FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Archives > Religion (Closed) > Biblical Criticism & History
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 03:12 PM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 09-27-2011, 07:55 PM   #21
Contributor
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by judge View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by TedM View Post

That seems foolish at first glance. Why would they do that? It would have been so easy to just say ---'what the F are you talking about--have you never read the gospels?'
Why would who do what? I can't figure out your objection.

If you are asking why the orthodox did not ask that question of the gnostic mythicists, we know the answer. They read the gospels as allegorical stories, and they wrote their own gospels.
Toto, as you know there is no evidence, for any "gnostic mythicists".

There is evidence of more than one hundred Gnostic Gospels and Acts


Quote:
Why should we belive in them if there is no evidence for them?

The Church Fathers said they were heretics.
And that their books were heresies to be anathemetized.

Why?

Because they depicted a different and non canonical story?
mountainman is offline  
Old 09-27-2011, 08:58 PM   #22
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Bli Bli
Posts: 3,135
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by archibald View Post
The heresy of mythicism seems to be 'a missing link'.

I am referring to an early version, not the contemporary one. :]

Am I wrong? What is the evidence?
There is no evidence. People choose to believe it without evidence.
judge is offline  
Old 09-27-2011, 09:30 PM   #23
Contributor
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 18,988
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by archibald View Post
..Regarding aa5874's 'touchstone' argument......
I don't know about any "touchstone" argument.

I present the evidence found in sources of antiquity.

It was HERESY that Jesus was an ordinary man in "Against Heresies" by Irenaeus and "Refutation of all Heresies" by Hippolytus.

And a Pauline writer in Romans 1 claimed that the Created should NOT be worshipped ONLY the Creator.

The very claim that Jesus was an ordinary man was an argument AGAINST the claim that Jesus was God Incarnate or the Son of God.

Again, people here are confusing the MJ/HJ argument with the BELIEF by Christians that Jesus EXISTED as God Incarnate on earth during the reign of Tiberius.

Christians BELIEVE Gods exist and actually promote the Jesus of Faith or MYTH Jesus.

The "historical Jesus" is a REJECTION of the Jesus of Faith, God Incarnate.

In antiquity, there were arguments AGAINST the Jesus of Faith and it was argued that Jesus Christ even as a man did NOT arrive as yet.

See "Dialogue with Trypho".

In effect, it was ARGUED over 1800 years ago that Jesus Christ was Neither God nor man.
aa5874 is offline  
Old 09-28-2011, 12:26 AM   #24
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Northern Ireland
Posts: 1,305
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by judge View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by TedM View Post

That seems foolish at first glance. Why would they do that? It would have been so easy to just say ---'what the F are you talking about--have you never read the gospels?'
Why would who do what? I can't figure out your objection.

If you are asking why the orthodox did not ask that question of the gnostic mythicists, we know the answer. They read the gospels as allegorical stories, and they wrote their own gospels.
Toto, as you know there is no evidence, for any "gnostic mythicists".

Why should we belive in them if there is no evidence for them?
It does worry me slightly when someone refers to them as 'gnostic mythicists'. Since it's more than just a bit speculative, it does sound like the language of making an unevidenced assumption.

Not warranted, surely?

At least, in this thread, not until someone makes a good case for it. And Toto basically opened with a reference to a mythicist conspiracy theory, now appears to have cemented a conclusion based on only this. So far.
archibald is offline  
Old 09-28-2011, 12:31 AM   #25
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Northern Ireland
Posts: 1,305
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by mountainman View Post

We only know about heresies and heretics (before and after Nicaea) largely through the writings of their enemies, the orthodox canon-following heresiologists. Relatively recent manuscript and archaeological discoveries of the writings of the heretics have redressed this balance.
Except one? The Nag Hamadi bunch?


Can I ask you one general thing about the Nag Hamadi Codices? If you read that lot as mythicists, what is the Gospel of Thomas doing in their library?
archibald is offline  
Old 09-28-2011, 12:37 AM   #26
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Northern Ireland
Posts: 1,305
Default

error.
archibald is offline  
Old 09-28-2011, 12:44 AM   #27
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Northern Ireland
Posts: 1,305
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Why would who do what? I can't figure out your objection.

If you are asking why the orthodox did not ask that question of the gnostic mythicists, we know the answer. They read the gospels as allegorical stories, and they wrote their own gospels.
What he's asking seems very clear to me. I restated it myself. It seems odd that you don't understand what he is saying?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Quote:
This is a pointless comment because we have to decide what Paul was talking about. One could just as well say that most other people seem to think that an HJ was an early stage since Paul and all the other earliest writings support one and the heresies we know about for certain came after those writings. This gets us no-where.
It's not pointless. It is an answer to the OP, from someone who has spent some time analyzing what Paul was talking about. The general idea is that the HJ came first and was mythologized, but there is no evidence to support this.
TedM is correct. It is merely your opinion that there is no evidence. And your opinion is not, in my opinion, a particularly convincing opinion. Paul is littered with HJ references from start to finish. It is bio detail that is (mostly) not there, that's all.


Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
That's a good question - what tradition preceded the gospel stories? The general answer has been to imagine that there was some oral tradition that passed on the information, but modern literary analysis has shown that the gospels are based on the Septuagint.
I agree with a few others here, Toto. This sounds like it was overstating something. Even when you clarified, you still said ALL the Jesus story was in the Septaguint. Is this the case? Is there, for example, a crucifixion in the Septaguint?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
The Jesus that you can derive from Paul is minimalist.
Fair point. But he's a minimal HJ.

And incidentally, Doherty is way out on a limb, from any rational standpoint. He's in the category of 'possible, but unlikely', IMO. I hope you're not a fan.

Unless, regarding Paul, as some have said, the epistles were so revamped that the original was almost unrecognizeable. You yourself have said that you think 50% (as a guess) is not original, though you never really said which 50% or on what basis you feel you know. At one point, you referred me to DCH's scenario, which I did not find at all reassuring. You also referred me to William O Walker, but he doesn't suggest anything like that extent and in any case appears well aware that he is being speculative (as was Price, in one of the first links you provided to me, way back). Yet...you....come across as much more heavily leaning one way?

Is it, Toto, actually the case that what you are saying is that you believe the truth was covered up so we can't see it? In both cases, I mean, Paul being revamped and myther heresies being erased? It all sounds like a complicated conspiracy theory. I was hoping there would be more evidence.
archibald is offline  
Old 09-28-2011, 01:49 AM   #28
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by archibald View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
Why would who do what? I can't figure out your objection.

If you are asking why the orthodox did not ask that question of the gnostic mythicists, we know the answer. They read the gospels as allegorical stories, and they wrote their own gospels.
What he's asking seems very clear to me. I restated it myself. It seems odd that you don't understand what he is saying?
??

Here's the dialogue:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto
Some modern mythicists think that some of the gnostics, in particular the Docetists, did not believe in a historical Jesus, but that the orthodox heresy hunters did not give an accurate description of their beliefs.
Quote:
Originally Posted by TedM
That seems foolish at first glance. Why would they do that? It would have been so easy to just say ---'what the F are you talking about--have you never read the gospels?'
So in the question "Why would they do that?" please identify the referents - why would who do what? And why is that foolish? Why would reading the gospels prove anything? How would any of this relate to Docetists or heresy hunters?

I am truly mystified.

Quote:
...

TedM is correct. It is merely your opinion that there is no evidence. And your opinion is not, in my opinion, a particularly convincing opinion. Paul is littered with HJ references from start to finish. It is bio detail that is (mostly) not there, that's all.
Paul's letters have references that appear to refer to a historical Jesus, but many more references that refer to Jesus as divine. There are no early texts that contain only historical references. Thus I am sure that there is no evidence that there was a historical Jesus who was later mythologized.

Quote:
... Is this the case? Is there, for example, a crucifixion in the Septaguint?
All of the details of the crucifixion come from Isaiah 53 and Psalm 22. Christians claim that these parts of the Hebrew Scriptures foretold Jesus or are prophesies - I think it is more likely that they were the sources for the story. (See e.g. this handy chart from a Christian apologist.)

Quote:
...

And incidentally, Doherty is way out on a limb, from any rational standpoint. He's in the category of 'possible, but unlikely', IMO. I hope you're not a fan.
I'm not sure what this is supposed to mean. Doherty has undertaken a major challenge to the conventional wisdom. This doesn't mean that he is wrong.

Quote:
Unless, regarding Paul, as some have said, the epistles were so revamped that the original was almost unrecognizeable. You yourself have said that you think 50% (as a guess) is not original, though you never really said which 50% or on what basis you feel you know. At one point, you referred me to DCH's scenario, which I did not find at all reassuring. You also referred me to William O Walker, but he doesn't suggest anything like that extent and in any case appears well aware that he is being speculative (as was Price, in one of the first links you provided to me, way back). Yet...you....come across as much more heavily leaning one way?
This whole field is based on speculation. The idea that Paul's letters were not heavily interpolated is speculation without proof.

Quote:
Is it, Toto, actually the case that what you are saying is that you believe the truth was covered up so we can't see it? In both cases, I mean, Paul being revamped and myther heresies being erased? It all sounds like a complicated conspiracy theory. I was hoping there would be more evidence.
It's not a conspiracy theory. There was an evolution of beliefs, and there were orthodox Christians who felt that they had to bring the text in line with what they knew was the truth.

But it all happened two millenia ago. What sort of evidence do you think has survived?
Toto is offline  
Old 09-28-2011, 02:32 AM   #29
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Northern Ireland
Posts: 1,305
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post

I am truly mystified.
The (at least my) question is this. Why would the orthos not have trashed any mythicist heresy out in the open? That is to say, not been so worried about erasing any trace of even their own trashing of it?


Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
All of the details of the crucifixion come from Isaiah 53 and Psalm 22. Christians claim that these parts of the Hebrew Scriptures foretold Jesus or are prophesies - I think it is more likely that they were the sources for the story. (See e.g. this handy chart from a Christian apologist.)
Even that apologist's chart doesn't seem to include a crucifixion?

I'm not even sure it's just the crucifixion either. It was my impression that sceptics (including Price) suggested that there were a lot of things from scripture, but not by any means 'all'. I think you are the first person I have 'heard' saying that.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
I'm not sure what this is supposed to mean. Doherty has undertaken a major challenge to the conventional wisdom. This doesn't mean that he is wrong.
It means what it says. Doherty is out on a limb, with no strong evidence. What evidence there is does not support his overall hypothesis. And it doesn't say Doherty is wrong. Not by any means. Why did you think it did?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
This whole field is based on speculation. The idea that Paul's letters were not heavily interpolated is speculation without proof.
And the idea that they were interpolated heavily is also speculation without proof. That it's all speculation is certainly my position, but at times ('The Mythicist Gnostics'....'I know from reading Paul'....) it doesn't seem to be yours.

Particularly if said heavy interpolation is taken as an interpolation in a mythicist direction. I said 'if'. It is not clear to me whether this is your speculated direction. At times it appears not to be, and at other times it is not clear exactly what your uninterpolated Paul would look like. All I have to go on is your referring me to DCH. If that resembles your uninterpolated Paul, I would suggest you too are out on a very speculative limb, though not quite as far out as Doherty in this instance.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post

It's not a conspiracy theory. There was an evolution of beliefs, and there were orthodox Christians who felt that they had to bring the text in line with what they knew was the truth.
Without evidence, it is a conspiracy theory. And an unparsimonius one at that. I refer to any idea that bringing the text in line involved countering any mythicism or NEP (Non existing personage). That it may have involved making it more ortho generally is not controversial, to me.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
But it all happened two millenia ago. What sort of evidence do you think has survived?
What a very, very odd thing to say.

Er, any evidence.

Evidence does survive. That's how we know about the other heresies.
archibald is offline  
Old 09-28-2011, 02:52 AM   #30
Contributor
 
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by archibald View Post

The (at least my) question is this. Why would the orthos not have trashed any mythicist heresy out in the open? That is to say, not been so worried about erasing any trace of even their own trashing of it?
Under Doherty's scenario, mythicism had evolved into docetism or some other gnostic heresy by the second century. The orthodox never met a mythicist.

Under other scenarios, The orthodox just never bothered to understand the gnostics.

Quote:
Even that apologist's chart doesn't seem to include a crucifixion?

I'm not even sure it's just the crucifixion either. It was my impression that sceptics (including Price) suggested that there were a lot of things from scripture, but not by any means 'all'. I think you are the first person I have 'heard' saying that.
Check out Michael Turton's Historical Commentary on the Gospel of Mark. I got the concept from him. He spent some time tracing every element in Mark back to the Septuagint.

Quote:
It means what it says. Doherty is out on a limb, with no strong evidence. What evidence there is does not support his overall hypothesis. And it doesn't say Doherty is wrong. Not by any means. Why did you think it did?
You clearly implied that Doherty was not someone to be associated with.

Quote:
And the idea that they were interpolated heavily is also speculation without proof. That it's all speculation is certainly my position, but at times ('The Mythicist Gnostics'....'I know from reading Paul'....) it doesn't seem to be yours.
It is speculative, so sometimes I don't spell it out. The mythicist gnostics were part of a hypothetical. I still don't know the reading Paul reference.

Quote:
...
Without evidence, it is a conspiracy theory. And an unparsimonius one at that. I refer to any idea that bringing the text in line involved countering any mythicism or NEP (Non existing personage). That it may have involved making it more ortho generally is not controversial, to me.
Countering mythicism is not making it more orthodox?

Quote:
Quote:
Originally Posted by Toto View Post
But it all happened two millenia ago. What sort of evidence do you think has survived?
What a very, very odd thing to say.

Er, any evidence.

Evidence does survive. That's how we know about the other heresies.
We only know some of what their enemies decided to write about them. I hope you don't assume that it's trustworthy or complete.
Toto is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 05:22 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.