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03-07-2010, 01:45 PM | #11 | ||
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03-07-2010, 02:08 PM | #12 | ||
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03-07-2010, 02:20 PM | #13 |
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Umm, except a guy called Socrates might have been killed by crucifiction, and what was that about drinking poison on the cross?
And the Sermon on the Mount is socratic teaching. What was that about historical kernels? Might the Jesus stories be an attempt by Greeks to put their stories in a Jewish context? |
03-07-2010, 03:40 PM | #14 | |
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Barabbas - Perhaps the Historical Jesus?
Hi Show_no_mercy,
I think this has to be considered a fantastic or dramatic element. It seems designed to make the point that Jesus was considered worse than a criminal insurrectionist murderer by the Jewish masses. The name Barabbas (the son of the father) would logically be another name for Jesus. From Paul "Romans, 8" we get this: Quote:
The point of the story seems to be to separate the Jesus character from the violent revolutionaries who existed prior to the Roman Jewish War or Wars. The Jewish masses preferred the revolutionary sons of God when given a chance to vote. We can suppose that the Jesus character was originally derived from a Barabbas type character. The revisionists rewriting the Jesus story are anxious now to separate him from this revolutionary character. This suggests that the gospels writers are anxious to distinguish Jesus from pre-war revolutionary Jews.This could indicate that the Jesus character was based on a pre-war revolutionary Jewish leader or a pre-war revolutionary Jewish literary figure. It strongly suggests that the gospels passion narratives are a drastic rewrite of an earlier story for political reasons. However, it doesn't tell us the nature of the earlier story and character. Warmly, Philosopher Jay |
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03-07-2010, 08:27 PM | #15 | ||
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It could just as easily be Buddhist.
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The accounts of the life of Buddha and Buddhas disciples preceed the Roman empire and all the earliest possible accounts of "Early christianity". Quote:
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03-08-2010, 06:23 AM | #16 | ||
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03-08-2010, 06:59 AM | #17 | |
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I don't think so. |
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03-08-2010, 07:12 AM | #18 | ||
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Hi Doug,
No, I do not think it probably happened, especially not as described in the gospels, I just think it is harder to explain than the other 9/10ths. The heavens opening up and a dove flying into the body of a man and a voice from heaven saying, "This is my son..." is obviously fictional and didn't happen. On the other hand, a Roman military governor crucifying a Jewish rebel leader around 35 C.E. does not require any kind of leap into supernatural belief. As presented in the gospels, much of it is false, but determining if it is referring to any actual event (and which one), a series of events or no event at all is difficult. Warmly, Philosopher Jay Quote:
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03-08-2010, 07:44 AM | #19 | ||
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Hi aa5874,
These are all good points. The Judas character seems to be there just to betray Jesus. It can be taken as an add on allegorical point that you shouldn't trust all your followers. We should recall that Leonidas and the 300 Spartans were betrayed by Ephialtes ("Nightmare" in Greek) from Malis. One may believe that Leonidas and the Spartans died at Thermopolae without believing that Ephialtes betrayed them. Malis was part of a colony of Lacedamonians who were forced by Athens to fight against the Spartans during the Peloponesian War. Ephialtes may symbolically represent the nightmare of a city's colony siding with a city's enemies against it. The cutting off of the high priest's son's ear is a fascinating detail. It does seem absurd that there are no repercussions for this action and nobody brings it up at the trial/s. It could symbolically represent the fact that the high priest's son would not listen to others. It is possibly related to the common saying by Jesus about those who have ears should listen - the high priest lost his ear and therefore couldn't listen. The whole incident seems to be there to show, a la the Barabbas story, that Jesus was not a violent revolutionary, but also that his followers were willing to defend him. The other points are excellent and does point to the story or at least most of the details being contrived from Hebrew scriptures and text to relate it to classical Jewish sources. Warmly, Philosopher Jay Quote:
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03-08-2010, 01:00 PM | #20 | |
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Hi Roland,
I agree, fantastic odds at every turn -- that it should have happened on the day before Passover or Passover, that Pilate should be awake and ready to hold a trial when the High Council brings him in, that Pilate judges him in two hours without any clear charges. It all sounds fantastic and contrived. Yet we still have to figure out a way to determine if there is anything underneath the fantastic and contrived details that the plot of the narrative could be referring to. It is a bit like distinguishing between a tootsie roll, a lollipop and a tootsie pop. A tootsie roll is a fairly hard chocolate candy. the lollipop is flavored sucrose with corn syrup on a stick and the tootiepop has a tootsie roll center but a lollipop outside. We may consider the tootsie roll as all history and the lollipop as all fiction. The fantastic coincidences in the narative eliminate the idea that we are dealing with a tootsie roll (history). They tell us that on the outside the tale is a lollipop (fiction). The quesion is, is it a lollipop (fiction) all the way through, or is there a chocolate (history) center somewhere? If there is a chocolate (historical center) center, what could it be? Warmly, Philosopher Jay Quote:
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