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Old 12-18-2008, 06:51 AM   #31
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Paul didn't write Acts, as far as I am aware.
True. This is a bit tricky, I know. But then this expresses a tradition that Paul did meet with the early church leaders, and it also expresses a tradtion that Paul persecuted early Christians. If those traditions are even partially true than the originator of the Jesus Cult was not Paul. And at the very minimum Paul thought with the early church leaders that Jesus was a real person.

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I also believe that there are quite a few interpolations in Galatians, Gal 1:18-24 is one of those places. I believe that the first visit to Jerusalem is a post-Acts, contra-Marcion interpolation.
Well, then, any pre-conceived notion that doesn't fit the textual evidence can be denied, can't it? That isn't being objective with the facts.

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You also assume that Paul believed that these other so called pillars met Jesus in a different way then Paul did. I don't see that specified anywhere in Paul.
They all had visions of a resurrected Jesus, but once again you're deniing the objective textual evidence that there was a real human person that called them together as disciples in the first place.

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The textual evidence for a physical Jesus, in Paul, seems fairly weak.
Paul preached "Jesus and him crucified." Sermons were long in those days. One tradition has a guy falling asleep while he preached (in Acts). What was he preaching?
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Old 12-18-2008, 07:08 AM   #32
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True. This is a bit tricky, I know. But then this expresses a tradition that Paul did meet with the early church leaders, and it also expresses a tradtion that Paul persecuted early Christians. If those traditions are even partially true than the originator of the Jesus Cult was not Paul. And at the very minimum Paul thought with the early church leaders that Jesus was a real person.
...and that tradition comes from Acts, which Paul did not write. We do not know what Paul may have thought concerning what the "early church leaders" may have believed regarding Jesus. He simply never says, in any of his writings.

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Well, then, any pre-conceived notion that doesn't fit the textual evidence can be denied, can't it? That isn't being objective with the facts.
A whole other discussion, but regardless, the text, as it stands, still doesn't say what you would like it to say.

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They all had visions of a resurrected Jesus, but once again you're deniing the objective textual evidence that there was a real human person that called them together as disciples in the first place.
"Obejective textual evidence" such as?

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Paul preached "Jesus and him crucified." Sermons were long in those days. One tradition has a guy falling asleep while he preached (in Acts). What was he preaching?
Paul didn' write acts....
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Old 12-18-2008, 07:16 AM   #33
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Paul didn' write acts....
I know, as I said.

Let's do it this way.

Do you believe Paul existed? Why or why not?
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Old 12-18-2008, 07:19 AM   #34
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Paul didn' write acts....
I know, as I said.

Let's do it this way.

Do you believe Paul existed? Why or why not?
Someone wrote the epistles. Paul is the name attached, so for all intensive purposes, that person is Paul.
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Old 12-18-2008, 07:23 AM   #35
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I know, as I said.

Let's do it this way.

Do you believe Paul existed? Why or why not?
Someone wrote the epistles. Paul is the name attached, so for all intensive purposes, that person is Paul.
Which ones? What parts? If the Gospels were not written by Mark, Matthew, Luke and John then maybe all of his letters were written by a guy named George, or, maybe they were written by various individuals. There is no independent evidence an Apostle named Paul existed. In these letters he claimed to do miracles, and he claims to have visited the highest heaven. This is an extraordinary claim and as such why should I believe he existed? You have the burden of proof. Such a burden has not been met.

Same method. Same result.
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Old 12-18-2008, 07:33 AM   #36
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Someone wrote the epistles. Paul is the name attached, so for all intensive purposes, that person is Paul.
Which ones? What parts? If the Gospels were not written by Mark, Matthew, Luke and John then maybe all of his letters were written by a guy named George, or, maybe they were written by various individuals. There is no independent evidence an Apostle named Paul existed. In these letters he claimed to do miracles, and he claims to have visited the highest heaven. This is an extraordinary claim and as such why should I believe he existed? You have the burden of proof. Such a burden has not been met.

Same method. Same result.
You are stretching a bit.

The Gospels, unlike the Paulines, have no author internally identified, so it could have been a Greek or Roman George, for all we know.

Do you have a letter from an author identifying himself as Jesus Christ?
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Old 12-18-2008, 07:38 AM   #37
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You are stretching a bit.
Sorry, this is MY claim about you. ;-)

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The Gospels, unlike the Paulines, have no author internally identified, so it could have been a Greek or Roman George, for all we know.
Okay.

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Do you have a letter from an author identifying himself as Jesus Christ?
Nope, don't need to anymore than someone needs a letter from Socrates to show he existed (BTW he never wrote anything either). My point is that textual evidence is evidence, prima facia evidence.
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Old 12-18-2008, 07:43 AM   #38
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You are stretching a bit.
Sorry, this is MY claim about you. ;-)



Okay.

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Do you have a letter from an author identifying himself as Jesus Christ?
Nope, don't need to anymore than someone needs a letter from Socrates to show he existed (BTW he never wrote anything either). My point is that textual evidence is evidence, prima facia evidence.
I don't assume Socrates existed, other than in the mind of Plato. Do you have some evidence for him?

So the textual evidence is prima facie evidence for what? A belief in a cosmic Christ?

Do you disagree that the Gospels, themselves, are highly midrashic? Does such a literary composition lend itself to historicity, in your mind?
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Old 12-18-2008, 08:30 AM   #39
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My point is that textual evidence is evidence, prima facia evidence.
The texts are prima facie evidence of something alright - but they are prima facie evidence of a cosmic god-man type of figure. That's what they were intended to be (in the form of a Canon).

They are most decidely not prima facie evidence THAT there was a man behind the myth of a cosmic god-man figure.

That has to be dug out of them, as does evidence for any other of the several possible options that a rational person can pursue (having ruled out miracle-working god-men), such as: fraud (pious or otherwise); literary invention; composite myth based on visionary/mystical experience.

Christian rationalists in the 18th and 19th centuries made a bad slip here: at a certain point it just became untenable rationally to believe in miracle-working god-men. So, as Christians (but as rational people who could no longer believe in miracle-working god-men) they naturally just assumed euhemerism - they just assumed that although the texts obviously couldn't be the kind of evidence they purported to be (because the kind of entity they purported to be evidence of can't possibly exist), they must be evidence of a someone. But that's just a mistake.

But non-Christian rationalists are under no obligation to make the same mistake. As soon as the texts fail to be what they purport to be, the field is open, it does not immediately channel to mythopoeia or euhemerism.
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Old 12-18-2008, 08:53 AM   #40
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The textual tradition says that Paul is earliest. Paul knows Jesus through divine revelation.

That is the prima facie evidence that Jesus is a fiction/myth.

Now if you want to provide some physical evidence to show that Paul is mistaken or can show that NT scholarship, itself, is mistaken regarding Paul's place in it's textual tradition, please do so.

Until then, based on what we have, myth seems to fit the prima facie evidence the best.
Paul's claim in Galatians and Acts is that he met with the Apostle Peter and the Jerusalem church leaders. If he had a different mythical view of Jesus than they did it would surface in fifteen days of conversations.

The textual evidence is actually strong, I think, that there was a doomsday prophet who originated the Jesus cult named Jesus. It fits with the over-all expectations of a Messiah of that era, too.
John the Baptist?
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