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09-14-2010, 04:42 PM | #21 |
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Two points before I go. 1. I agree the Gospels are based on hearsay. That necessarily means that there were oral traditions about Jesus before the Gospels were written. That is inconsistent with the theory that Jesus was just a character in a fictional account. It is more consistent with the proposition that there was a Jesus who was being talked about before the Gospels were written, in other words a historical figure. 2. I’m glad you agree that my account of why he is called Jesus of Nazareth fits. Do you have an account that fits better? Steve. |
09-14-2010, 04:53 PM | #22 | |||
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But you realize that the standard academic consensus is that by the time the gospels were written, Christians had forgotten most of the details of Jesus' life. Most of the details in the gospels were "made up" under either hypothesis. Quote:
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09-14-2010, 05:13 PM | #23 | |
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09-14-2010, 05:23 PM | #24 | ||
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There are claims that Jesus walked on WATER by all the Gospel writers. If Jesus was just a man and people knew Jesus was just a man living in Galilee why would ALL the Gospel writers claim Jesus walked on water? Because it was true? The historicity of a man called Jesus the MESSIAH who lived in Nazareth NEEDS CORROBORATIVE NON-APOLOGETIC sources and there is ZERO. NONE. NOTHING. By the way, in the Jesus story, the MYTH writers claimed Mary and Joseph with the OFFSPRING of the Holy Ghost , Jesus, FLED from BETHLEHEM to Egypt and then LIVED in NAZARETH. In the MYTH stories, Jesus, the OFFSPRING of Ghost (HOLY) was NOT KNOWN to have been born in Bethlehem. It was a SECRET. Why did the author/authors of the Memoirs of the Apostles claim Jesus was born in a cave? Because it was true? If you can't find any EXTERNAL CORROBORATIVE source for your Jesus you are just wasting time. The Bible says Jesus was from Nazareth so it is true? Only the truth is in the Bible? Perhaps we are dealing with fundamentalists or inerrantists. Matthew 2. 23 Quote:
Because Jesus was fabricated from mis-construed prophecies and the Jesus story was NOT known in NAZARETH, Capernaum, or Galilee before the Fall of the Temple. |
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09-14-2010, 05:28 PM | #25 |
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Good post double A...........
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09-14-2010, 06:29 PM | #26 | |||||
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Nazareth does not equal Nazarene
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Where are these people identified? Is there some other passage in Mark, which describes such folk? Here's part of the problem, Steve: Mark 16:9 Quote:
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o de legei autaiV mh ekqambeisqe ihsoun zhteite ton nazarhnon ton estaurwmenon hgerqh ouk estin wde ide o topoV opou eqhkan auton Here's your passage, Steve, Mark 1:9 kai egeneto en ekeinaiV taiV hmeraiV hlqen ihsouV apo nazaret thV galilaiaV kai ebaptisqh eiV ton iordanhn upo iwannou avi |
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09-14-2010, 07:46 PM | #27 |
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The word "Nazareth" is problematic in the Greek because it appears in at least two major variations and neither is an exact transliteration of the phrase "from the city of Nazareth." The same problem exists in the Talmud, where the term for Jesus (or not...it's up for debate still) doesn't exactly translate as "from the town of Nazareth" yet it's hard to find another suitable reference it could refer to. Spelling wasn't uniform back then, and transliteration of words from one language into another weren't any better then than they are today (just look at how many variants there are for the name of Libya's long-time dictator, just for starters).
My own personal leaning is to translate it as "Jesus of the Nasoraeans," a gnostic-leaning Jewish sect that prospered in the Samaria/Galilee/Syria area in the first century BCE. The Nasoraeans valued prophesy over written law and devalued the Temple service. It's just the kind of group that would have welcomed a charismatic teacher like a John or a Jesus. |
09-14-2010, 08:08 PM | #28 | ||
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Jesus in the myth stories used to talk in PARABLES. Scarcely anyone understood Jesus. Or whatever people understood was ALREADY found in Hebrew Scripture. This is the evidence supplied in the Synoptics. Matthew 13. Quote:
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09-14-2010, 08:44 PM | #29 | |
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He went and dwelt in a town called Nazareth, so that what had been spoken through the prophets might be fulfilled, "He shall be called a Nazorean."No one knows what prophecy Matthew is referring to, but clearly early Christians believed there was such a prophecy, and this is more than enough to explain the Nazareth connection from a MJ perspective. |
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09-14-2010, 08:55 PM | #30 |
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JustSteve,
spin |
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