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04-14-2003, 11:27 AM | #31 | |
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I agree with Vinnie for the most part, I think there is sufficient evidence from Paul, the gospels, and the smaller Josephus reference, to conclude that Jesus existed. I understand why many are agnostic on the question, but I think the mythicist position is not particularly well supported. But that's just my opinion. |
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04-14-2003, 03:38 PM | #32 | |
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04-14-2003, 03:40 PM | #33 |
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"the brother of the Lord" in some sense (Gal 1:19), and though some Catholic and mythicists dispute that sense (no, they were cousins; no, he was in a brotherhood; both are possible),
Another possibility: that he saw himself as a spiritual brother like Nxele or Hong Hsiu-chuan. Vorkosigan |
04-14-2003, 04:11 PM | #34 |
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Even if he did exist, he was probably not the Messiah. The alleged messianic prophecies either referred to (a) current events (b) were not intended as prophetic (c) Adressed Israel itself, as is most likely the case of the "Suffering Servant".
Another strike against Jesus's claims:The theology of the Old Testament is also out of line with the New. In the Old Testament we have a creator God who gives his people a Law with which to run a society, as well as complex religious rituals. This God is potrayed as bestowing earthly prosperity on his most faithful and supports a society with strong family values and also on occassion champions war(A fact covered up by Bible translaters: "God of Hosts" means "God of Armies"). Then we have Jesus and Paul, who say that life on Earth is to be counted as nothing, that institutions such as the temple and family are to be replaced with spiritual counterparts, there is to be no more law, just a few rules, and so on. Plus Satan, an angel of God in the OT, suddenly becomes a rebellious ruler of the physical dimension and all evil. In other words, in the Old Testament we have a religion from which to run a fairly decent ancient Middle Eastern kingdom. In the New Testament, we have something more akin to a gnostic mystery cult. Both Jesus and Paul uphold the validity of the Old Testament as divine revelation. However their own points of view totally contradict it's theology. |
04-14-2003, 06:18 PM | #35 | |
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IronMonkey writes: Extraordinary, from my POV, means something that challenges common sense, perharps violates natural laws.
Rare, does not mean extraordinary - in the context we are discussing in. Do you agree? I agree that rarity in itself does not make a claim extraordinary: for example, it is rare that I would be wearing specifically a green sweater, blue jeans, and black socks, but there is nothing improbable about it. What challenges common sense would be the claim that I went streaking in the snow, as that would not fit my personality. Are you saying that there is something extraordinary in the idea that there was a Galilean preacher named Joshua executed by Pilate? If not, doesn't the claim require no more than ordinary evidence for its acceptance? Dionysos was also born of woman. I will not allow you to bring in comparands without indicating your sources. Please name and quote the source you are using, and then explain its relevance. Paul doesnt mention the name of this woman at all Most women have names. neither does he place her anywhere on earth. Most human births take place on earth. Doherty argues that this Pauline phrase was almost entirely governed by Isaiah 7:14. In your opinion, was Isaiah 7:14 a messianic prophecy? Of course, you have failed to negate the fact that the Pauline epistles refer to Jesus as a man, one born in the ordinary manner. It's not as though a non-human reading of Paul's Jesus is obvious; you have to make several special assumptions for it even to be possible. The Jews were writing their own "vaunted" history and the figures of Abraham and Moses might or might not have been real. Compare the story of Moses for example whose name was an Egyptian name, meaning "son of," as in Thutmose (son of Thoth) and Ramses (son of Ra). I have read texts that have plausibly demonstrated that most of the early biblical partriarchs correlated with Egyptian Pharaohs/gods - that must have been Alan Alfords When the Gods Came Down. Price said "History does repeat itself, but not nearly as much as myth does" . I can make a finer point on this later. But let me see your take on it thus far. Red herring. The relevant point here is that Paul thought of Abraham as a person in the course of human history, and thus thought of Jesus, his descendant, as probably in human history in his mind as well. kata sarka - in the "sphere of the flesh" says Doherty and C. K. Barrett. I dont think I have to visit that with you - you probably have a better grasp of the argument. It means, in respect of his physical nature, Jesus was descended from David, according to Paul. This too - the word "brother" is open to interpretation. James the Just - we have spent too much time on it - Eusebius, origen - incongruence etc etc. If it's open to interpretation, then you have not shown it to be correct that Paul doesn't know anything about a human Jesus. One thing that Paul may have known is that he had a brother named James. Its simple - he doesn't place him anywhere on earth. Even Attis was killed hung on a nail, died and resurrected - proof of concept. Nothing is to compel us that the story of Jesus is any more real than that of Asherah. Again, what you have to do is cite the sources for your claims and explain the relevance, particularly how you know that these (similar) events were placed in a heavenly sphere. I see that you made no response to the story that Paul tells about Jesus in 1 Cor 11, particularly how it is clear that Jesus must be supping and speaking with human beings on that night, in the mind of Paul. Doherty doesn't address the force of this point either and instead focuses on the origin of the story, as though that would change its content. In any case, here is what Maurice Goguel says about this passage: Quote:
Are you still defending Louis W. Cable's paragraph that you quoted? Even if Paul could have had no point to prove, there is no clear reason why he never bothered to mention actual places while referring to Jesus. And an explanation is needed for this unfathomable silence. And I dont agree that Paul never needed to prove that Christ existed. I dont have the verses now but I remember Doherty made a fine point of it. Paul had plenty of points to prove: that Jesus is Lord, that our resurrection lies in the future, that his apostleship was authorized by God, and that the Law was not binding on Gentiles, among other things. That there was a man named Jesus who was crucified does not seem to be one of the things that was disputed; rather, this was taken as a starting point and used by others to show that Jesus is cursed by God. best, Peter Kirby |
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04-14-2003, 06:24 PM | #36 | |
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04-14-2003, 06:30 PM | #37 | |
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Vinnie,
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Sincerely, Goliath |
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04-14-2003, 08:50 PM | #38 | |
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04-14-2003, 09:08 PM | #39 | |
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As for the Josephus passage. 2 problems. 1. Context - The passage was placed totally in the middle of something that it has no connection with? If my english teacher were to read this she'd red mark it all up asking "Where does this fit? Where did this come from?" 2. Jewish Accuracy - Would a Jew have written from the standpoint that he believed that Jesus was the Messiah? This point has been banged to death which leads up to the apologists 'cleaning up' of the text so that it agrees with what an Orthodox Jew would have said during the time. My argument is why not take it out all together? I remember reading (and maybe somebody can back this up?) that some of the earliest translations of Josephus's Antiquities of the Jews didn't even have this entry about Jesus in them? |
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04-14-2003, 09:24 PM | #40 |
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Look people, here's the deal.
Just sit down with your favorite translation of the New Testament someday and do something I did a lot time ago. I did it with the bible, a piece of paper and a pen/pencil. READ the accounts of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. Write down notes of everything he did. Historical facts. Details. Just write it down and compare. Even pull out Paul's writings and do the same thing. Just write what Jesus historically did. Information. After you're done, compare all the accounts. The classical view is that these books were written by seperate people who actually WITNESSED Jesus whether it be first hand or 2nd hand or whatever. Compare. Can all these historical facts be presented in a courtroom to PROVE Jesus, a historical man, ever exsisted and also performed all of these events? I'm absolutely and totally convinced that they cannot. The contradictions are vast and cannot work in a literal/historical context. You don't need to INTERPRET anything. Just read the stories. =) Since the gospels cannot agree on details and events without contradicting one another you have to look OUTSIDE of the NT for proof. Even if the NT *did* work it would be a very good idea to look for non-christian and even christian writers around the time to VERIFY the stories. This has been done to death. We have a list of names of historians/writers around the era (Josephus, Pliny, Suetonius, Tactus, etc) that SEEM to be talking of, perhaps, the same person but I'm convinced that they fall one by one. The reason I suggested that people look into this stuff for themselves is because either I or anyone here is going to convince anyone that Jesus was a Myth or a historical figure. It requires an open mind and a willingness to ask yourself some HARD questions and to be intellectually honest with ones self. I hold the belief that Jesus was 100% myth. Why? Because the gospels don't tell a historical story that doesn't contradict itself. Outside sources, for the most part (at the very least), fail to backup a historical Jesus. And the most important: Doesn't it seem just a LITTLE odd that there have been dozens of 'fallen son of god' stories that have been told over the ages that have VASTLY SIMILIAR coorelations to someone that supposedly was historical? Why don't we argue that Dionysus was historical? Mithra? Because it's OBVIOUS that it's not. =) Oh, and just a footnote, I don't discount ANYONE's theory or idea based on the fact that someone say it's 'old' or has been 'disproven YEARS ago' - I wanna know WHY. Show me ONE solid non-biblical writer within 100 years of Jesus's supposed death that can be quoted as a CREDIBLE witness (or even 2nd hand witness) to the life of Jesus. |
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