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: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 04-06-2012, 04:07 PM   #51
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: South Pacific
Posts: 559
Default

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.
MrMacSon is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 04:31 PM   #52
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: UK
Posts: 98
Default

There's a difference between authorial intention and reader's interpretation.

Of course the Gospels can be interpreted as historicist. If you read what I said, I agree the Gospels were intended as non-historicist.

Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by EmmaZunz View Post
I guess it's also possible that some Xian writers continued to hold to MJ even after the spread of Gospels, if they treated them as the allegories they were originally intended as...
The Gospels do NOT historicise Jesus. In gMatthew and gLuke the writers made sure they claimed Jesus was the Child of a Ghost, in gJohn, Jesus was God the Creator and in gMark Jesus walked on water, and transfigured.

The Gospels did NOT humanize Jesus at all-virtually all the miracles of Jesus were NOT even humanly possible.

Matthew 1:18 KJV
Quote:
Now the birth of Jesus Christ was on this wise..... his mother Mary..... was found with child of the Holy Ghost.
This passage cannot in any way be the humanising of Jesus.
EmmaZunz is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 05:11 PM   #53
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Australia
Posts: 5,714
Default

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?
GakuseiDon is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 05:40 PM   #54
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Australia
Posts: 5,714
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by EmmaZunz 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.
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".
GakuseiDon is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 05:44 PM   #55
jdl
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Auckland
Posts: 85
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by JonA View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by jdl View Post
And he is right to point out that you haven't done the leg work here. If you haven't read the case that mythicists make, then what point are you trying to make by saying you haven't seen their evidence?
But I have seen Mythicist 'evidence', just not the kind of evidence that I'm talking about in this thread. My conclusion is that it doesn't exist.
Your conclusion is based on the fact that you haven't read the detailed published works of mythicists. Are you going to try to defend that?

Quote:
There are no early Christian writings that depict Jesus as a solely mythical being
There don't need to be. It's sufficient for the current version of a document to offer indications of an earlier stage of belief.

Quote:
But I might be wrong; that's the purpose of this thread.
The purpose of this thread is for you to condescend to people whom you simultaneously expect to do your homework for you.

Quote:
Quote:
I haven't read Doherty, but I have read Price, and exactly the kind of case you are demanding from mythicists is right there in the pages of Deconstructing Jesus.
I'm not demanding a case. I'm simply requesting a list of early Christian writings.
You said:
Quote:
I have not been able to find any indication of an evolution of belief regarding the historicity of Jesus.
Quote:
How do mythicists address this issue?
I replied directly and appropriately to what you asked.
jdl is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 06:27 PM   #56
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by GakuseiDon View Post
...How can it be contrived, when EmmaZunz has stated that there are examples of literature doing that very thing?
What examples?

This is what I think is contrived: You have some early writers that you think believe that there was a historical Jesus, but they don't say anything to confirm that. So you decide, voila! they must not be interested in the historical Jesus! Problem solved - even though you can't figure out why they would not be.

Quote:
... 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".
Er, there is a big difference between bad analysis and flights of fancy. "Bad" implies some logical error. "Flights of fancy" only implies using one's imagination to fill in the gaps in the record.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard 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. ..
I'd need more context to unravel this, and I can't locate that post without a better reference.

Quote:
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.
Carrier doesn't seem to agree with you that there probably was a historical Jesus. I don't see a good case for an entire society being interested in a cosmic Jesus and not caring a bit about his human form.

Quote:
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?
I don't see the point. The author of this epistle, if it was written that late, might have known of "traditions" or might have known of fake history, but what does that have to do with actual history?
Toto is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 08:07 PM   #57
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Australia
Posts: 5,714
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
This is what I think is contrived: You have some early writers that you think believe that there was a historical Jesus, but they don't say anything to confirm that.
I'm saying that they appear to be aware of a historical Jesus, but they aren't interested in him. Their interest is in confirming his credentials as a cosmic Jesus through reference to the Hebrew Scriptures. And that's what the literature itself tells us. Why not go through one of these examples together to see if that is the case?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
So you decide, voila! they must not be interested in the historical Jesus! Problem solved - even though you can't figure out why they would not be.
Again, I'm saying that they appear to be aware of a historical Jesus, but they aren't interested in him. Their interest is in confirming his credentials as a cosmic Jesus through reference to the Hebrew Scriptures. And that's what the literature itself tells us. That's the "why".

Let's look together at either of the examples I've already brought up: The Epistle of Barnabas, or the conversion of Justin Martyr. Why don't we examine either of these in detail, and study this for ourselves?

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?
GakuseiDon is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 08:23 PM   #58
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Barrayar
Posts: 11,866
Default

Quote:
I'm saying that they appear to be aware of a historical Jesus, but they aren't interested in him. Their interest is in confirming his credentials as a cosmic Jesus through reference to the Hebrew Scriptures. And that's what the literature itself tells us. Why not go through one of these examples together to see if that is the case?
Don, that's Earl's case, right there. Except for the faith statement that the First Ones were not interested in the HJ, you've summed up the evidence admirably.

Vorkosigan
Vorkosigan is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 08:29 PM   #59
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2003
Location: Australia
Posts: 5,714
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Vorkosigan View Post
Quote:
I'm saying that they appear to be aware of a historical Jesus, but they aren't interested in him. Their interest is in confirming his credentials as a cosmic Jesus through reference to the Hebrew Scriptures. And that's what the literature itself tells us. Why not go through one of these examples together to see if that is the case?
Don, that's Earl's case, right there. Except for the faith statement that the First Ones were not interested in the HJ, you've summed up the evidence admirably.
Yep. Thank you. I agree that the evidence is clear. Once Toto agrees, we can start looking at the implications in the other early Christian literature.
GakuseiDon is offline  
Old 04-06-2012, 08:34 PM   #60
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jan 2001
Location: Barrayar
Posts: 11,866
Default

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

Don, that's Earl's case, right there. Except for the faith statement that the First Ones were not interested in the HJ, you've summed up the evidence admirably.
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.
Vorkosigan is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:26 PM.

Top

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