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11-21-2011, 05:51 PM | #11 | |||
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You were. |
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11-21-2011, 06:07 PM | #12 |
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I was referring to the variety of Jesus' mentioned in the OP.
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11-21-2011, 08:39 PM | #13 | |
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The are 17 of them: 01. Jesus, son of Phabes – High priest. Ant 15.322DCH PS: I think I once met you at a party on earth, but without the extra head and arm. |
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11-21-2011, 09:13 PM | #14 | |
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Josephus is really just about the only contemporary (1st century CE) author outside the NT which might even mention the man. But to say that Josephus cannot be trusted about anything relating to Christian history sounds like an attempt to limit the historical evidence to the books of the NT, and them alone. Sola Scriptura and all that. No sense dirtying Jesus with the politics and social unrest of his times DCH |
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11-22-2011, 08:47 AM | #15 | ||
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Is there any easy way to know which, if any of these personages would have been contemporary with the life of of the HJ? Is there an easy way to search through the annals of other historians besides Josephus, say Philo, for similar correspondences? I am afraid I am ignorant of the skills and resources - let alone the core background knowledge - to muster such a search. It does seem like a worthwhile project. When I first started visiting this site, I was impressed, and I am still impressed, btw, by a disconnect between how the problem of the historical silence on the HJ was perceived by the erudite (here and elsewhere) and how it is perceived by those newly initiated to the issue of the historicity of JC. Here, it is reduced to being just another unresolved question like so many others. However, to someone coming upon this issue afresh it is startling news indeed, and is a foundation-shaking revelation. Which, I will maintain - is exactly how it should be regarded. I think that the apologetic-minded have done a nefariously good job of minimizing the perceived relevance and importance of this silence problem, by asserting that there would be such a low expectation of discovery of historical references. But is this true? I can tell you that the very fact that the vast majority of scholars blithely acknowledge that the 'real' JC could not be the man depicted in the Bible - this alone - would be pretty darned explosive information for the general public if it ever escaped from the confines of academia. So, since this issue of historical silence could have devastating ramifications to Christian faith in the real world, one has to ask - just how accurate is this idea that we would not expect to find historical reference to the HJ? I don't recall ever seeing a thread here devoted to a catalogue of the trivial personages that WERE noticed and preserved by contemporaneous writers. Do we have information on beggars, musicians, artists for example from the period 50 years on each side of AD 1? Do we have minor politicians, rabbis, mendicants, orators, athletes, marital scandals.... but no Jesus Christ? Thanks again for your efforts to reproduce the list. It is not, however, the list that I remember, which if I can trust my memory, was fairly recent, much shorter, and had the life dates and a description of the notoriety of the various agitators. What I do seem to remember (?!) was that several of them were, indeed, contemporaneous to the HJ. If that is true, as you can see from my initial link to the conversation at WEIT, that that information would be considered as very significant by many. PS - Was that the party at Islington? ;D |
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11-22-2011, 10:33 AM | #16 | ||
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Judas, son of Hezekiah (4 BCE) War 2.56 and Antiquities 17.271-272.All of the info about the other rabble rousers were stolen from here. A nod of my hat to you for managing to pick up that hot chick Tricia. I couldn't get anywhere with her. :dancy: DCH |
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11-22-2011, 05:50 PM | #17 |
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