FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Yesterday at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 04-06-2012, 08:34 PM   #61
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Oregon
Posts: 738
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by JonA View Post
For mythicists who argue that Jesus is a character based on pagan 'dying-rising' gods later historicized in the gospel stories, what is your evidence of this evolution from mythical Christ to historical Christ?

I have not been able to find any indication of an evolution of belief regarding the historicity of Jesus. It appears that in all of the earliest writings on Jesus he is always viewed as having physically existed. (Even if we accept that Paul's references are not to a physical being, it is very difficult to view them as references to a solely mythical being—from 'not necessarily physical' to 'most certainly and only mythical'; it's a pretty big leap.)

How do mythicists address this issue? There is plenty of talk about the silence of early historians regarding the existence of Jesus as an historical being; and that talk is rather spot on. There appear to be no incontestable references to an historical Jesus from early historians living and writing around the time Jesus was supposed to have lived. But if this silence of attestation to Jesus' historicity is a damning nail in the historical Jesus coffin, then certainly the silence of attestation to Jesus' existence as a solely mythical character must be seen as equally damning against the case of a 'myth-first' evolution of the Jesus character.

One would think that, if the Jesus character began his life as a myth that was later historicized, there would be some evidence of the process in the writings of those people who believed in him. Wouldn't they have clearly written about Jesus in this other realm? Why would their references to a mythical Jesus be so elusive that only careful and highly-interpretive readings of a few early texts could divine it if indeed they believed in Jesus as a mythical character in a mythical realm?

Yes, we must ask, 'where is all the evidence for an historical Jesus?'. But we ,must also ask, 'where is all the evidence for a mythical Jesus?'.

So... where is it?

Jon
Other than the reference in Galatians to James, the brother of the Lord, there is nothing in Paul about Jesus that could not refer to a Jesus that lived in the mythical past. Greeks, too, could believe in a mythical past. I think there a good explanations for the Galatians reference, but I do acknowledge that reference as being the strongest strike against mysticism in Paul's letters.

Paul refers to his source:

"“What no eye has seen,
what no ear has heard,
and what no human mind has conceived”[b]—
the things God has prepared for those who love him—

10 these are the things God has revealed to us by his Spirit. "

no eye saw, no ear heard. Where is the ministry of Jesus in this? No, the gospel comes through revelation, not through an earthly Jesus.

1 Cor 15:

So it is written: “The first man Adam became a living being”[f]; the last Adam, a life-giving spirit. 46 The spiritual did not come first, but the natural, and after that the spiritual. 47 The first man was of the dust of the earth; the second man is of heaven. 48 As was the earthly man, so are those who are of the earth; and as is the heavenly man, so also are those who are of heaven. 49 And just as we have borne the image of the earthly man, so shall we[g] bear the image of the heavenly man.

Isn't this a direct reference to a mythical Jesus?

This doesn't address your question about the dying/rising god mythos. I don't really adhere to that at all. Paul refers to Jesus as the second Adam with a "spritual body:"
Grog is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 09:15 PM   #62
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Australia
Posts: 5,714
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Vorkosigan View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by GakuseiDon View Post
Yep. Thank you. The evidence is clear. Once Toto agrees, we can start looking at the implications.
We can discuss Barnabas in light of your (2) above, but (1) is not supportable.

The date of Barnabas is more interesting. I'd say that, like Mark, it dates from Hadrian's reign just/at the outset of the war and the comment that the servants of the enemy will rebuild the temple is the kind of false prophecy that "Daniel" was making; the writer knew the Romans were rebuilding the temple.
Okay, so probably around 130 CE. Let's start with the implications of (2). What did the the author know of Jesus, and what does it mean, given the date of the epistle? Let's look at some passages:
The prophets, having obtained grace from Him, prophesied concerning Him. And He (since it behoved Him to appear in flesh), that He might abolish death, and reveal the resurrection from the dead, endured [what and as He did], in order that He might fulfill the promise made unto the fathers, and by preparing a new people for Himself, might show, while He dwelt on earth, that He, when He has raised mankind, will also judge them. Moreover, teaching Israel, and doing so great miracles and signs, He preached [the truth] to him, and greatly loved him.

But when He chose His own apostles who where to preach His Gospel, [He did so from among those] who were sinners above all sin, that He might show He came "not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance." Then He manifested Himself to be the Son of God. For if He had not come in the flesh, how could men have been saved by beholding Him?
The question here is, where is the above information coming from? According to Doherty in J:NGNM, page 465 (my emphasis):
Like Polycarp and Clement, 'Barnabas' has no documents or traditions to draw upon when he wishes to describe Jesus' passion (5:2, 5:12, 13). He, too, has recourse to Isaiah (50 and 53) and the Psalms (22 and 119). While Barnabas has a greater sense than any of the other early Fathers that Jesus had been on earth (5:8-11), he has little of substance to say about that incarnation. He speaks of Jesus as teaching the people of Israel, his miracles and wonders, but he fails to itemize any of those teachings or miracles. The latter were expected of the Messiah, so the writer may simply be assuming that such things had happened.
On the Gospels, Doherty writes (page 465):
Barnabas quotes other things whose sources are unknown, and it is possible that this saying too is from a writing now lost, or is a unit of oral tradition that has come to be applied to Jesus. Barnabas is not likely to have known Mark and yet misapply this saying so badly, or to so misrepresent the character of the apostles in that Gospel. His only other quotation of a saying found in the Gospels (Mt. 22:14) is 4:14: "It is written that many are called but few are chosen." The "it is written" tells us that Barnabas looks upon the source as a sacred writing. In his time, this could not have included the Gospel of Matthew—although it may have been recently written by then.
So, if Barnabas is not getting his information from the Gospels about Jesus and the apostles, where is it coming from? (And these questions still exist even if the mythicist view becomes mainstream, since scholars would still try to trace the development of Christianity through early literature.)
GakuseiDon is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 10:06 PM   #63
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Barrayar
Posts: 11,866
Default

Don, i have moved your previous post and my response to...

http://www.freeratio.org/showthread.php?p=7131872

Quote:
Originally Posted by GakuseiDon View Post
Okay, so probably around 130 CE. Let's start with the implications of (2). What did the the author know of Jesus, and what does it mean, given the date of the epistle? Let's look at some passages:
Ok... but this might work better as a new thread.

Quote:
[indent]The prophets, having obtained grace from Him, prophesied concerning Him. And He (since it behoved Him to appear in flesh), that He might abolish death, and reveal the resurrection from the dead, endured [what and as He did], in order that He might fulfill the promise made unto the fathers, and by preparing a new people for Himself, might show, while He dwelt on earth, that He, when He has raised mankind, will also judge them. Moreover, teaching Israel, and doing so great miracles and signs, He preached [the truth] to him, and greatly loved him.
The problem is that this discussion relates to EBarn's complex history. Have you read Paget? Google books has him in truncated format.

Quote:
So, if Barnabas is not getting his information from the Gospels about Jesus and the apostles, where is it coming from? (And these questions still exist even if the mythicist view becomes mainstream, since scholars would still try to trace the development of Christianity through early literature.)
I think Doherty has answered this question, as Barn himself says, from revelation and the prophets. The next section after the part you offer above is devoted to that. If Barn knows a gospel tale, he's wondrously reluctant to discuss. Rather, the details and reasons he offers are all built out of scripture.

There is a very Dohertian moment here further down, where EBarn discusses the circumcision. It is obvious that EBarn does know a historical Jesus but rather one who has come down via scripture and whose actions are deduced from that. If the writer thought of Jesus as a real human executed less than a century ago, why isn't Jesus' own circumcision an issue?

Again for food laws. Where is Jesus' pronouncement on them?

Ditto for Jesus' baptism -- Jesus foretold baptism, but he didn't undergo it. No JBap, no dove.

He even links Joshua and Moses and has them predicting Jesus, but significantly, there is a "When shall it happen?" question -- but alas, he relies on prophecy to explain the When. He doesn't say it came to pass in the day of Pilate. He doesn't know anything about any historical events of Jesus.

This follows the regular pattern of epistles in the first and early second century. No discussion of earthly life, everything deduced from prophecy. EBarn is good exemplar of Doherty's understanding.

Vorkosigan
Vorkosigan is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 10:09 PM   #64
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Barrayar
Posts: 11,866
Default

Don I moved this to...

http://www.freeratio.org/showthread.php?p=7131872
Vorkosigan is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 10:34 PM   #65
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Location: Mornington Peninsula
Posts: 1,306
Default

Gdon
If Barnabas, why not throw in Hermas?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Carolyn Osiek (Fortress, 1999)
“No other noncanonical writing was as popular before the 4th C as the Shepherd of Hermas
Shepherd-Hermas-Hermeneia-Historical-Commentary (or via: amazon.co.uk)
Further paraphrasing Osiek:
Little doubt written in central Italy, probably Roma.
Majority of scholars say first half of 2nd C.
Rome in a time of considerable theological diversity.
“The name Jesus never occurs in Hermas, and the title Christ appears only three times in very dubious manuscript variants”
“If we were to take it with complete literalness, the woman, the tower, the church, the Holy Spirit, and the Son of God would all be one and the same!”
A 'blending of genuine Jewish-Christian and hellenistic elements' revealing a window on the world of everyday Christianity.

I might also add that 3rd C archeology (Early Christian art) continues very much in this mold with very little reference to Jesus up until the early 4th C.

It is essential to Doherty that these 2nd C authors did not think in terms of an HJ but not to the MJ case in general. This is presumably why Carrier says
Quote:
Originally Posted by Carrier
... they weren't much interested in the historical Jesus but interested in a mystical one known through revelation, who had a primarily cosmic role, which is IMO true (for those he discusses), but compatible (to my mind, but apparently not Doherty's) with their believing in a historical Jesus. ..
Of course, irrespective of what they thort, it does not mean there was a HJ, it is simply part of the evidence which requires explanation. These guys are late on the scene and historicisation presumably well advanced - if indeed that is what occured.

Might we reckon that since you & Earl are still arguing the toss over that evidence that it doesn't tend to support either case all that much?
youngalexander is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 10:44 PM   #66
Contributor
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 18,988
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by MrMacSon View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
The "historical Jesus" means a complete human Jesus with a human father and mother.
You reckon?

Most Christian doctrine would say it was a human form of God, as irrational as that is.
God Incarnate is a Myth character in the HJ/MJ argument. A lot of people here don't even understand that there is a QUEST for an historical Jesus.

HJers do NOT know who they are looking for and that is PRECISELY why the QUEST for HJ is still on-going.

I wish them the best of luck. Happy hunting.
aa5874 is offline  
Old 04-07-2012, 01:38 AM   #67
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Australia
Posts: 5,714
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by youngalexander View Post
Gdon
If Barnabas, why not throw in Hermas?
Yes, I think the Shepherd of Hermas is a wonderful example of the point I am making.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Carolyn Osiek (Fortress, 1999)
“No other noncanonical writing was as popular before the 4th C as the Shepherd of Hermas
Shepherd-Hermas-Hermeneia-Historical-Commentary (or via: amazon.co.uk)
Further paraphrasing Osiek:
Little doubt written in central Italy, probably Roma.
Majority of scholars say first half of 2nd C.
Rome in a time of considerable theological diversity.
“The name Jesus never occurs in Hermas, and the title Christ appears only three times in very dubious manuscript variants”
“If we were to take it with complete literalness, the woman, the tower, the church, the Holy Spirit, and the Son of God would all be one and the same!”
A 'blending of genuine Jewish-Christian and hellenistic elements' revealing a window on the world of everyday Christianity.
That's right. And neither the Gospels nor other NT canon are used as authoritative. According to Richard Carrier in his "Formation of the NT canon" (basically a summary of Metzger):
http://www.infidels.org/library/mode...r/NTcanon.html
As all this is going on, however, one of the first written texts to become universally popular and an object of praise among Christians is none other than the book of Hermas, a.k.a. "The Sheppherd," an unusual (to us) collection of "visions, mandates, and similitudes" (the names of the three books that comprise it). This was written at some time in the 2nd century, and we have papyrus fragments from that very century to prove it (M 63-4). It may date even from the 1st century (cf. op. cit. n. 1), but references inside and outside the text create likely dates ranging from 95 to 154 A.D. (both Origen and Jerome thought the author was the very Hermas known to Paul, i.e. Romans 16.14), but it is probably more likely later than earlier in that range.

So popular the Sheppherd was that it was widely regarded as inspired--it was actually included, along with the Epistle of Barnabas, as the final book in the oldest NT codex that survives intact, the Codex Sinaiticus (c. 300 A.D.). But even the book of Hermas never names or quotes exactly any NT text. It contains many statements which resemble those in various NT books, but this could just as well reflect a common oral tradition.
Quote:
Originally Posted by youngalexander View Post
Of course, irrespective of what they thort, it does not mean there was a HJ, it is simply part of the evidence which requires explanation. These guys are late on the scene and historicisation presumably well advanced - if indeed that is what occured.

Might we reckon that since you & Earl are still arguing the toss over that evidence that it doesn't tend to support either case all that much?
Not really. Doherty is still arguing the toss. From my perspective the game has been run and completed. Even other mythicists like Carrier and Wells don't support Doherty on his laughably bad analysis of Second Century writers.

But let's look at the Shepherd of Hermas in more detail. The text is here:
http://www.earlychristianwritings.co.../shepherd.html

As you have pointed out, there is no reference to "Jesus" or "Christ". There are no direct references to the Gospels, or to Paul, or to anything else. Yet, what do you make of the following? Keep in mind that the Shepherd of Hermas is usually thought to be an Adoptionist text; that is, "Christ" and "Jesus" are two separate entities, where Jesus is a human being "walking according to the flesh" in whom the Holy Spirit dwelt:
The holy, pre-existent Spirit, that created every creature, God made to dwell in flesh, which He chose. This flesh, accordingly, in which the Holy Spirit dwelt, was nobly subject to that Spirit, walking religiously and chastely, in no respect defiling the Spirit; and accordingly, after living excellently and purely, and after labouring and co-operating with the Spirit, and having in everything acted vigorously and courageously along with the Holy Spirit, He assumed it as a partner with it. For this conduct of the flesh pleased Him, because it was not defiled on the earth while having the Holy Spirit. He took, therefore, as fellow-councillors His Son and the glorious angels, in order that this flesh, which had been subject to the body without a fault, might have some place of tabernacle, and that it might not appear that the reward [of its servitude had been lost ], for the flesh that has been found without spot or defilement, in which the Holy Spirit dwelt, [will receive a reward ]
In the following passage, the "rock" is thought to refer to "the Christ", pre-existent and divine; while the "gate" is thought to be the man Jesus:
"This rock," he answered, "and this gate are the Son of God."

"How, sir?" I said; "the rock is old, and the gate is new."

"Listen," he said, "and understand, O ignorant man. The Son of God is older than all His creatures, so that He was a fellow-councillor with the Father in His work of creation: for this reason is He old."

"And why is the gate new, sir?" I said.

"Because," he answered, "He became manifest in the last days of the dispensation: for this reason the gate was made new, that they who are to be saved by it might enter into the kingdom of God.
Again, let me point out that there is no reference to "Jesus" or "Christ", or to Pilate or any Gospel details. Yet it seems here you need to make a choice: is this work referring to Jesus or not? If not, what is it talking about? Who is the person who became manifest in the flesh in the last days, who was the embodiment of the Son of God? If so, how does it reset our expectations about what we see in other earlier literature?
GakuseiDon is offline  
Old 04-07-2012, 01:49 AM   #68
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: UK
Posts: 98
Default

I don't think I accept what you say I accept.

What exactly do you mean here that I accept?


Quote:
Originally Posted by GakuseiDon View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
EmmaZunz: GDon wants to argue that since some early Christians, that he assumes believed in a historial Jesus, did not show any interest in the details of the human side of Jesus, that we cannot use the vast early silence about the human Jesus to argue that there was no human at the center of the myth - even though he can't think of a reason why these early Christians would be so totally uninterested in the human Jesus, unlike every other era of Christians.

I hope that sentence is not too complex. It is a very complex idea, and one that I find totally contrived.
How can it be contrived, when EmmaZunz has stated that there are examples of literature doing that very thing?

The problem is that this tends to get ignored. But Doherty's analysis on this question is so laughably bad, even Richard Carrier (seven years ago, but I confirmed by email that he hasn't changed his view) wrote of it as one of Doherty's "wilder flights of fancy". Here is the context (my emphasis):
http://www.freeratio.org/thearchives...=59493&page=30
I took his book as making the case that they weren't much interested in the historical Jesus but interested in a mystical one known through revelation, who had a primarily cosmic role, which is IMO true (for those he discusses), but compatible (to my mind, but apparently not Doherty's) with their believing in a historical Jesus. This is just one of many major quarrels I have with Doherty. IMO, if we stick to his core argument, and ignore his wilder flights of fancy like this one, his case stands up much better.
Toto, Carrier gives you a reason right there: they weren't much interested in the historical Jesus, but interested in Jesus who had "a primarily cosmic role" which is still "compatible with their believing in a historical Jesus". It is only since we tend to look at Christianity through a lens of 1800 years of the Gospel Jesus that it is hard (even for mythicists!) to consider a view where earliest Christians had such a view. But this is exactly examining the early literature tells us.

Toto, why not investigate this together? Let's start with the Epistle of Barnabas. Doherty gives a date range of 90 CE to 125 CE. Are you okay with that? Was the author someone who was aware of traditions of the historical Jesus, in your view? If so:

(1) Assuming the author was aware of traditions of the historical Jesus, how much would you expect the author to have written about the historical Jesus, and
(2) How much did the author actually write?
EmmaZunz is offline  
Old 04-07-2012, 01:51 AM   #69
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: UK
Posts: 98
Default

What Earl says about that is that he thinks Justin was converted to a MJ Xianity and only later came to hear of and believe in HJ.

That fits fine with the idea that HJ was slowly filtering in to wider Xian consciousness in this period.

Which texts do you think ignore HJ even though the author knows of him?

The table here is useful - http://www.fromchristtojesus.org/Eng...dEvolution.htm

The silence really is a gaping void.

The onus is on you to show an author who knows HJ but ignores him.

Quote:
Originally Posted by GakuseiDon View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by EmmaZunz View Post

Hi. Well it's a possibility, but it doesn't seem likely does it? They had no interest in the guy whose life, death and resurrection started the whole thing?
EmmaZunz, how do you suggest that we test that possibility? As I wrote earlier, the first step is not trying to look at early Christianity through a lens of 1800 years of the Gospel Jesus. Then we need to see if we have actual examples of that very thing: people who had little interest in a historical Jesus, while still being aware of him. Don't we find that in the Epistle of Barnabas?

My view is that, until the Gospels and NT epistles became authoritative in their own right towards the end of the Second Century, the primarily item of conversion were the Hebrew Scriptures, and not the Gospels.

You write of Justin Martyr, for example, as unambiguously believing in a HJ. There is no doubt about it. But what actually converted him to Christianity? Was it stories of the life, death and resurrection of Jesus? Or was it reading the Hebrew Scriptures? Justin tells us in "Dialogue with Trypho". As Doherty explains ("Jesus: Neither God Nor Man", page 491) (my bolding below):
In Justin's account of his conversion, the philosopher by the sea has not a word to say about Jesus of Nazareth, nor about any incarnation of the Son. In chapter 7 the old man is speaking about "teachers" of the philosophy of body and soul they have been discussing. Justin asks if it is best to employ one, seeing that so many pagan philosophers have, in the old man's view, been deficient in their insights. In answer, the latter points to the Hebrew prophets "who spoke by the Divine Spirit" and foretold events that are now happening...

Here, in a specific discussion of teachers of the truth, the historical Christ on earth is not mentioned. In fact, the old philosopher has just said, in pointing to the Hebrew prophets, "These alone both saw and announced the truth to men" (my emphasis). They have been put forward as the opposite to the deficient pagan philosophers; yet there is no sign of Jesus as the prime example in this regard. The old man has even disparaged "false prophets" who seek to astonish men with miracles without offering a qualification for the miracle-working Jesus.
As Doherty put it in TJP: "Where is Jesus of Nazareth in all this? The old philosopher had not a word to say about him, nor about any incarnation of the Son." And he is right!

For Doherty, the reason is that Justin initially converted to a Christianity that had no historical Jesus at its core.

For me, it is another clear example of what we see in early Christian literature, before the Gospels became authoritative. "Jesus of Nazareth" was not the focus; it was (as Carrier put it) the "cosmic Jesus".
EmmaZunz is offline  
Old 04-07-2012, 02:03 AM   #70
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: UK
Posts: 98
Default

That would be bits and pieces of Gospel tradition filtering thru without the actual texts.

Some people heard bits of Mark (like Barnabas heard about coming to call sinners not saints, tho he misapplied it) while resorting to OT prophetic scriptures for the most part.

I think we can judge the depth of HJ knowledge in texts like Barnabas by seeing how much Gospel vocab they use, as per the table here - http://www.fromchristtojesus.org/Eng...dEvolution.htm

Does Barnabas have precise Gospel vocab like empty tomb, Pilate, Mary, Lazarus, Bethlehem?

No. All Barnabas has is very broad vocab: "He dwelt on earth". No specifics.

This suggests he does not know a very full Gospel or HJ tradition.

If he did, we might expect him with equal probability to pick some specific vocab as to pick some general vocab. He might have briefly mentioned Mary or Pilate or the tomb.

But he doesn't, suggesting he only knows a very vague HJ, reinforced by the way he gets wrong a tiny sliver of Mark that he has heard.

Quote:
Originally Posted by GakuseiDon View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Vorkosigan View Post

We can discuss Barnabas in light of your (2) above, but (1) is not supportable.

The date of Barnabas is more interesting. I'd say that, like Mark, it dates from Hadrian's reign just/at the outset of the war and the comment that the servants of the enemy will rebuild the temple is the kind of false prophecy that "Daniel" was making; the writer knew the Romans were rebuilding the temple.
Okay, so probably around 130 CE. Let's start with the implications of (2). What did the the author know of Jesus, and what does it mean, given the date of the epistle? Let's look at some passages:
The prophets, having obtained grace from Him, prophesied concerning Him. And He (since it behoved Him to appear in flesh), that He might abolish death, and reveal the resurrection from the dead, endured [what and as He did], in order that He might fulfill the promise made unto the fathers, and by preparing a new people for Himself, might show, while He dwelt on earth, that He, when He has raised mankind, will also judge them. Moreover, teaching Israel, and doing so great miracles and signs, He preached [the truth] to him, and greatly loved him.

But when He chose His own apostles who where to preach His Gospel, [He did so from among those] who were sinners above all sin, that He might show He came "not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance." Then He manifested Himself to be the Son of God. For if He had not come in the flesh, how could men have been saved by beholding Him?
The question here is, where is the above information coming from? According to Doherty in J:NGNM, page 465 (my emphasis):
Like Polycarp and Clement, 'Barnabas' has no documents or traditions to draw upon when he wishes to describe Jesus' passion (5:2, 5:12, 13). He, too, has recourse to Isaiah (50 and 53) and the Psalms (22 and 119). While Barnabas has a greater sense than any of the other early Fathers that Jesus had been on earth (5:8-11), he has little of substance to say about that incarnation. He speaks of Jesus as teaching the people of Israel, his miracles and wonders, but he fails to itemize any of those teachings or miracles. The latter were expected of the Messiah, so the writer may simply be assuming that such things had happened.
On the Gospels, Doherty writes (page 465):
Barnabas quotes other things whose sources are unknown, and it is possible that this saying too is from a writing now lost, or is a unit of oral tradition that has come to be applied to Jesus. Barnabas is not likely to have known Mark and yet misapply this saying so badly, or to so misrepresent the character of the apostles in that Gospel. His only other quotation of a saying found in the Gospels (Mt. 22:14) is 4:14: "It is written that many are called but few are chosen." The "it is written" tells us that Barnabas looks upon the source as a sacred writing. In his time, this could not have included the Gospel of Matthew—although it may have been recently written by then.
So, if Barnabas is not getting his information from the Gospels about Jesus and the apostles, where is it coming from? (And these questions still exist even if the mythicist view becomes mainstream, since scholars would still try to trace the development of Christianity through early literature.)
EmmaZunz is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 12:40 AM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.