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Old 04-19-2007, 07:07 PM   #21
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Gamera and Ben, could you take that off topic thing in another thread?

My OP is about the symbolic use of an alleged person "Jesus" to in reality be a group.

Mistakingly me thought Essenes was historical.

I have now changed to the Scrolls from Qumran as evidence of a group that cared to be different.

They are not fictional. They actually exists. We only know very little about them.

My interpretation could be very wrong and I know it is a loose speculation but it seems very logical to me.

They had the text of OT. They had a tradition to interpret that text and what I suggests is that some of them came up with this "elaborated" way to give "cred" to their interpretation. To move the text to a time close to their own.

Their beloved "Teacher" lived 100 years before the alleged "Jesus". Maybe he too is fictional. They practiced on giving him cred and it didn't seem to get enough following to survive so my bold suggestion is that break out groups started the "Jesus" movement and they got taking over by those who mocked up Saul/Paul. And them got taken over by the Constantine people.
The Dead Sea Scrolls involve a community headed by the sons of Zadok, the sons of Aaron and the sons of Levi. This should sound familiar enough: they are the temple hierarchy. In pre-Herodian Judea bloodline was an extremely serious notion, so any attempts to "metaphorize" the numerous references to priests are doomed to be data manipulation.

The teacher of righteousness was a priest, a high priest, a son of Zadok. The scrolls mainly used a two messiah theology, a priestly messiah and a worldly messiah, a messiah of Aaron and a messiah of Israel. Jesus by his genealogy and by the literary recognition of him as the son of David could not have been the messiah of Aaron -- wrong bloodline -- and therefore could not have been either the messiah of Aaron or the teacher of righteousness.


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Old 04-19-2007, 08:43 PM   #22
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KUMRAN TRIVIA:

The LXX version of the Book of Esther clearly shows her married to Artaxerxes, the "son of Xerxes." But the popular Hebrew version shows her married to "Ahasuerus" whom most historically link with Xerxes, since her and mordecai active during the time of Artaxerxes I would be considered contradictory to canonical Erza/Nehemiah.

Thus it would have been interesting to see which version of the book was in use at Kumran. Guess what. Esther is the only book of the Bible not found at Kumran. Not one fragment.

I wonder why?


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Old 04-19-2007, 08:55 PM   #23
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Only my hunches, I have no knowledge in such matters. I fail to see why they would be absent in the text if the writers had knowledge about them.
That's certainly a baited question. But ever hear of the "Mysteries"? Secret societies who are trained in propaganda and disinformation? One of their rules seems to be that if somone is unliked, and you want to obliterate them historically, you don't talk against them, better to simply not mention them at all. So a no mention isn't always evidence of nonexistence but of competitiveness. This was understood in ancient Egypt where some rulerships were obliterated and not mentioned. Once you mention them, even negatively, you preserve them.

Also you have to understand this about historicity, which is true: "He that controls the past controls the present. He that controls the present, controls the future. But that controls the present, also controls the past!"

So once an entity comes into power and influence, they control history. They control the libraries, everything. So that in the end, what we get is pretty much picked over and may be everything that isn't controversial for those making revisions. People rewrite their history all the time, to fit political correctness.

So one scenario to include, certainly, is intentional avoidance.

The Christian movement was so powerful that even pagan emperor Constantine gave in and merged with it, corrupting it at the same time, but still, such a movement is not likely to have been the creation of a group of clever writers. The entire Jewish nation was waiting for a messiah to come and he did. They preached about it and eye witnesses of these things got the movement started and it continued on from there. The eye witnesses died off or went into obscurity and all that was left was the movement itself and the OT-coordinated gospels. To me, that so many people believe suggests these things really happened rather than were invented.

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Old 04-19-2007, 09:09 PM   #24
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Ironically, the quality of the evidence that there even was a sect of Essenes is poorer than the quality of evidence for the historicity of Jesus.
If that's so, perhaps we should just give up on the enterprise of 1st century history altogether, seeing as there is no credible evidence Jesus even existed.
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Old 04-19-2007, 09:15 PM   #25
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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
Esther is the only book of the Bible not found at Kumran. Not one fragment.

I wonder why?
No doubt, the answer must be some sort of evil atheist anti-Bible conspiracy. But since you're the messiah, you must already have the "right" answer to this question (and all others!).
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Old 04-19-2007, 10:28 PM   #26
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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
KUMRAN TRIVIA:
It's Qumran -- with a Q. Always has, always will be. Forget toiletpaper editions.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
The LXX version of the Book of Esther clearly shows her married to Artaxerxes, the "son of Xerxes." But the popular Hebrew version shows her married to "Ahasuerus" whom most historically link with Xerxes, since her and mordecai active during the time of Artaxerxes I would be considered contradictory to canonical Erza/Nehemiah.
The Vulgate often agrees with the LXX over matters but it certainly doesn't here, as it has Asuerus, ie Ahasuerus, ie Xerxes. In fact all versions except the LXX has Ahasuerus.

Your insistence on the LXX here is purely tendentious.

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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
Thus it would have been interesting to see which version of the book was in use at Kumran. Guess what. Esther is the only book of the Bible not found at Kumran. Not one fragment.

I wonder why?
It hadn't been written at the time.

But then, there was no Nehemiah either. Josephus only knows a version of the Nehemiah Memoir, so he doesn't even support a biblical Nehemiah text.

And the supposed tiny scrap of Chronicles at Qumran is certainly not. It is probably just a wayward form from Kings, so it is unlikely that Chronicles was there either.


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Old 04-19-2007, 11:56 PM   #27
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Your insistence on the LXX here is purely tendentious.
No. I'm just noting there are two versions where Esther is married to two different kings. It's a legitimate inquiry since Josephus quotes the history from the LXX and he wrote at the turn of the 1st century CE. Why did he do that? Why did he prefer the LXX version? Further, he is quite specific. He definitely says, "Artaxerxes, the son of Xerxes" so he's not historically confused. He deals with Ezra and "Neamias" by placing them specifically under Xerxes. Thus being a point of historican contention between the two books, both of which can't be correct, not that either has to be since it was originally a fable now turned pseudo-history, there was a thought that Qumran might shed some light on the topic. But it's quite silent in the case of Esther for some reason.

Quote:
But then, there was no Nehemiah either. Josephus only knows a version of the Nehemiah Memoir, so he doesn't even support a biblical Nehemiah text.
That's for sure. And I've read at least one folkroic version of Nehemiah, where he is apparently infatuated with Artaxerxes, sits on his lap and bats his eyes at the king when he asks to return to Jerusalem. I was in shock. So he was a popular folkloric hero, likely partially because he was rather "militant" in getting the Jews to finally fight back.

Quote:
And the supposed tiny scrap of Chronicles at Qumran is certainly not. It is probably just a wayward form from Kings, so it is unlikely that Chronicles was there either.
Interesting. I didn't know that. The Encyclopaedia Britannica suggests the LXX version precedes the Hebrew version, however:

Page 928 under "Biblical Literature"/Book of Esther: "The Book of Esther is a romantic and patriotic tale, perhaps with some historical basis but with so little religious purpose that God, in fact, is not mentioned in it. The book may have been included in the Hebrew canon only for the sake of sanctioning the celebrations of the festival of Purim, the Feast of Lots. There is considerable evidence that the stories related in Esther actually originated among gentiles (Persian and Babylonian) rather than among the Jews. There is also reason to believe that the version given in the Septuagint goes back to older sources than the version given in the Hebrew Bible."

Again, interesting that Josephus as late at the end of the 1st Century CE uses the LXX version where she is decidedly married to Artaxerxes and not Xerxes.

William Whiston's footnote on Josephus regarding Esther is also interesting:
Quote:
"Since some skeptical persons are willing to discard this Book of Esther as no true history; and even our learned and judicious Dr. Wall, in his late posthumous Critical Notes upon all the other Hebrew books of the Old Testament, gives none upon the Canticles, or upon Esther, and seems thereby to give up this book, as well as he gives up the Canticles, as indefensible; I shall venture to say, that almost all the objections against this Book of Esther are gone at once, if, as we certainly ought to do, and as Dean Prideaux has justly done, we place this history under Artsxerxes Longimanus, as do both the Septuagint interpretation and Josephus. The learned Dr. Lee, in his posthumous Dissertation on the Second Book of Esdras, p. 25, also says, that "the truth of this history is demonstrated by the feast of Purlin, kept up from that time to this very day. And this surprising providential revolution in favor of a captive people, thereby constantly commemorated, standeth even upon a firmer basis than that there ever was such a man as king Alexander [the Great] in the world, of whose reign there is no such abiding monument at this day to be found any where. Nor will they, I dare say, who quarrel at this or any other of the sacred histories, find it a very easy matter to reconcile the different accounts which were given by historians of the affairs of this king, or to confirm any one fact of his whatever with the same evidence which is here given for the principal fact in this sacred book, or even so much as to prove the existence of such a person, of whom so great things are related, but. upon granting this Book of Esther, or sixth of Esdras, (as it is placed in some of the most ancient copies of the Vulgate,) to be a most true and certain history," etc.

http://www.earlychristianwritings.co...hus/ant-11.htm
Again, the version/s that might have been found at Qumran may have shed some light on this but it's the one book not found at Qumran.

SOME MISC COMMENTS FROM THE WEB:

Quote:
"And the fifth chapter takes up the puzzling absence of the Book of Esther at Qumran to conclude that the lacuna may just as easily be the result of scroll decay as of a community decision to exclude the book."
Quote:
"One of the many riddles that have been posed by the Dead Sea Scrolls has been the apparent absence of any complete or partial copy of the Book of Esther. The thousands of fragments in that ancient library include the oldest known texts of the Hebrew Bible, some of them (like a scroll of Isaiah) in relatively complete form, but most of them in tiny shreds and crumbs.

Only Esther is missing."

http://www.ucalgary.ca/~elsegal/Shok...ranEsther.html

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Old 04-20-2007, 05:45 AM   #28
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Originally Posted by spin
The Vulgate often agrees with the LXX over matters
Apparently you mean against the Hebrew Bible. I would like to see some of those "oftens". Have a documented source ? (Outside of Psalms, where Jerome did multiple translations, from the Greek as well as from the Hebrew.)

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin
.. all versions except the LXX has Ahasuerus.Your insistence on the LXX here is purely tendentious.
spin accepts the Greek OT as an independent significant source when it fits his methodology of manipulation. In fact then he will accept the authority of the preferred manuscript that he wants to highlight as

"directly derived from the Hebrew".

Consistency, thou art a jewel.

Shalom,
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Old 04-20-2007, 06:39 AM   #29
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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
No. I'm just noting there are two versions where Esther is married to two different kings. It's a legitimate inquiry since Josephus quotes the history from the LXX and he wrote at the turn of the 1st century CE. Why did he do that? Why did he prefer the LXX version?
Because it was already in Greek so he didn't have to translate it.

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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
Further, he is quite specific. He definitely says, "Artaxerxes, the son of Xerxes" so he's not historically confused.
Of course. He's aware of the Hebrew and trying to compromise by at least mentioning Ahasuerus.

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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
He deals with Ezra and "Neamias" by placing them specifically under Xerxes.
What is important with Josephus's Ezra is that it is also the Greek version. That Greek version has Artaxerxes, yet Josephus changes it to Xerxes. He did so through his own rationale.

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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
I've read at least one folkroic version of Nehemiah, where he is apparently infatuated with Artaxerxes, sits on his lap and bats his eyes at the king when he asks to return to Jerusalem. I was in shock.
This is the grunt and groan video version is it?

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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
Interesting. I didn't know that. The Encyclopaedia Britannica suggests the LXX version precedes the Hebrew version, however:

Page 928 under "Biblical Literature"/Book of Esther: "The Book of Esther is a romantic and patriotic tale, perhaps with some historical basis but with so little religious purpose that God, in fact, is not mentioned in it. The book may have been included in the Hebrew canon only for the sake of sanctioning the celebrations of the festival of Purim, the Feast of Lots. There is considerable evidence that the stories related in Esther actually originated among gentiles (Persian and Babylonian) rather than among the Jews. There is also reason to believe that the version given in the Septuagint goes back to older sources than the version given in the Hebrew Bible."
You need to realize that the Greek version of Esther contains a lot of other material, ie "stories related to Esther".

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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
Again, interesting that Josephus as late at the end of the 1st Century CE uses the LXX version where she is decidedly married to Artaxerxes and not Xerxes.
Take it up with Josephus. He clearly used the Greek version of Esdras including the debate of the pages and the scene of Ezra reading the law, which later made its way from Ezra into Nehemiah 8.

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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
William Whiston's footnote on Josephus regarding Esther is also interesting:
Whiston was writing in the 17th century without many of the cards of the deck that are now available to us.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
Again, the version/s that might have been found at Qumran may have shed some light on this but it's the one book not found at Qumran.
There was no theological reason for it not to be there. It is most likely that either it hadn't been written, or that it hadn't arrived in Palestine.

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Originally Posted by Larsguy47 View Post
SOME MISC COMMENTS FROM THE WEB (about Esther being missing):
Yeah, I know.


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Old 04-20-2007, 06:42 AM   #30
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Apparently you mean against the Hebrew Bible. I would like to see some of those "oftens". Have a documented source ?
Two, the Vulgate and the LXX. Check them out. You'll find them interesting.

Quote:
Originally Posted by praxeus View Post
spin accepts the Greek OT as an independent significant source when it fits his methodology of manipulation. In fact then he will accept the authority of the preferred manuscript that he wants to highlight as

"directly derived from the Hebrew".

Consistency, thou art a jewel.
One day praxeus might learn something about text criticism.


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