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|  01-18-2006, 10:01 PM | #1 | 
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				 |  Historical vs Mythical Jesus: academic status of argument 
			
			Hi folks, As one uneducated in biblical scholarship, I enjoy lurking here because I learn such a lot. I was quite surprised to find that people here argue very strongly that Jesus is a mythical character. I had always assumed that there was some Jesus chap that the religion was based on, if only very loosely. Monty Python has led me to believe that Palestine was awash with Messiahs at the relevant time. Surely MP would not lie :-) Now, what I want to know is whether this Mythical Jesus is an academic consensus, mainstream position, roughly 50:50, minority, or fringe position - among serious ancient historians. Leave out all the theologists & apologists if you will, but please be honest with me. Are you mythicists fighting an uphill battle, or are you (like evolutionists) the uncontested winners except for the usual fundie frootloops? | 
|  01-18-2006, 10:34 PM | #2 | 
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			Among serious ancient historians? Fringe position. Without a doubt. The scholarly consensus is overwhelmingly (99%+) in favor of a historical man named Jesus who lived in 1st century Palestine that is ultimately at the heart of the gospel stories.
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|  01-18-2006, 10:59 PM | #3 | |
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|  01-18-2006, 11:02 PM | #4 | 
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			cajela, I asked very much the same question here a while back. Allow me to share my answers with you: Jesus Myth: does it take an historian? Earl Doherty himself sent a reply via a moderator. Here's a quote: Someone mentioned that the qualification for competency ought to be further restricted to the "biblical historian". The problem is that such 'historians' invariably come out of a religious-confessional background. (I'd challenge anyone to give me much of a list of "biblical historians" who do not.) Are they going to approach the question in an unbiased manner, using the methodology of the historian's craft in a neutral manner? Again, a rhetorical question. Can anyone show us how a "proper" historical methodology has arrived at a demonstration of Jesus' existence--beyond the type of argument I've mentioned above? It seems to me that the majority of historians fail to question the existence of Jesus for the same reason everyone else does; it is generally taken for granted. Here's a link on alternative Messiahs in history that I found too. Enjoy.   http://www.livius.org/men-mh/messiah....html#overview | 
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|  01-18-2006, 11:49 PM | #5 | ||
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 http://www.infidels.org/library/mode...r/indconf.html Quote: 
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|  01-19-2006, 01:04 AM | #6 | |
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  ). He preached for 1-3 years, and had managed to gain a small following of believers. Eventually he was executed over Passover by Roman authorities as a criminal. Early in his ministry, there was wide diversity of belief in interpretation of his teachings, but some of his followers, believed that shortly after his death god would come with all his glory and that the end of the world was near. Stories about Jesus circulated around mainly thru oral tradition at first, and eventually some of them came to be written down. About 40 years later, the Jews revolted against the Romans, and this war was lost. After the failure of this war against the Romans, it is when we start to see the Gospels being written (with Mark being the first). So the Gospels are a reflection of how the early Christians were dealing with losing the war, and the fact that the second coming had not come. For over 40 years they were waiting for God to come in all his glory, and this they thought would happen shortly after his death! They dealt with these very depressing and hard times by telling stories about Jesus. This is a very brief summary, but for anyone interested Id recommend books written by Helmut Koester from Harvard, Paula Friedrickson from Boston University, or Bart Erhman from the University of North Carolina. | |
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|  01-19-2006, 01:08 AM | #7 | 
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			Interesting, so the resurrection was more of a hallucination, myth or wishful thinking (when God didn't come).
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|  01-19-2006, 01:52 AM | #8 | |
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|  01-19-2006, 02:13 AM | #9 | |
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 The same goes for Jesus or rather Joshua, i.e. Yahweh is salvation, particularly since is was one of the most common male names. Joseph and Mary were also common and most likely used like Jane Doe today. Sure there might be a Jane Doe but unlikely that the court case is dealing with anyone with that birth name. | |
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|  01-19-2006, 03:27 AM | #10 | |
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