Freethought & Rationalism ArchiveThe archives are read only. |
02-11-2013, 11:45 PM | #901 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: On the path of knowledge
Posts: 8,889
|
Those poor starving Theraputae living on a bread and water diet, and impelled to even further starve themselves on that, would have been in no condition to attend to the medical or spiritual needs of anyone, trapped in their cells six days a week by their fellow religious fanatics, they would have quickly became 'venerable' appearing emaciated cadaverous sickly skeletons, to be propped up at Feasts.
|
02-11-2013, 11:53 PM | #902 | ||||
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
|
Quote:
1.The tenor is loud and clear. It is extremely anti-christian and rather disgraceful. There is a tendency for extremities to be quite close to each other in appearance, such that extreme anti-christian can look a lot like extreme christian (with just a few negatives). That's tenor. Now the act. The typical zealous christian who comes here attempts to apply biblical verses as though they had some sort of authority with which they can prove some rhetorical point, which is what you were doing by citing Deut (in Hebrew, mind you) to attack the therapeutae because they don't adhere to your standards of bible literalism. Nobody said you were. You won't win the pathos vote on that note. Quote:
Quote:
You have ceased to be talking on the subject of your view of the therapeutae being "hinky" in the light of your understanding of what Judaism had to be, so I guess you've decided that you have no more to say on the issue. |
||||
02-12-2013, 12:20 AM | #903 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: On the path of knowledge
Posts: 8,889
|
Quote:
-other than certain small nut-job desert cults that attempted to produce their own self-promoting revisions. The Books of Exodus and Deuteronomy had been around for hundreds of years both in the Hebrew and in the Greek by the the 1st century. Their contents were well known, and they were often cited in the many Jewish literary works that had been built on that known content of these texts. Huge sections of The Torah were often committed to memory, There would have been little acceptance of such well known texts being significantly altered. The differences that have been found in ancient Torah texts when recovered, are are usually confined to little more than a missing letter or a slightly different spelled word here or there, not the elimination or addition of entire verses that change the entire sense of a passage. As Exodus 12:42 and Deuteronomy 4:2 also exist within the LXX, I have little reason to doubt that these two verses are as authentic as any Torah verse can be. |
|
02-12-2013, 12:33 AM | #904 | ||||
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: nowhere
Posts: 15,747
|
Quote:
As I have made it plain the pentacontad reckoning of the therapeutae from our one source on them goes back to Palestinian notions also found in the Temple Scroll. This means your comments about the 1st century are of no value. Quote:
Quote:
You are still trying to assert the way you think Jews had to behave, when there is sufficient evidence from the DSS to show that your opinions don't represent the world of the time. |
||||
02-12-2013, 12:36 AM | #905 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: On the path of knowledge
Posts: 8,889
|
Quote:
It is so hinky its stupid. And looking at his ignorance of conjoined-twins, I seriously doubt that this text was composed by the real Philo. The real Philo was well educated and experienced and certainly wouldn't have been that ignorant. (Which is a compliment to Philo) |
|
02-12-2013, 12:44 AM | #906 | |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: On the path of knowledge
Posts: 8,889
|
Quote:
Jewish groups may have disagreed over the interpretation of various verses and Laws, but the TEXT of the Hebrew TORAH and of the LXX translation of it had long been established. These weren't the kind of texts that could be shoved around and altered on a whim. |
|
02-12-2013, 12:44 AM | #907 | ||||||||||
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
|
Quote:
That's not quite the case. Some of them take the time to document their reservations and "presuppose without discussion Philonic authorship of the treatise". That's called an hypothesis. Quote:
Quote:
See post #900. It's Greek term meaning those who serve the [presumably Greek] gods. Quote:
Whoever wrote "VC" applied the term "therapeutae" to this group. It was a pre-existing and prestigious pagan term related to what is now perceived to be the pagan church. The author of "VC" borrowed it. Quote:
Eusebius also found the "TF". Quote:
Or that Josephus described Jesus F. Christ. Quote:
Of course. Quote:
This mass of literary evidence is corroborated by the archaeological evidence. The world's best educated biblical historians have been running a circus tent for the last 100 years in which they exhibit one item of literary evidence "Vita De Contemplativa" to establish a Utopian sect of Jewish therapeutae. This single item of literary evidence remains uncorroborated by the archaeological evidence. Don't you see the paradox? |
||||||||||
02-12-2013, 01:07 AM | #908 |
Veteran Member
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: On the path of knowledge
Posts: 8,889
|
There are none so blind, as those who will not see.
Philo describes an 'idealized' (read that as totally F'd up) religious cult. "Vita De Contemplativa" has to be unquestionable, the unchallengeable sacred text, its every word inscribed in letters of gold. Forget anything The Torah might say, it doesn't count. "Vita De Contemplativa" is now their God's infallible word. And Philo is his messenger! |
02-12-2013, 01:32 AM | #909 | |
Contributor
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Falls Creek, Oz.
Posts: 11,192
|
Heal
Below are the results of the LexiConc search using your criteria. There are 6 LexiConc entries that match ................ "heal." Quote:
|
|
02-12-2013, 01:33 AM | #910 | |||
Contributor
Join Date: Jun 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 40,549
|
Quote:
In other words, you've got nothing. Quote:
Quote:
I don't know what sort of evidence you would expect to find of a sect that lived in modest houses, not large temples. I don't see an absolute insistence by modern scholars (most of whom are not Biblical scholars) on the existence of this sect. I don't see the point of continuing this. |
|||
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
|