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07-06-2009, 10:23 AM | #31 | ||||||||
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It is central to Christian theology but it is totally absent from Paul's letters. Until you can provide a credible explanation for that, you are spinning your wheels. Quote:
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That said, Jesus' mother obviously serves a crucial role at the beginning but, unlike the suspiciously convenient Joseph A, she reappears in the story and continues to provide plot points (eg Jesus considered crazy by family, status of "beloved disciple"). Quote:
We are talking about a wealthy member of the Sanhedrin who was also a secret disciple of Jesus. He was powerful and secure enough to be willing to ask Pilate for the body of an executed rebel but he only gets a cameo? It requires great faith to accept such a dubious character. Certainly more than I have. Quote:
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The tomb is not a credible detail independent of Joseph A and the guards. Joseph A is not a credible character independent of the empty tomb and the guards. The guards are not a credible detail independent of the empty tomb and Joseph A. Again, I just don't have enough faith to ignore all these problems but ignoring them seems to be your only resolution. |
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07-06-2009, 10:28 AM | #32 | |
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07-06-2009, 11:37 AM | #33 | |
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2. No empty tomb tradition can be found in Christian literature before Mark's Gospel. 3. There is no evidence that 1st Century Jews ever claimed Jesus' body had been stolen, or that they were even aware of any resurrection story at all. 4. Matthew was writing to a Gentile audience 50 years after the alleged crucifixion, outside of Palestine and after the destruction of the first Jewish-Roman War. His audience was not at all likely to encounter any Jews going around saying Jesus' body had been stolen, but it was an obvious question which would have been raised by prespective targets of conversion, so Matthew was simply trying to preemptively head that question off at the pass. It was not necessary for the objection have been something the target audience had actually heard from "the Jews," only that it was a question that would naturally occur to anybody. As a matter of fact, if a dead body actually DID go missing from a tomb, then by far the most probable explanation is that somebody took it (other less likely, but still more probable than magical explanations include the possibility that animals took it or ate it, that the location of the site was misidentified or that there was some kind of natural geological event which moved or buried the body), so Matthew needed to contrive a rebuttal to an objection which anyone with any sense would raise immediately. |
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07-06-2009, 01:59 PM | #34 | |
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That the story the Jews were telling was of disciples stealing, and that that was a naturalistic response to an alleged Very Big Sign from God, is part of what I am saying. The bribe aspect is not in the core of my argument. We agree. The questions I pose are- why is Matthew putting ideas into potential converts minds about the body being stolen; and why is this Jewish claim and Christian counter-claim being played out in Matthew if the resurrected body thing is a late invention? My conclusion isn't “...therefore Jesus is God, Hallelujah!”, but a more modest conclusion; that historically this guard story makes much better sense if we say the earliest Christians were claiming Jesus body had vanished, as a necessary part of their wider claim that he had risen again bodily. To put it differently: let us suppose- 1)Earliest Christianity wasn't anything about a body. 2)Later Christians began to use resurrection language to describe some sort of exultation of Jesus. 3)Other Christians misunderstood and began to invent literal stories about the resurrection, unharassed by the Christians involved at stage 1). 4)Jews, worried at the rise of Christianity, invented a counter-story about the body being stolen, in preference to the “You're making it up as you go along” approach. 5)Still other Christians, getting worried by an effective counter-charge, if a doubly fictional one, added a further layer of fiction by inventing stories about guards and a bribe. 6)Matthew judged this tradition well enough established to include it in his gospel, so he cunningly split it in two and merged it seamlessly into his story. Now all this happened by...well Diogenes (above) has Matthew at 80 C.E. Mainstream scholars tend to stop at the 90s at very latest. Whatever the date, the sequence above realistically just isn't going to be played out by then. Sixty years after the “events”-one would have to be very naïve to believe that this level of evolution would have occurred. One wonders what the Christians involved at 3) and 5) actually believed in this scenario. |
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07-06-2009, 02:08 PM | #35 |
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07-06-2009, 03:03 PM | #36 | |
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Kashmir tomb of Jesus, or the tomb of Jesus in Japan. http://www.thiaoouba.com/tomb.htm http://www.tombofjesus.com/2007/home.html K. |
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07-06-2009, 04:37 PM | #37 |
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Anyway- the empty tomb story appears quite late in the Christian works : * Paul - no mention of the E.T. * James - no mention of the E.T. * 1,2,3 John - no mention of the E.T. * Jude - no mention of the E.T. * 1 Clement - no mention of the E.T. * Revelation - no mention of the E.T. * Didakhe - no mention of the E.T. * Barnabas - no mention of the E.T. * Gospel of Thomas - no mention of the E.T. * 1,2 Peter - no mention of the E.T. * Papias - no mention of the E.T. * the Pastorals - no mention of the E.T. Not until early-mid 2nd century did Christians start mentioning the empty tomb. The same time they started mentioning the Gospels. K. |
07-06-2009, 05:38 PM | #38 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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If you want an example where a character who wouldn't be of such a nature, then you have Nicodemus, who certainly serves more than just a discussion with Jesus about rebirth; he is part of the Sanhedrin and votes not to execute him, and is present at the burial. Quote:
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07-06-2009, 05:54 PM | #39 | ||||||
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07-07-2009, 01:09 AM | #40 | ||||
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Your clearly faith-based objections certainly notwithstanding, I've provided ample support to any rational and objective inquirer. Denying reality isn't helping your credibility. There is nothing "wildly speculative" about noting the problematic absence of an empty tomb tradition in Paul or your inability to offer a credible alternative explanation. The notion that such a symbol of the resurrection would not have been used by Paul is simply absurd on its face. There is nothing "wildly speculative" about noting the dubious nature of the sudden appearance of the amazingly convenient and unlikely character of Joseph A. There is nothing "wildly speculative" about noting only one of four versions includes the rather crucial detail of guards at the tomb. In fact, none even seem to leave room in the story for them!! Multiple independent lines of argument lead to the same rational doubt. This continues to hold true despite your repeated straw men and rhetorical characterizations (eg "wildly speculative"). Denying the rational basis for doubt only emphasizes the absence of rational thought involved in your position. Quote:
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What lengths won't the faithful go to in order to retain their belief? Quote:
You've been given very clear, rational and independent reasons to doubt Joseph A, the tomb, and the guards and have offered no credible rebuttal to any of those reasons. The doubt stands. :wave: |
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