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Old 02-12-2008, 07:38 AM   #21
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PFC wrote........
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In first century Judaism, the idea of a dying and rising Messiah was completely unheard of.
I used to have a book on my hard drive about "Twelve Crucified Messiahs"
Many of you probably also saw the book as it was being promoted several years ago. The point is that the Jesus story was one of many crucified Messiah fables from antiquity.
Jesus was not unique.

Stuart Shepherd
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Old 02-12-2008, 07:45 AM   #22
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PFC wrote........
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They were even willing to die for their claim, as is recorded by Clement of Rome, Josephus, and others.
The claim that Christians were willing to die for their religion is not convincing.
Throughout history men have foolishly relinquished their most important possession, their life, for false causes. Pick up the newspaper and you can read about people dying in vain for nonsense even today.

Stuart Shepherd
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Old 02-12-2008, 08:28 AM   #23
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The Apostles were supposedly commanded by Jesus.......
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Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:Matthew 28:19
But the Apostles did not run out and publish the Gospel so that the whole world would know what would be the most important message in human history if it were true.
Instead they relied on word of mouth, according to Christian Apologists, and didn't publish the Gospels until at least 40 years after the death of Jesus.
This makes no sense since the Jews of those days were a literate people.
Look in the Gospels and see for yourself how many times Jesus says to the Jews..."Have you not READ"
But this following Scripture proves that the Jews were mostly literate....
John 19:20 (King James Version)
20This title then read many of the Jews: for the place where Jesus was crucified was nigh to the city: and it was written in Hebrew, and Greek, and Latin.

The Synoptic Gospels all include an account of the destruction of Jerusalem which occurred in 70 CE and supposdly according to Christians, Jesus died in 33 CE. So why did they wait to publish their message to a literate people?

Examine this following Scripture........
Matthew 28:15 (King James Version)
15So they took the money, and did as they were taught: and this saying is commonly reported among the Jews until this day.
See the bolded portion. This proves that the Gospel was published many years after the events that it is supposed to report.

In my opinion, this time lapse of 40 years at least, of potentially the most important message in human history, casts serious doubt on the truthfulness of the Gospel stories.

Stuart Shepherd
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Old 02-12-2008, 11:44 AM   #24
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Originally Posted by stuart shepherd View Post
PFC wrote........
Quote:
In first century Judaism, the idea of a dying and rising Messiah was completely unheard of.
I used to have a book on my hard drive about "Twelve Crucified Messiahs"
Many of you probably also saw the book as it was being promoted several years ago. The point is that the Jesus story was one of many crucified Messiah fables from antiquity.
Jesus was not unique.

Stuart Shepherd
:banghead:

It's 16 Crucified Saviors, and please forget you ever saw it. Read Richard Carrier's assessment here.
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Old 02-12-2008, 12:16 PM   #25
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It sounds like PFC is using the same arguments laid by William Lane Craig. However, I think they are great points and do have some truth to them.
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Old 02-12-2008, 12:19 PM   #26
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by stuart shepherd View Post
PFC wrote........


I used to have a book on my hard drive about "Twelve Crucified Messiahs"
Many of you probably also saw the book as it was being promoted several years ago. The point is that the Jesus story was one of many crucified Messiah fables from antiquity.
Jesus was not unique.

Stuart Shepherd
:banghead:

It's 16 Crucified Saviors, and please forget you ever saw it. Read Richard Carrier's assessment here.
16 or 12 ....I downloaded the book but only skimmed...never read it.
The point is not the book but that crucified messiahs or saviors existed and thus this was not a completely unknown phenomena as PFC might have us believe.
I don't endorse the book since I didn't read it.

Stuart Shepherd
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Old 02-12-2008, 12:29 PM   #27
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It's 16 Crucified Saviors, and please forget you ever saw it. Read Richard Carrier's assessment here.
The book is worthless, but the preChristian concept of death and resurrection among gods, at least according to Carrier, is legitimate: (from the link you posted)

Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard Carrier
Although I have not exhaustively investigated this matter, I have confirmed only two real "resurrected" deities with some uncanny similarity to Jesus which are actually reported before Christian times, Zalmoxis and Inanna, neither of which is mentioned by Graves or John G. Jackson (another Gravesian author--though both mention Tammuz, for whom Inanna was mistaken in their day). This is apart from the obvious pre-Christian myths of Demeter, Dionysos, Persephone, Castor and Pollux, Isis and Osiris, and Cybele and Attis, which do indeed carry a theme of metaphorical resurrection, usually in the terms of a return or escape from the Underworld, explaining the shifting seasons. But these myths are not quite the same thing as a pre-Christian passion story. It only goes to show the pervasiveness in antiquity of an agricultural resurrection theme, and the Jesus story has more to it than that, although the cultural influence can certainly be acknowledged.

The only pre-Christian man to be buried and resurrected and deified in his own lifetime, that I know of, is the Thracian god Zalmoxis (also called Salmoxis or Gebele'izis), who is described in the mid-5th-century B.C.E. by Herodotus (4.94-96), and also mentioned in Plato's Charmides (156d-158b) in the early-4th-century B.C.E. According to the hostile account of Greek informants, Zalmoxis buried himself alive, telling his followers he would be resurrected in three years, but he merely resided in a hidden dwelling all that time. His inevitable "resurrection" led to his deification, and a religion surrounding him, which preached heavenly immortality for believers, persisted for centuries.

The only case, that I know, of a pre-Christian god actually being crucified and then resurrected is Inanna (also known as Ishtar), a Sumerian goddess whose crucifixion, resurrection and escape from the underworld is told in cuneiform tablets inscribed c. 1500 B.C.E., attesting to a very old tradition. The best account and translation of the text is to be found in Samuel Kramer's History Begins at Sumer, pp. 154ff., but be sure to use the third revised edition (1981), since the text was significantly revised after new discoveries were made. For instance, the tablet was once believed to describe the resurrection of Inanna's lover, Tammuz (also known as Dumuzi). Graves thus mistakenly lists Tammuz as one of his "Sixteen Crucified Saviors." Of course, Graves cannot be discredited for this particular error, since in his day scholars still thought the tablet referred to that god (Kramer explains how this mistake happened).
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Old 02-12-2008, 12:34 PM   #28
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It only actually takes one crucified savior, and Jesus would not be unique.

But when you cite Kersey Graves 16 crucified saviors, you lose the argument.
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Old 02-12-2008, 12:47 PM   #29
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//edited//

미안해
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Old 02-12-2008, 04:49 PM   #30
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First of all, we are not concerned with issues related to Biblical Inerrancy. Assuming for the sake of argument that the Gospels contain some contradictions does not in any way undermine the historical core of evidence in favor of Jesus’ bodily resurrection. After all, no one believes that John Alden’s biography of George Washington must be infallible in every detail in order to accept the basic tenets of Alden’s testimony. Likewise, what the New Testament teaches about the events surrounding the resurrection of Jesus do not have to be infallible in order for us to salvage a number of important facts.
Punk wants to concede inerrancy in the hope that we'll concede that the bible is generally reliable. But, unlike Alden's biography of Washington, the bible is shot thru with events unlikely, impossible, outlandish, contradicted by other sources, and contradicted by itself. There is hardly more reason to assume that something in the bible is true than to assume that something in Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone is true.



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Other unrelated issues may arise throughout the course of this debate, but it is of the utmost importance that we stay focused on the relevance of one issue only: does the evidence point to or away from a bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ?
This single-minded clarity is undoubtedly why punk introduced the claim that if Jesus rose from the dead then we should assume that Jehovah did it.



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So why should we believe that Jesus was raised from the dead? While this is often seen as a “faith issue”, there are a number of important facts accepted by the majority of New Testament scholars, Christian and non-Christian alike, <snip>

The Empty Tomb


First, the empty tomb is multiply attested to in early, independent sources.
As has been explained by others, it is not generally thought, not even by "the majority of New Testament scholars," that the gospels are independent sources.



Quote:
Mark’s Gospel ends with the empty tomb and the angel announcing Jesus’ resurrection (Mark 16:6-7). There are dissimilarities between the Synoptic Gospels, suggesting that the authors did not borrow from one another, but rather had independent sources.
So, we should judge the gospels to be reliable both because they agree with each other and because they disagree with each other. One wonders whether there is anything which punk would recognize as indicating that the bible is unreliable.



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Cumulatively, this is important because, as Marcus Borg points out, “The logic is straightforward: if a tradition appears in an early source and in another independent source, then not only is it early, but it is also unlikely to have been made up.”[1]
What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. Will punk grant that his logic works just as powerfully to support the Book of Mormon, the Koran, Beowulf, and Star Wars?



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Second, one may readily make a case that the empty tomb is a historical fact based on the Gospel narratives’ inclusion of the tomb being discovered empty by women. This would have been extremely embarrassing for early Christians, since the testimony of women was not regarded as trustworthy,
Are we then to believe that women are untrustworthy? Or are we to believe that the men who wrote the bible were untrustworthy in their judgments about women? Pick one.

If we are to believe that the writers of the bible were wrong about women, the flesh and blood women that they lived with and knew intimately, then why should we suddenly believe that their judgment is sound when it comes to fantastic gods?



Quote:
Third, the empty tomb was not only proclaimed by followers of Jesus, but was also implicitly affirmed by the Jews.
"The Jews"? All of them? One of them? A reliable one, or a hysterical misguided one?

In any case, this is part of the story. It would make as much sense to argue that Harry Potter must be real because if he wasn't real then Hermione wouldn't have talked to him. She's part of the same story as Harry Potter; she is not, therefore, corroboration. Likewise, these alleged Jews are part of the same story as Jesus, so they cannot reasonably be regarded as corroboration of that story.

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