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Old 04-04-2012, 12:04 PM   #41
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Another newbie here!

Sotto: I'm not sure I understand. Or maybe I do. Isn't the question Of an historical Peter part of investigating the divine origin of the NT? If it is, then you really couldn't use the NT as a reason for Peter's existance, could you? Any more than saying that Hercules or any character from another book existed.
Welcome to the forum. The divine origins of the NT would be another debate. It is not just that Peter is claimed to have existed by the NT. In the epistle to the Galatians, Peter is a character in Paul's account of a bitter theological dispute about whether or not uncircumcised gentiles should be fully accepted as members of the church. Peter (Cephas) would not sit with the gentiles at a meal, and Paul writes that he confronted Peter to his face and said that he stood condemned. There is no conceivable reason that either Paul or anyone else would just make this up. The plausible and explicit Christian interest was to portray the apostles as unified behind a single doctrine, as we see in the book of Acts (in which Peter starts out disagreeing with Paul but comes around to Paul's way of thinking beautifully).
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Old 04-04-2012, 12:04 PM   #42
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Let's suppose that's true. Why is the NT not reason enough to believe that Peter existed?
Why should anything in the NT that cannot be corroborated elsewhere be believed when it is a collection of writings that were obviously produced, not for historical purposes, but to persuade people of the truth of a religion?
becauze thats not how history or scholarships work.

Its not that easy.


it would do you wise to study what scholarship actuially is
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Old 04-04-2012, 12:11 PM   #43
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OK let me rephrase that although I do not claim to be a scholar, just interested in these matters.
There is no evidence outside the NT that such a person as Peter ever existed.
Let's suppose that's true. Why is the NT not reason enough to believe that Peter existed?
Why should anything in the NT that cannot be corroborated elsewhere be believed when it is a collection of writings that were obviously produced, not for historical purposes, but to persuade people of the truth of a religion?
Is there some inherent defect about religions that makes them invalid as factual sources?
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Old 04-04-2012, 12:29 PM   #44
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I would say yes, because no one, even among the believers, can agree on what they say, or what they "mean". It seems to be that either you need divine inspiration to understand how to get around inconsistancies, or they are just stories told to explain more emotional stands than rational ones.
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Old 04-04-2012, 12:31 PM   #45
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I would say yes, because no one, even among the believers, can agree on what they say, or what they "mean". It seems to be that either you need divine inspiration to understand how to get around inconsistancies, or they are just stories told to explain more emotional stands than rational ones.

false all of it
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Old 04-04-2012, 12:37 PM   #46
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"Is there some inherent defect about religions that makes them invalid as factual sources?"

If you are looking at a document full of stories of people raising others from the dead, being released from prison by angels, wandering around the world performing signs and wonders and miracles and so on it is reasonable to question whether those events ever happened and if anything narrated in those documents is credible.
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Old 04-04-2012, 12:38 PM   #47
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I would say yes, because no one, even among the believers, can agree on what they say, or what they "mean". It seems to be that either you need divine inspiration to understand how to get around inconsistancies, or they are just stories told to explain more emotional stands than rational ones.

false all of it
Do you mean the texts or my post?
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Old 04-04-2012, 12:52 PM   #48
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OK let me rephrase that although I do not claim to be a scholar, just interested in these matters.
There is no evidence outside the NT that such a person as Peter ever existed.
Let's suppose that's true. Why is the NT not reason enough to believe that Peter existed?
Why should anything in the NT that cannot be corroborated elsewhere be believed when it is a collection of writings that were obviously produced, not for historical purposes, but to persuade people of the truth of a religion?
Is there some inherent defect about religions that makes them invalid as factual sources?
It's not a factor of religion per se. The issue is the nature of a tradition. Once information enters a tradition it loses whatever its prior status was. There is no tangible way of separating fact from non-fact once it has been drawn into the tradition. For centuries the vast majority of writers of past events were more hagiographers and purveyors of traditions. Just look at works such as those by Geoffrey of Monmouth. Once something is tradition it loses any historicity it may have had and becomes a part of a story of the past. It's hard to say when a datum entered the tradition. Can you say when the woman taken in adultery entered the christian tradition? It isn't in any of the earliest manuscripts, but it was considered kosher by everyone before the time of Erasmus and probably before the 19th century. We need outside help to get some understanding of the developments in a tradition. That's how we learnt of the status of the adultery story. Extractable history is not to be found in a tradition.
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Old 04-04-2012, 12:52 PM   #49
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[ In the epistle to the Galatians, Peter is a character in Paul's account of a bitter theological dispute about whether or not uncircumcised gentiles should be fully accepted as members of the church. Peter (Cephas) would not sit with the gentiles at a meal, and Paul writes that he confronted Peter to his face and said that he stood condemned. There is no conceivable reason that either Paul or anyone else would just make this up. .
There were many competing ideas in the early church, weren't there? It is at least conceivable that "Paul" and "Peter" were invented as personifications of the theological communities whose ideas the characters promote and that there were never such actual people.
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Old 04-04-2012, 01:03 PM   #50
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Well, the Acts quote says Saul was introduced to the apostles, the Galatians quote specifically says he saw none of them save Peter and James.
Peter and James were apostles, plural. Still no problem.

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Okay, but do you know why anyone would even want to forge the canonical letters attributed to Paul?
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Yes, if they were forged by Marcion
But Marcion did not claim authorship.

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The reason I quote from wikipedia is that it is easy to find and look up and cite references that way online
Exactly. Propaganda is free! You tend to get what you pay for.

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and I want to show that I am not just making things up or merely stating my own unsupported opinions. I know wikipedia is not perfect, but what is?
Why do people spend $10,000+ on expertise, if they can get it all on Wiki? You could spend your whole life correcting the religious entries of Wiki, because there is an abundance of falsehoods in them, and someone would reinstate the falsehoods before very long. It's Stalinist.

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"Marcion was the first to propose a New Testament canon.
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Why believe that Marcion existed?
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His existence is attested by Tertullian and others.
Oh, right. Like Peter and Paul, then.

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I also do believe that there is no evidence that there ever was such a person as the Apostle Paul and that the wildly improbable tales of him performing miracles,
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Why are these 'tales' improbable?
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A few choice examples:
Acts 13:6-11 Paul strikes a sorcerer blind
Why is that improbable, if Paul was an apostle of the creator?

One must avoid circularity.

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going on long journeys to places where the inhabitants did not even speak the same language
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Paul knew Hebrew, Greek, Aramaic and no doubt Latin. You had to go a very long way to find a place where nobody knew any of those.
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Well if you believe Acts Paul went to Galatia and Phrygia and converted people who spoke "in the Lycaonian language" (Acts 14.11).
That does not mean that they did not also speak Greek koine, the regional lingua franca, or even Latin, having been occupied by Rome for fifty years. They evidently knew and loved Graeco-Roman deities, anyway.
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