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Old 07-22-2010, 10:07 PM   #51
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Originally Posted by ApostateAbe View Post
The point is that Jesus is sandwiched in between two apocalyptic human beings. Our evidence found in the gospels claims that John the Baptist was apocalyptic. Our evidence found in the writings of Paul shows that Paul was apocalyptic. Before Jesus, we had an apocalyptic human being. After Jesus, we had an apocalyptic human being. Jesus is the character linked between the two: Jesus is associated with John the Baptist, and Jesus is associated with Paul. Both John the Baptist and Paul seem to be apocalyptic human beings. The gospels portray Jesus as an apocalyptic human being. Therefore, it is entirely consistent with the evidence to explain Jesus as an apocalyptic human being. It is inconsistent with the evidence to think that Jesus was apocalyptic mythical/fictional character. Such an explanation would require that the mythical character Jesus was reportedly a religious heir to the actual human John the Baptist, and an actual human Paul was a religious heir to the mythical Jesus. Why not think that all three of them are human?
Scenario 1:Paul, or at least Paulish ideas --->temple destruction-> The gospels (if you think the gospels predate 70 CE, we are so far apart that discussion is futile)

Ok, so you say Paul is apocalyptic. Assuming that the gospels came later than Paul, we still see apocalytic beliefs. The gospels depict JtB as being apocalyptic, and even though I think it's obvious none of the quotes attributed to JtB in the gospels were actually spoken by him, we'll go with you're claim that he was apocalyptic. You are now a gospel author who has witnessed either the ruin or razing of the temple. Surely the apocalypse inherent in your belief system is at hand, and surely Jesus must have predicted it.

How would *you* depict Jesus...as apocalyptic, or as oblivious to the destruction that would be forthcoming from his perspective? Your perspective requires that both Jesus and John are apocalyptic *before* the Jewish wars even began. How can you not see that as an anachronism? Sure, it's *possible*, but it's not very plausible.

Scenario 2:
temple destruction -> apocalyptic fervor gives birth to a new Jew who since he can not engage in ritual law anymore, figures out theologically why he doesn't have to - and hell, who wanted to do all that crap anyway. We'll call him Christian.

Of course everyone is an apocalyptic preacher now, real or mythical, since the the birth pangs of the apocalypse are clearly present. Think about this carefully:

If Paul is apocalyptic, what are the odds he got it right and was by happenstance also essentially the father of the Christian church right before the most apocalyptic event any Jew of the day could have imagined?

...them's mighty small odds. I think any unbiased jury would toss such
a case out in a heartbeat.

Scenario 3:
temple destruction -> apocalyptic fervor depicted in the gospels -> an internalization of the apocalypse into spiritual idea

This is the scenario I prefer. The destruction of the temple in 70 CE results in a new kind of Jew who must figure out how to be Jewish without a temple. A lot of Jews who lived far from the temple had done this anyway to justify why they didn't fulfill their obligations. They find theological justifications for abandong the law (the Jerusalem church we see in Paul) and invent stories about their own plight, told metaphorically through a character they call Jesus.

After the Bar Kochba revolt, these anti-law Jews are rejected by more hardcore Jews who have figured out how to substitute synagogue for the temple, and officially break off into their own sect, which they call Christianity. It's at this point that anti-Jewish sentiments build among Christians - cause in large part by Jewish persecution of Christians in that time frame. The Christians don't really remembers how it all started because even before 70 CE there were dozens of different takes on Judaism, so origin stories are tacked onto the metaphorical Jesus. In these stories we see all the emotions bubbling at the time:

- apocalypticism
- anger at Jews for mistreating them
- a recognition that this anger is counterproductive and so an emphasis on forgiveness
- a metaphorical story drawn from scripture about how the Jewish rebellions resulted in the humbling and abject annihilation of their only hope for re-establishign an independent state (aka, the passion)
- another metaphorical story explaining why the 2nd born (the Christians) have now received the birthright (the resurrection)

Later on, as apocalypticism began to fade some, we see teh apocalypse itself being phrased in spiritual terms. Thsi is Paul's writings as we know them.

Quote:
Paul's language is apocalyptic (he even has the same apocalyptic deadline as Jesus found in 1 Corinthians 15:51--"We will not all die..."). If you think that it is all spiritual stuff, nothing to do with overthrowing Earthly rulers, then fine.
No. I think that 1 Cor 15 is the work of a different author - a competing sect to that who originally penned 1 Cor. You'll note how often this particular chapter of this particular text comes up in these discussions. There's a reason for that.

Quote:
I put in bold all of the prophecies.
As he came out of the temple, one of his disciples said to him,...
...

In other words, the apocalyptic predictions are a helluva lot more than the destruction of the temple, and they can not all be explained as a retroactive prediction. What is your more complete explanation, then? You know my explanation.
Yes I know your story, and it does not explain how it is possible that Jesus exactly predicted the events of the Bar Kochba revolt 100 years before it happened.

Here are historical details of that time:

- the temple mount was razed by Hadrian. Nor one stone left upon another.
- Bar Kochba claimed to be the messiah
- Hadrian errected a temple to Jupiter on the old temple mount - which was linked to Daniel's prophecy
- The Bar Kochba revolt was a war like none seen before to the Jews
- Jerusalem was completely destroyed. God help anyone who didn't flee

The rest of the crap about the sun darkening, eathquakes, etc. was a common literary device.

Quote:
OK, let me know if I missed anything this time around.
This is disheartening. I would have expected you to at least recall some of the objections, even if you felt them unconvincing, after the many months you and I have been discussing this.
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Old 07-22-2010, 11:11 PM   #52
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Originally Posted by spamandham View Post
....The rest of the crap about the sun darkening, eathquakes, etc. was a common literary device.
The sun and moon darkening, and stars falling from the sky is not really crap, these were supposed to be prophetic events lifted from Hebrew Scripture that should have happened IMMEDIATELY after the Fall of the Temple c 70 CE.

It was the author himself who was APOCALYPTIC and he used the Jesus God/man character to propagate his apocalyptic message.

This is what the author of gMark wrote.

Mr 13:31 -
Quote:
Heaven and earth shall pass away: but my words shall not pass away.
If an actual human Jesus did claim he would be raised on the third then his words would have passed away with 72 hours of his death and Jesus would have been known as a false prophet and a fraud and Mark 13.31 would have been totally ignored.

It was the author of gMark or the authors of the Jesus stories who thought passages found in Hebrew Scripture were prophecies of an Apocalypse.

Joel 2:31 -
Quote:
The sun shall be turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, BEFORE the great and the terrible day of the LORD come.
Now the author of gMark would REPEAT those prophetic words of the Apocalypse found in Joel 2.31 through his God/man character.

Mark 13.24-26
Quote:
24But in those days, after that tribulation, the sun shall be darkened, and the moon shall not give her light,

25and the stars of heaven shall fall, and the powers that are in heaven shall be shaken.

26And then shall they see the Son of man coming in the clouds with great power and glory...
The supposed Apocalyptic prophecies of the coming of the Lord in Joel or Hebrew Scripture may have been a major factor in the fabrication of the God/man character after the Jewish Temple fell.
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