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#801 | |
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#802 | |
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#803 | |
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#804 | |||
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As you pointed out, neither Q nor Thomas included a crucified Jesus. Michael Turton believes that Thomas knew Mark, rather than the other way around. As far as I can ascertain at this point, the dependency issue has no consequence for VMJ. In either case, Mark was a work of fiction. (Or should I spell it "fixtion"?:banghead: ) I realize that nearly all the sayings in Mt and Lk that weren't lifted from Mk are said to come from a sayings gospel called Q. It is entirely possible that the Q sayings come from an independent tradition that knew nothing of the crucified Jesus. While I realize that there are no coincidences in history (?), the use of the name "Jesus," common as it was, may have been used in early layers of Q that knew nothing of the crucifixion that led to Pauline Christianity. Or, that coincidence, the existence of those Jesus sayings coupled with that notorious crucfixion, could have led messianic Jews and God-fearers to think that the crucified man named Jesus was indeed their long awaited savior! In sequence: Messianism + Sayings + Crucifixion = Pauline Christianity + Gospels = "Modern" Christianity. Of course the sayings were eventually, in Mt and Lk, "officially" attributed to Paul's crucified savior. Quote:
Agreed, except for the "Christian" part. In fact, those sayings may well have been floating around long before the time of Pilate. Burton Mack assumes that they were the work of a particular "community," probably located in Galilee, but doesn't provide any particulars about the community beyond that. It's just as reasonable to think that they refected a tradition about Galilee, not a community in Galilee. Aside from their use of the name "Jesus," why should those sayings be considered part of the Christian religion prior to Mt's and Lk's folding them into their gospels? Merely the fact that they seem to have been uttered by a wandering preacher named Jesus? Quote:
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#805 | |
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#806 | ||
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Jake Jones IV |
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#808 | |
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Of course, it is unlikely that they believed that Jesus just died and that was it. The question is then what was in the ending after that was later removed and replaced with a new ending in the later versions of the Mark - with the longer ending? We do not know and so we do not really know what the earliest christians believed. Alf |
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#809 | |
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According to your categorisation, a theory that posits a historical individual who resembled the Jesus of the gospels in 'major elements of biography' is a 'Historical Jesus' theory. On that basis, in order to define what counts as a 'Historical Jesus' theory, we need to know which are the major elements of the biography of the Jesus of the gospels. You tell me what those are and I'll tell you whether or not I subscribe to a 'Historical Jesus'. |
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#810 | ||
Moderator - General Religious Discussions
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