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View Poll Results: Check off everything you would need to see to say a guy was a "Historical Jesus."
God 1 2.63%
Resurrection 3 7.89%
Healed miraculously and drove out real demons 3 7.89%
Was a conventional (non-supernatural) faith healer and exorcist, but did not do miracles 13 34.21%
Performed nature miracles such as walking on water 3 7.89%
Was born of a virgin 2 5.26%
Said all or most of what is attributed to him in the Gospels 4 10.53%
Said at least some of what is attributed to him in the Gospels 21 55.26%
Believed himself to be God 2 5.26%
Believed himself to be the Messiah 5 13.16%
Was believed by his followers to be God 1 2.63%
Was believed by his followers to be the Messiah 16 42.11%
Was involved in some kind of attack on the Temple 9 23.68%
Was crucified 27 71.05%
Was from Nazareth 8 21.05%
Was from Galilee 12 31.58%
Had 12 disciples 3 7.89%
Had some disciples, not necessarily 12 25 65.79%
Raised the dead 2 5.26%
Was believed by his disciples to still be alive somehow after the crucifixion. 17 44.74%
Multiple Choice Poll. Voters: 38. You may not vote on this poll

 
 
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Old 04-01-2012, 09:35 AM   #151
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yes spin, you were right
I've been told that does happen occasionally.
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Old 04-01-2012, 10:21 AM   #152
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I am asking a question about the way we communicate with each and what we collectively mean when we say "historical Jesus."

Since it isn't clear, my extractions from the Gospel narratives were meant to inquire how closely mythicists insist on defining Jesus as equivalent to Bible Jesus. If they want to argue that only Bible Jesus is Jesus, That's fine (and it ironically puts them in alliance with the fundies), but it does not actually exclude the possibility of Christianity of arising from a historical personality cult, and that possibility is, quite honestly the best supported, most plausible and most parsimonious explanation for why a 1st century cult would say they revered a dead person.

My question is whether that person is per se "Jesus" just by virtue of being the object of a genuine founding cult, or whether mythicists would say he also has to walk on water.
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Old 04-01-2012, 10:31 AM   #153
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I am asking a question about the way we communicate with each and what we collectively mean when we say "historical Jesus."

Since it isn't clear, my extractions from the Gospel narratives were meant to inquire how closely mythicists insist on defining Jesus as equivalent to Bible Jesus. If they want to argue that only Bible Jesus is Jesus, That's fine (and it ironically puts them in alliance with the fundies), but it does not actually exclude the possibility of Christianity of arising from a historical personality cult, and that possibility is, quite honestly the best supported, most plausible and most parsimonious explanation for why a 1st century cult would say they revered a dead person.

My question is whether that person is per se "Jesus" just by virtue of being the object of a genuine founding cult, or whether mythicists would say he also has to walk on water.

You wont get a straight answer because like the fundy's their minds are made up and shut tight.


the biggest mistake I see them make is completely ignoring the FACT hellenistic romans deified mortal men all the time and gave them magical attributes.


this was normal, but the real problem is that we have cross cultural deification, and the early movement was buried by the romans who stole this movement for their own.


had this movement stayed within judaism, we could much more historical knowledge. IF the movement lasted.
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Old 04-01-2012, 10:36 AM   #154
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One of the ironies of this debate, I think, is that I believe a historical Jesus is much more devastating to Christianity than a mythical one.
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Old 04-01-2012, 10:55 AM   #155
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I am asking a question about the way we communicate with each and what we collectively mean when we say "historical Jesus."

Since it isn't clear, my extractions from the Gospel narratives were meant to inquire how closely mythicists insist on defining Jesus as equivalent to Bible Jesus. If they want to argue that only Bible Jesus is Jesus, That's fine (and it ironically puts them in alliance with the fundies), but it does not actually exclude the possibility of Christianity of arising from a historical personality cult, and that possibility is, quite honestly the best supported, most plausible and most parsimonious explanation for why a 1st century cult would say they revered a dead person.

My question is whether that person is per se "Jesus" just by virtue of being the object of a genuine founding cult, or whether mythicists would say he also has to walk on water.
Perhaps getting rid of the name *Jesus* might shift the focus here - shift the focus from the gospel JC story to history. After all, is not that name *Jesus* supposed to mean something relevant to 'salvation'? i.e that name is relevant for the gospel salvation 'history' and is not necessarily the name of any historical figure that was important to the early christian writers. (and name changing was quite a big deal in that NT story....)

That the whole christian phenomena started from 'Paul's' imagination is not something that I find convincing. History mattered, historical events mattered, to those early christian writers. The gospel JC story is how they chose to convey the meaning, the relevance, they found within their historical environment.
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Old 04-01-2012, 11:00 AM   #156
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Every single item on your list is extracted from the existing sources. It has to be, there are no other sources to use. The problem is that the sources you are using are not historical evidence. The only surviving material is literature, not historical information.



I'm not denying anyone existed. So perhaps it sounds evasive because you're making baseless assumptions. If anything it's rather amusing that you'd suggest I'm a mythicist. What I'm stating is that historical criticism can tell you exactly nothing when all you have are literary sources. The items on your poll mean nothing, because they are extracted not from historical evidence, but from a story.
Hi Rick

If I argued that we cannot extract a historical Socrates because all our contemporary sources, (Plato, Xenophon, Aristophanes...), are literary sources rather than historical evidence, how would you reply ?

Andrew Criddle
Hi Andrew,

We have a context for Plato, Xenophon etc. that we don't have for the gospels. They have a provenance in a sense that the gospels do not.

Constructing a biography of Socrates is difficult, and you get a lot of "perhaps" and "maybe" and "possibly" when you read one. Which is a fun way of raising possibilities, but ultimately the amount most biographers claim to truly know is scant indeed.

If that difficulty was compounded by an inability to ground our sources--if they just sort of appeared in the ether--I'd say that constructing an historical Socrates was impossible.

I've adopted what I think of as the Thompson principle, since I lifted it more or less wholesale from Thomas Thompson: If anyone can reasonably doubt what you have is evidence, it's not, and you can't ask questions of sources that aren't evidence, no matter how little that leaves you.

Better to say too little than speculate too much.
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Old 04-01-2012, 11:20 AM   #157
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Diogenes the Cynic View Post
I am asking a question about the way we communicate with each and what we collectively mean when we say "historical Jesus."

Since it isn't clear, my extractions from the Gospel narratives were meant to inquire how closely mythicists insist on defining Jesus as equivalent to Bible Jesus. If they want to argue that only Bible Jesus is Jesus, That's fine (and it ironically puts them in alliance with the fundies), but it does not actually exclude the possibility of Christianity of arising from a historical personality cult, and that possibility is, quite honestly the best supported, most plausible and most parsimonious explanation for why a 1st century cult would say they revered a dead person.

My question is whether that person is per se "Jesus" just by virtue of being the object of a genuine founding cult, or whether mythicists would say he also has to walk on water.
Perhaps getting rid of the name *Jesus* might shift the focus here - shift the focus from the gospel JC story to history. After all, is not that name *Jesus* supposed to mean something relevant to 'salvation'? i.e that name is relevant for the gospel salvation 'history' and is not necessarily the name of any historical figure that was important to the early christian writers. (and name changing was quite a big deal in that NT story....)

That the whole christian phenomena started from 'Paul's' imagination is not something that I find convincing. History mattered, historical events mattered, to those early christian writers. The gospel JC story is how they chose to convey the meaning, the relevance, they found within their historical environment.
The name has no necessary meaning at all except as a placeholder for the hypothetical object of a founding personality cult behind Christianity.
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Old 04-01-2012, 11:22 AM   #158
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If anyone can reasonably doubt what you have is evidence, it's not
The key word here is "reasonably."
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Old 04-01-2012, 11:32 AM   #159
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The key word here is "reasonably."
Absolutely. That's why I put it there.
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Old 04-01-2012, 07:18 PM   #160
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....., quite honestly the best supported, most plausible and most parsimonious explanation for why a 1st century cult would say they revered a dead person.

There are many people here who would reject your 1st century cult as being imaginary, since there is no evidence at all from the 1st century.

When you replace in your schema of discussion 1st century cult, with 2nd century cult, there is a change in historiographical context.


Quote:
My question is whether that person is per se "Jesus" just by virtue of being the object of a genuine founding cult, or whether mythicists would say he also has to walk on water.
The mythicists who support a 2nd century origin for the cult would point out that the cult was invented or perhaps arose via scribal manuscript worship in the 2nd century. In the canonical texts the story of the 1st century did not originate in the first century. What does that make jesus?
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