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Old 04-01-2008, 10:58 AM   #21
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Docetic belief was heretical.
To the docetic, Jesus was not real.
He only "seemed to exist"
but did not in fact do so.
As Solo has already pointed out, that is not accurate. To the docetic, Jesus was not physical and only seemed to be physical. Marcion, for example, clearly believed that his only "seeming physical" Jesus engaged in activities and with people on earth.

You are, not surprisingly, introducing a bias for the conclusion you clearly prefer at the very start of your alleged "investigation". Such a practice is hardly likely to call into question the conclusion you prefer but, instead, almost guaranteed to obtain that very result (ie circular reasoning).

I have a question about the following quote you offered:
Quote:
Apollinaris of Laodicea

"Our opponents ask:
If Jesus was not an historical personage,
how is it that no one ever doubted his existence?
We reply with the further question:
Granting that he was an historical personage,
how is it that not only does the Talmud never mention him,
but, apart from the gospels, not a single work
belonging to the early Christian period
gives us any intimate detail
about the life of this personage?
The source of the quote is Drews but there is nothing on that page which connects it to Apollinaris. Does Drews attribute it to Apollinaris and, if so, what is the citation from the original source?
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Old 04-01-2008, 11:40 AM   #22
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I remember in Philosophy 101 studying about Plato and the shadows on the wall and such. Do you believe that Jesus was a jungian archetpe of humanity rising out of the caves into the realm of pure thought?
I believe Plato's Cave was intended to be an allegory.
Even so, this allegory is supposed to illustrate a higher truth, namely that the world around us is in part an illusion however that through reason mankind can grasp "truth."
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
I believe that it is reasonable to believe that Plato was an historical figure.
Of course, based on historical written records, right?
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
I am not so sure about your man Jesus,
Ok, so it's not reasonable to conclude that Jesus was a historical figure. Is your theory that he is a purely a fictional character?
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post

who shares with Joshua,
Are you talking about Joshua, the person who took over leadership of Israel after Moses died?
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
the same nomina sacra from a certain point in the ancient historical record.
Yeah, Yeshua and Joshua are similar kinds of names.
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
That epoch needs to be determined. We know Jesus became historical by the fourth century.
Ok, which "writer(s)" made Jesus a historical person in the fourth century?
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Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
There is conjecture concerning the third and the second. The first century appears to be completely silent. The possibilities it seems - for the historical jesus and/or the ahistorical jesus - are one of, or a combination of the 2nd, 3rd and 4th centuries.
Orwellian newspeak.
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Docetism covers all these, since the seeming appearance of the first century seems to be exactly that --- no footprints.
Best wishes,
Pete Brown
If Jesus is an allegory, like Plato's shadow's on the wall then, then it has profound metaphysical/philosophical ramifications. At the very least you do agree that this jungian archetype of christ consciousness has had a profound impact of the course of history, right?
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Old 04-01-2008, 11:58 AM   #23
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Of course, Jesus could have been a fictional character invented in the fourth century, but still have had an effect on subsequent history. That's not the issue. Other fictional characters have had effects on subsequent history - William Tell comes to mind, Luke Skywalker is a candidate. If you think that Jesus was a Jungian archetype, you are probably a mythicist or a neo-Gnostic, not an orthodox Christian. (Not that there is anything wrong with that. . .)

The quest for a historical Jesus was initiated by Enlightenment thinkers who rejected the idea that there is a "higher reality" or a supernatural. Docetists didn't play by those rules, so it is hard to classify them in Enlightenment terms. Freke and Gandy classify them as early mythicists. Doherty thinks they were a transitional form between early mythicists and later historicists. Modern historicists are sure that docetists thought that there was a historical Jesus, just one who for theological reasons could not be classified as mere flesh. But they are not around to speak for themselves.
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Old 04-01-2008, 02:34 PM   #24
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[those who are 'doing' there 40 years and still die nonetheless?
Oops that should say "doing their 40 years and still die nonetheless" and so will spend their eternal portion of life tryig to work out their own salvation --which they never can and therefore will die in the end.

Note here that eternal life is life after rebirth wherein the father and son become one ("the father and I are one") and only need the mother to be brought under the care of this divine union . . . which then is how the Trinity becomes one God in one person.

So Pete, if "40 years and [still] die nonetheless" is the destiny of a 'lifer' it is easy to see how heaven and hell can both be eternal and remain opposites that are known to us . . . or at least are known to those who wrote about it.
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Old 04-01-2008, 03:26 PM   #25
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....let's for the moment consider the possibility that in fact JC did not exist anywhere but in the literature. That his nomina sacra remained understood as the Joshua of the Hebrew bible, and that Jesus was wheeled in with a codex or scroll in century 2, 3 or 4. What would the news report be looking like? Would anyone ask the obvious question? Were their in fact many "anti-christian particles"? How would his reception be reported? This is the question one needs to ask a christian activist/apologist (since in theory, Eusebius is later reporting these peoples observations) in the appropriate century (not the first).
Ok, so the docetists encountered not JC but the texts about JC.
This is an important point and needs to be underlined. Our reports of christian origins are bound with the literature and we know that this literature that forms early christian period of the pre-nicene epoch extended (hypothetically) from the second century perhaps, to the third, etc.

The second century authors whom we read, encountered the text, and if we are to believe Eusebius, had a religious experience. Others, we are told, by these authors of antiquity, had a different experience. They examined the text, and they did not have that same authodox experience but in fact seemed, or appeared to be observed to articulate "heretical things": that Jesus "seemed" to exist (in the literature) but had no "real physical" existence.

The question should be asked whether this includes the notion of historical existence. What if someone were to read the NT lit in the 2nd century and say "Jesus had no historical existence". Would they be reported (at that time) as a "docetist"?


Quote:
saying that they "knew" what they have been served was untrue and had to be modified to euphemize Jesus' non-existence ?
That is one possibility, or question, yes. They were served with text which they thought (for one reason or another) was not historically accurate, and they said so. How would the later christian historians report this, other than under the banner of docetic belief? (There may be other answers, I dont know).


Best wishes,



Pete Brown
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Old 04-01-2008, 03:38 PM   #26
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Originally Posted by Chili View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Docetic belief was heretical.
To the docetic, Jesus was not real.
He only "seemed to exist"
but did not in fact do so.
But Pete, if Jesus was the pupa stage how can you say that he was not real?
Docetists have been spun together in a big cacoon of heresies by the earliest of the christian ecclesiastical historians and it is they and not I who is doing the saying. I am simply trying to interpret the evidence.

The butterfly did not fly from the cross until the fourth century. It may have been in a pupae stage from earlier centuries, as appears to be the intention of Eusebius' various "histories" and the gathering of the authorship on the matter from the preceeding centuries. It must certainly have been very much underground since, we could say because of the extreme paucity of archaeological evidence, a long way underground.

So that leaves us (for the moment) with the texts and the reports of the docetae.


Best wishes,


Pete Brown
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Old 04-01-2008, 03:51 PM   #27
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Originally Posted by Amaleq13 View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post
Docetic belief was heretical.
To the docetic, Jesus was not real.
He only "seemed to exist"
but did not in fact do so.
As Solo has already pointed out, that is not accurate. To the docetic, Jesus was not physical and only seemed to be physical. Marcion, for example, clearly believed that his only "seeming physical" Jesus engaged in activities and with people on earth.

See my response to Solo. The purported authors of the second century are not dealing with your man Jesus direct. They are then dealing with a textual tradition in which the nomina sacra for the name of Jesus appears. This is actually two-steps removed from the previous century. Once for the fact that those who are now described as docetists were emergent in the second century, and secondly, that the docetists only had the text of the nomina sacra form of the name of Jesus - this was the same as Joshua's!

Quote:
I have a question about the following quote you offered:
Quote:
Apollinaris of Laodicea

"Our opponents ask:
If Jesus was not an historical personage,
how is it that no one ever doubted his existence?
We reply with the further question:
Granting that he was an historical personage,
how is it that not only does the Talmud never mention him,
but, apart from the gospels, not a single work
belonging to the early Christian period
gives us any intimate detail
about the life of this personage?
The source of the quote is Drews but there is nothing on that page which connects it to Apollinaris. Does Drews attribute it to Apollinaris and, if so, what is the citation from the original source?

Not sure. I made a quick summary of Drews one day and the notes may indicate this to be so. I will try and look it up sometime later, or string search this page on Witnesses to the Historicity of Jesus: Arthur Drews (1912) .

Best wishes,


Pete Brown
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Old 04-01-2008, 04:26 PM   #28
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Originally Posted by arnoldo View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post

I remember in Philosophy 101 studying about Plato and the shadows on the wall and such. Do you believe that Jesus was a jungian archetpe of humanity rising out of the caves into the realm of pure thought?
I believe Plato's Cave was intended to be an allegory.
Even so, this allegory is supposed to illustrate a higher truth, namely that the world around us is in part an illusion however that through reason mankind can grasp "truth."[/quote]

It may also indicate an habitual cycle of returning to the cave. The allegory is the allegory and ten million and four people may take it ten million and four different ways. Think of ground-hog day for example, as an upward spiral.

Quote:
Quote:
I believe that it is reasonable to believe that Plato was an historical figure.
Of course, based on historical written records, right?

A great diversity of written records, not a neatly wrapped Trojan Horse.


Quote:
Quote:
I am not so sure about your man Jesus,
Ok, so it's not reasonable to conclude that Jesus was a historical figure.
Is your theory that he is a purely a fictional character?

Spectacularly lavish fictional character of the fourth century still replaying reruns with great novelty at a tax-exempt basilica near you.



Quote:
Quote:

who shares with Joshua,
Are you talking about Joshua, the person who took over leadership of Israel after Moses died?

Yes.

The Greek word “Jesus” is used in the Old Testament
to translate the (sacred) name Joshua, and in the
New Testament for Jesus of Nazareth.

Quote:
Marcellus of Ancyra Fragment 4

Fragment number Klost. 1 -- Rettb. 1 -- Vinz. 4
Source Eusebius, Against Marcellus 1.2;
GCS: Eusebius vol. 4 (3rd ed.), pp. 9-10.
Modern edition M. Vinzent, Markell von Ankyra:
Die Fragmente (Leiden, 1997).
Translator's Notes:

The Greek word “Jesus” is used
in the Old Testament
to translate the name Joshua,
and in the New Testament
for Jesus of Nazareth.

Marcellus declares the name Jesus
to be the greatest name upon the earth.
To prove this, he quotes the angel’s
statement to Mary in Luke as well as
a passage in Zechariah.

The Old Testament hero Joshua was given
the same name as the Savior
because he was a type,
i.e. one foreshadowing a future person,
in this case Jesus who leads true believers
into the heavenly Jerusalem.

Quote:
Quote:
the same nomina sacra from a certain point in the ancient historical record.
Yeah, Yeshua and Joshua are similar kinds of names.

With the identical "nomina sacra" or abbreviated name of two greek letters.

Quote:
Quote:
That epoch needs to be determined. We know Jesus became historical by the fourth century.
Ok, which "writer(s)" made Jesus a historical person in the fourth century?

Constantine, Eusebius and others.


Quote:
Quote:
There is conjecture concerning the third and the second. The first century appears to be completely silent. The possibilities it seems - for the historical jesus and/or the ahistorical jesus - are one of, or a combination of the 2nd, 3rd and 4th centuries.
Orwellian newspeak.
Ancient historians have given up on the ground of the first century to deliver any evidence for the historical Jesus. Everyone knows he became historical in at least the fourth century due to random selection sponsorship out of the millieu by Constantine, who "had a religious experience".

This leaves three options:

1) A theory of christian origins starting in the second century.
2) A theory of christian origins starting in the third century.
3) A theory of christian origins starting in the fourth century.

0) A theory of christian origins starting in the first century has no evidence.




Quote:
Quote:
Docetism covers all these, since the seeming appearance of the first century seems to be exactly that --- no footprints.
If Jesus is an allegory, like Plato's shadow's on the wall then, then it has profound metaphysical/philosophical ramifications.
Everything is allegorisable. My focus is on what we may or may not know about ancient history in a strict and critical sense. Metaphysics and philosophy, as much as I appreciate the fields, are separate enquiries to the path of the enquiry in the field of ancient history.


Quote:
At the very least you do agree that this jungian archetype of christ consciousness has had a profound impact of the course of history, right?

I am interested in the psychology of Constantine, the first emperor to embrace a religion complete with heretics and schisms and all sorts of hoo-har. Did he know what he was getting himself into? As the commander of the army he wanted uniformity. The army marches better to the One True Song. So why did he decide to back a new and strange religion who were splintered by people like the doceticists who had serious problems with the authodox "belief"?

Best wishes,


Pete Brown
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Old 04-01-2008, 04:33 PM   #29
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I am interested in the psychology of Constantine, the first emperor to embrace a religion complete with heretics and schisms and all sorts of hoo-har. Did he know what he was getting himself into? As the commander of the army he wanted uniformity.
Best wishes,
Pete Brown
Constantine was an anti-christ type figure mixing State and Religion. IIRC he also wanted to rebuild the jewish temple in Jerusalem. Instead he helped establish mystery babylon which the book or revelations describes as a whore drunk with the blood of the saints.
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Old 04-01-2008, 04:43 PM   #30
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Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Of course, Jesus could have been a fictional character invented in the fourth century, but still have had an effect on subsequent history. That's not the issue. Other fictional characters have had effects on subsequent history - William Tell comes to mind, Luke Skywalker is a candidate. If you think that Jesus was a Jungian archetype, you are probably a mythicist or a neo-Gnostic, not an orthodox Christian. (Not that there is anything wrong with that. . .)

The quest for a historical Jesus was initiated by Enlightenment thinkers who rejected the idea that there is a "higher reality" or a supernatural. Docetists didn't play by those rules, so it is hard to classify them in Enlightenment terms. Freke and Gandy classify them as early mythicists. Doherty thinks they were a transitional form between early mythicists and later historicists. Modern historicists are sure that docetists thought that there was a historical Jesus, just one who for theological reasons could not be classified as mere flesh. But they are not around to speak for themselves.
I have attempted to gather up some references and have posted them here below. None of these have been checked to classical standards at this stage and are to be treated accordingly for discussion.

EXTRACT
THEOSOPHY, Vol. 57, No. 11, September, 1969
(Pages 328-334; Size: 19K)
THE DOCETAE

The theosophist author claims to be citing data in Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible (or via: amazon.co.uk)

Quote:

The following from Hastings (Vol. IV, 833)
gives the authority for Docetism in the apocryphal scriptures
and also suggests the partisan sentiments
that ruled the Council of Nicea:


There are traces of Docetism in several apocryphal books
that circulated for a time among early Christians.
We have seen that Serapion of Antioch forbade the reading of

the Gospel of Peter because it had been corrupted by Docetes....

The Acts of John (early 2nd cent.; cf. Euseb. HE iii. 25) exhibits the most pronounced form.

At the Last Supper, St. John, leaning on Christ's breast, found it non-resisting (89, Hennecke, NT Apokryphen, Tubingen, 1904, p. 451);

at the entombment, the body of Christ was at one moment apparently solid, at another it ]was "immaterial and incorporeal and like nothing" (93 ib. 452).

The Crucifixion was only an appearance; at the same moment Christ
appeared to John on the Mount of Olives and explained this (97 ib. 454).

The Acts of Peter (cf. Euseb. iii. 2) has the statement, characteristic
of one school of Docetism, that God sent His Son "through the Virgin Mary"
(7 Hennecke, 399) ...

The Acts of Andrew is strongly Encratite; its Docetism appears in chapter 6 (Hennecke 466), where man is said to be "immaterial, holy, light," etc.

In the Acts of Thomas, Docetism is less evident, but the usual Gnostic
antithesis between matter and spirit is supposed throughout; Christ is
spirit (Hennecke, 480-544).

Only the Acts of Paul (ib. 369-383) seems free from any trace of this heresy.

In many cases the Docetism of these apocryphal scriptures is latent rather
than manifest, or it shows itself only in one or two sentences. For the rest they speak of our Lord in much the same tone as in Canonical books.

This explains how they could be read in orthodox circles often without suspicion. On the other hand, they were rejected by authority (cf. Euseb. iii. 25) because of their heretical tendency, shown chiefly in the form of Docetism.


Text and Tradition: The Role of New Testament Manuscripts in Early Christian Studies
The Kenneth W. Clark Lectures
Duke Divinity School
1997
Lecture Two: Text and Transmission: The Historical Significance of the "Altered" Text
Bart D. Ehrman
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

Quote:
7. In the second century, there were a number of Christians who maintained that since Jesus was fully divine, he could not be human. Included in their number were Marcion and members of several groups of Gnostics. Their opponents called these "heretics" docetists, from the Greek word doke/w (to seem or to appear), since these persons maintained that Jesus only "seemed" or "appeared" to be human.

8. This was a serious and heated controversy in the second century, as it affected profoundly the church's entire understanding of the nature of Christ. If the solution to that question seems obvious today, we should surely reflect on the fact that one side eventually won the debate and then wrote the history of the conflict. In any event, in view of this controversy, it is worth observing how the verses in question were used in the sources that first attest them. They occur three times in the writings of anti-heretical, proto-orthodox church fathers of the second century: Justin, Irenaeus, and Hippolytus. Remarkably, in all three cases they are cited to the same end, to counter any notion Jesus was not a real flesh and blood human being. Justin, for example, argues that Jesus' bloody sweat shows "that the Father wished His Son really to undergo such sufferings for our sakes, so that we "may not say that He, being the Son of God, did not feel what was happening to Him and inflicted on Him" (Dial. 103). What is interesting in this case is that we do not need to hypothesize the usefulness of these verses for an anti-docetic polemic; we know that the verses were put to precisely this use during the second-century and that that is when the account came to be inserted into the third Gospel; scribes who did so may well have been reflecting the anti-docetic concerns of their own communities.

Other notes ...

***** (no refs)
Quote:
Docetae: Encyclopedia - Docetism

In Christianity, Docetism is the belief, regarded by most theologians as heretical, that Jesus did not have a physical body; rather, that his body was an illusion, as was his crucifixion. This belief is most commonly attributed to the Gnostics, who believed that matter was evil, and hence that God would not take on a material body. This sort of statement, however, is rooted in the idea that a divine spark is imprisoned within the material body and that the material body is in itself an obstacle, deliberately created by an evil lesser god (the demiurge) for this purpose, that prevents man from seeing his ...


ANTI-CHRIST

1 John 4:1, where certain ‘spirits’ labeled Antichrist deny that ‘Jesus Christ has come in the flesh,’ while 2 John 7 condemns a similar denial.

Docetae (Latin from Greek dokein to seem)

Illusionists; applied to certain Gnostics, regarded by the early Christian Church as heretics, who taught that the death of Christ was an illusion, some saying that he did not have a body of real matter but only an apparent body, and others explaining their belief in similar ways.

The Gnostic teaching is that the Christ is the nous or Son of the spirit, overshadowing all mankind, his death being symbolic of its voluntary entrance into the murky mists of the body. Some of these Gnostics would seem to have been trying to achieve an accommodation with the creed of the then growing Christian Church, which had transformed this mystical crucifixion into a literal and historical death of Jesus.

231. "DOCETISM....
In the early Church, a tendency, rather than a formulated
and unified doctrine, which considered the humanity and
sufferings of the earthly Christ as apparent rather than real.
Evidence for its existence is to be found in the NT
(1 Jn. 4. 1-3; 2 Jn. 7; cf. Col. 2. 8 f.)".


Best wishes,



Pete Brown
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