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03-24-2004, 07:53 AM | #11 | |||
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03-24-2004, 03:36 PM | #12 |
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I don't know Spanish well enough to make my points in Spanish, but maybe you can understand this in English, someone can translate it.
There are several factors as to why the myth has held up so long, and also the fact is that the myth has been criticized strongly for 200 years now as well. Firstly you have the Catholic Church to consider. The Catholic Church held almost all the political and cultural power in Europe from about 400 CE until 1600 CE, and has maintained a strong influence since that time as well. The Catholic Church dominated all aspects of life in Europe for over 1,000 years and during this time of course they were able to enforce the belief in this myth and keep society too ignorant to criticize it. Now there is another issue. Prior to the invention of the Printing Press no one except Catholic clergy ever saw or read the Bible. There was no way to criticize it at that point. The Printing Press was not invented until the 1400s. There was almost no knowledge outside of the knowledge presented by the Church until the Crusades, and that knowledge didn't get back to Europe until around the 1200s. From the 1200s it took until the 1500s for real criticism of the Church to build. By the 1700s people were starting to criticize the myth of Jesus itself. The American, Thomas Paine was one of the first to put such a criticism into print in his book, The Age of Reason. You should look for a Spanish version of The Age of Reason. |
03-24-2004, 04:09 PM | #13 | |
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03-24-2004, 07:29 PM | #14 | ||
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03-24-2004, 07:50 PM | #15 | |
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Obviously though at least parts of the stories about him ar false. The question then becomes, how much is real and how much is false? Do you assume that all the things that are not supernatural really happened? I think that the Jesus story is likely based on real events and a real person or people, but to say that "Jesus was real" becomes difficult even if you discount the supernatural things because even if the story is "based on a real person" we don't know how much of it is real and how much is made up. The Jesus in the story is definately not completely real. |
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03-24-2004, 11:15 PM | #16 | |||
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Por supuesto, usted es correcto. Acerca de es extraordinario. Pero solo en tamano. Muchos personas aqui creen que una persona historica era necesaria. Habia las iglesias separadas. Como consolidar? Por la autoridad. La autoridad de la historia falsa. Quote:
El Escrita mucho acerca de esto aqui. Quote:
Hay un "hilo" en este ahora. Lea los comentarios por la "Vuelta". Hay un Vinnie denominado tambien. Nacido de un perro. El sueno con los camellos. Olore como una cabra. Bromeando por supuesto. Somos amigos aqui. |
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03-25-2004, 08:13 AM | #17 | |
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I don't know if Jesus in the history is definitely not completely real, but I believe that the Jesus Myth theory in the scholarship is definitely irreal. Best regards, |
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03-25-2004, 08:41 AM | #18 | ||
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Let me just challenge you to stop the numbers game and demonstrate through historical methods that there was a Jesus. You know what history was like in Russia during the communist regime: if you didn't say the official things you didn't get published. This is the old fact Orwell wrote about: who controls the present controls the past. xians controlled the present for a long time. Just look at the invention of Ebion, the leader of the Ebionite sect according to Tertullian and various other church fathers. Turning unreality into history is not a strange event at all in the context. So, the challenge again: show me that there was a Jesus. I've looked at the evidence such as the Roman writers after 100 CE, Tacitus, Suetonius and Pliny II. Useless. Josephus testimony? You know what that's worth. The gospels? When were they written? No-one knows. You just get hopes, like Vinnie's silly 70-80 CE for Mark. Do you want to talk evidence or count opinions? spin |
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03-25-2004, 08:54 AM | #19 | |
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Re: A myth that dynamites the history
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For a few good examples, take this quiz These aren't as longstanding as the Jesus idea yet, but only because they're still relevant. Romulus and Remus lasted as long as the Roman empire, and the Jesus story will last as long as the Christian religion. Sorry for the American-centric response, but they're the myths I grew up with. I'd be very curious to know what equivalent myths there are about Spanish history if you care to post some. Oh, and guys, I think the OP was using the word "myth" in a more general than technical sense, so the "inflated historical jesus vs. no jesus at all" stuff may be OT. But I don't speak spanish, so I may be way off base. |
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03-25-2004, 05:33 PM | #20 | ||||
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