FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 11-01-2008, 02:11 AM   #381
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Paul's revelation is of a crucified messiah (an oxymoron for Jews). My reading of Galatians is that Paul by his own words didn't get his gospel from anyone but his messiah through revelation. No historical Jesus is necessary for kickstarting Pauline christianity.
Galatians is a different case than Corinthians. In Galations, circumcision was the central dispute, and in this dispute Paul had a different view than other apostles. He had to appeal to his revealed Jesus on this topic; he had no other way to argue.

The issues with the Corinthians, on the other hand, had nothing to do with arguments with other apostles, thus he can appeal to agreement with those apostles to bolster his case.
You aren't dealing with Paul's claim that his gospel didn't come from being taught, but from revelation.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
We'll have to agree to disagree then, both on the value of criteria and the usefulness of economy of explanation. You haven't shown any good reasons to remove a historical Jesus from the picture.
If Paul didn't need a historical Jesus, why should you?

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Agreed... I don't "know" either, all we can argue about are probabilities.
Probabilities are based on relevant data.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Seems to me Paul is picking his arguments for the occasion. 1 Cor 15 is his statement that the apostles are all one big team, so the Corinthians should heed them. There is nothing incompatible with Galatians, just a different cirumstance. Remember, Paul tries to "become all things to all men".
So Paul did get his gospel from humans contrary to his own claims?

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
The twelve are separate from other apostles. What's the problem?
Umm, Judas was dead. We aren't dealing with a testable tradition.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
There was a core group, and there were latecomers. The 500 may be ludicrous, but it appears he's just repeating here what he "received" from his predecessors. Could be the number itself was copied wrong somewhere.
Looking at each of the Pauline passages dealing with gospel material and they all seem suspicious.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
The Jerusalem group was a Jesus-based group, that much is clear.
Clear, especially when Paul doesn't allow you to think that.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
If they believed in Jesus as the soon-to-return Messiah, that much agrees with Paul. If they didn't agree on anything substantial, why even try to be on the same team? Paul's notions differed on the subject of non-circumsized Gentiles, and I agree the Jerusalem group were more Torah-observant. But certainly, there was background knowledge upon which both camps agreed.
And you need to demonstrate, rather than assume, it. Paul contrasts faith in Jesus and justification through his death with torah observance.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Quote:
The people Paul persecuted were messianists, "the assemblies of Judea in the messiah". Paul saw himself as messianic and the people he'd persecuted heard he was, but we, knowing what "messiah' means, can see him as someone who doesn't support true messianism at all. What then do you think Paul got from the Jerusalem group and on what textual evidence?
spin
Paul doesn't write very much about what he got from them, but this shouldn't be surprising, as much would be common knowledge to his readers which didn't need repeating.

But I think Paul "received" from others what he also "delivered", the basic doctrine of "first importance" in 1 Cor 15:3, and describes in what follows. I also think that when Paul writes of something received "from the Lord", that's often his code for "Jesus said this to the apostles".
So it's not important what people write. You have codes for interpreting their words. Paul specifically says he received his gospel from the revealed Jesus. There is no problem with 1 Cor 15:3. He received the knowledge from the revealed Jesus.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
That makes sense where he quotes the prohibition of divorce (1 Cor 7:10-11), where he quotes Jesus words at the last supper (1 Cor 11:23-25),...
The post-Pauline intrusion of the last supper into the problems Paul was dealing with over the abuse of the communal meal simply confuses the passage and goes off in a tangent. The text is about carnality and the abuse of the meal. The last supper is a poor interpolation, but the text isn't read for its significance but for quote mining.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
...and where he appears to quote a version of the second coming (1 Thess 4:15-18) ("we declared" by the word of the Lord)... admittedly rather modified from the Jesus sayings, perhaps to deal with the new circumstances.

That's E. P. Sanders' perspective, and I find it persuasive. Notice that for each of the above items, a fairly close Jesus parallel exists in the gospels.
Yet it's christian apologetics and you should be more critical.


spin
spin is offline  
Old 11-01-2008, 02:24 AM   #382
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Much depends on what we are asking of the sources. If we're asking for evidence of a virgin birth and a resurrection, yes the sources are wholly inadequate witnesses for such extraordinary claims. But when a bunch of diverse sources agree about something very ordinary (existence of a cult leader and his followers), I see no reason not to grant their existence.

As for Josephus, I'm sure you know that most scholars consider the TF a corruption of an original neutral or negative statement (accounting for Origen's knowledge the Josephus "did not believe in Jesus as the Christ".
The scholarly arbitrariness on the issue is like watching me pee in your water bottle and they can remove the pee so that you can drink what's left.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
The other short passage identifying Jesus as brother of James was known to Origen, so is almost certainly authentic. Not being in power yet, Christians would hardly be in a position to interpolate so early.
If you consult the archives you'll know that I've been through all this material with a fine tooth comb. No, Origen didn't know the James passage. He knew another source which knew the James passage. Origen has added a great amount of his own conjecture in the passages from Contra Celsus. He gives the false idea that Josephus called James "James the Just". He has the false idea that Josephus said that James's death was responsible for the fall of Jerusalem. It's not Josephus and in fact Josephus attributes the fall to another's death in BJ. Josephus doesn't talk about "James the Just brother of Jesus called christ". The passage in Josephus talks of "the brother of Jesus called christ, whose name was James". Origen is no help in trying to bolster the claim of the awkward James passage.


spin
spin is offline  
Old 11-01-2008, 09:52 AM   #383
Contributor
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 18,988
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post

Do you see the probems?

The statement by Origen that Josephus "did not believe in Jesus as the Christ" is NOT found anywhere at all in the writings of Josephus. No where whatsoever.
Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger
The point is, seems Origen read something in Josephus to make him think that. But what? apparently, a negatively worded TF.
No. The evidence is clear. The claim by Origen is a hoax. No such passage exists in Josephus.


Quote:
And in fact, almost the entire statement found in Against Celsus by Origen is not found at all in any of Josephus writings. Josephus never mentioned that the death of James was responsible for the destruction of the Temple.
Origen did apparently misinterpret Josephus about that, but this is irrelevant to the case above, and also to the authentic "brother of Jesus" reference.
t
It would appear that Origen was not reading from Josephus, what he wrote was not in his writings.

So which James was Origen referring to? You can guess.
aa5874 is offline  
Old 11-01-2008, 12:45 PM   #384
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: California
Posts: 145
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Much depends on what we are asking of the sources. If we're asking for evidence of a virgin birth and a resurrection, yes the sources are wholly inadequate witnesses for such extraordinary claims. But when a bunch of diverse sources agree about something very ordinary (existence of a cult leader and his followers), I see no reason not to grant their existence.

As for Josephus, I'm sure you know that most scholars consider the TF a corruption of an original neutral or negative statement (accounting for Origen's knowledge the Josephus "did not believe in Jesus as the Christ".
The scholarly arbitrariness on the issue is like watching me pee in your water bottle and they can remove the pee so that you can drink what's left.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
The other short passage identifying Jesus as brother of James was known to Origen, so is almost certainly authentic. Not being in power yet, Christians would hardly be in a position to interpolate so early.
If you consult the archives you'll know that I've been through all this material with a fine tooth comb. No, Origen didn't know the James passage. He knew another source which knew the James passage. Origen has added a great amount of his own conjecture in the passages from Contra Celsus. He gives the false idea that Josephus called James "James the Just". He has the false idea that Josephus said that James's death was responsible for the fall of Jerusalem. It's not Josephus and in fact Josephus attributes the fall to another's death in BJ. Josephus doesn't talk about "James the Just brother of Jesus called christ". The passage in Josephus talks of "the brother of Jesus called christ, whose name was James". Origen is no help in trying to bolster the claim of the awkward James passage.


spin
Such a lovely metaphor...

Reconstruction will always have a level of arbitrariness, that doesn't invalidate the attempt. There is more instrinsic probability in a scribe "correcting" a passage that he found offensive, than in a scribe inventing a passage of whole cloth. Especially when Origen relates knowledge of Josephus' negative view about Jesus as Christ.

Origen did read Josephus very loosely, in a way that suited his agenda; he did that in other places as well. But that's not particularly relevent to this question, because the identification of James as brother of Jesus is a rather simple datum, and one that is indeed in the Josephus text. There is nothing awkward about Josephus' reference, it's simply a way for him to identify which James he was talking about.

You've been over it with a fine tooth comb? does that make you an authority? so have plenty of scholars, and most still draw a different conclusion than you.
t
teamonger is offline  
Old 11-01-2008, 12:57 PM   #385
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: California
Posts: 145
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
That's E. P. Sanders' perspective, and I find it persuasive. Notice that for each of the above items, a fairly close Jesus parallel exists in the gospels.
Yet it's christian apologetics and you should be more critical.
spin
(sigh) painting a respected scholar as an apologist is really sad. Sanders freely admits that early Christians "made things up" in the gospels, does that sound like an apologist? For an apologist, generally it's either all or nothing. The Jesus myth position, that nothing could be historical, is starting to look like apologetics to me.
t
teamonger is offline  
Old 11-01-2008, 01:15 PM   #386
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
The scholarly arbitrariness on the issue is like watching me pee in your water bottle and they can remove the pee so that you can drink what's left.


If you consult the archives you'll know that I've been through all this material with a fine tooth comb. No, Origen didn't know the James passage. He knew another source which knew the James passage. Origen has added a great amount of his own conjecture in the passages from Contra Celsus. He gives the false idea that Josephus called James "James the Just". He has the false idea that Josephus said that James's death was responsible for the fall of Jerusalem. It's not Josephus and in fact Josephus attributes the fall to another's death in BJ. Josephus doesn't talk about "James the Just brother of Jesus called christ". The passage in Josephus talks of "the brother of Jesus called christ, whose name was James". Origen is no help in trying to bolster the claim of the awkward James passage.
Such a lovely metaphor...
I usually use another metaphor, but the implication doesn't seem to sink it. The point is there is no way to know how much of the passage if any is original. Josephus quite often drops names of people without giving background and suddenly here we get a lovely little synopsis. I think it's all crap.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Reconstruction will always have a level of arbitrariness, that doesn't invalidate the attempt.
It doesn't allow the Testamonium Flavianum to be used as a witness to Jesus.

Riddle me this: as AJ 18.65 starts "About this time another outrage threw the Jews into an uproar", what is the previous outrage that threw the Jews into an uproar?

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
There is more instrinsic probability in a scribe "correcting" a passage that he found offensive, than in a scribe inventing a passage of whole cloth. Especially when Origen relates knowledge of Josephus' negative view about Jesus as Christ.
You're not reading what Origen actually says, which is simply that Josephus didn't believe in Jesus, which is an assumption, but probably a correct one. After all Josephus was a Jew.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Origen did read Josephus very loosely, in a way that suited his agenda;
Actually, as he ties the notion of James the Just to his representation of Josephus, saying that he hadn't read Josephus firsthand. He got it from a previous reader of the text, but how much of what he got was from the text and how much was the assumption of the earlier writer can't be reclaimed from Origen. The only clear thing is that he was ignorant of the text getting almost nothing right about it.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
he did that in other places as well.
Tying "the Just" to James.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
But that's not particularly relevent to this question, because the identification of James as brother of Jesus is a rather simple datum, and one that is indeed in the Josephus text.
Which is a matter of christian doctrine, thus eminently information a christian could add as an explanation. We already should be able to see that Origen doesn't know the passage.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
There is nothing awkward about Josephus' reference, it's simply a way for him to identify which James he was talking about.
Actually the wording is extremely awkward. "the brother of Jesus called christ, whose name was James". In earlier analysis I showed that Josephus doesn't put the relation before the subject unless the relation had just been mentioned. The word order attributed to Josephus is very different from that of Origen.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
You've been over it with a fine tooth comb?
So it is unlikely that you'll say anything that I haven't heard before.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
does that make you an authority? so have plenty of scholars, and most still draw a different conclusion than you.
How many people who don't have commitments to the content? One of the biggest hurdles in religious studies is that it is mainly religious people are doing it. There are places many will not go.


spin
spin is offline  
Old 11-01-2008, 01:39 PM   #387
Contributor
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 18,988
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post

Reconstruction will always have a level of arbitrariness, that doesn't invalidate the attempt. There is more instrinsic probability in a scribe "correcting" a passage that he found offensive, than in a scribe inventing a passage of whole cloth. Especially when Origen relates knowledge of Josephus' negative view about Jesus as Christ.
Rufinus in his "Epilogue to Pamphilus" claimed that Origen's writings were heavily interpolated, so much so that Origen wrote a letter complaining that his writings were corrupted by heretics.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Rufinus' Epilogue
It is of no great thing that they should have corrupted the writings of Origen when they dared to corrupt the sayings of God our Saviour.
The writings of Origen have been manipulated and corrupted.
aa5874 is offline  
Old 11-01-2008, 03:25 PM   #388
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Yet it's christian apologetics and you should be more critical.
(sigh) painting a respected scholar as an apologist is really sad. Sanders freely admits that early Christians "made things up" in the gospels, does that sound like an apologist? For an apologist, generally it's either all or nothing.
This is a cheap way out... "but he's a respected scholar". For you to understand, what percentage of non-christians do you find enrolled in bib studs in any university? Apologetics works across the crass-erudite scale.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
The Jesus myth position, that nothing could be historical, is starting to look like apologetics to me.
That may also be the case.


spin
spin is offline  
Old 11-01-2008, 03:39 PM   #389
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
Default

To come back to this:
Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Origen did read Josephus very loosely
Below is the principal example of what Origen said in his Contra Celsus. Indigo text marks obvious Origen additions (opinions and observations); Green marks apparently erroneous material unrelated to the James passage.
[Josephus], (although not believing in Jesus as the Christ,) in seeking after the cause of the fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the temple, (whereas he ought to have said that the conspiracy against Jesus was the cause of these calamities befalling the people, since they put to death Christ, who was a prophet,) says nevertheless (--being, although against his will, not far from the truth--) that these disasters happened to the Jews as a punishment for the death of James (the Just), who was a brother of Jesus called Christ, (--the Jews having put him to death, although he was a man most distinguished for his justice).
Given that we are left with [Josephus] says nevertheless [of] the death of James who was brother of Jesus called Christ that is potentially from Josephus, can you really derive from the above that Origen had ever laid eyes on a copy of the Josephus passage? Origen is blithely unaware of the actual source text. The only thing that has potential of coming from Josephus is "James a brother of Jesus called christ", but not in that order. For me Origen helps us understand the sorts of errors people commit being too slavish with their source materials.


spin
spin is offline  
Old 11-01-2008, 04:19 PM   #390
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spin View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post

(sigh) painting a respected scholar as an apologist is really sad. Sanders freely admits that early Christians "made things up" in the gospels, does that sound like an apologist? For an apologist, generally it's either all or nothing.
This is a cheap way out... "but he's a respected scholar". For you to understand, what percentage of non-christians do you find enrolled in bib studs in any university? Apologetics works across the crass-erudite scale.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
The Jesus myth position, that nothing could be historical, is starting to look like apologetics to me.
That may also be the case.


spin
Since "apologist" is such a heavily charged word here, let's try to avoid it, okay?

teamonger - as I mentioned before, spin is not a mythicist. But you are mischaracterizing the mythicist position when you describe it as "nothing could be historical."
Toto is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 08:46 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.