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|  03-24-2007, 09:27 AM | #1 | |
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				 |  Do mainstream theologians really have an HJ? 
			
			From GRD thread what is religion, written by fatpie42 Quote: 
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|  03-24-2007, 11:42 AM | #2 | 
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			I don't know that what this describes is "mainstream" in the US. But, yes, for a Christian that radical, it scarcely makes any difference if Jesus was mythical or human.
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|  03-24-2007, 11:58 AM | #3 | 
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			Writing from Rome, Italy, I tell you that the Vatican cannot be more distant from these radical theologians. All the catholic establishment really believe, and try to convince everybody to believe, in the factual, historical, truth of the gospel stories and derive from these stories all sorts of conclusions concerning social life, human behavior, family, education, practical questions like divorce, abortion, marriage, gays etc etc. If historians can show beyond reasonable doubt that at least some of those stories are just myth, they would contribute to deliver us from catholic superstition and from their pervasive power. Therefore the debate around a MJ vs HJ, or just around the mythical content in the gospel and in the Bible, is useful and needs to be carried out even if for some Christian intellectuals would make no difference. It sure makes a difference to those that on the presumed gospel historicity built an all-too- powerful repressive institution called the Catholic Church. | 
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|  03-24-2007, 04:44 PM | #4 | 
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			Jesus the Christ, the Word,  was a myth long before he was thought to be historic.  For a description of the myth, see John 1:1-4, "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. The same was in the beginning with God. All things were made by him,and without him was not anything made that was made. In him was life and the life was the light of men'. And in John 1:14, we have the Word turn to flesh, the assumed historicity of Jesus the Christ, "And the Word was made flesh and dwelt among us...." John 1 appears to be all myth to me. | 
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|  03-24-2007, 05:43 PM | #5 | |
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|  03-24-2007, 05:56 PM | #6 | 
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			Mainstream theologians really have an HJ as  an unexamined hypothesis or postulate, to be quite specific about the logic of the enterprise. Mainstream theologians are totally contrained by the quadrants and phalanxes of the literary tradition, and cannot reach out to any other form of accepted scientific/archeological citations in any other discipline, other than that of paleography, aka handwriting analysis. Thus the greatest problem faced by mainstream theologians are the assorted vagaries inherent in the Eusebian pseudo-history, and its totally unambiguous creation and authorship during the rise to supremacy of the despot "bullneck". | 
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|  03-25-2007, 02:32 AM | #7 | 
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			Is there a reason Bultmann does not seem to be mentioned much here?
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|  03-25-2007, 04:00 AM | #8 | |
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