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Old 10-07-2010, 04:29 PM   #21
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I disagree that "according to Scripture" supports mythicism so well. It can still be explained as claim of fulfilled scriptural prophecy.
Taken in isolation, maybe. But when combined with everything else Paul tells us about his vision to the third heaven and his discussion about secrets in the scriptures that he was specially chosen to reveal, I don't think that's the best understanding. He doesn't tell us things happened in fulfillment of scripture. If these particular things are not the former secrets he refers to elsewhere, then what is?


Now to him who is able to establish you by my gospel and the proclamation of Jesus Christ, according to the revelation of the mystery hidden for long ages past, but now revealed and made known through the prophetic writings by the command of the eternal God, so that all nations might believe and obey him— to the only wise God be glory forever through Jesus Christ! Amen.


This is saying the exact same thing as 1 Cor. 15 - the gospel was derived from scripture via revelation. Paul tells us this more than once.

If he said it just once, well, maybe you could hand wave it away, but he says it explicitly twice and alludes to it elsewhere. It requires substantial mental gymnastics to reject the straightforward reading and try to fit a gospel Jesus into a Paul hole.
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Old 10-07-2010, 04:44 PM   #22
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Paul says Jesus was born of woman. Isn't that evidence of a human Jesus?
The complicating factors are:

1. Almost all scholars agree the Pauline corpus has had multiple authors. So which author wrote that?

2. The text doesn't say Jesus was born of woman, it says God's Son was born of a woman, born under the law. The connection from Son to Jesus is via assumption.

At best, this is weak evidence that Paul thought Jesus had been human.
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Old 10-07-2010, 06:35 PM   #23
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Originally Posted by Juststeve View Post
Paul says Jesus was born of woman. Isn't that evidence of a human Jesus?
The complicating factors are:

1. Almost all scholars agree the Pauline corpus has had multiple authors. So which author wrote that?

2. The text doesn't say Jesus was born of woman, it says God's Son was born of a woman, born under the law. The connection from Son to Jesus is via assumption.

At best, this is weak evidence that Paul thought Jesus had been human.
Good point but better yet is that Christ was born and they called him Jesus. The question now is: who is 'him' and why Jesus and not Christ until Jesus died.
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Old 10-07-2010, 07:08 PM   #24
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One of the reasons I don't accept 1 Cor. 15:4-7 as a later interpolation is that if such an insertion was made in the 2nd century, after the Gospels were known, that list of 'appearances' would more closely reflect the Gospel accounts. It would include the women, and would not likely include the 500 brothers. Where would the latter have come from if it surfaces nowhere in the 2nd century traditions?

I have many times pointed out that Romans 1:2 specifies that God's gospel of the Son is found in scripture, with the clear implication that scripture is the source of the details of that gospel, including the kata sarka and kata pneuma elements of verses 3 and 4. Also, if you read the passage carefully, you will see that this gospel in the prophets is a 'fore-announcing' of the Gospel preached by Paul, not of Jesus himself and his life.

As for "born of woman" indicating a human birth, consider Revelation 12, which tells of the birth of the Messiah to a woman in the heavens, pursued by a dragon which seeks to devour the child. The child is snatched up to God's heaven, while the angels make war on the dragon. This is hardly an earthly scene, and indicates that Christian writers were capable of envisioning a birth to a woman in a mythical setting. And there isn't the slightest hint in the mind of Revelation's writer that this child Messiah had any life on earth. He simply waits in heaven until the End-time.

However, I think there is a good case to be made that the "born of woman, born under the Law" is an interpolation. (I devote an entire chapter in my "Jesus: Neither God Nor Man" to this Galatians passage, examining both possibilities of authenticity and interpolation.) Ehrman has pointed out that there is extant evidence of those phrases being doctored later to make them more efficient at countering docetism, increasing the likelihood that they began as interpolations in those same interests.

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Old 10-07-2010, 09:15 PM   #25
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If he got the good news from Peter and James, who swore they saw and touched a ghost, why believe any of them? (bacht)
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Notice that Paul does not say *how or from whom* he received this information. The typical assumption is that he received it from the Jerusalem church or some other contemporary Christian… (spamandham)
In Galatians 1 Paul clearly states he did not receive his gospel from man, nor was he taught it, but that it came through a revelation of Jesus Christ and he “did not confer with flesh and blood” in learning of it.

After spreading his supernaturally revealed gospel for three years he claims he met for a couple of weeks with Peter and had no social contact with any other member of the group associated with Jesus except James.

Then, the narrative continues, after 14 more years Paul returned to Jerusalem so they could check on his work. They said, ‘That thing with the blood. Don’t teach that,’ the Jerusalem Decree, Acts 15 & 21

Does anybody else see a disconnect here?

Between the group with drinking of blood as a central concept and the group that prohibited drinking of blood? It was two different groups.

There were two groups both claiming the same messiah. One group’s messiah – the ones who did not know Paul’s face, but for two, allegedly - was plausibly historical. The other mythical one was created by people who had minimal social contact with the one who may have been historical. Or at least their social interactions were not pleasant. With the violence and everything.

Herodian-connected Paul opposed the group associated with Jesus. First with violence, then with rhetoric. Paul’s Christ was cosmic (except for a few biographical details). We cannot rule out the possibility that Paul’s group, in opposing the traditionalist covenant renewal groups, modeled their cosmic Christ on an insurrectionist group's resurrection claims made about a historical Jesus whom they had killed.
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Old 10-07-2010, 09:28 PM   #26
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How do mythicists explain aforementioned passage? One thing I found is Ribert M. Price's discussion: http://depts.drew.edu/jhc/rp1cor15.html

Any more ideas / views?
Only people who think 1 Cor. 15.3-8 are the only passages where the Pauline writers mentioned that Jesus was raised from the dead and was the son of God have problems.

There are 13 Epistles under the name of Paul and the mere fact that the Pauline writers mentioned the name Jesus clearly indicate that they are talking about an earthly figure or one who they believe or wanted people to believe was on earth.

The NT Jesus was a God/man. The NT Jesus, again notice Jesus and not just Christ, was said to have either been a God before he came man or was the offspring of the Holy Ghost and a Virgin.

A Pauline writer chose gJohn's version of the God/man or some similar version.

Philippians 2.5- 8
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5 Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus:

6 Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God:

7 But made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men:

8 And being found in fashion as a man, he humbled himself, and became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross.
And throughout the Epistles the Pauline writers refer to JESUS as the Son of God.

The Pauline Jesus was a God/man which is consistent with the teachings and Creeds of the Roman Church.
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Old 10-08-2010, 12:16 AM   #27
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What would being chopped into pieces and, subsequently being reconstituted and resurrected, (senza Mr. Winkie) mean for the historical Osiris?
It would mean lots of tombs for Osiris:
http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/...Osiris*/A.html
The traditional result of Osiris's dismemberment is that there are many so‑called tombs of Osiris in Egypt;89 for Isis held a funeral for each part when she had found it. Others deny this and assert that she caused effigies of him to be made and these she distributed among the several cities, pretending that she was giving them his body, in order that he might receive divine honours in a greater number of cities, band also that, if Typhon should succeed in overpowering Horus, he might despair of ever finding p47the true tomb when so many were pointed out to him, all of them called the tomb of Osiris.90

Of the parts of Osiris's body the only one which Isis did not find was the male member,91 for the reason that this had been at once tossed into the river, and the lepidotus, the sea-bream, and the pike had fed upon it;92 and it is from these very fishes the Egyptians are most scrupulous in abstaining. But Isis made a replica of the member to take its place, and consecrated the phallus,93 in honour of which the Egyptians even at the present day celebrate a festival.
Also:
... not the least important suggestion is the opinion held regarding the shrines of Osiris, whose body is said to have been laid in many different places.98 bFor they say that Diochites99 is the name given to a small town, on the ground that it alone contains the true tomb; and that the prosperous and influential men among the Egyptians are mostly buried in Abydos, since it is the object of their ambition to be buried in the same ground with the body of Osiris. In Memphis, however, they say, the Apis is kept, being the image of the soul of Osiris,100 whose body also lies there. The name of this city some interpret as "the haven of the good" and others as meaning properly the "tomb p53of Osiris."
:Cheeky:

So you are saying that there is more evidence for the historical Osiris than there is for the historical Jesus? Cool.... :notworthy:
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Old 10-08-2010, 03:29 AM   #28
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It can still be explained as claim of fulfilled scriptural prophecy.
I don't think anybody is arguing that it cannot be so explained. What ahistoricists argue is that, contrary to the prevailing assumptions, there is at least one other plausible explanation and, for various reasons, we consider that alternative to be a better explanation.
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Old 10-08-2010, 03:34 AM   #29
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Paul says Jesus was born of woman. Isn't that evidence of a human Jesus?
Suppose it is. Is there some reason we should we regard everything else Paul wrote as irrelevant to the issue? According to which historiographical theory must we decide that every other datum pertinent to an assessment of Jesus' historicity must be interpreted so as to fit this one particular statement?
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Old 10-08-2010, 09:39 AM   #30
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Doug:

No, everything else is not irrelevant. In 1 Corinthians 23-26 Paul narrates an event from the historical Jesus' life:

For I received from the Lord what I also passed on to you: The Lord Jesus, on the night he was betrayed, took bread, 24and when he had given thanks, he broke it and said, "This is my body, which is for you; do this in remembrance of me." 25In the same way, after supper he took the cup, saying, "This cup is the new covenant in my blood; do this, whenever you drink it, in remembrance of me." For whenever you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord's death until he comes.

Is this not evidence that Paul believed that the last supper, later recorded in the Gospel’s actually occurred?

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