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Old 03-27-2012, 11:06 AM   #11
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A preliminary and quick reply (more will follow later) to Abe's "review" of Ehrman's book. (It's more like a cheerleader squad's "rah rah rah". Shake those pom-poms, Abe!)
"Cheerleader squad"? AAbe's review didn't read that way to me. :huh:
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Old 03-27-2012, 11:09 AM   #12
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Ehrman developed what he called "Two Key Data for the Historicity of Jesus" for Chapter Five, and they were (1) James, Peter and the multiplicity of sources attesting to them and (2) the crucifixion of Jesus against messianic interests and the multiplicity of sources attesting to it. After that, he focuses on the failures of the mythicist arguments. He didn't give advice to mythicists.
It is disappointing if he didn't cover what he thought the mythicists got right. Thanks AAbe.
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Old 03-27-2012, 11:14 AM   #13
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What's the difference between Ehrman's latest and Lee Strobel's The Case for the Real Jesus? (or via: amazon.co.uk)
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Old 03-27-2012, 11:14 AM   #14
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Originally Posted by ApostateAbe View Post
Ehrman developed what he called "Two Key Data for the Historicity of Jesus" for Chapter Five, and they were (1) James, Peter and the multiplicity of sources attesting to them and (2) the crucifixion of Jesus against messianic interests and the multiplicity of sources attesting to it. After that, he focuses on the failures of the mythicist arguments. He didn't give advice to mythicists.
It is disappointing if he didn't cover what he thought the mythicists got right. Thanks AAbe.
He at times states his agreement with mythicists, often in the process of calling those points of agreement "irrelevant"--the tone was certainly not conciliatory.
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Old 03-27-2012, 11:20 AM   #15
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Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic
He doesn't claim there are Aramaic documents, tanya, he claims that Aramaic words in Mark show an Aramaic oral source.
Ok, thanks for clarifying my error. I better stick with what I can quote!!

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Originally Posted by Bart Ehrman
However else the Gospels are used--for example, in communities of faith--they can and must be considered historical sources of information.
NONSENSE. UTTER RUBBISH.

The gospels, like most works of fiction, contain legitimate, honest, authentic, genuine, real historical data.

We know this, not from reading the gospels, but from reading other sources.

The fact that there are sprinkled throughout the gospels, bits of truthfulness, in no way alters their essential composition as doctrines of myth.

Documents describing mythical activities can not be employed to explain any aspect of history. You cannot use the newspaper accounts of Paul Bunyan, to explain the history of deforestation of North America.

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Originally Posted by Bart Ehrman
...I want to stress that the apocalyptic proclamation of Jesus is found widely throughout our earliest sources. In other words, it is multiply attested, all over the map, ...
And so, for example, we find the following...in our four earliest accounts of his life: Mark, Q, M, and L.
So, Abe, Diogenes, have either of you a link to these "earliest accounts of" the life of Jesus? I refer to "Q, M, and L".

No. You don't. Neither does Ehrman.

This is blatant dishonesty.

:huh:
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Old 03-27-2012, 11:21 AM   #16
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ApostatAbe has already stated that there is really no new argument for an historical Jesus so perhaps the only new thing is the diatribe against the MYTHERS.

No evidence for HJ just diatribe AGAINST his opponents.
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Old 03-27-2012, 11:29 AM   #17
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What's the difference between Ehrman's latest and Lee Strobel's The Case for the Real Jesus? (or via: amazon.co.uk)
I haven't read that book, but I would anticipate that Lee Strobel would not count the "apocalyptic prophet" model of Jesus as a strong argument. Bart Ehrman makes a lot of it, toward the end of his book. I wish he developed the argument in greater detail, because I would count it as the best argument for a historical Jesus, only my argument would be different from Ehrman's.

My argument would be:

1) Christianity was a doomsday cult.
2) The myths of all human founders of doomsday cults are small variations of actual humans.
3) The myth of Jesus was that he was the human founder of Christianity.
4) Therefore, the myth of Jesus is a small variation of an actual human.

Ehrman did not use this argument. Instead, his argument was that:

1) John the Baptist was apocalyptic.
2) The gospel authors and Paul were apocalyptic.
3) Linking those two is Jesus.
4) Therefore, Jesus was apocalyptic.

I think this is a weaker argument--the only sources that tell us that John the Baptist was apocalyptic are the synoptic gospels, though the description of John the Baptist in Josephus fits what we may expect for an apocalyptic prophet (getting arrested and killed by the ruling king and the followers predicting the king's downfall as a result). Ehrman's argument was designed mainly for the liberal Christians such as JD Crossan who believe Jesus to be a human being of some other occupation (they all agree that John the Baptist was apocalyptic).
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Old 03-27-2012, 11:48 AM   #18
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I had a very similar assessment of the book, and I share the consternation about the level of emotion some atheists invest in the mythicist position, as if the mere of existence of a historical personality behind the Jesus story is some kind of concession to religion.

Honestly, some of the arguments I see used by mythers (and I don't mean all arguments or all mythers) are just as tendentious and silly and improbable as anything I see from fundamentalists. Some of the attempts to connect every single element of the Gospel narratives to this or that pagan god based on vague associations are basically just making pictures out of clouds.

I sometimes feel like some people (atheists and theists alike) have difficulty detaching the Jesus of myth from any possible historical model or inspiration.

There is Santa Claus and there is the historical St. Nikolaos of Myra. We know that the "Christ" of religious faith did not actually exist any more than Santa Claus ever actually existed, but that doesn't mean there wasn't a Nikolaos somewhere, and the preponderance evidence suggests that there was. This conclusion does not imply the slightest belief in any of the supernatural claims of Christianity, any more than think St. Nikolaos really existed implies a belief in a workshop at the North Pole.

St. Nikolaos of Myra was not Santa Claus (or vice versa). Santa Claus is a mythical character that was made up from an amalgam of mythical and historical or supposedly historical figures, not just St. Nikolaos. In fact, the evolution of Santa Claus could be a decent example of how a mythical Jesus Christ could evolve out of the milieu of first century hellenistic Judaism, superimposing a mythical savior figure on greek mythos as well as actual historical would-be messiahs.
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Old 03-27-2012, 12:11 PM   #19
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He doesn't claim there are Aramaic documents, tanya, he claims that Aramaic words in Mark show an Aramaic oral source.
Not only that, they can be dated to 1 or 2 years after Jesus' death!
I still don't really understand his reasoning for that.

He does bolster his argument with examples in the Greek text that only make sense when translated back to Aramaic.
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Old 03-27-2012, 12:12 PM   #20
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What's the difference between Ehrman's latest and Lee Strobel's The Case for the Real Jesus?
Scholarship, facts, evidence, credentialed expertise, basic honesty.
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