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 10-22-2008, 04:20 PM   #41
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: California
Posts: 145
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spamandham View Post
I've had this discussion many times here before. We can't simply claim Matthew invented the prophecy. If his audience was not already familiar with it, he couldn't get away with doing that.

The prophecy he refers to need not exist explicitly within the modern canon. All that matters is that he and his audience thought it was a prophecy, and they clearly did. Since they thought it was a prophecy, then Jesus coming from Nazareth serves a theological purpose and need not be historical.
But in the birth narrative, Matthew got away with so many other bogus prophecies, mistranslations and misunderstandings. And with Jewish believers like the Ebionites, he did NOT get away with it... their version of Matthew didn't have the birth narrative. But it would've been quite easy to hoodwink Gentiles with such stuff, people unfamiliar with Jewish scripture. And Christians are still hoodwinked by it today, because they don't really read their Bibles.

It's clear that Jesus coming from Nazareth was something to be glossed over, explained away. That's what both birth narratives are about, but their complete inconsistency gives the game away. We see in other places too how embarrassing this was to the early church, and that gives us good reason to accept it as authentic.
t
teamonger is offline  
Old 10-22-2008, 04:38 PM   #42
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: California
Posts: 145
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spamandham View Post
There's nothing particularly probable about it either, and that's the problem.
Actually, there is plenty about this preacher's earthly existence that is probable. For one thing, you avoid having to posit a vast fabrication by the likes of Mark, the Q writer, early Jewish gospels, for which there is no good evidence. You avoid having to invent a remarkable "someone else" who came up with all those graphic parables. You don't have to invent a special apostle category "spiritual brother" for James.

Accepting that this cult leader walked the earth simply avoids historical problems. Occam's razor should apply.
t
teamonger is offline  
Old 10-22-2008, 04:49 PM   #43
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: California
Posts: 145
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spamandham View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
3. But clearly, the early church did expect the end of the world. Paul says "time had grown very short". 1 Peter says "the end of all things is at hand".
I think it's important to keep the timelines in mind. 1 Peter is almost certainly a late 2nd century writing (by my estimates. scholars are all over the map, and I have strong reservations against accepting the obviously apologetic early dates) - part of the catholicising stage, whereas some of the epistles may be genuinely first century.

Paul's kingdom of god is, to me at least, clearly a kind of spiritual enlightenment rather than an end of the world scenario. If Paul did indeed write first, then this counters anything that sounds apocalyptic in the gospels or later canon. Even if Paul did believe in and end of the world scenario, it really doesn't argue for a historical Jesus.

After all, the end times nutters are still going at it today, and certainly no-one modern knew Jesus. For all we know this has been going on for 10,000 years.
1 Peter is almost certainly fairly early, as it has the same end-times point of view as Paul and Mark. It's not beyond the pale to suggest the historical Peter had something to do with it. 2 Peter is another matter, certainly in the catholicizing stage.

If Paul's parousia was spiritual enlightenment, what's all this about time being short? So from now on, behave as though you have no wife?

I don't know what you mean that Paul's apocalypticsm "counters" any in the gospels.

No, Paul's belief in the end of the world doesn't prove a historical Jesus, but we have a whole bunch of other writers also believing it's the end-times, apparently based upon their Jesus belief.

Sure, it still goes on today, but who is it believing? Mostly people who listen to charismatic preachers. Yes, they've been with us for 10,000 years at least.
t
teamonger is offline  
Old 10-22-2008, 05:08 PM   #44
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: California
Posts: 145
Default

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

I think there's a chronological problem with your reconstruction. The early believers (before Paul, whom Paul persecuted) were apparently Torah-following Jewish Christians (the "pillars" at Jerusalem, i.e., the "superlative apostles".) These folks were more conservative than Paul, thus it's difficult to imagine them following a "spiritual Christ", or any pagan-style savior-god. It's much easier to imagine them following a Galilean preacher who impressed them with his graphic parables and last-days talk.
t
Conservatives like the Sadduccees may not have acknowledged any sort of messianic speculation. They wouldn't have accepted a human incarnation of the God of Moses, though re-incarnated prophets might've been conceivable. The figure of Wisdom/Sophia seems to be on the angelic plane, beyond human mortality. She could have evolved into Philo's Logos, a non-eschatalogical spiritual mediator.

The Son of God idea comes from passages like Ps 2 or 72, the royal son of David. This was not a supernatural being, though possibly a humanly perfect messiah.

It's easy enough to see John the Baptist as following the apocalyptic tradition, heralding the Day of the Lord. If Jesus was the messiah, he didn't pursue the traditional military/political agenda, and his death didn't signal the Messianic age. Either he was conceived of differently from the start, or his followers had to re-interpret his career after Easter.

If the early believers weren't followers of Jewish eschatology then any sort of amalgam of ideas is possible. JtB's successors (Dositheus, Simon Magus) were seen as gnostics. These were contemporaries of Paul. Maybe the 1st C really was a time of religious innovation.
Jesus' early disciples were not Sadducees, but mostly simple folk who often didn't understand him. They wouldn't have thought of him as God incarnate, nor would Jesus have thought of himself as such. That's the later theologians at work. Jesus may not have even thought of himself as the Messiah. In the synoptics, he says very little about who he is, instead asks others what they think.

Yes, after Easter re-interpretation had to take over. In particular, we see the conservative James the brother taking over (perhaps pressed into service?). But Paul was out of his control, and after the war Jewish-Christian influence was largely diminished. The remants apparently became the Ebionites (or "Nazarenes"), who followed a much more human version of Jesus, and regarded Paul as an apostate.
t
teamonger is offline  
Old 10-22-2008, 05:53 PM   #45
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

"Embarrassment" has nothing whatsoever to do with history. You need evidence or information to support your claims.
On the contrary, embarrassment is an important criterion for historians. Read E. P. Sanders.
t
E. P. Sanders is a Protestant, he expects a reward from Jesus or the father of Jesus when he is dead. E. P. Sanders is an extremely bias historian, he wants to get eternal life in heaven.

I think certain parts of Homer's Achilles are embarrassing, so Achilles existed.
aa5874 is offline  
Old 10-22-2008, 07:36 PM   #46
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: California
Posts: 145
Default

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

On the contrary, embarrassment is an important criterion for historians. Read E. P. Sanders.
t
E. P. Sanders is a Protestant, he expects a reward from Jesus or the father of Jesus when he is dead. E. P. Sanders is an extremely bias historian, he wants to get eternal life in heaven.

I think certain parts of Homer's Achilles are embarrassing, so Achilles existed.
Translation: you don't understand the criterion, so would rather smear Sanders instead, ruling out his historical arguments because you don't like his background. Do you think that's a proper procedure?

It's not whether you think it's embarrassing, it's whether the item in question is embarrassing to the agenda, whether it goes against the grain. Whether there is evidence that it was later glossed over. That is a standard way of evaluating any document with an agenda.
t
teamonger is offline  
Old 10-22-2008, 09:04 PM   #47
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

E. P. Sanders is a Protestant, he expects a reward from Jesus or the father of Jesus when he is dead. E. P. Sanders is an extremely bias historian, he wants to get eternal life in heaven.

I think certain parts of Homer's Achilles are embarrassing, so Achilles existed.
Translation: you don't understand the criterion, so would rather smear Sanders instead, ruling out his historical arguments because you don't like his background. Do you think that's a proper procedure?
How can it be a smear to repeat the biography of E.P. Sanders. He is Christian, Protestant and most likely wants to go to heaven to be with Jesus when he dies to get eternal life.

Would it surprise you if a Hindu historian claimed that it is a historical fact that Hindu Gods really exist?

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger
It's not whether you think it's embarrassing, it's whether the item in question is embarrassing to the agenda, whether it goes against the grain. Whether there is evidence that it was later glossed over. That is a standard way of evaluating any document with an agenda.
t
So, if in the epistles, a writer claimed he was a Jew, that would not be embarrassing, so it is false, the writer was not a Jew.

The birth and resurrection of Jesus of the NT are not embarrassing, therefore they must be false.
aa5874 is offline  
Old 10-22-2008, 09:18 PM   #48
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 11,525
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
Nothing in the gospels was simply to record history, but to glorify Jesus. But that doesn't mean that real history couldn't be mixed in.
True, but it can also be nonhistorical. The same purpose is served either way.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
A historian needs to sift the words to find it. The baptism was clearly embarrassing to the early church, and each later gospel version glosses it over more and more, until in the 4th gospel it is not even mentioned at all, just the groveling.
The later you move in church history, the more Jesus sounds like a real person (by the way, this is rather telling), and the more the need to gloss over that which came to be embarassing. That doesn't imply the earliest Christians found it embarassing, nor does it imply they thought it historical. Mark presents Jesus as the son of God, yet he didn't find the baptism embarassing in the least...ratehr, it plays an important role in the story.

Would you agree that anything you or I write is irrelevant to what the first Christians were thinking? If so, just move that same standard back to anyone writing post-Mark. It irrelevant that later writers found it embarrasing, just as it's irrelevant if you or I do.

Honestly, I think you're making way way too big a deal out of this baptism embarrasment argument. It's very weak at best, and you are glossing over the blatant theological/dramatical role it plays in Mark. You can't simply ignore that. As best I can tell, you are starting with an assumption it was a real event , and that's why Mark rolled it in and made a big deal out of it?

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
The reason for portraying John's groveling behavior was certainly to claim dominion over his followers. But we have another tradition in Matthew which shows John, while in prison, sending followers to Jesus to ask "are you the one?". We can see that John was actually not certain about Jesus at all. Since that goes against the grain, that piece is likely authentic.

t
If possible, I'd like to concentrate on Mark the genuine Pauline epistles, and anything else contemporary with those. The later writings are irrelevant to determining the historicity of Jesus, IMHO.
spamandham is offline  
Old 10-22-2008, 11:26 PM   #49
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: California
Posts: 145
Default

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

Translation: you don't understand the criterion, so would rather smear Sanders instead, ruling out his historical arguments because you don't like his background. Do you think that's a proper procedure?
How can it be a smear to repeat the biography of E.P. Sanders. He is Christian, Protestant and most likely wants to go to heaven to be with Jesus when he dies to get eternal life.

Would it surprise you if a Hindu historian claimed that it is a historical fact that Hindu Gods really exist?

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger
It's not whether you think it's embarrassing, it's whether the item in question is embarrassing to the agenda, whether it goes against the grain. Whether there is evidence that it was later glossed over. That is a standard way of evaluating any document with an agenda.
t
So, if in the epistles, a writer claimed he was a Jew, that would not be embarrassing, so it is false, the writer was not a Jew.

The birth and resurrection of Jesus of the NT are not embarrassing, therefore they must be false.
All I can say is, Sanders is a respected mainstream scholar, and certainly no apologist. For example, he writes that the gospel of John has little value in historical Jesus study. His view is that Jesus was quite mistaken in predicting an imminent end of the world scenario. Just because his background is from a religious context, doesn't mean you understand what he really believes, or that he is necessarily biased.

Your last two comments are laughable, and simply show you don't understand the argument. No, the criterion of embarrassment does not work in reverse.

Let's look at a simple example. Let's say you're interviewing a man for a job, and ask if they've ever been arrested. If he says "yes", wouldn't you be very inclined to believe him? But if he says "no", surely that doesn't mean he is lying.
t
teamonger is offline  
Old 10-23-2008, 12:06 AM   #50
Regular Member
 
Join Date: May 2007
Location: California
Posts: 145
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spamandham View Post
The later you move in church history, the more Jesus sounds like a real person (by the way, this is rather telling),
Actually, I find quite the reverse to be true. The earliest Jesus in Mark and Q sounds like a real end-times preacher from Galilee. The later you move in history, the more the accounts are varnished up and mythologized with virgin birth, extended resurrection accounts, other embarrassing tidbits glossed over, such as Jesus' family thinking he was mad.


Quote:
Originally Posted by spamandham View Post
Would you agree that anything you or I write is irrelevant to what the first Christians were thinking? If so, just move that same standard back to anyone writing post-Mark. It irrelevant that later writers found it embarrasing, just as it's irrelevant if you or I do.
Well, it's not quite the same, if we're talking about just a decade or two later when the tradition was still forming. If the embarrassing item doesn't go away, but is glossed over, that's a sign that it was something so well-known that it couldn't be omitted completely (although the John gospel nearly does so). Anyway, even Mark has John groveling somewhat, saying he is unworthy to untie Jesus' sandals.

Quote:
Originally Posted by spamandham View Post
Honestly, I think you're making way way too big a deal out of this baptism embarrasment argument. It's very weak at best, and you are glossing over the blatant theological/dramatical role it plays in Mark. You can't simply ignore that. As best I can tell, you are starting with an assumption it was a real event , and that's why Mark rolled it in and made a big deal out of it?
No, I didn't start with any assumptions. The baptism not only has the embarrassment criterion going for it, but also multiple attestation (including non-canonical Hebrew gospels). And the baptism is not the only item that fits these criteria. Jesus' coming from Nazareth, his mistaken end-times predictions, his being rejected by family, and the crucifixion itself are believable events.

Quote:
Originally Posted by teamonger View Post
The reason for portraying John's groveling behavior was certainly to claim dominion over his followers. But we have another tradition in Matthew which shows John, while in prison, sending followers to Jesus to ask "are you the one?". We can see that John was actually not certain about Jesus at all. Since that goes against the grain, that piece is likely authentic.

t
If possible, I'd like to concentrate on Mark the genuine Pauline epistles, and anything else contemporary with those. The later writings are irrelevant to determining the historicity of Jesus, IMHO.[/QUOTE]

Actually, many scholars think that Q material goes back to a time before Mark. The final form of Matthew was certainly later than Mark, but that doesn't mean all the contents were.
t
teamonger 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.