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09-17-2011, 11:15 AM | #11 | |
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The Brother of Jesus Damneus
Thanks to AndrewCriddle and AA5874 for pointing out my mistake about Eusebius not referring to the James passage in Book 20. This proves once again that one should not write posts around midnight when one is exhausted and not thinking clearly.
On the other hand, the thought that led me to the conclusion that Eusebius could not have mentioned the Josephus passage in book 20 along with the contradictory death description passages in Clement and Hegesippus. Eusebius, in his Hegesippus account tells of scribes and pharisees 1) suddenly getting angry at a speech by James defending Jesus, 2) throwing James from the summit of the temple, 3) stoning him, and 4) a fuller killing him with a staff. Eusebius, In his Clement account, says that "the Jews" 1) frustrated by Paul being sent to Rome) 2) got James to deliver a speech about Jesus, 3) suddenly killed James when he defended Jesus, and 4) this was done at the time after Festus had just died. Eusebius adds that Clement also said that "he was thrown from the pinnacle of the temple, and was beaten to death with a club" [Church History 2:23.3]. Eusebius then puts in his account of Josephus' description of the death of James: Quote:
As DC Hindley pointed out, it is apparent that Christians have confused passages in Josephus about the death of the high Priest Ananus with passages about the death of James Damneus, the brother of the High Priest Jesus Damneus. This shows that early Christians played around with the text of Josephus in the same way that they played around with the the text of the Hebrew scriptures to get a certain queer reading that in some way promoted their mythology. We have only to figure out now the order of the changes. The main mark of the Josephus James interpolation is that it took passages having nothing to do with the Jesus of Nazareth stories and changed them into being a reference to them. We may assume the same methodology in the TF. Whatever was written there originally by Josephus had nothing to do with the Jesus of Nazareth stories. Warmly, Jay Raskin |
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09-17-2011, 12:00 PM | #12 |
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09-17-2011, 02:56 PM | #13 | ||||||||||||
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The placement has been recognized as a bit odd by most commentators. Quote:
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Christians valued Josephus for his dramatic stories of the Jewish War, which they believed showed that YHWH had removed the Jews as his favorite race. They didn't need to make massive interpolations. Quote:
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09-17-2011, 04:18 PM | #14 | ||||
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Had been known to tamper with Josephus works and many other writers works as well.He uses this passage in Evangelical Demonstration Book (3) page 124: Quote:
!st Century Jewish historian Josephus Famous work "The Antiquities of the Jews." Made no mention of Christ. Church felt he should recognize Christ.. The only reference is a forgery. 200 years Church fathers were familiar with his works. Knew nothing of the celebrated passage. Had the forged passage been in the works of Josephus which they knew people such as Justin Martyr, Tertullian, Origen and Clement of Alexandria would have thrown it at their Jewish opponents. Forged passage did not exist. Origen who knew Josephus well expressed that he had not acknowledge Christ. |
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09-17-2011, 06:49 PM | #15 | ||||||||||
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09-17-2011, 07:36 PM | #16 | ||||||||||
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Peter Kirby has a much more thorough and unbiased consideration of the evidence - he actually changed his mind several times on this issue, so I don't think he started with the conclusion that he wanted. |
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09-17-2011, 08:05 PM | #17 |
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What precisely do you mean by the statement "Eusebius (as a probable interpolator) didn't have to convince anyone"?
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09-17-2011, 08:58 PM | #18 | |||||||
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09-17-2011, 11:40 PM | #19 |
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The authenticity/non-authenticity argument for the writings of Josephus is a NON-SEQUITUR argument to determine the historicity of Jesus called the Christ.
And it is clearly evident since BOTH Church writers and HJers are claiming that the writings of Josephus are authentic but make the complete OPPOSITE claim about the nature of Jesus called Christ. It simply does NOT follow that if Josephus writings are authentic that Jesus did exist or was the Child of a Ghost. Authenticity is NOT directly related to historicity. Whether or not Plutarch wrote "Romulus" both Remus and Romulus are still considered myths. |
09-18-2011, 12:11 AM | #20 | ||||
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There is an alleged Prayer Book of George Washington. It doesn't read like Washington's words. Whoever wrote it did not seem to care, and the people who claim that Washington wrote it do not seem to care, although the experts are not persuaded. Quote:
"Eusebius and the Testimonium Flavianum," Catholic Biblical Quarterly 61 (1999): 305-322 Quote:
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