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07-23-2013, 10:05 PM | #61 | |
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I don't think the man was that dumb. Following John D Crossan. he sets up a demonstration mocking Pilate by entering Jerusalem on a female donkey. Could be many things. Fiction is a possibility as the authors were building divinity through prophecy. But he could have been setting the crowd up with this first demonstration. The incident in the temple he may not have been looking for "god" to help. He had 400,000 ish attendants that could have been used as a tool if properly motivated. He sacrificed himself taking a chance he organize the crowd to turn on the corrupt temple authorities and Roman garrison, and simply failed. Think about it, he lived his life in a hovel like Nazareth where no god saved the oppressed while in eyeshot, Hellenist lived in opulence in Sepphoris. He wasn't waiting on some myth, he took actions in his own hands. |
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07-23-2013, 10:07 PM | #62 | ||||||
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Look at the end of the preceding paragraph: Quote:
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I additionally think the second reference to Jesus in the TF is completely forged, but I won't get into that. Quote:
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07-23-2013, 10:11 PM | #63 |
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07-23-2013, 10:15 PM | #64 | |
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This article is about the second reference to Jesus in Josephus. Here is the abstract: Abstract Analysis of the evidence from the works of Origen, Eusebius, and Hegesippus concludes that the reference to "Christ" in Josephus, Jewish Antiquities 20.200 is probably an accidental interpolation or scribal emendation and that the passage was never originally about Christ or Christians. It referred not to James the brother of Jesus Christ, but probably to James the brother of the Jewish high priest Jesus ben Damneus. In this article, though, he also addresses the argument that an original Josephus reference was tampered with to give it more of a Christian flavor. He demonstrates, I think conclusively, that the argument is not as plausible as simply holding that the entire reference is an interpolation. |
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07-23-2013, 10:32 PM | #65 | |
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This very public display as well as that in the temple may have really caught the attention of his eventual accusers: The Gospels spend a fair amount of time showing how the religious leaders challenged his authority--trying to catch him with difficult/trick questions, etc..He had gotten their attention big time. |
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07-23-2013, 10:49 PM | #66 | ||||
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Or was he just wrote in that way afterwards? Quote:
We are not even sure exactly what the kingdom of god translates too, for a Galilean Jew. We know what the different Hellenistic authors had different positions. A Galilean? we have no clue. Quote:
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Being questioned for tax evasion gives credibility towards a Zealot But I think a lot of what your reporting her is later attributes as the Christian movement was separating themselves from Judaism and playing to a Roman audience making the Jews the bad guys. Reality is with 400,000 ish attendants, no matter what he taught or said, he would have been invisible. Actions speak louder then words, and it looks as if his actions are what got him killed. These mirror what a Zealot would do as well. |
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07-24-2013, 05:59 AM | #67 | |||
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07-24-2013, 07:39 AM | #68 | |
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I think this argument would apply to any proposed alternative TF. How do these proposed interpolations occur simultaneously in all subsequent manuscripts? As Carrier points out: the TF appears to not have been in Origen's copy of the TF which was probably directly ancestral to the copies of Eusebius. Yet the copy that Eusebius had did have the TF, in whole, in its current extant state. That with all the other evidence, including the seam evidence, the observation that the TF is out of character for the author to have ever penned, etc., really, in my mind rules out any possibility other than that the TF is a whole interpolation into the text of Josephus. |
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07-24-2013, 09:42 AM | #69 | ||
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Was he a military leader? or one of many unknown traveling teachers? Jesus and Judas bear no similarity. Quote:
ONLY if we follow the mythology as literal. |
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07-24-2013, 12:38 PM | #70 | ||
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Jesus could have thought himself to be the Suffering Servant, and thus been planning his own death, but none of his followers could grasp that idea. Or, he could have thought himself to be heading a revolt against Rome, which failed, and was wiped clean from the record. In either case we may have a strand of the truth -- ie he consistently taught about the 'kingdom of God'., and entrance into Jerusalem could have been his signal that he believed the time had come for it to be revealed, and that was enough to explain why he was killed. What we DON'T have clarity on is why he and not Judas or the Egyptian, or others, was believed so early on to have been resurrected, with a continued movement after his death. Was it because he was actually quite popular with the people, or something more 'quirky' -- ie a few charismatic folks talking about having seen him or having a vision of him, or perhaps there was a Suffering Servant ideology which others quickly applied to Jesus as the paschal lamb sacrifice for Israel's sins? I don't see why it couldn't have been some combination of all 3 of these. |
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