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Old 02-07-2003, 12:10 AM   #31
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Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
And if the writer uses "historical" language like Herod and Pilate and Jerusalem and Census?
In that case, it would be clear that the writer accepts that Jesus was human. I would allow for the idea that there are cases in which the truth is not clear to us.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
What do you suppose inspired Mark to take sudden (assuming it was very fashionable to be silent on historical details) interest in historical details of Jesus' birth, life and death?
I don't take what a person writes to be a simple function of that person's interests. For example, from most of my posts, you would have no idea that I am very interested in artificial intelligence. And, if you were my teacher in a computer science class, you would not know that I had an interest in applying computational techniques to ancient literature, even though that is a related subject. Similarly, in the case of a modern believer, I don't say that the person is more interested in an earthly Jesus on the day that he writes a homily on a Gospel passage than on the day that he sermonizes on the Old Testament. The content of a document is a function of the writer's aim in writing more than the writer's interests. Since the author of Mark set out to write something like an ancient biography, it is not surprising that this aim in writing produces a different document than a Christian letter.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
The fact is Paul, whether or not he met a historical Jesus for a fact, uses "mythological" references concerning Jesus. We can simply conclude that the figure historical Jesus can not be gleaned/ constructed from his writings.
I have not attempted to construct a historical Jesus from the letters of Paul.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
This supports a mythicist position because we wouldnt expect historical details about a mythical figure anyway.
The problem is that a mythologized person can be spoken of in the same way.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
Or are you saying we must seek negative evidence to support a mythicist position - like the unrealistic example Carrier provided?
I am not familiar with "the unrealistic example Carrier provided." For my part, I seek evidence for any position that I take.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
We can simply cut the chase by you stating what would constitute positive evidence for the mythical nature of Jesus.
What you would expect us to have.
These are two different questions. The first one states, what would be sufficient to show that Jesus was mythical? The second one states, what would be necessarily true (expected) in the case that Jesus was mythical? The answer to these two different questions may be different. In other words, a Jesus Myth hypothesis may be plausible without being demonstrated. I could answer your question with something that would show definitely that there was no historical Jesus, but that is not the same as the minimum amount of evidence that I would expect in the case that there was no historical Jesus.

The matter that started off this discussion was a related but separate matter, that of whether the authors of the NT epistles accepted that Jesus was the name of a human being. It is possible that the epistle writers accepted an earthly Jesus yet that they were mistaken--if, for example, all of the NT epistles were forgeries in the second century. So, what would make me recognize that a writer disbelieved in an earthly Jesus? If the writer made a statement that is incompatible with an earthly Jesus. I think it would go beyond the evidence to hold the belief that the author disbelieved in an earthly Jesus in the case of mere silence.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
We must have premises - as you once told me.
State the premises upon which you base your argument.
Of course, I haven't been arguing that there was a historical Jesus, nor have I been arguing that Paul accepted the idea of an earthly Jesus. I have been questioning the case for the idea that Paul disbelieved in an earthly Jesus. The person who would like to persuade others that this case is sound is in need of laying out an argument.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
People who knew a historical Jesus would be more relevant, OR people who knew such people.
We can't just pick any Galilean ignoramus that "believes" and say: "there, see?".
The point of this message is obscure to me.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
To be sure, we would have to ask him now wouldn't we?
Setting up such demanding goals doesnt seem objective. Considering the paucity of info on Jesus.
My question was, "how sure can we be" -- what do you think? It's a fair question.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
We can simply examine his letters and conclude that he doesnt seem to have believed in a historical Jesus.
This is not the same as concluding that he seems to have disbelieved in an earthly Jesus.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
Why would anyone need the OT(cant remember the verses) while telling others about a historical person?
Why would you say that a person "needs the OT" simply because that person uses the OT? A person may use the OT because the person believes that it is scripture and that Christ is prefigured in scripture, not because the OT is the person's sole source of information. This should be clear, and it is supported in my original study, in which I quoted this use of the OT to describe Jesus: "Therefore, when you lie alone in your bed, let Christ be as a bundle of myrrh, to sleep and lie all the night between your breasts (Cant. 1:13)." The author of this letter had stories about Jesus (in the Four Gospels) yet chose to use an illustration from the Old Testament.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
1. You dont know that he knew such details. Its more probable that he did not. Just like his correspondents. They were believers.
Believers believe. They dont research, they dont examine. His letters are "feel-happy" letters, uncritical, not logical and "dreamy".
Why do you suggest that a person has to do research in order to be familiar with stories about Christ?

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
2. You do not know whether he found it necessary or not. Lets stick to what can be argued here.
It can be argued on the basis that the person didn't write it and that most people write what they feel necessary to write in something that they write. Elementary, my dear Watson.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
Paul "met" Jesus in a "revelatory" manner. He never saw a historical Jesus. He had no historical life story concerning Jesus. He stuck to what he knew and believed.
That is what he wrote.
And none of it is historical.
I have not claimed that Paul had met a historical Jesus. I simply doubt the claim that Paul disbelieved in an earthly Jesus.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
You would have expected him to write that he did not believe in a historical Jesus? But to him, Jesus existed - just in another realm - the sublunar one.
Does Paul actually say that the heavens in which Jesus existed are sublunar?

There is no question that Paul accepted that Jesus resided in heaven in the present, even among the staunchest HJ believer.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
Actually, that was the question I meant to ask you. If u answer in the negative (ie they werent interested in facts - hence "writers" just wrote myths and shadowy stories), then you have a case.

So please answer it.
If your answer is in the affirmative, then well...I neednt say it.

If you cant answer, then you cant explain the reason they omitted the historical details and hence have no basis of making your argument.
Although there may be exceptions, I don't think that most people give a great deal of research to each of the beliefs that they hold--today or then.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
It does not apply because they supposedly had no other "myths" to rely on (Jesus only lived once) because they were the mythmakers - so we would expect more historical info from them since they "supposedly" had them. But there is dearth of historical facts.

They had no rational reason to write in mythical tones yet they had the historical facts - unless you want to argue for gnostic leanings and mystery cults. If they attempted to write genealogies (bringing him "down" to earth and giving him roots), they must have been interested in historical facts too.

But it seems they lacked that.

Your only other explanation would be that people preferred to write in mythical terms about historical people those days.
I agree that early Christians did not write about Jesus in the way that they would have written about any other historical person. They did believe that he resided in heaven and that he had reversed death and that he would come in the eschaton. That's a lot of mythology, but piling mythology onto the persona of an actual person would not make that person non-actual.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
Genealogies, Pontius Pilate, sea of Galilee? Census? Herod?

Not historical huh?
I suggested that the NT epistles were not written with the concern of imparting historical details. If the NT epistles were gospels, then they would contain details such as the gospels do.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
Hence the ""<quotes> around the word testimony.
Scare quotes don't excuse you from falsehood.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
I am afraid I disagree:

1. They are writing centuries apart
2. NT epistles were written early after the life of Jesus.
3. Rutherford was writing to (close) friends Paul wrote to groups of people - among whom no doubt were Judaism adherents.
4. The letters would only serve to reinforce the notion of a spiritual christ, always alive, huggable against ones breast, dies multiple deaths etc.
For the first three points, I am discussing them with other respondents.

For the fourth, why would the authors of the NT epistles be afraid of reinforcing the notion of a spiritual Christ in which they clearly believed?

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
Is the argument questionable because of the existence of Rutherfords letters?

Or is its very construction questionable?

You can provide a basis of your questioning without this example - surely?
The arguments are questionable because they are not sound, unless you can present a sound argument for thinking that Paul et al. disbelieved in an earthly Jesus.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
How so?
How would we then know that they were interested?
If they wrote about myths, they had, and were interested in myths.

This is like arguing that although someone who had coffee was interested in taking cofee, he chose to take tea.
How would you then argue he was interested in taking coffee?

Unless you can demonstrate that they had good reasons (inquisitions? mystery?) for leaving out historical facts, we have no reason for believing they had historical facts.
I have not argued that we should believe they had historical facts. I am suggesting that the person who sees someone with a cup of tea and says "that guy doesn't like coffee" is making an unsound argument.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
Was the life of Jesus a fact then? - I mean, from the epistles?
This is a separate point. Once we have agreed that there are no sound arguments for believing that the authors of the NT epistles disbelieved in an earthly Jesus, then I may answer this question.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
This sounds more like Q ie. Sayings etc.

There is plenty of mention about Jesus in the epistles however. Only, not in historical terms.
But that makes a lot of sense.

Because Jesus was not historical.
What does it mean to say that "Jesus was not historical"? That would seem to be the place to start, before attempting to draw a conclusion.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
'proves too much'? And is that good or bad - from your position?

Are you saying he is overstating his case?
I am saying that the method that Doherty uses to determine whether a person believes in an earthly Jesus is flawed because that method leads to an incorrect conclusion in the case of 2 Peter.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
Is that a joke?
No.

Quote:
Originally posted by IronMonkey
Yeah, yeah, the controversial Celsus. Iaison (Quentin) was tackling that recently with layman?
Maybe he can comment further on this - I am rusty on Celsus.
The last time that Celsus came up, Quentin had reasonably stated, "yes, I begin to doubt Hoffman a little" with respect to the quote used.

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Peter Kirby
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Old 02-07-2003, 12:26 AM   #32
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Quote:
Originally posted by Clutch
I had written:
Peter, you replied:
I cannot see where the "only if" comes from, here. Why would only some positive doubt be grounds to mention any actual historical details about the person whose divinity is being proclaimed? Surely the ignorance of one's interlocutors would be a powerful reason to share such details in the course of witnessing to them!

Now, your claim that Paul was not in fact preaching to the unconverted in the epistles is another story, and if sound would go some ways towards explaining the lack of detail. (Though even here it is to some degree surprising that neither Paul nor his audience would be very interested in the personal history of, well... God.) But the epistles are oriented at least in part towards counselling their recipients on how to present the nascent religion. So the absence of allusion to the historical details of Jesus' life is again rather surprising, given the intuitive persuasive force of such details if the original doctrine to be preached was historical in character. Are we to assume that Paul, and his correspondents, and everyone they met as well, already believed in the existence of a historical Jesus, so that the otherwise suasive force of the historical details was simply never called for?
[/B]
I am indeed suggesting that it is plausible that Jesus mythicism is a modern phenomenon. Note that I am the skeptic in this context, and it would fall upon a person who wishes to use the premise to justify the idea that hearers of the gospel would have questioned the basic existence of Jesus.

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Peter Kirby
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Old 02-07-2003, 12:49 AM   #33
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Quote:
Originally posted by Greg2003
I found your post interesting and a little frustrating. While it is true that some JMers argue solely from the argument of silence, most of the JMers here seem to have a more sophisticated position.
Thank you for this thoughtful response. It is true that many JMers do not use a simple argument from silence. But it is telling that it took us to the second page before anyone brought up that point. Apparently there are people who think that the argument from silence in itself is persuasive.

I had anticipated this idea, though. I did not merely point out that the collected letters of Samuel Rutherford were silent on specific details in the life of Jesus. I also pointed out instances in which Rutherford draws upon the Old Testament for analogies to Jesus, refers to Gospel sayings without attribution, and speaks of Christ in Gnostic-type or spiritual terms. These features are often taken as indicators that a person disbelieved in an earthly Jesus, but this is not a sound conclusion.

Quote:
Originally posted by Greg2003
First, it isn't just that Paul is silent on historical details, but rather that the language that he uses corresponds with Gnostic and neo-platonic ideas that posit an existence at a higher level above the earth. In this sense Paul JMers can hold that Paul believed that Jesus really existed, just not down here on earth. His crucifixion and resurrection really did happen, just not here on earth a few years before Paul's ministry.

It isn't the silence alone that testifies to this, but it is the fact that Paul is using the same language as those (namely the Gnostics) who clearly state that Jesus existed on a higher plane and made his redemptive sacrifice there. Please take a look, if you haven't already, at Kurt Rudulph's Gnosis: The Nature and History of Gnosticism. He clearly establishes that the other worldly redeemer figure in Gnosticism predates Christianity and that the language used to describe him is similar to the language Paul uses.
I have read Kurt Rudolph (well, most of it anyway). I agree that the idea of a descending and ascending redeemer was a motif in the air at the time of Paul. What I suggest to be plausible is that some early Christians took that idea and made it their own in applying it to the crucified sophist. Since the idea is indeed a mythological one, and yet is the one that captivated early Christians such as Paul, it is not surprising that mythological language is used in expressing their beliefs. Naturally, though, I am skeptical of attempts to read back either later Gnostics or later Catholics into the letters of Paul.

Something worth pointing out, though, is mentioned by Burton Mack (in the must-read book A Myth of Innocence) and by Earl Doherty (in a message once posted to JesusMysteries). That point is that the equation Mark = Paul + Pilate (this is my trope) doesn't add up. The Gospel of Mark doesn't appear to be simply the concrete expression of the Pauline kerygma. Apart from a couple enigmatic sentences, there is little emphasis on the redemptive atonement which Paul holds so dear, and the level of divinity (if any such in Mark) is not the same. It therefore appears that the author of Mark may be drawing on a tradition independent of Paul. The question of whether that tradition traced back to a historical individual, and whether that person is the same one that Paul mythologized (if Paul had any human person in mind), is an open one.

Quote:
Originally posted by Greg2003
Second, Paul does seem to indicate that Jesus revealed himself to the world in a recent historical context. But he equates that revelation to the apostles in Jerusalem with his own spiritual revelation. Thus making it impossible for us to distiguish a historical revelation of a man calling himself the Christ from a purely spiritual revelation that did not involve an actual man on earth named Jesus.
OK, but: Does Paul really say that he knew Christ in the exact same respect as the pillars of Jerusalem? He does say that he has also seen the resurrected Christ, but that is not the same claim.

And, do we trust Paul to point out that others might have had a more tangible connection to Christ?

Quote:
Originally posted by Greg2003
The fact that HJ writers since the time of ancient christianity use mythical or mystical language to describe Christ is not really relevent to discerning what Paul may have believed since all of Western Civilization has been drawing upon both the historical fiction of the gospels and Paul's mystical language for the last 2000 years anyway.
I agree that later Christians would have been influenced by the mystical language of Paul. However, as I have mentioned before, it would be false to think that later Christians were purposefully omitting details about an earthly Jesus in imitation of Paul. Not that you have specifically said that, but the point is that the silence on details of an earthly Jesus is not forced. It just does not seem to be a necessary thing to bring up in a Christian epistle, even if one accepts that Jesus was a man.

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Peter Kirby
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Old 02-07-2003, 08:24 AM   #34
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I have not argued that we should believe they had historical facts. I am suggesting that the person who sees someone with a cup of tea and says "that guy doesn't like coffee" is making an unsound argument.
This (your analogy) is different. Interest is intrinsic or immanent.

We can only judge from external facts - what was written.

From what was written, we dont get a historical person.

So we conclude he was not historical but mythological.

You say, no, maybe he was historical but these guys loved mythological language.

You are also arguing that we cant say he was mythological because the fact that people write in mythological terms might mean they werent interested in writing in historical terms.

Your argument suffers a number of weaknesses that Toto and Gregg have pointed out (the Paul versus Samuel Rutherford incongruences etc).

But worse still, you are arguing over intrinsic, unknown things. Like what they were interested in, like what they liked, like what was fashionable, like what is possible - NOT what we know happened. This makes your argument very tenuous.

What happened was that Paul wrote in mythological terms. You say that doesnt mean a damn thing (you have ducked both the historic and ahistoric position).

Well, to me, the gnostic style, mythological nature (Revelation is the best - if you are tired of Paul) point to a Christ Logos.

You have yet to demonstrate that that kind of reasoning is unsound.
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Old 02-07-2003, 09:02 AM   #35
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Originally posted by IronMonkey
From what was written, we dont get a historical person. So we conclude he was not historical but mythological.
So? To be honest, I don't see a 'there' in you therefore, i.e., 'the absence of evidence is not evidence of absense'.
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Old 02-07-2003, 10:11 AM   #36
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Quote:
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Originally posted by Gregg
Peter,

Is this post a joke? It's not April Fool's Day yet!
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



Are you implying that anyone who doubts that Paul et al. disbelieved in an earthly Jesus is not to be taken seriously?
I really do apologize, Peter, this didn't come out the way I meant it to.

No, what I was trying to say is that this particular post seemed so unlike you. I was genuinely surprised that you, given what I know about you and your familiarity with the mythicist case, would make an argument like this, and I thought that perhaps you were just being facetious, or deliberately throwing out a rather strained analogy in order to generate some discussion (which you certainly got).

I mean, I think comparing Rutherford to Paul is an interesting and legitimate exercise, but that's about as far as it goes. In the end it really doesn't tell us much, since these two men were writing in such vastly different historical contexts.

I was also suprised at your rejoinder to one poster who argued that in the earliest Christian correspondence we don't find any historical or biographical data about Jesus, but then later we find piles of it. You stated that you had just "disproved" this claim with your post about Rutherford. But come on, Peter. You know very well that the poster was talking about the entire body of Christian literature from the 2nd c. onward (after the gospels became common knowledge and people began to take them literally), not about individual writings. And you certainly know very well that you don't "disprove" this claim by quoting one 17th c. writer. All you've shown is that not ALL post 2nd c. writings talk about Jesus as a historical person, which, I'm sure, the poster never meant to imply in the first place.

Again, Peter, I'm sorry that my remark came off the way it did. But I also have to say, I honestly find some of the statements you've made in this thread to be out of character for you.

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Old 02-07-2003, 10:44 AM   #37
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With respect to the others on this thread, I think Peter's only point is that the argument from the silence of Paul's letters is a weak one. In this he is correct. There are dozens of explanations for that silence and some have been explored here, but on its own it tells us very little. Given that many mythicists start their case with Paul's silence and then go on to explain it by postulating that Jesus did not exist, his example is a valid counter to the idea that Paul's silence logically leads to the mythicist thesis.

On the other hand, he is not claiming, IMO, that other possible reasons for Paul saying nothing much about the earthly Jesus (and he did say rather more than mythicists are usually ready to credit), on their own, invalidate the mythicist case.

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Old 02-07-2003, 11:23 AM   #38
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Quote:
Originally posted by Peter Kirby
Thank you for this thoughtful response. It is true that many JMers do not use a simple argument from silence. But it is telling that it took us to the second page before anyone brought up that point. Apparently there are people who think that the argument from silence in itself is persuasive.
Well, Peter, I certainly don't. And this is a pretty strong conclusion to reach based on one page of posts. Your original post was related to the argument from silence, so that is what I addressed. I know that you're intimately familiar with the MJ case. You know that I'm intimately familiar with the MJ case. Do I have to repeat the entire MJ case every time I reply to one of your posts? (And before you say that I've just made your argument for you, please keep in mind that the argument from silence encompasses the ENTIRE BODY of 1st c Christian correspondence, and that the epistle writers had many reasons to bring up the historical Jesus at least once in a while in their letters--see below.)
Quote:
It just does not seem to be a necessary thing to bring up in a Christian epistle, even if one accepts that Jesus was a man.
I'm sorry, but I just can't help but find this mind-boggling. God (or the Logos, if you want to split hairs) comes to earth as a little bitty baby, grows into a child prodigy, becomes a popular preacher, eats a sacred meal with his disciples in which he initiates an important Christian ritual, causes a ruckus in the Temple courtyard that gets him arrested, is tortured and crucified, and supposedly walks out of his grave and talks to his friends before going into the sky. And all of this happened just 20 years ago, and many of the people who were there are still alive. And, except for brief references to the Last Supper and the appearances (and of course plenty of references to the suffering, crucifixion, and resurrection, but all of them drawn from the Jewish scriptures, not from eyewitness testimony) no one wants to write about it. I mean, OK, they don't have to repeat the whole story every time they exchange letters. But you know, just a quick reference to a particularly memorable incident in the life of God? A direct quote from Jesus on a contentious point of doctrine? A rebuke to Christians who were claiming that Christ never came in the flesh, along the lines of "They wanna say that to Peter's face?" An "Oh, by the way, Jesus' mum sends her love" ?

However, as I said, the argument from silence alone does not persuade me. The entire mythicist case is what persuades me. Given what we know about the philosophical and religious ideas that were prevalent in Paul's day, a historical Jesus really isn't necessary to explain the origins of Christianity. It could have emerged quite easily without one. So, why is it so important to postulate some shadowy figure back there, who was somehow charismatic enough to attract a considerable number of followers (who were so impressed by him and so devastated by his loss that they started believing--maybe after one of them had a vision--that he was the incarnate Logos, that he'd risen from the dead, and that he was now part of the Godhead), somehow controversial enough to draw the attention of both Jewish and Roman authorities and be sentenced to crucifixion, and yet somehow lived a life so obscure and forgettable that he escaped being mentioned by any chroniclers of the era (except for Josephus in those two hotly debated passages), and even his own followers didn't bother to write down anything about it until 30 some odd years later?

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Old 02-07-2003, 11:44 AM   #39
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Quote:
Originally posted by Bede
With respect to the others on this thread, I think Peter's only point is that the argument from the silence of Paul's letters is a weak one. In this he is correct. There are dozens of explanations for that silence and some have been explored here, but on its own it tells us very little. Given that many mythicists start their case with Paul's silence and then go on to explain it by postulating that Jesus did not exist, his example is a valid counter to the idea that Paul's silence logically leads to the mythicist thesis.
I don't know who's claiming that the argument from silence is the entire mythicist case, Bede, because I'm certainly not. I can't help it if the argument from silence is what most HJers want to discuss. As I mention in another post in reply to Peter, do I have to repeat the entire mythicist case every time I post? Both of you are focusing your attacks on the argument from silence (I assume because you feel that this is the weakest part of the MJ case), leaving MJer's little choice but to respond in defense of the argument from silence--then you claim that our only argument for the MJ case is the argument from silence.

I think your assessment of the argument from silence as "weak" is entirely subjective, but leaving that aside, no one here is claiming that that AFS is the be-all and end-all of the mythicist case. It just seems to be the aspect of the case that HJers most want to discuss.
Quote:
On the other hand, he is not claiming, IMO, that other possible reasons for Paul saying nothing much about the earthly Jesus (and he did say rather more than mythicists are usually ready to credit), on their own, invalidate the mythicist case.
I agree that this isn't what Peter is saying.

And as to Paul saying more about the earthly Jesus than MJers are "ready to credit," well, don't count me among the timid. Put these passages up and let's talk about them.

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Old 02-07-2003, 01:37 PM   #40
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I thought it was pretty clear that Peter argued that Rutherford is a clear case of someone who believed in a historical Jesus and yet who wrote lots of metaphorical stuff about Jesus. Rutherford therefore counts as a disproof of premise (1) in the following inference:

(1) S has historical knowledge of J --> (S writes about J --> S reveals or discusses many historical details about J)

(2) Paul writes about Jesus & does not reveal many historical details about Jesus.

(3) Not-(Paul writes about Jesus --> Paul reveals many historical details about Jesus) (Logical equivalent to 2)

(4) Not-(Paul has historical knowledge of Jesus) (1,3, modus tollens)

But nobody ever thought -- correct me if I'm wrong, of course -- that (1) holds as a general law. Presumably there were supposed to be a bunch of things special to Paul's situation that made it plausible (like, that he didn't live in a culture where everyone already believed "There was a man named Jesus who was God"). And even at that, the arrows could not represent logical entailment but are surely more of the "you'd expect that" variety.

If the point is now just supposed to be that the silence argument can hardly carry the day on its own, then (i) I agree completely and (ii) what's the point of the analogy to Rutherford, given the powerful disanalogies between Rutherford and Paul?
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