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04-07-2012, 12:06 PM | #81 | ||||
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they didnt know such a person, and its not why they were writing. they wrote biblical jesus because thats all they knew. I think your correct about HJ but your sorely mistaken if you dont think they didnt believe jesus was a 100% man with 100% divinity. They all wrote him in as a very mortal man EVEN after the resurrection, he is written in a a bodily resurrection, sitting around the fire eating a fish with the boys.. you do know that people back then looked at visions and dreams as reality dont you.? |
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04-07-2012, 12:11 PM | #82 | |
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If you don't comment on that, I will take that as a concession that this is all based on muddled thinking. |
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04-07-2012, 02:42 PM | #83 | |||
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It's like Acharya S and her wacko Pygmy idea. If you've read me debating Dave31 on this, you'll note that I often grant that there was an ancient advanced global Pygmy civilization, in order to discuss the implications of this on the rest of Acharya S's theories. Case in point: her idea that Pygmies couldn't have been influenced by outside contact on dying-rising gods belief because they have been isolated for 5,000 years (when an Egyptian expedition visited the Pygmies), yet elsewhere she has stated that the dying-rising beliefs have existed for 25,000 years. Quote:
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04-07-2012, 02:46 PM | #84 | ||
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By "historical Jesus", I mean a belief that there was a person called Jesus who had appeared on earth and was crucified in the first half of the First Century. Whether they got that from visions or from eye-witness accounts, whether they searched for evidence or were repeating dogma, is not important for the point I'm making. |
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04-07-2012, 02:49 PM | #85 | |
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comes right out of the OT from two different sources. doesnt mean they used said legends to form a new one. But more in line with simular thinking within theology. |
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04-07-2012, 03:22 PM | #86 | |||||||
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gMark's Jesus is IDENTIFIED as the Son of God---NON-HUMAN. gMark's Jesus was NON-historical. Mark 3:11 KJV Quote:
gMark's Jesus was NON-historical. Mark 5 Quote:
gMark's Jesus was NON-historical. Mark 15:39 KJV Quote:
gMark's Jesus was NON-historical. Mark 14 Quote:
gMark's Jesus was NON-historical. Mark 6:48 KJV Quote:
gMark's Jesus was NON-historical. Mark 9:2 KJV Quote:
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04-07-2012, 04:17 PM | #87 |
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@GDon - OK. I can't see any HJ in Hermas. Ignatius yes, Barnabas yes - seems to me they have heard vague elements of the Gospel tradition, but they have not read Gospels themselves - the ideas were probably spreading orally.
@Toto - There is an interesting question whether all HJ sprang from the Gospels, or other HJs sprang independently from interpretations of scripture. Which texts were you thinking of in particular as showing dogmatic, scriptural, non-Gospel HJ? @ aa5874 - Why do you post the same comments again and again on every thread? I see you have made over 14,000 posts and I dread to think they are all the same point. You seem to be setting very tight semantic constrictions on what qualifies as HJ, but your expectations are way stricter than anybody else's, ancient or modern. Hence I think why everyone just ignores you. |
04-07-2012, 05:31 PM | #88 | |
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EmmaZunz, most people here ignore aa, and I recommend the same. He's harmless enough, and can be funny at times, but a time waster if you want to debate something.
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But on early literature: looking at the NT today, which epistles (i.e. not counting Acts and the Gospels) were the works of Christians who believed in a historical Jesus? Would you agree that there are none? That is, when the proto-orthodox began to decide what epistles should be included, they ended up choosing only works by mythicists? (Hermas and eBarnabas were in there for a little while, so eBarnabas would have been the only candidate, but even that would not have been influenced by the Gospels based on the above.) |
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04-07-2012, 06:40 PM | #89 | ||||
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04-07-2012, 07:00 PM | #90 | ||||
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Please stop this. Quote:
If, on the other hand, Doherty is essentially right and Christianity started with visions or with interpretations of Hebrew scripture, and the crucifixion of Jesus happened in some other plane of existence in mythical time and space, you would expect what you see in early Christianity - an absence of any historical details, a reliance on scriptural references, inconsistencies in the story, mythic themes - early Christians who appear not to be that concerned about historical details about their Lord and Savior. |
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