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07-25-2008, 09:42 PM | #71 | |||
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In other words, the author of the passage is concurring with the existence of slanders against Christians, while simultaneously presenting the Neronian persecution as occasioned not by these slanders, but by imperial injustice? Neil |
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07-26-2008, 02:30 AM | #72 | |
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(I think you may be minimizing the problems involved in going behind the rhetoric of this passage to the explicit historical claims being made. The passage represents the persecution as a story of wicked things being done to wicked people by a wicked person. Retelling the story in less rhetorical language, and working out the exact culpability and responsibility being attributed to the different actors, has been made difficult by the way the story is told, maybe intentionally so.) Andrew Criddle |
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07-26-2008, 01:34 PM | #73 | |
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Ben. |
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07-26-2008, 02:01 PM | #74 | |||||||||||
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It is also partially incorrect. I did demonstrate the separateness of the persecution from the deaths of the apostles. You simply ignored the sections of my post(s) where I did so. Quote:
I am going to say this again, but only once; nobody is bound by your expectations. Your expectations are not an argument. Quote:
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The point is that you said these Christian authors had only Peter and Paul in mind; and you used that word only. That has been shown to be incorrect. Yet for some reason you are still kicking it around. Quote:
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At this stage of the game you seem merely to be saying that the persecution under Nero was perhaps not as severe as has been imagined. Whatever. That does not interest me, especially since we are given no hard numbers to work with. What was of interest to me was (A) the reason why Eusebius did not refer to Tacitus and (B) the fact that most of these authors envision a persecution not limited to the apostles. Ben. ETA: I cut this part out by mistake. Quote:
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07-26-2008, 09:59 PM | #75 | ||
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07-27-2008, 01:41 AM | #76 |
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Both works, The Annals and The Twelve Caesars, were written in a four-year span. That renders them contemporary to each other, even according to spanmandham’s narrow criterion of contemporariness – 50 divided into 10 equals 5 years, doesn’t it?
Now, there are two different questions. The answers are: yes, Suetonius corroborates Tacitus in the persecution of Christians by Nero, but they disagree in the question about the origin of the word ‘Christians’. Tacitus follows Josephus, while Suetonius deems the Jew to be an unreliable source and supports the theory – ‘urban legend’? – of a Greek rather than Jewish origin of the Christian faith. |
07-27-2008, 10:09 AM | #77 | |
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I do not consider people writing later than Tacitus to count as corroboration of what he said. I doubt Tacitus was just making things up, so the fact he wrote about it means he had heard the story somewhere, and implies that others would also have heard it. Suetonius attributes the persecution to a different cause. Are we to conclude therefor that Christians were persecuted under Nero, and yet no-one knew why, or is it simpler to propose that story evolved by the time Suetonius wrote? If the first records of some significant event from the US Civil war first surfaced in 1925 by someone who was a toddler at the time of the said event, and his story was internally inconsistent, how seriously would we take it? If another 50 years later, someone else wrote about that same event, but now the facts were different, what would be the most reasonable assumption? - hence the comment about urban legends. |
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07-27-2008, 11:18 AM | #78 |
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Corroboration of Tacitus by Suetonius – a later writer – is not factual evidence that Tacitus got it right: both might be wrong, of course. Furthermore, Suetonius could possibly have been induced to mistake by Tacitus himself. Is that what you mean? I’m afraid it is pointless to the issue of whether or not Annals 15:44 is authentic.
Tacitus on the persecution of Christians by Nero allegedly is an interpolation on the grounds that there is no factual evidence that the persecution ever was. As such a suspect invention it qualifies as the insertion of an unscrupulous Christian writer rather than a serious historian like Tacitus. The point is that Suetonius corroborates the persecution – whether actual or an urban legend – to be not a later invention, and that there was reason for the narrative to be there, exactly where it is. |
07-27-2008, 06:59 PM | #79 | |
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What needs to be restated today is that none of this provides any evidence for the historicity of THE CHRISTIAN in this epoch of antiquity, other than what dear Eusebius informs and misinforms us of, a few centuries later. There is the boundary event (or at least the transition, was it gradual) between the use of the scroll (in the time of Tacitus and Suetonius) and the use of the codex (in the time of the boss). Best wishes, Pete |
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07-27-2008, 08:12 PM | #80 |
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Suetonius, who mentions 'the Chrestians', does not provide us with evidence of the existence of Jesus, certainly. Yet he corroborates Tacitus, who furnishes the evidence.
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