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07-22-2007, 05:14 AM | #121 | ||
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07-22-2007, 05:18 AM | #122 | |
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Ditto the part about ascending to heaven at or after death. Again, I presume it can apply to a purely spiritual figure; does it actually do so somewhere? Thanks. Ben. |
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07-22-2007, 08:55 AM | #123 |
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Augustus has something neither Inana nor Dionysos nor Jesus (certainly the Pauline one) has: clear historical attestation outside the religious/mythological realm. So if a writer would mention that Augustus was born from a woman, we would say: Well, duh. If that same writer would then go on to mention the woman in question was a virgin, we would label that as mythical accretion. The problem with I, D and J is that we don't have any clear historical attestation, just a lot of myth. So if some writer mentioned these three did something earthly--be it being born, walking the earth or something else--we then assume as the most likely hypothesis that this earthly act is real(M) rather than real(H).
Because of our "third party" (with respect to religion/myth) knowledge of Augustus' historicity, we are with him in a position where we can say that his being born of a woman is real(H) while his being born of a virgin is (at best) real(M). I say at best because I'm not all that sure to what extent people really believed that: it may have been politically correct hyperbole (do you know?). This is why I keep saying that you should first come up with some evidence for an HJ, before you can "harmonize" Paul with that. The passages you mention in Paul are simply not enough to get Jesus anywhere near an Augustine status of reality: they are too few compared to the rest, plus they are easily explained as myth. Gerard Stafleu |
07-22-2007, 09:50 AM | #124 | |
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07-22-2007, 11:23 AM | #125 | ||
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07-22-2007, 02:17 PM | #126 | |
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Myth in its metaphoric form is made by poets (in the wide sense of the work, Dali's melting time can here be seen as poetic expression as well). But poets are rare, literalists are not. So, was Paul a mythopoet or just a literalist reporter? My impression is: mostly a reporter, although he claims to have made some new discoveries. But are those different from the "new discovery" of the idea of rapture by John Darby in the 19th century? Given the fervency of Paul's presentation, I doubt that he was a mythopoet who was aware of the metaphoric background of his material. If he was, all discussions about his belief in an HJ of course go by the wayside, but I don't think it's that easy. Gerard Stafleu |
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07-22-2007, 04:35 PM | #127 | |||
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Should Paul have spoken of where and when Jesus was born? Of his infancy and adulthood? Of his miracles and wonders? That is what you expect, isn’t it? Yet, look: Paul spoke of the sole thing that was important to him - Jesus’ resurrection. Paul speaks of Jesus’ resurrection a number of times, and in every of his epistles. Why was it the sole important thing? Because it was the only deed that could not possibly be performed by men. What about the miracles, the healings, the walks on the water? Those deeds could be performed by men, and not precisely by a few, but by many, whether good or evil. Paul thought those deeds unimportant. Accordingly, he said nothing of them. Now, discount resurrection - if you wish - as much as you discount Augustus’ having been born of a virgin, that is, as a mythical accretion. What still remains is a very stylized life, but a life - born of a woman, of so-and-so ascendency, crucified, buried. Quote:
See what I mean? Ordinary people, Christians - not Christ - doing miracles, healing, etc., as a matter of course. Just show me one mythological discourse written in the first person by someone that acknowledges to be an ordinary man, like this one - “For I am the least of the apostles, unfit to be called an apostle…” (1 Cor 15.9) - and I’ll say, “Ok, you’re right; it's a mythical discourse.” Quote:
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07-22-2007, 08:20 PM | #128 | |
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07-22-2007, 11:07 PM | #129 |
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07-23-2007, 04:28 AM | #130 | ||
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Clearly he believed that the entity he was talking about was real, but the ancients usually considered their mythical entities real, whether based on what we would consider to be historical human beings or not, so prima facie there's nothing to tell whether he meant real as in "once a human being" or real as in "purely visionary (to us) but real-to-him" (in which case the details would be genuinely historical to him, but not acceptable as historical to us (i.e. about a human being)). |
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