Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
07-12-2007, 03:36 PM | #11 |
Contributor
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
|
|
07-12-2007, 03:39 PM | #12 |
Contributor
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
|
The glorifyhisname site seems to be down, but you can find google caches of the pages, e.g. here.
There is also a wikipedia entry for Brother_Lawrence with links to his work on project Gutenberg. |
07-12-2007, 09:10 PM | #13 | ||
Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: Madrid, Spain
Posts: 572
|
Quote:
Read Martin Luther, who wrote a lot on church organization and very seldom mentions Jesus' life or the gospels - yet very often the epistles. |
||
07-12-2007, 10:28 PM | #14 | |
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2004
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 11,525
|
An entire thread could easily be devoted to many of these points individually! But, I will address what to me seems the weakest point in the list.
Quote:
The possibilities as I see them, in order of increasing plausibility are: 0. Paul just didn't know or care about Jesus, and plugged his ears for 17+ years every time someone started to talk about Jesus. 1. All of Christianity is a fraud invented by Eusebius (threw this one in for mountainman) 2. Paul is a fiction invented by Marcion. 3. The historical Jesus somehow undermined Paul's ministry, and so Paul stuck to the more fantastic aspects that gentiles had generally heard of, rather than the undermining details they probably had not heard 4. Paul had never even heard of Jesus, and the texts were modified later by Marcion to apply Paul's spiritual savior concept derived from Isaiah 53 to Jesus. 5. Paul's historical Jesus is actually a character from the Jewish scriptures, renamed and syncretized with pagan ideas. Paul intentionally left out details of Jesus other than creedal aspects to keep his mystery hidden. 6. Paul only wrote about the creedal aspects of Jesus, even though he knew more, and never bothers to use the authority of Jesus on moral or political issues when it would trump, because Paul was peddling himself as a greater authority than the earthly Jesus 7. Paul's Jesus is either purely mystical, or a god incarnate from the indefinite past, rather than someone Paul viewed to have actually lived on earth within his own lifetime. |
|
07-13-2007, 12:33 AM | #15 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 3,397
|
Quote:
That Paul did not mention an HJ cannot be used as evidence for an HJ. There, fixed... |
|
07-13-2007, 01:10 AM | #16 | |||
Veteran Member
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: London, UK
Posts: 3,210
|
Quote:
Quote:
This is what I meant by circularity in the last post that I mentioned circularity in that I didn't really explain, which you quite rightly picked me up on. I glimpsed something there but I wasn't sharp enough to encapsulate it at the time. Thanks to your post it's become clearer to me (though I'm probably still not sharp enough to get it down right ). By reading Paul with gospel glasses on, the assumption is made that Paul must have been silent because he was "a visionary/mystic who was uninterested in the gospel Jesus". This assumption is then fed back into counter-arguments against the relevance of Pauline silence, just as you have done. But you have no warrant for being so cocksure about who Paul was and what he was like and what his circumstances were, such that you can claim that you have enough background knowledge to be sure that his case is analogous to Lawrence's; there's no comparable weight of obvious evidence about Paul's situation to enable you to be sure that had there been a gospel Jesus, Paul is the sort of person who wouldn't have mentioned him in his writings, even if he was a mystic. Let's see if I can make it even clearer. The knowledge that Lawrence was a Carmelite lay brother and his biographer's knowledge about his devotion to the historical Jesus makes redundant any discussion of his psychology and about what mystics are and aren't likely to say given their beliefs. The fact is, you already know his belief (unless he was living a lie), and that's what enables you to say that, as a mystic, he's evidently uninterested in the historical Jesus (at least in his instructional writings). But Paul's psychology is still an open question, because we don't have that kind of hard evidence - neither internally from unambiguous statements leading to historicity in Paul, nor externally from eyewitness accounts of a human Jesus. Factor in proximity in terms of time and space, and the fact that there's an obvious brouhaha between Paul and apostles who supposedly knew a living Jesus, in which he would have had to justify his apostleship on merely visionary grounds as against their grounds of acquaintance with the living words of the cultic figure, and Lawrence becomes even less relevant. |
|||
07-13-2007, 05:35 AM | #17 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Midwest
Posts: 4,787
|
|
07-13-2007, 05:37 AM | #18 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Midwest
Posts: 4,787
|
|
07-13-2007, 05:37 AM | #19 |
Regular Member
Join Date: Apr 2007
Posts: 268
|
Even apart from the difference of the times they lived in there is at least one glaring difference between Rutherford/Lawrence and Paul. Rutherfords/Lawrences audiences presumable had the same access to bibles and works on the bible as they themselves. Pauls audience had, as far as we know, nothing in writing, zip, nada, not a scrap.
|
07-13-2007, 05:47 AM | #20 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 3,397
|
Quote:
Ahh...not to prove an HJ, but of course, not as evidence for such a character either... In other words, Paul can in no way be used to argue as evidence for an HJ due to the fact that he is silent regarding an HJ. I completely agree... |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|