracle, likewise found in their sacred scriptures, to the effect that at that time one from their country would become ruler of the world. This they understood to mean someone of their own race, and many of their wise men went astray in their interpretation of it" (Jewish War 6:312-313). One of the claimants to the Davidic throne at this time was Menahem, the grandson of Judas the Galilean. He and his followers entered Herod the Great's arsenal on Masada, armed themselves, and returned to Jerusalem, proclaiming him king (Jewish War 2.433-434). He was killed by followers of Eleazar, the son of the High Priest Ananias, when he entered the Temple "adorned with royal clothing" (Jewish War 2.444). Another, Simon bar Giora, gathered a following of 40,000 by promising freedom to slaves and rewards for others. They fortified the town of Nain, took the city of Hebron, and entered Jerusalem, where they expelled John of Gischala--another messianic leader--and set bar Giora up as their king. He surrendered at the fall of Jerusalem to the Romans in 70 CE and was executed in Rome.

According to Eusebius in Ecclesiastical History 4.2.1-5,. during Trajan's rule (115-117 CE), one Lukuas, who was also called Andreas, proclaimed himself king and led the Jews to rebel against Roman rule once again. His followers destroyed pagan temples and killed their enemies brutally. According to Dio Cassius, "In all two hundred and twenty thousand persons perished" (Roman History 68.32.1-3). In the backlash against this revolt, the Jews of Alexandria were almost entirely annihilated.

The final great and best-known messianic uprising among the Jews was led by Simon bar Kosiba in 132-135 CE in reaction against Hadrians building of a pagan city, Aelia Capitolina, on Mount Moriah. Claiming that he was the prophesied "Star" in Numbers 24:17-19 ("I see him, but not now; I behold him, but not near--a star [Hebrew kochba] shall come out of Jacob, and a scepter shall rise out of Israel; it shall crush the borderlands of Moab, and the territory of all the Shethites. Edom will become a possession, Seir a posession of its enemies, while Israel does valiantly. One out of Jacob shall rule, and destroy the survivors of Ir."), he became thereafter known as Simon bar-Kochba and led the Jews in a rebellion against their Roman overloards (Talmud, b. Sanhedrin 93b). It is said that in his support Rabbi Akiba said "Kosiba goes forth from Jacob" and declared that he was the awaited King and Messiah. The bar Kochba revolt gained wide support and a war with Rome ensued.
I find it interesting that if the "King of the Jews" had already manifested himself, there would remain such a protracted search for the messiah. Perhaps the word just didn't get around.
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