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03-17-2003, 12:36 AM | #31 | ||||
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We know that the Christians of the time read the Hebrew scriptures for clues about Jesus, but their method seems to have been rather idiosyncratic and creative. What do you think that a story created about Jesus based on the Hebrew scripture at issue would have been like, and how can you be sure? |
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03-17-2003, 02:48 AM | #32 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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A mythical figure that was historicized? well, that is a MJ. Why not be kind enough as to elaborate to us on this "large" middleground? My point is that when (if we can) we reach the bottom of the layers of truth/fiction and ambiguities and strip off all the fluff, we will find either a mythical man like hercules or a historical being like Adolf Hitler. Tell me what irrational about that please. And provide the continuum of possibilities between these two extremes. Or NOGO can do that since he says: Quote:
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You cannot support why Modern Translations and Commentaries Interpret the Term as "Second" or "Again" is any better than Doherty's other than appeal to popularity. In essence, it betrays the fact that you do not understand why the interpretation is done as such because you cannot articulate the merits of the transactions you cling to. You can only regurgitate the interpretations like a computer without explaining why they are better than Dohertys. Its clear you believe there was a first coming and any translation that seems to support it is correct from your POV. Its called argument from a position of preconception (apop). Quote:
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The only way people express their thoughts/ feelings is thro their deeds. We cant assume they thought/felt what they did not express. Going by your line of thought, one can state that the fact that Hitler did not express his love for the Jews does not mean he did not love them. Arrant nonsense. Quote:
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1. Both Jesus and the animals were sacrificed. 2. Both the animals and Jesus suffered during the act of sacrifice. 3. Both of them were sacrificed to redeem (certain) people of sins. Considering (1.)(2.)(3.) above, the locations, and sequences you mention are rather trivial. An analogy can be drawn between the two because they represent acts of sacrifice. Quote:
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Read Supplementary article number 9 for a better understanding of the platinic mindset of the Hebrews author. In a nutshell, to the platonists, what happened on earth was just a reflection/imitation of a higher truth. Quote:
I have argued with "proof of concept" Attis, Osiris etc. Quote:
And I really wouldnt give a rats ass how you judge the breadth of what I have or have not read. Quote:
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I can equally say there is no reason to think such an omission is insignificant. In the absence of evidence, we have no reason to believe the writer(s) believed in a historical Jesus. Quote:
1. Mentioning the location was insignificant 2. The authors knew the location (but chose not to mention it). Unless you can make a case for a conspiracy of silence. Quote:
You need to refute it if you are serious about whatever you are claiming. Quote:
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From the quote you provided Luke T. Johnson, The New Testament Writings, at 422 said: Quote:
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Your argument remains totally unsupported, totally unsubstantiated, totally baseless. |
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03-17-2003, 08:11 AM | #33 | |
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This is how the statement should have been spoken by Jesus some 30-40 years before. "For those days will be a time of tribulation such as has not occurred since the beginning of the creation which God created until then, and never will (after the event). Jesus is prophesying about an event sometime in the future. So nothing like it would have been experienced until then NOT until now. From the speaker's (Jesus) perspective the statement is in error. From Mark's perspective "now" is the time present time when he is writing the text. If the event is still in the future for Mark then he would have used the words "until then". vtran31: I get it means it will be a time of tribulation that is so tribulous that anything in the past, beginning of the creation of God, this present time, now, or the future, ever will be. Yes, but where do you place the event??? is it a) creation till present b) now c) in the future Your statement seems to say that the event will never happen. The logical place to put it is "now". The author is saying that nothing like it happened in the past and nothing like it will happen in the future. |
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03-17-2003, 08:29 AM | #34 | |
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Yes, and if Toto's quote is correct, then he also rejects all attempts to date the fall of jerusalem before 70 CE. Amazing! Layman does not see how his partial quote changes the conclusion which Kümmel states quite clearly " we must be satisfied with the conclusion that Mark was written around 70." But Toto, this cannot really surprise you. Believers are masters at misquoting references. They learn the basic technique by reading the NT. |
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03-17-2003, 10:41 AM | #35 | |
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Layman is trained at this sort of dubious word twisting. It should be clear from the paragraph that I quoted that Kümmel did not reject any attempt to date Mark in any year, other than rejecting the evidence presented by one particular scholar for the year 71. It would be more accurate to say that Kümmel accepts all of the proposed dates as possibilities, and says that the date of 70 CE must "satisfy" us - in other words, it's a best guestimate in the face of uncertain knowledge. |
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03-17-2003, 12:03 PM | #36 | |
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There is no significance to you because you are unable to step outside the box for just a moment, suficiently long, to even understand someones point of view. If the author of Hebrews had mentioned Calvary when discussing the sacrifice of animals outside the camp as an analogy to Jesus' sacrifice then we would not be arguing. The significance is obvious. Calvary was a hill outside Jerusalem so the analogy is good. Jesus was sacrificed outside the "camp". Why then not state it since it is a benefit to the arguement presented? You should also see that presenting a million verses discussing Jesus' sacrifice without the above analogy does not help your case. This is not disctated by the whims of a Jesus myther. It is disctated by the logic of the argument. For this reason I must conclude that you still don't get the point although you claim that you do. |
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03-17-2003, 01:55 PM | #37 | |||||
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Second, it would not benefit the argument presented to say "Calvary." The analogy is between outside the camp and outside the gate. Since you JMers like "parrallels," why do you ignore that here? To say, the animal was sacrificed "outside the camp" is roughly similar to "outside the gate." It's not the same, however, as saying, "outside the gate, near Calvary." It adds nothing to the argument. Nothing at all. Quote:
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03-17-2003, 02:07 PM | #38 | |
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Kummel doesn't buy a dating after the fall of Jerusalem. That is very clear from his quote. Not that I really care what is personal opinion is. What I was trying to prove to you I did prove: the majority of scholars date Mark before the fall of Jerusalem: But inasmuch as there is no clear reference to the destruction of Jerusalem in the year 70, most scholars date Mark in the years 64-70. To what extent Kummel finds the arguments compelling or not is irrelevant to the fact he writes that "most scholars date Mark in the years 64-70." This, along with Sanders comment, does suggest that the majority of scholars date Mark befor the fall of Jerusalem. Just a reminder. E.P. Sanders: Cumulatively, however, the absence of decisive references in mark to events which were post-70 add up, and they make it likely that Mark was written near the end of the first generation of Jesus' followers: approximately 65-70. E.P. Sanders & Margaret Davies, Studying the Synoptics, at 21. The authors then proceed to note that, regarding their dating of Mark, "The reader will learn that we do not share many of the consensus judgments about the synoptics. This one, however, seems correct...." Id. What is your evidence that a majority of scholars date Mark after the fall of Jerusalem, Toto? |
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03-17-2003, 03:17 PM | #39 | |||
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It is untrue that "Kümmel doesn't buy a dating after the fall of Jerusalem." Kümmel clearly does not take a decisive stand on the issue. He reports that "most scholars" say one thing, others say another, and picks a consensus date in the middle, which has Mark written around the time of the fall of Jerusalem. Sheesh. Quote:
You have, however, managed to change the subject, which was not the majority opinion on the dating of Mark, except that it reflects your ideological assumption that Mark was written by a person named Mark who knew St. Peter in Rome, and got his details from him, making Mark genuine history. You can probably find some faith based scholars who hold that view, who will interpret away any evidence of the fall of Jerusalem in Mark as not "decisive" enough. But modern scholars who are not basing their scholarship on their confessional stance appear to reject this. I don't have any sources here at work, except for Peter Kirby's page on Mark. But you've already rejected that, since Peter is no friend to Christianity. |
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03-17-2003, 04:08 PM | #40 | ||||||||
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I never said he was the last word. I just wanted to offer up a liberal source. Obviously, you will only accept extremist scholars as sources. Quote:
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All quotes are selective, Toto. At least I'm offering some. Sanders, Davies, and Kummel agree that the majority of scholars date Mark prior to the fall of Jerusalem. Quote:
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Quite a lot of hoops you are adding to this (completely unsupported as usual). Basically you seem intent on whittling down who is a "scholar" until only radical liberals are left. And all this without any evidence! If I said the sky was blue on a clear day in California at noon you'd find some way of disputing that. |
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