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04-28-2004, 08:35 PM | #1 |
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Jesus called Christ in Josephus AJ 20.9.1
As a summary of the case against the presence of the phrase "Jesus called Christ" in Josephus AJ 20.9.1, here are the arguments I have put forward:
How the phrase got into the text could easily have been a case of what I call "creeping marginalia": a note made in the margin of a text, in this case, referring to James, someone having read Origen for example, adds "the brother of Jesus called Christ", and a subsequent scribe, copying the text, inserts the marginal note, perhaps thinking it had been omitted from the text and then corrected. (Arguments based the opinions of the majority of scholars are not arguments. We have to deal with the raw unadulterated evidence or forget it.) I don't think people can rest of the assumption the phrase is acceptible until proven otherwise is justifiable when one considers that forgery and less than optimal scribal practices are quite common in the xian tradition. spin [Ananas is Italian for "pineapple"] |
04-28-2004, 09:07 PM | #2 | |||||
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[polemic] That JMers are so desparate to find a flaw in the almost universally accepted Josepheus passage that they resort to syntactical annomilies (common in Josepheus anyway) and the surprise in the use of a nickname (xristos) should show how weak the arguments really are. It is possible Josepheus described Jesus by some other nick name, then was edited by Christian scribes. And it is possible the Testimonium said a lot more about Jesus that the Christians didn't like, so was heavily edited. And even one of the arguements Spin uses admits the Jesus passage is there, but Origen read something different then what we see, which supports the hypothesis that the nickname or descriptor used may not have necessarily been "christ" but the reference itself to Jesus remains valid. [/polemic] |
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04-28-2004, 09:22 PM | #3 | ||||||
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Your views on possibilities and your misconceptions about what I admit are irrelevant to the problem under discussion. Your views on the TF are just as arbitrary as they are for the James passage. I have already pointed out the indication that the whole TF was an insertion interrupting the discourse indicated at the beginning of 18.3.4 which claims to be connected to 18.3.2. spin |
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04-28-2004, 09:39 PM | #4 | |||||
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Also, that he was called "Christ" does not mean Josepheus himself believed it. Many middle east historians say something along the lines of Muhammad called prophet, which does not imply that every middle east historian believes Muhammand was the one true prophet. Quote:
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04-28-2004, 09:43 PM | #5 |
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Here's a task for anyone with bible software:
search the whole Hebrew bible for the phrase "brother of" and see how many of them have no antecedent (which is invarianbly a name here) The only examples I found using the KJV are: 2Sa 21:19 in which a translator had inventively inserted "brother of" before the name Goliath, and 1Ch 24:25, "The brother of Michah was Isshah", as Michal had been mentioned in the verse before. spin |
04-28-2004, 09:52 PM | #6 | ||||
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And please the name is Josephus in English. Quote:
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spin |
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04-28-2004, 09:59 PM | #7 | |
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Why familial? I'm sure there's a lack of attestation among maid-servent connectives lacking qualifiers, are we to suspect that the Julia reference was tampered with and that Julia now lacks a historical basis? |
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04-28-2004, 10:11 PM | #8 | |
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As to familial descriptions, it was the done think when people didn't have surnames of the type we have to identify us. Look at where Josephus was coming from in the Hebrew bible. That should help you understand the use of familial relationships. Thank you Xeno for your display of debating skills. I await your return with some evidence on the matters we are dealing with to contribute to the thread. spin |
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04-28-2004, 10:24 PM | #9 |
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hey Spinmeister-
There is absolutely nothing in the JW section that would correspond to the AJ passage. It should be in JW 2.271. Josephus blasts through Felix, Festus, Albinus and Florus. I don't understand this. It's as if sections of text that should be there are missing. Nothing about Ananus. This should be in 62 CE. Festus dies. Ananus supposedly executes James. While this may not pertain to JW, I still find it odd that so little is said. I have been looking for a descriptive passage about ananus that is supposedly in JW that contrasts sharply with the description in the AJ passage you are discussing. Still looking. By the way, isn't a Jesus appointed to the very position that ananus is deposed of? And did he have a brother named James? |
04-28-2004, 10:37 PM | #10 | ||
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