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Old 08-26-2011, 06:17 AM   #11
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Originally Posted by Vincent Guilbaud View Post
Here is something that struggles me for some time.
It seems people tend to separate the theories of E.Doherty & G.A.Wells, and themselves sometimes help it.

But I think their differences are really nothing and both have the same point of view.

----------------------------------
Who cares if the Galilean movement of the first century had for origin:
- Wells: an unknown leader called Jesus who didn't really perform any miracle nor died crucified in Jerusalem
(and from whom we only have several sayings although we don't even know for sure which ones).
- Doherty: several unknown leaders who didn't really perform any miracle nor died crucified in Jerusalem
(and from whom we only have several sayings although we don't even know for sure which ones).

Who cares if the Jesus of the early Christians was:
- Wells: a man of the indefinite past
- Doherty: an heavenly being

Some myths may have been seen on earth, others in the air...
They are still not historical truth.

Knowing the almost complete unreliability of the source,
I feel there is very little today to argue for one or the other,
and for what purpose?
----------------------------------

Both theories say finally exactly the same thing:
there has never been a man who would have been exalted to the rank of Messiah and Son of God,
as recognition and reward of a life of righteousness and a ministry of costly faithfulness culminating in martyrdom.

Let me know if I missed something.
Hi Vince. If you have characterized their theories correctly, I tend to agree with you. But I'm unclear regarding Wells--what is it about that Galilean preacher that was charismatic enough to have him be fused eventually into Paul's heavenly figure? That's a difference that those who find influential people to be interesting might see as important. If there was something charismatic about a human Jesus, those characteristics would appeal to many people, whereas fewer would care about characteristics of a made-up or multi-preachers collective.

Well said Ted! In a nutshell this is the main point of contention between the Doherty type mythicism and Wells. Wells is seeking, however inadequately, to retain a human element in his reconstruction of the gospel JC figure. True, Wells cannot supply historical evidence for his Galilean preacher figure, but, after many years of writing on the JC problems, has come to realize that the JC story is not all mythological. In other words; flesh and blood, historical realities, have played a part in the creation of the JC gospel figure. Doherty, as far as I'm aware, works from the idea that Paul's cosmic JC figure has been historicized in the gospel JC. (however see my footnote)
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Can We Trust the New Testament? George Albert Wells (or via: amazon.co.uk)

Can we trust the New Testament?: thoughts on the reliability of Early Christian Testimony.
(2003)

By George Albert Wells

Page 50

The summary of the argument of The Jesus Legend (1996) and The Jesus Myth (1999a) given in this section of the present work makes it clear that I no longer maintain this position (although the change is perhaps not as evident from the titles of those two books as it might be). The weakness of my earlier position was pressed upon me buy J.D.G. Dunn, who objected that we really cannot plausibly assume that such a complex of traditions as we have in the gospels and their source could have developed within such a short time from the early epistles without a historical basis (Dunn 1985,p.29). My present standpoint is: this complex is not all post-Pauline (Q, or at any rate parts of it, may well be as early as ca. A.D. 50); and – if I am right, against Doherty and Price – it is not all mythical. The essential point, as I see it, is that the Q material, whether or not it suffices as evidence of Jesus’s historicity, refers to a personage who is not to be identified with the dying and rising Christ of the early epistles.
So, while Wells cannot provide historical evidence for his Galilean preacher figure - his point is that we cannot discard the possibility that historical figures have played a part in the creation of the gospel JC figure. That there was no historical gospel JC does not translate into no historical figures being relevant to the gospel writers and relevant for the creation of their symbolic or mythological gospel JC figure.

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I personally find the Doherty's idea that there never was any historical figure who inspired others enough to begin Christianity to be interesting yet disturbing at the same time, perhaps some on an individual psychological level since I once was a believer and loved Jesus, and I still would admire someone who willingly died for a cause he believed in--especially if it was to help save others. I think many non-believers like to think that are things about Jesus in the gospels that are true and very likable--wise, compassionate, passionate, devout, committed--even if many of the sayings and doings may not be true.

The main point that Wells is offering is that his Galilean preacher was not crucified. Thus, if there was a charismatic figure living during the gospel date stamp, and that figure was found to be inspirational for the gospel writers - then psychologically speaking, the followers of such a figure were doing what comes naturally - people are drawn to such figures today as back then. People are inspired by other people. We all leave our footprint upon those we come in contact with, for good or for ill. Bottom line, it’s not just great deeds than an individual does but how that individual is comprehended, viewed by others, that is going to have lasting, staying power - long after the charismatic figure has died. The true leader must light a spark in others. No, not giving them cool-aid to drink to cloud their senses, but awakening their own potential for great things.

Ted, willingly dying for a cause is heavy stuff. Yes, people do that - but mounting the barricades brings with it tears as well as joy. If, Wells is right, and I happen to think he is, that his Galilean preacher figure was not crucified, ie an element, a part, of the gospel JC story is reflecting a non-crucified figure, then the element dealing with a crucified figure would indicate that we are dealing with a composite JC figure. And rather than go with Wells that the two fused figures represent his Galilean preacher and Paul’s cosmic Christ figure - I would stay with reality, with historical elements. Which means two historical figures are the primary elements in the creation of the gospel JC figure. One historical figure was crucified and the other historical figure lived out his days. The gospel JC is a composite, a fusing, of two historical figures.

(As to Paul’s cosmic Christ figure - Doherty is correct here - that is a heavenly, spiritual, intellectual context for this figure. The heavenly parallels the earthly - thus, two crucifixion stories in the NT. A position that would be illogical if one wants a historical JC. But with a symbolic or figurative JC - two crucifixion stories, earthly and heavenly, are possible - and would go a long way in overriding all the back and forth as to where JC has been crucified....

The Pauline JC crucifixion is heavenly, spiritual, intellectual. The rulers of that spiritual world crucify JC. In ancient terms that could have been interpreted as taking place in some sort of real out there in space other worldly sphere. A modern understanding would suggest a more individual intellectual world – our mental world, the world of our mind. It’s in that world, a purely intellectual world where ‘crucifixion’, death, of old outdated ideas can have great value, salvation value. ‘Resurrection’ deals with the fact that even new ideas owe something to what has gone before in the sphere of human intellectual evolution. Obviously there would be some overlap between the gospel JC and Paul's cosmic christ figure - resurrection would be the no-man's land...)

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I would also find it disturbing because--as fascinating as it would be to consider that mankind could be deceived to such a degree as has been the case, I would prefer not to think that it is possible. After all, it would make a laughingstock out of billions of people who worship or admire the man Jesus as being perhaps the most influential human being of all time due to his willing sacrifice. To find out that he never even lived--or that there was nothing worthy of inspiring the religion even would be very insulting to much of mankind. Something that I can't help believe that man non-believers would find pleasure in...which to me is a dishonorable character trait.

People want things to make sense. It is very hard for the avg person to make sense out of the idea that there was no man even resembling Jesus who inspired Christianity. At least in Wells' case from what little I know the perception is that he allows for such a man to have existed. Please correct me if wrong.

These views may help provide some insight as to why some might find a significant difference between the two theories.
The position of Wells has more to offer in the psychological stakes. People don’t like to believe they have been taken for a ride. And it makes no sense to go the conspiracy route. Misunderstanding along the way are to be expected in understanding a storyline with such a long history. Yes, to tell someone that the gospel JC is mythological or symbolic, is a big deal. Knocking down the historicists position is simple because they can’t supply any historical evidence for their assumption. But you know what, destruction should be a creator’s prerogative - if one can’t provide a reasoned alternative one should not be so eager to knock down what is there. And that alternative has to have a measure of flesh and blood for it to be viewed as an alternative position. Paul’s cosmic Christ is cold comfort and cannot replace the heart warming pull of the gospel JC. Ah, but together - the spirit and the heart can indeed be uplifted....

-----------------------

Footnote: http://jesuspuzzle.humanists.net/rfset5.htm#Mary
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Earl Doherty

I can well acknowledge that elements of several representative, historical figures fed into the myth of the Gospel Jesus, since even mythical characters can only be portrayed in terms of human personalities, especially ones from their own time that are familiar and pertinent to the writers of the myths.
I don't know if Earl is still prepared to uphold this position - because if he does then arguments re where JC is crucified become nonsensical - ie such a position allows for two NT crucifixion stories - one on earth and one in heaven....So, Earl can have his heavenly spirit realm crucifixion for JC - but he cannot then deny that a historical crucifixion was relevant to the creation of the gospel JC figure.
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Old 08-26-2011, 06:41 AM   #12
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I would also find it disturbing because--as fascinating as it would be to consider that mankind could be deceived to such a degree as has been the case, I would prefer not to think that it is possible. After all, it would make a laughingstock out of billions of people who worship or admire the man Jesus as being perhaps the most influential human being of all time due to his willing sacrifice. To find out that he never even lived--or that there was nothing worthy of inspiring the religion even would be very insulting to much of mankind.
Lots of skeptics would agree with you on that point, and I think that accounts for much of the resistance from people who would otherwise be receptive to the ahistoricist hypothesis.

I for one strongly disagree. It is not the case that if Jesus didn't exist, then everyone who thought he did for all these centuries was some kind of fool. They were not fools, any more than pre-Copernican scholars were fools for thinking Ptolemy had gotten things right, or than scientists before Michelson-Morley were fools for thinking a luminiferous ether had to exist.

The time may come when it can be well argued that no reasonable person can believe in a historical Jesus. That time is certainly not here yet, and it will almost certainly not come within the next few generations.

All of our intellectual ancestors, ever since the gospels came to be widely regarded by Christians as factual accounts of their religion's origins, had every epistemic right to believe that Jesus was a real person, quite regardless of whether they gave any credit to the story about his rising from the dead. It was and remains to this day an entirely reasonable belief. Those of us who question it are embracing a new paradigm. We dare not sneer at those of our contemporaries who are not ready to adopt it, much less at those of our predecessors who were not even offered the opportunity of considering it for adoption.
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Old 08-26-2011, 06:46 AM   #13
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Who is talking about Acharya? I thought that this thread is about Wells and Doherty and the likes.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but they seem to have the same wacky ideas about the character of Jesus.
I have not reach much of Acharya's writings, because the little I have read did not make me want to read any more.

That said, it's my understanding that although Acharya denies Jesus' historicity, she and Doherty/Wells don't agree on much of anything else about how Christianity got started.
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Old 08-26-2011, 07:01 AM   #14
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Correct me if I'm wrong, but they seem to have the same wacky ideas about the character of Jesus.
I have not reach much of Acharya's writings, because the little I have read did not make me want to read any more.

That said, it's my understanding that although Acharya denies Jesus' historicity, she and Doherty/Wells don't agree on much of anything else about how Christianity got started.
You're right. I just read up further on what those two men believe. My bad.
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Old 08-26-2011, 01:34 PM   #15
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I agree that believers in a historical Jesus aren't fools, but would (if Jesus never lived) say they have been 'made out to be fools'.. I do not think the myth hypothesis could exist without deliberate doctoring of texts and deliberate dishonest portrayals of Jesus in the common documents (mostly gospels) both Christians and believers accept as at least somewhat historical.. I do not think the transition from ahistorical to historical could have taken place without deliberate dishonesty. That is what I find offensive.

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I would also find it disturbing because--as fascinating as it would be to consider that mankind could be deceived to such a degree as has been the case, I would prefer not to think that it is possible. After all, it would make a laughingstock out of billions of people who worship or admire the man Jesus as being perhaps the most influential human being of all time due to his willing sacrifice. To find out that he never even lived--or that there was nothing worthy of inspiring the religion even would be very insulting to much of mankind.
Lots of skeptics would agree with you on that point, and I think that accounts for much of the resistance from people who would otherwise be receptive to the ahistoricist hypothesis.

I for one strongly disagree. It is not the case that if Jesus didn't exist, then everyone who thought he did for all these centuries was some kind of fool. They were not fools, any more than pre-Copernican scholars were fools for thinking Ptolemy had gotten things right, or than scientists before Michelson-Morley were fools for thinking a luminiferous ether had to exist.

The time may come when it can be well argued that no reasonable person can believe in a historical Jesus. That time is certainly not here yet, and it will almost certainly not come within the next few generations.

All of our intellectual ancestors, ever since the gospels came to be widely regarded by Christians as factual accounts of their religion's origins, had every epistemic right to believe that Jesus was a real person, quite regardless of whether they gave any credit to the story about his rising from the dead. It was and remains to this day an entirely reasonable belief. Those of us who question it are embracing a new paradigm. We dare not sneer at those of our contemporaries who are not ready to adopt it, much less at those of our predecessors who were not even offered the opportunity of considering it for adoption.
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Old 08-26-2011, 01:45 PM   #16
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I agree that believers in a historical Jesus aren't fools, but would (if Jesus never lived) say they have been 'made out to be fools'.. I do not think the myth hypothesis could exist without deliberate doctoring of texts and deliberate dishonest portrayals of Jesus in the common documents (mostly gospels) both Christians and believers accept as at least somewhat historical.. I do not think the transition from ahistorical to historical could have taken place without deliberate dishonesty. That is what I find offensive.
Your feelings of offense are misplaced, and will get in the way of understanding the issues.

There are a few debaters who think that Jesus was a deliberate fiction for some nefarious purpose - mountainman, Joe Atwill.

Most mythicists disagree, and see the historical figure as an evolutionary outgrowth of natural human processes. Some believers even prefer the mythical Jesus.

I don't think the Swiss were offended when historians decided that William Tell was a historicized myth who never actually existed.
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Old 08-26-2011, 01:59 PM   #17
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The main point that Wells is offering is that his Galilean preacher was not crucified. Thus, if there was a charismatic figure living during the gospel date stamp, and that figure was found to be inspirational for the gospel writers - then psychologically speaking, the followers of such a figure were doing what comes naturally - people are drawn to such figures today as back then.
I can see a case being made for combining a charismatic figure, but I have a harder time believing that the demise of that charismatic character would get so botched up in the history. Further, the very fact that he was charismatic would increase the odds of a dramatic demise--charismatic people arouse emotions, so the idea of crucifixion to me makes a lot of sense. The shorter-lived his ministry and the less well-known he was, the more likely we'd see a mixture of details on the pseudo-historical accounts too. For me then, what we actually see -- multiple conflicting accounts of a crucified charismatic leader -- is more consistent with an actual man who wasn't well known but who was charismatic and died that way, than an actual man who was very well known--enough to get integrated into Paul's Christ--but who never was actually crucified.

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The Pauline JC crucifixion is heavenly, spiritual, intellectual. The rulers of that spiritual world crucify JC. In ancient terms that could have been interpreted as taking place in some sort of real out there in space other worldly sphere.
No where does Paul clearly indicate that Jesus was crucified by beings in a spiritual world. The passage you are probably referencing from 1 Cor 2 is IMO nonsensical in that light, as it would involve a switch from a discussion about the wisdom or lack thereof of MEN to the LACK of wisdom of the spiritual BEINGS in the spiritual world followed by a switch back to discussing the wisdom of MEN again. Even the OT verse Paul applies to the rulers is referring to the wisdom/knowledge of human MEN--not demon rulers in some spiritual world. IOW the context would have to be distorted in an unnatural way without explanation by Paul!

For me his works as a whole cannot reasonably be interpreted as Doherty does because Paul references a flesh and blood human Jesus over 90 times and simply does not provide the qualifications that would be needed or expected by anyone then or now to support this heavenly man concept. Paul's authentic epistles plus Colossians consist of a total of 1589 verses. In my bible the average full page has about 22 verses. Therefore Paul's epistles consist of only about 72 pages!

Despite the fact that Paul wasn't writing to non-believers or to people he needed to explain who Jesus was to, there are 92 different verses that reference Jesus in ways that 'sound human'. That's more than one reference per page. 31 of these refer to Jesus' death with no further detail. Another 27 include further detail associated with Jesus' death. The remaining 34 or so do not pertain to his death. IF Paul's Jesus lived and was crucified in some realm other than earth then the silences in his writings to that effect are a glaring omission of amazing proportion that can only be explained by multiple doctoring of his works. Such doctoring is IMO a deficient explanation and certainly doesn't deal with the actual evidence.
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Old 08-26-2011, 02:11 PM   #18
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Your feelings of offense are misplaced, and will get in the way of understanding the issues.
If someone is deliberately dishonest toward you, wouldn't you be offended? That's all I'm saying. IF it truly was an evolutionary development from myth to history then there is nothing to be offended by. What I am saying is that I don't think that was the case; therefore I would be offended personally and for all those who were duped.
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Old 08-26-2011, 02:27 PM   #19
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Here is something that struggles me for some time.
It seems people tend to separate the theories of E.Doherty & G.A.Wells, and themselves sometimes help it.

But I think their differences are really nothing and both have the same point of view.
Although the outcomes are the same (no historical Jesus) and there are similarities, their theories are quite different.

Both believe in a Jesus constructed from two main traditions: a "Galilean" tradition (represented as one coming out from a group of itinerant Galilean preachers) and a "Jerusalem" one (represented by a group focused on messianic beliefs and the death of Christ). There are historicists who push a similar view, except while they think the two traditions were inspired by the same person, Wells and Doherty think they were inspired by separate groups about different people/entities whose stories were eventually merged by aMark.

Wells believes that the hypothetical Q document is about an actual Galilean preacher who lived in the first half of the First Century, while Wells' Paul believed in a "Jesus Christ" who lived on earth in the past, possibly 200 years before. The Galilean preacher was probably not called Jesus nor crucified. The passion story in gMark comes from the Pauline side, the sayings and actions from the Q side.

Doherty believes that the Q document represents a group of itinerant Galilean preachers who claimed to perform miracles, preached an end times message about the Son of Man, and incurred the hostility of the religious establisment. These preachers at some point devised a figure to represent their thoughts and the actions of their group. Doherty's Paul believed in a celestial being who was crucified in a celestial realm in the indefinite past. As with Wells, Doherty believes that the passion story in gMark comes from the Pauline side, the sayings and actions from the Q side.

In my opinion, Doherty's theories fail since there is no evidence for such beliefs, especially for his views of pagan beliefs (it's unfortunate that so much is focused on Paul in this regard, since Doherty's views on the pagan side are all too often assumed to be correct.) There are too many implausible claims that remain unsupported, in my very humble opinion.

On the other hand, there is nothing inherently implausible about Wells' model.

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I feel there is very little today to argue for one or the other,
and for what purpose?
But are you happy with that? It sounds like you are saying it doesn't matter what theory is being proposed, as long as you get the outcome that is consistent with your beliefs. That almost sounds like [censored].
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Old 08-26-2011, 02:51 PM   #20
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The main point that Wells is offering is that his Galilean preacher was not crucified. Thus, if there was a charismatic figure living during the gospel date stamp, and that figure was found to be inspirational for the gospel writers - then psychologically speaking, the followers of such a figure were doing what comes naturally - people are drawn to such figures today as back then.
I can see a case being made for combining a charismatic figure, but I have a harder time believing that the demise of that charismatic character would get so botched up in the history. Further, the very fact that he was charismatic would increase the odds of a dramatic demise--charismatic people arouse emotions, so the idea of crucifixion to me makes a lot of sense. The shorter-lived his ministry and the less well-known he was, the more likely we'd see a mixture of details on the pseudo-historical accounts too. For me then, what we actually see -- multiple conflicting accounts of a crucified charismatic leader -- is more consistent with an actual man who wasn't well known but who was charismatic and died that way, than an actual man who was very well known--enough to get integrated into Paul's Christ--but who never was actually crucified.

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The Pauline JC crucifixion is heavenly, spiritual, intellectual. The rulers of that spiritual world crucify JC. In ancient terms that could have been interpreted as taking place in some sort of real out there in space other worldly sphere.
No where does Paul clearly indicate that Jesus was crucified by beings in a spiritual world. The passage you are probably referencing from 1 Cor 2 is IMO nonsensical in that light, as it would involve a switch from a discussion about the wisdom or lack thereof of MEN to the LACK of wisdom of the spiritual BEINGS in the spiritual world followed by a switch back to discussing the wisdom of MEN again. IOW the context would have to be distorted in an unnatural way without explanation by Paul!

For me his works as a whole cannot reasonably be interpreted as Doherty does because Paul references a flesh and blood human Jesus over 90 times and simply does not provide the qualifications that would be needed or expected by anyone then or now to support this heavenly man concept. It's a glaring omission that can only be explained by multiple doctoring of his works, which is IMO a deficient explanation and certainly doesn't deal with the actual evidence.
Ted, I'm not about to make a plea for Doherty's position - but just as a matter of interest, here is what Wells had to say:

Quote:
“Perhaps Doherty's strongest point is Paul's assertion (1 Cor.2:8) that Jesus was crucified by supernatural forces (the archontes). I take this to mean that they prompted the action of human agents: but I must admit that the text ascribes the deed to the archontes themselves.”

http://www.infidels.org/library/mode.../earliest.html
Apart from that - Ted, there is no way under heaven that the gospel JC figure can be historical. Yes, such a figure could have been a real flesh and blood figure - ie a crucified preacher that upset the Jews - but the jump cannot be made from that possibility to historicity. So, christians, and others, who want to uphold a real flesh and blood gospel JC do so without historical support for their position. Historical support that, because of the nature of their claim, can never be forthcoming. A nobody preacher is of no interest to history back then or now. And in the search for early christian origins such a nobody preacher figure is a non-starter. Useless. That millions of people believe in the assumed historicity of the gospel JC means nothing in the broader picture of intellectual evolution. There is no safe place in our intellectual world just as there is no safe place in our physical world. Both are subject to the unrelenting forces of change and chance. The forces of nature can devastate our physical environment. Our intellectual environment, our mental picture of the world, is subject to our intellect's constant striving for 'truth', for knowing, for searching for knowledge. A big difference is that while we can do nothing about the natural disasters to our environment - we so often fight with tooth and nail to prevent changes to our intellectual world. All the assumed historical gospel JC does is bring comfort to those who believe - but its a placebo effect only. There is nothing there but belief.
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