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02-12-2004, 05:27 PM | #51 | |
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Re: Re: Re: The Didache and the Eucharist
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Look, I readily admit to the possibility and probability of Zoroastrian belief in Syria at that time. The Parthians had held Jerusalem for a brief time in the previous century (1st century BCE). They were, during the 1st and 2nd centuries, Rome's most daunting opponent. But I don't know of enough evidence to claim that most Syrians were Zoroastrians. I'd had rather thought that Attis and Cybele and the Mesopotamian fertility gods, adapted and redacted themselves, and the Phonician and Caananite gods, and, as Hellenism was still quite strong, Artemis and the fading Greek pantheon, were present along with incursions of Zoroastrianism which had overlain it and then retreated. Can you provide evidence of this preponderance of Zoroastrianism in 1st century Syria? And in Tarsus? I do think that the social upheaval surrounding the need to pacify the empire immediately adjacent to the ongoing front lines of a continuing war between two empires, Rome and Parthia, is a fertile ground for new invention in the face of the clear failure of the old paradigm - the destruction of the Temple. There are multiple responses to this incident, one of them mutated to become Christianity. Another became what we now know as Judaism. In that period. It was a time ripe for syncretism and recreation of old myths into new myths of hope and delivery. I'm also not sure I agree that all mythic heroes are necessarily based upon some actual individual. Euhemerism is, in my estimation, a strong presence in such myths, but not a necessary precondition. I think the human imagination is strong enough to create, in thought alone, a new creation that offers some hope out of the dismal conditions of life and the looming and ever-present specter of death. I believe humans will create a delusion, something out of whole cloth, to create a shred of hope. I think it's a human trait to do so. I don't see why you don't think it possible. Can you explain? godfry n. glad |
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02-12-2004, 06:24 PM | #52 | |
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If you had read the reference that I gave in my last post you would have realized that the eating of the bread has absolutely nothing to do with eating flesh and drinking blood. If anything re-read John 6 63 "It is the Spirit who gives life; the flesh profits nothing; the words that I have spoken to you are spirit and are life. This is poken by Jesus to explain the following 51 "I am the living bread that came down out of heaven; if anyone eats of this bread, he will live forever; and the bread also which I will give for the life of the world is My flesh." The "I" above is not the man speaking ... it is his words! It is the words that come from heaven. Get it? That is the bread in the Last Supper - Jesus' teachings. Verse 51 is repugnant even to Jesus' disciples as is presented in John 6, BUT the explanation is not. |
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02-12-2004, 07:00 PM | #53 | ||
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Mithras in Cilicia
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02-12-2004, 07:41 PM | #54 | |||||||||
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Re: Re: Re: The Didache and the Eucharist
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Crossan (The Birth of Christianity, p.434) contrasts the eucharist traditions given by Paul and Mark with that in the Didache: "One tradition, that in Paul and Mark, involves a ritual meal institutionalized by Jesus himself and connected with his own execution." (I would add the word "allegedly before "institutionalized") "The other tradition, that in Didache 9-10, has none of those connections, and its prayers are extremely similar to standard Jewish prayers." When I read this in the context of your views, I see the Didache tradition as more consistent with TJC. They seem to have used the meal to commemorate what they learned from Jesus including the fact that he was the Messiah. Thus, the wine is the "holy vine of David" while the bread is the "life and knowledge" made known through Jesus. That the Didache version sticks more closely to Jewish tradition seems to connect it to TJC and to deny accepting symbology that would be antithetical to Jews. Crossan goes on to show that both traditions exhibit evidence of being influenced by Isaiah's Suffering Servant. He finds the pais (servant/child) from the Didache and Paul's paredideto in the Septuagint version to provide that connection. To me, this only reinforces my suspicion that belief in the sacrificed Jesus could have been entirely obtained from Scripture. These two use the same Scripture but move in different directions with it. Quote:
Paul writes about it because certain members of the Corinthian church were apparently abusing the ritual... Quote:
"For, in the first place, when you come together as a church, I hear that divisions exist among you; and in part I believe it. For there must also be factions among you, so that those who are approved may become evident among you. Therefore when you meet together, it is not to eat the Lord's Supper..."(1Cor 11:18-20, NASB, emphasis mine) Paul goes on to describe specifically how they are not using the Lord's Supper as it was intended: "...for in your eating each one takes his own supper first; and one is hungry and another is drunk. What! Do you not have houses in which to eat and drink? Or do you despise the church of God and shame those who have nothing? What shall I say to you? Shall I praise you? In this I will not praise you."(11:21-22) Then he repeats to them the revelation he has clearly previously told them: "For I received from the Lord that which I also delivered to you..." Paul is writing a letter to correct the way the Corinthians are using the "tradition" he had given them. I rely on Crossan for an understanding of the specifics of the misuse: "We are talking about a patronal share-meal in which one of the wealthier members hosts the entire community. This is the typical situation of the house church. On the one hand, Paul clearly presumes that there are those who have food to eat at home and need not come to the Lord's Supper for sustenance. They are the haves. On the other hand, those haves "show contempt for the church of God and humiliate those who have nothing." Those latter are the have-nots. The Lord's Supper is supposed to be a patronal share-meal in which the haves and have-nots can eat food together in common, but, of course, all or most of the food and drink must come from the haves. What happens, however, is that the nonworking haves can arrive before the working have-nots and eat together whatever they bring or their host prepares for them. When the have-nots arrive, there is nothing left for them, hence "one goes hungry [have-nots] and another becomes drunk [the haves]," as Paul put it." (The Birth of Christianity, p427) Quote:
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Assuming you are correct about TJC, what do you understand Paul's view of Jesus' messianic career to have been? He completely ignores it in his letters because it was apparently irrelevant to his gospel but what do you think he thought of it? Quote:
I think I will have to reread Galatians after obtaining a better understanding of your position. Paul complains that they are following a "different gospel" that seems to include following Jewish Law. I'll have to see if his complaints match what you hold TJC to have believed/preached. Quote:
Thanks for the additional explanation re: James. It seems to adequately address my concerns. |
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02-13-2004, 07:51 AM | #55 | |
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Re: Mithras in Cilicia
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I'm interested in your (or the Cap'n's) response to Ulansey's hypothesis that the Mithraic practitioners of the first century were NOT practicing some derivation of Zoroastrianism, but a relatively newly invented (circa 2nd-3rd century BCE) mystery cult in Tarsus based upon the procession of the equinoxes and the role of the constellation of Perseus (patron hero of Tarsus) in the shifting of the heavens. Mithras = Perseus. I believe this issue I started out on was that Zoroastrianism is not a precondition. If you point to Mithras as evidence of Zoroastrianism, then I point to Ulansey, who states that Mithraism, as known in Roman antiquity is NOT Zoroastrian, but a new mystery religion. Invented.... Which I would think would be quite a lesson if any were acquainted with the real nature...the mystery... of Mithras. Having grown up in the midst of it and all. In short, Mithras does not necessarily equal Zoroastrian. godfry |
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02-13-2004, 09:53 AM | #56 | ||
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I agree with the allegorical content of your analysis of the above verses, but not with the chronological context within which you place them. Rather, I would argue that the chronological placement of GJohn supports my contention that GJohn and (Ch 9 of) the Didache are contemporary with each other, and reflect diversification decades after the 55CE dating of I Chron. Once again, sorry for not making this clear earlier. |
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02-13-2004, 11:54 AM | #57 | |||
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Re: Re: Re: Re: The Didache and the Eucharist
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Dualism: After the Exile, the Hebrews adopt a concept of a more or less dualistic universe, in which all good and right comes from Yahweh, while all evil arises from a powerful principle of evil. Eschatology and Apocalypticism: Popular Jewish religion begins to form an elaborate theology of the end of time, in which a deliverer would defeat once and for all the forces of evil and unrighteousness. Messianism: Concurrent with the new eschatology, there is much talk of a deliverer who is called messiah, or anointed one. In Hebrew culture, only the head priest and the king were anointed, so this messiah often combined the functions of both religious and military leader. Otherworldliness: Popular Judaism adopts an elaborate afterlife. Since justice does not seem to occur in this world, it is only logical that it will occur in another world. The afterlife becomes the place where good is rewarded and evil eternally punished. As you can see, were it not for the infusion of these Zoroastrian concepts, Judaism would be a much more alien religion. So much so that it would have been impossible for Xtianity to have claimed ANY Judaic antecedency. It is striking that all these same Zoroastrian roots now form the pillars of Xtian cosmology. Quote:
This was the application that I intended for the paragraph to be applied to the subject of HJ. I was defending my strategic approach to the issue, specifically: To drill down into the canonical record using archaeological and non-canonical historical sources as tools to see if I eventually reached a point where conflicting evidence essentially precluded the possibility of a HJ (in any guise). The result of that strategic approach yielded the scenario I have been presenting in this thread. Though I found what I believe to be compelling evidence, holding it forth here for challenges from the aggregate body of knowledge held by the members of this forum is a rigorous test, and (at least) parts of it may not survive. I have already had to amend some details, and others are still under spirited discussion. |
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02-13-2004, 12:06 PM | #58 | |||
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The Didache and the Eucharist
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Still... Ulansey. Have you read his _The Origins of the Mithraic Mysteries: Cosmology and Salvation in the Ancient World_? If not, you need to at least consider his hypotheses before committing yourself to this assertion that Roman Mithraic belief is Zoroastrian in source or nature. Ulansey has extended and revised much of the work done shortly after the beginning of the 20th century by Franz Cumont on Mithraic iconography and its meaning to the members of the mystery cult. It is a very short book and is available at Amazon.com here and probably available at your local public library. Quote:
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godfry |
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02-13-2004, 01:25 PM | #59 | ||||||
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Re: Re: Re: Re: The Didache and the Eucharist
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Here is the connection between redaction and a historical character. If the redactions are excised from a document, what remains is a document about 'someone' (either historical or mythical). If mythical, then there must be another layer of embellishment/redaction (else the myth must have been created from whole cloth). Considering the relatively short period of time between the (presumed) HJ and the redactions, the whole cloth option is greatly diminished (as it would necessarily require a newly created myth, since a several hundred year old myth would surely be recognized by the intended readers of the redacted version). Quote:
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02-13-2004, 02:07 PM | #60 | |||
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: The Didache and the Eucharist
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Strictly in the interests of brevity (not always a good idea on this forum; this being a good case-in-point), since some of those candidates were Zoroastrain (or derivatives of), I included the Z allusion as point of reference. My clarification (to which your response is addressed) attempted to marginalize the importance which one (or amalgum of) was actually Paul's source, to the argument that his 'Christ' bore huge similarities to all of them. If you can exclude any of these candidates, I would be very interested in exploring that with you. Quote:
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