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06-02-2009, 11:33 AM | #51 | |
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Sorry, I can guarantee there was a Russian exile in America with a copy of the Soviet Encyclopedia. There are Russian exile Scout groups! |
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06-02-2009, 11:54 AM | #52 | |
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http://www.lasvegasorthodox.com/libr..._1925-1950.htm
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06-02-2009, 12:05 PM | #53 |
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Hi Clive - Jiri has already located the entry on Pilate in the Great Soviet Encyclopaedia (post 32 above - thanks Jiri), and it clearly describes a historical Pilate and a historical Jesus. There seems to be no way to pin this particular error on the Communist conspiracy or the Orthodox reaction to it.
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06-02-2009, 12:15 PM | #54 |
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Probably starting a new thread - mythicism historicism and 20 th century politics!
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06-02-2009, 12:42 PM | #55 | |
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But the ones discovered archeologically are clearly not the ones in the Bible. The Hittite Empire proper was destroyed in the "Sea Peoples" strife and migrations of around 1200 BCE, along with the Mycenaean Greek palace society, and the Egyptians' Levantine empire. There were some Neo-Hittites or Syro-Hittites after that, though even their connection with the Biblical Hittites is doubtful. The Bible's reliable history starts a few centuries after that, in the Dual Monarchy period. I've seen some Bible-science apologetics that takes the same approach, claiming that "skeptics" rejected various claims in the Bible before scientists discovered their truth. |
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06-02-2009, 03:10 PM | #56 | ||
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Yes, it would be interesting to try to get at the source of this, and find the earliest reference to the idea. |
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06-02-2009, 03:51 PM | #57 | |||
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And it doesn't rely on the apologists actually having read the works in Polish or Russian. In fact, quite the opposite. As I mentioned earlier, more likely than not key passages were translated, but without the surrounding context. Or the surrounding context was translated but dropped. Those passages were repeated in apologetic circles. Quote:
I'm happy to agree to disagree, but I suspect what happened was this: apologists had already been floating the notion that skeptics considered that most if not all of the Gospel characters were fictional ("there existed no Jesus Christ, Apostles, Pontius Pilate, no other persons, mentioned in the Gospel" as the second link put it), so when the stone with Pilate's name was found in 1961, the apologists considered that as evidence that the whole theory was invalidated. THAT's why the idea is usually presented along these lines: "People say that there was no historical Jesus". "Yeah? Well, they used to say that there was no historical Pilate". Quote:
So, this is my speculation about what happened: Prior to 1961, apologists were well aware of claims by Drews and other early mythicists that the Gospels were fictional, either in part or in whole. When the stone was found in 1961, they claimed this as proof that Drews and others were wrong. |
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06-02-2009, 04:43 PM | #58 | ||||||||
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Your link is a translation of a work written in Russian, and badly translated at some time - probably after the death of the Russian author in the 1980's. So, no, I see no suggestion here that Christian apologists learned about Drews from Russian immigrants. Quote:
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I was around in the 60's, and I don't recall anyone seriously arguing that Jesus never existed, and I don't recall any Christian feeling the need to rebut that argument. The theological debates of the day were issues such as whether Christians should follow Jesus into pacifism and socialism, or whether Jesus would be an anti-Communist. There were also fights over whether full immersion baptism was required for salvation, or whether sprinkling was enough. But the idea that Jesus might never have existed was just not part of the culture at that time. I think you are imagining potential scenarios of facts that would make your theory relevant, but I see no evidence that those facts exist. Quote:
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The previous thread on the Pilate myth dates to 2003. You might want to reread it - Roger Pearse even back then kept saying that there might be some skeptic somewhere who claimed that Pilate was not historical. Now you are saying that there were apologists who misinterpreted Drews to be saying that. I say there's no there there. |
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06-02-2009, 06:04 PM | #59 | ||
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