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05-26-2007, 08:02 PM | #31 |
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According to Doherty, nearly all of the non-historicist Christians writing to pagans whose letters are extant wrote in the second half of the Second Century CE, so were near-contemporaries of Celsus. It goes towards how Doherty's model stands up. Personally, I don't think Celsus is strong evidence against Doherty's model -- the lack of references in the heresiologists of around that time is a much more significant argument IMO.
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05-27-2007, 09:38 AM | #32 | |
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But as Earl suggests, there is no surviving 'spin' by the Jews until much later. The Jews in power in the mid first century didn't provide spin because there was nothing for them to argue against. By the time the stories were circulated and accepted as historical, the ones in the know would have long since been dead. I feel like the lack of literature from Jewish sources from AD 30-60 against any historical tradition of Jesus Christ is telling. Are there any documents from Jewish sources rebutting any traditions about an historical Jesus that early? If not it could also strengthen Doherty's thesis that Paul's Jesus is mythical. If Paul's references to Jesus were about an earthly man, where are the Jewish documents refuting Paul's idea that an earthly Jesus was the Jewish messiah and that messiah was actually the Son of God? Maybe they didn't have his letters, but since oral tradition was so highly regarded, surely they heard the stories. But if they took it as just another religious movement like the other mystery religions, why would they bother to rebut it? But if Paul had multiple churches out there worshipping a man they called the messiah of the Jewish scriptures and claiming he was God encarnate and fulfilled Jewish prophecy, you'd think Jewish leaders would be up in arms and out in force to disprove such a claim. Even if they were unable to do so for some reason, we would still see evidence in their literature... and that is all we are looking for at this point. |
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05-27-2007, 10:39 AM | #33 |
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Writings about Jesus before 70AD
Read the classic by Robert Eisler, The Messiah Jesus and John the Baptist. It is Eisler's thesis that there was plenty of written evidence about Jesus but it was censored and/or destroyed once Christianity became official in the 4th Century. Most of the official records and the writings of the 'real' Josephus were full of negative commentary about Jesus as the leader of a messianic anti-Roman movement. Eisler attempts to restore the oldest writings of Josephus through the Old Russian translation of an early Greek manuscript based on an Aramaic one by Josephus designed not for his Roman patrons but for Jews in the East. The picture there of Jesus and John the Baptist and the earliest Christians is one the official church could not permit to survive. Its Jesus allowed himself to be proclaimed an anti-Roman king by the Jerusalem populace. He was quickly arrested by Pilate and killed. His followers continued anti-Roman agitation and even military action through the two wars against Roma, the one leading to the destruction of the Temple and Massada and the second leading to the victory of Hadrian over Bar Kokhba who may have been a relative of Jesus'.
This is heady stuff but fascinating. In any event, the Gospels do more to conceal than to reveal the real Jesus. The Gospels pretend that Jesus and the early Christians were not hostile to Rome, which they were. And that everything anti-Roman was the fault of the non-Christian Jews, which it was not. |
05-27-2007, 12:29 PM | #34 | ||
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These hostile claims seem to be presented by Celsus as being the Jewish view of Jesus, and, given the parallels with hostile Jewish accounts of Jesus known from later sources, it is probable that he is using a Jewish source of some kind. Andrew Criddle |
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05-27-2007, 02:10 PM | #35 | |
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And this story [that the disciples stole the body of Jesus] was widely spread among the Jews, to this day.Ben. |
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05-27-2007, 03:21 PM | #36 | ||
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Earl Doherty |
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05-27-2007, 03:42 PM | #37 | |||
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I can do no better than quote a passage from my book “Challenging the Verdict”: (Sorry the quote turned out like this. I took it from a pdf file, and don't know how to eliminate the line problems. Too many tricks for this old(ish) dog!) Quote:
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05-27-2007, 04:56 PM | #38 | |
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If that wasn't the debate, I think it happened someplace else. Doug |
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05-27-2007, 05:52 PM | #39 | |
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Jiri |
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05-27-2007, 07:08 PM | #40 | |
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