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07-08-2004, 08:39 AM | #31 | |||||
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I will let you cite Sanders as I go home since you wrote in the other thread said Sanders assumes existence of a HJ . |
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07-08-2004, 08:43 AM | #32 | |||
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Regarding comparative explanatory power, I think my current "subjective" stance is largely due to reading Maccoby and finding his thesis, despite the flaws I perceive in his approach, to be just as potentially explanatory as Doherty's. (That and reading Holbling where that rotten bastard {in the best possible sense] has me questioning everything I think is true. ) The notion of a historical Jesus existing essentially independent of Paul's theology seems to me to adequately address many of the questions I have when considering the evidence. For at least one passage, in fact, it seems to address it better than Doherty. Specifically, I'm thinking of the portion of Acts where Gamaliel is depicted as comparing Jesus' activities to those of two other messianic contenders (traditional style with all the appropriate political agendas) with no indication that the former was in any way different. Maccoby contends this is the author of Acts forced to deal with a historical reality and I can't think of a plausible alternative (argument from person ignorance). Quote:
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And, speaking of headaches, I think we've gone and derailed this thread into yet another HJ/MJ thread of its own. I think it might need a place of its own. |
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07-08-2004, 08:49 AM | #33 |
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This was my first split so let me know if I missed anything crucial.
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07-08-2004, 09:18 AM | #34 | ||
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First, the one man is attacking merchants who are not best known as fighters. He started a panic and lots of people ran off. Not hard to do, especially with plenty of animals about. I have seen bars empty in five seconds flat when a fight is about to start. And who should arrest him? The place is full of crowds with everyone similarly dressed. It would be easy to slip away. 2. How did this single lightly armed man clear out the Temple, which I understand was comparable to a football field? A few money changers together could have foiled him and wrestled him to the ground. End of disturbance, end of messiah. As I said, he probably created a panic among some fat merchants who ran away. Clearly, the idea that he totally emptyed the place is hyperbole. Think is, even though I don't know the exact details, I can still assert it happened from the evidence available. I don't need to go into microscopic detail. 3. What was Jesus' motivation? He claimed to want to uphold the law, and the moneychangers were a vital part of the law and the Temple administration. His motivation is clearly stated. 4. Is it not more likely that "clensing the Temple" had some sort of symbolic meaning for early Christians, relating to clensing the body? No. It has multiple attestation with no sign at all that it should be interpreted symbolically. Furthermore, Mark explicitly tells us that it was the reason the sadducees decided to deal with Jesus. 5. Given that this act probably never happened, why was Jesus crucified? Isn't that also more likely to have symbolic as opposed to historical implicatoins? No. It did happen and we know this because we have a multiply attested event with a clear cause and recorded effect. That your questions are meaningless is demonstrated by the fact I could take any event in history and ask similar ones. Is it likely that Hannabal would really march elephants over the alps? Surely this is a symbolic Africa entering Italy. Surely the assasins of Julius Caesar could not just walk away after they did the deed - what about the guard? Surely the German barbarians couldn't actually wipe out three whole legions? This must just be a story Augustus put about to justify drawing the border at the Rhine. etc etc etc Yours Bede Bede's Library - faith and reason |
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07-08-2004, 09:52 AM | #35 | |
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I stated in the other thread that "a priori" probably isn't the best description of Sanders position, because he never elaborates. We don't get to presume he's done so without analysis of the evidence unless he tells us as much. All we can safely say is that it's his working hypothesis. A priori means before analysis of the evidence, you seem to think it means before I present argument X I presume premise Y for any reason. Premise Y must be presumed for no reason. Regards, Rick Sumner |
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07-08-2004, 10:00 AM | #36 | |
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Didn't it happen twice? Or do you have rules which allow us to tell which are retellings of the same events and which are events which were similar , but happened twice (such as Jesus preaching two similar sermons - one on a plain, and one on a mountain) |
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07-08-2004, 10:09 AM | #37 |
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How necessary is the temple incident to a reconstruction of Jesus? Fredriksen doesn't think it's terribly necessary at all, and her presentation accounts for a lot of things that most others do not. I might start another thread on this, which of course inspires another question: How likely is it that that thread will go longer than five consecutive posts without becoming yet another thread on the Jesus-Myth? Regards, Rick Sumner |
07-08-2004, 12:18 PM | #38 | ||||||
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07-08-2004, 01:25 PM | #39 | |||||
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The historicity of the Temple disruption scene(s) is clearly far more in doubt than your confident assertion suggests. |
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07-08-2004, 02:04 PM | #40 |
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Shrugs.
I'm not playing tag wrestling with Sec Web mods. You can launch a thousand questions against anything you like. The fact is we have multiple attestation of an event which is quite possible. It seems quite clear to me that a panic could be caused by a lone man who could easily get away afterwards. If you walk into a shopping mall and pull and gun you will have little trouble escaping in the ensuing pandemonium no matter how many security guards were around. Here are two modern examples where CCTV footage caught the killer in the second case but he was still able to walk away. Anyway, end of discussion, It's not really worth it. B |
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