FRDB Archives

Freethought & Rationalism Archive

The archives are read only.


Go Back   FRDB Archives > Philosophy & Religious Studies > History of Abrahamic Religions & Related Texts
Welcome, Peter Kirby.
You last visited: Today at 01:23 AM

 
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Old 06-29-2013, 06:13 PM   #531
Contributor
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 18,988
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Grog View Post
Good points. I tend to agree with you more often than not. I am still in the strange contingency phase of accepting late Paul. I have not rejected it. I find it more persuasive to argue from a point where there is agreement on certain elements, such as early Paul. Accepting for the sake of argument, Early Paul, problems for the HJ position are serious, or even fatal.
Early Paul writings do not affect the HJ argument at all. Those who argue for an HJ also argue that the Pauline writings were composed before c 70 CE.

See "Did Jesus Exist?" by Bart Ehrman

It is Late Pauline letters that completely destroy the HJ argument as soon as it is understood that up to at least the Late 2nd century that the Pauline letters were unknown by the Jesus cult, Christians and Non-Apologetics and were not used in the early development of the teachings of the Churches.

Justin Martyr was very specific in "First Apology".

On Sundays, it was the Memoirs of the Apostles and the Books of the Prophets that were read in the Churches.

Justin's First Apology LXVII
Quote:
And on the day called Sunday, all who live in cities or in the country gather together to one place, and the memoirs of the apostles or the writings of the prophets are read, as long as time permits...
Paul was supposed to be a Jew, a Hebrew of Hebrews, who preached Christ crucified in the Roman Empire and supposedly documented his teachings, yet there was no reference to Paul the Jew in multiple Christian writings of antiquity.

Irenaeus, probably the first writer to mention virtually all the letters of the Pauline Corpus, claimed Jesus was crucified at about 50 years according to John and the OTHER Apostles which confirms or suggests the Pauline Corpus was really a late invention.
aa5874 is offline  
Old 06-29-2013, 07:34 PM   #532
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Canberra, Australia
Posts: 635
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by James The Least View Post
His name wasn't John Frum, but he did exist.
Don't know if John Frum :notworthy: is real, but we can be slightly more certain about his brother.

Shades of how "brother of the Lord" is used (of an allegedly Jewish Bishop?) to 'prove' the existence of Jesus.
Robert Tulip is offline  
Old 06-29-2013, 09:43 PM   #533
Contributor
 
Join Date: Feb 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 18,988
Default

The earliest story of Jesus can be found in gMark and it can be seen that the Jesus character of gMark did NOT start the Jesus cult, that he was NOT known as Christ by the Populace, did NOT want the supposed disciples to tell the Populace he was Christ and also BOASTED secretly that he wanted the Populace to Remain in Sin by deliberately speaking Parables.

The Jesus story of gMark is NOT about the start of a new religion.

The story is about the Evil Jews including his disciples.

1. Astonishingly, Jesus claimed Peter was Satan in gMark.


Mark 8:33 KJV
Quote:
--But when he had turned about and looked on his disciples, he rebuked Peter, saying , Get thee behind me, Satan: for thou savourest not the things that be of God, but the things that be of men.
2. Jesus in gMark would be ashamed of Peter in the SECOND coming because he DENIED Jesus.

Mark 8:38 KJV
Quote:
Whosoever therefore shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful generation; of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed , when he cometh in the glory of his Father with the holy angels.
3. In gMark, Jesus would be ASHAMED of his disciples in the SECOND coming because they abandoned him.

Mark 14:50 KJV
Quote:
And they all forsook him, and fled.
4. It would have been better that Judas was not born according to Jesus in gMark.

Mark 14:21 KJV
Quote:
The Son of man indeed goeth , as it is written of him: but woe to that man by whom the Son of man is betrayed ! good were it for that man if he had never been born .
The Jesus story in gMark was NOT about the start of a new religion. It was composed to promote the propaganda that the Jews were Evil and that even the supposed Jewish disciples of Jesus were ASHAMED of him and his own disciple was involve in his Arrest.

It was people of antiquity who BELIEVED the Jews were Evil and Killed the Son of God that started the Jesus cult of Christ.

Aristides, Justin Martyr, Tertullian, Irenaeus, Hippolytus, Origen, Arnobius, Eusebius and others BELIEVED the Jews were Evil and Killed the Son of God.

Up to a thousand years later, Eugene claimed the Jews will burn in Hell if they did not follow the teachings of the Christians.

Quote:
Pope Eugene IV

“The Holy Roman Church firmly believes, professes and preaches that all those who are outside the Catholic Church, not only pagans but also Jews or heretics and schismatics, cannot have a share in eternal happiness; but that they will go into the everlasting fire which was prepared for the Devil and his Angels, unless they unite themselves to the Church before their death.............
aa5874 is offline  
Old 06-30-2013, 03:31 AM   #534
J-D
Moderator - General Religious Discussions
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: New South Wales
Posts: 27,330
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Grog View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by J-D View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by dog-on View Post
The question was what, not who, or even how... the what being things in the air at the time which I think we can identify...

Of course, you are correct in that if the question was actually who or how, as in "Who started Christianity?" or "How, exactly, did Christianity start?", then we may are probably up the proverbial river.
I have never heard of any instance where there is reliable evidence to confirm that a religion was started by things in the air. In every case I am aware of where there is reliable evidence to confirm what happened, a religion was started by a living human, not by things in the air.
J-D, what about religions started by a man who rose from the dead?
I am not sure of the point of your question. If it is based, in part, on the impression that I am advocating some particular theory of how Christianity started, you are mistaken.

That said, I have never heard of any instance where there is reliable evidence to confirm that a person who was truly dead returned to life, and if there never was any such person then obviously it cannot be the case that such a person started a religion.
J-D is offline  
Old 06-30-2013, 03:53 AM   #535
Contributor
 
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Seattle
Posts: 27,602
Default

The thing is JC in the New Testament never rejected Judaism, he reinforced it.


The RCC takes Matthew 16:18 to infer Peter was the first 'pope' and all the Catholic popes are in a line of succession. It us the basis of the RCC claim as the one and only true Christian church. They take the passage to mean the founding of Christianity. I've heard similar from evangelicals o the founding, but not the Peter as pope claims.


http://biblehub.com/matthew/16-18.htm

'...And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it...'

As once explained to me, Jews have no central authority. Jews can consult with cleric for rulings and interpretations on an issue, but there is no recurrent to do so.
steve_bnk is offline  
Old 06-30-2013, 03:58 AM   #536
J-D
Moderator - General Religious Discussions
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: New South Wales
Posts: 27,330
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Grog View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Davka View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Grog View Post
Yes, I think religions can emerge from what is "in the air." I think a lot of advances (if you can call them that) in human thought are collaborative, collective, movements toward new understandings. L. Ron Hubbard didn't just dream up Scientology, he built it on the ideas of others. He might have founded "Scientology" but his underlying ideas were "in the air" already.
I suspect that the primary reason you're having trouble communicating this idea is the use of the phrase "in the air." It's somewhat ambiguous, to say the least. Perhaps you would have better luck with 'dominant social paradigms' or 'contemporary popular concepts' or some similar phrase. "In the air' can be too easily interpreted as having something to do with woo.
I didn't use the term first. I understand the term quite well. I was quoting J-D. But that's a red herring. Move on to some substance, please.

J-D appealed to ignorance, I am responding to that. The idea is that Christianity may have evolved out of ideas that were current in the culture of the time, mostly out of the hellenism and judaism. J-D could not imagine a religion emerging from ideas "in the air." J-D's appeal is the logical fallacy of the appeal to ignorance. At the same time, I can contradict that:

--Three Teaching
--New Age Spirituality

In addition, J-D seems to believe that all religions can be attributed to a founder, but there are religions that we don't even know where they came from. The Romulus cult? What one person founded that? Who founded the Plumed Serpent religion in pre-columbian america? Who founded the Isis cult? Who founded Judaism? Couldn't Judaism itself have emerged as an evolution of Egyptian, Canaanite, and Babylonian religions? Emerging, as it were, from ideas "in the air."

I can't think of a reason for p, therefore not p. That's a fallacy.

Really? That whole post and all you can do is come up with a red herring around the phrase "in the air?"
I only used the expression in response to somebody else using it.

What I did post is not the view you have attributed to me, but this:
Quote:
Originally Posted by J-D View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jaybees View Post
What started Christianity?

There's a larger question here that needs answering. What is it that starts any cult, and why is it that some catch on and flourish while others die aborning?

Buddhism, Xtianity, Islam, Catholicism, Protestantism are still thriving. Once widespread, Zoroastrianism is surviving only in small pockets. Judaism has always been a minority religion, but it continues generation after generation. Mormonism shows promise of lasting for quite a while. On the other hand, Christian Science flourished for a time, but only a whisper of its former self remains.

What gives?
When I try to think of well-documented examples of the beginnings of religions, the common features I see are an individual preaching a religious message and other people accepting it. I don't know of any well-documented example of a religion starting without those ingredients.

Obviously by itself that's not an adequate explanation of the origin of any religion, but it suggests the structure an explanation could have: who was the founding preacher? what was the original message preached? what was that message produced from? what were the founder's motives? what were the characteristics of the first group of people to accept the founder's original message? why did they accept it?

If those questions were answered for Christianity, I think that would count as an explanation of what started Christianity, which I think is a separate question from the subsequent history of Christianity.

'Why did Christianity acquire so many adherents?' may be a more important or more interesting question than 'How did Christianity start?', but 'How did Christianity start?' is the question this thread began with.
If you can refer me to a well-documented example of a religion that started without the ingredients I mentioned--an individual preaching a religious message, and others accepting it--please do.
J-D is offline  
Old 06-30-2013, 06:34 AM   #537
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Japan
Posts: 156
Default

Christianity as we know it started, in some sense, with an individual named Paul preaching a religious message. There was most likely an individual named Cephas as well, preaching a similar, but rival, gospel.

One of the remarkable things about Christianity is that practically nothing about it resembles the religion of its supposed founder, Jesus, or the message the founder allegedly preached, except when anachronistic or anti-Jewish teachings he never could possibly have taught are placed in his mouth.
Tenorikuma is offline  
Old 06-30-2013, 07:20 AM   #538
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Oregon
Posts: 738
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by J-D View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Grog View Post
I didn't use the term first. I understand the term quite well. I was quoting J-D. But that's a red herring. Move on to some substance, please.

J-D appealed to ignorance, I am responding to that. The idea is that Christianity may have evolved out of ideas that were current in the culture of the time, mostly out of the hellenism and judaism. J-D could not imagine a religion emerging from ideas "in the air." J-D's appeal is the logical fallacy of the appeal to ignorance. At the same time, I can contradict that:

--Three Teaching
--New Age Spirituality

In addition, J-D seems to believe that all religions can be attributed to a founder, but there are religions that we don't even know where they came from. The Romulus cult? What one person founded that? Who founded the Plumed Serpent religion in pre-columbian america? Who founded the Isis cult? Who founded Judaism? Couldn't Judaism itself have emerged as an evolution of Egyptian, Canaanite, and Babylonian religions? Emerging, as it were, from ideas "in the air."

I can't think of a reason for p, therefore not p. That's a fallacy.

Really? That whole post and all you can do is come up with a red herring around the phrase "in the air?"
I only used the expression in response to somebody else using it.

What I did post is not the view you have attributed to me, but this:
Quote:
Originally Posted by J-D View Post
When I try to think of well-documented examples of the beginnings of religions, the common features I see are an individual preaching a religious message and other people accepting it. I don't know of any well-documented example of a religion starting without those ingredients.

Obviously by itself that's not an adequate explanation of the origin of any religion, but it suggests the structure an explanation could have: who was the founding preacher? what was the original message preached? what was that message produced from? what were the founder's motives? what were the characteristics of the first group of people to accept the founder's original message? why did they accept it?

If those questions were answered for Christianity, I think that would count as an explanation of what started Christianity, which I think is a separate question from the subsequent history of Christianity.

'Why did Christianity acquire so many adherents?' may be a more important or more interesting question than 'How did Christianity start?', but 'How did Christianity start?' is the question this thread began with.
If you can refer me to a well-documented example of a religion that started without the ingredients I mentioned--an individual preaching a religious message, and others accepting it--please do.
I already did. Who was the individual who preached the religious message that became Judaism? Who was the individual who originally preached the message that became what we call kabbalah? Who was the individual who first taught the Three Teachings?

Example 1: Taosim

Interestingly, Laozi is the traditionally considered the founder of Taoist thought, but his actual existence is disputed:


Laozi is traditionally regarded as the founder of Taoism and is closely associated in this context with "original", or "primordial", Taoism.[17] Whether he actually existed is commonly disputed...(wikipedia)

In the mid-twentieth century a consensus had emerged among scholars that the historicity of Laozi was doubtful or unprovable and that the Tao Te Ching was "a compilation of Taoist sayings by many hands.

From wikipedia:

Taoism evolved in response to changing times, with its doctrine and associated practices being revised and refined.

My point is that it is not so extreme to consider the contingency that the evolution of Christianity followed a similar path. In fact, the hypothesis is pretty much identical:

Christianity evolved in response to changing times, with its doctrine and associated practices being revised and refined.

The evolution of Christianity would be much like the evoluton of Taosim, with philosophies and ideas accreting to the character "Jesus Christ," a name like Laozi that is heavy with associated meaning. It emerged in a time of change and turbulence as hellenism collided with judaism, with Christianity being a amalgam, a synthesis, of ideas. Different groups adopted the emerging philosophy in different ways so we see a great diversity of Christian thought (which is not what we find when a cult is founded by a charismatic founder: see Scientology, LDS, for examples).

My point is that your focus on an individual founder is entirely too limiting to the debate.

By the way, my position has always been that the so-called "Mythicist" hypothesis ought to be taken seriously. I often argue in favor of it because I see it so misunderstood and misrepresented. I was very disappointed in Ehrman's book because he clearly did not take the hypothesis seriously. I would like to see more scholarly work that is not framed by the assumption that Christianity was founded by a single founder (Jesus Christ). I think doing so, would open up a lot of fruitful avenues in researching the Origins of Christianity. The focus is too narrow, is my point.

My feeling is that we would benefit from accepting these premises:

Jesus Christ is traditionally regarded as the founder of Christianity and is closely associated in this context with "original", or "primordial", Christianity.[17] Whether he actually existed is commonly disputed...(wikipedia)

In the mid-21st century a consensus had emerged among scholars that the historicity of Jesus Christ was doubtful or unproveable and that the teachings of Jesus were "a compilation of Christian sayings by many hands.

Example 2: Judaism

Let's take a look at the origins of another religion: Judaism. Again, no single individual can be attributed with the founding of Judaism. There isn't a person who preached a message and gained followers and thus started a religion to be identified. Traditionally held founders such as Abraham and Moses are mostly considered to have not existed, and certainly their actual existence is greatly in doubt.

from wikipedia;

The ancient roots of Judaism lie in the Bronze Age polytheistic Ancient Semitic religions, specifically Canaanite religion, a syncretization with elements of Babylonian religion and of the worship of Yahweh reflected in the early prophetic books of the Hebrew Bible.

The central founding myth of the Israelite nation is the Exodus of the Israelites from Egypt under the guidance of Moses, followed by the conquest of the Promised Land (Canaan). There is little or no archaeological or historical evidence to support these accounts, and although they may in part originate as early as the 10th century BCE, they reached something like their present form only in the 5th to 4th centuries BCE, when they were edited to comply with the theology of Second Temple Judaism.

The central event to the founding of the nation of Israel is a myth. The supposed founders are likewise mythical.

Example 3: Kabbalah

The traditional founder of Kabbalah is Adam. Are you starting to see a pattern here? Religious schools of thought founded by non-historical people?

from wikipedia:

Contemporary scholarship suggests that various schools of Jewish esotericism arose at different periods of Jewish history, each reflecting not only prior forms of mysticism, but also the intellectual and cultural milieu of that historical period. Answers to questions of transmission, lineage, influence, and innovation vary greatly and cannot be easily summarised.

Where is the individual in this story who "preached a message?"

I am not saying that it is never the case that an individual preaching a message founds a religion. There are many examples of that as well: Scientology, possibly Islam (though I am doubtful about that), LDS. One thing that is common to these, at least the confirmed ones, is that there is an initial controlled message. Religions that evolve see diversity in thought and practice, and less control over message. Christianity follows the path of an evolved religion much more than a founded one (it seems to me).
Grog is offline  
Old 06-30-2013, 07:40 AM   #539
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Feb 2012
Location: Oregon
Posts: 738
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by Tenorikuma View Post
Christianity as we know it started, in some sense, with an individual named Paul preaching a religious message. There was most likely an individual named Cephas as well, preaching a similar, but rival, gospel.

One of the remarkable things about Christianity is that practically nothing about it resembles the religion of its supposed founder, Jesus, or the message the founder allegedly preached, except when anachronistic or anti-Jewish teachings he never could possibly have taught are placed in his mouth.
We know from Paul's own writings that Christianity existed before Paul. Paul cannot be the individual to whom we can attribute the origins of Christianity, nor really "Christianity as we know it" considering the very considerable differences between the Christianity that Paul taught and the Christianity now practiced.

There is one important similarity: to Paul and to modern Christians, Jesus is a being who does not exist on Earth and communicates to his followers through revelation.
Grog is offline  
Old 06-30-2013, 07:52 AM   #540
Veteran Member
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: USA
Posts: 4,095
Default

Grog, what do you mean "we know from Paul's own writings, etc." Since when do we know who wrote the epistles attributed to someone named Paul? And where is there evidence that the epistles were written when the Church states they were (i.e. in the first century or even 2nd century)? Where is the evidence that they were written by someone named Paul, and where is there evidence that there was "Christianity" before this alleged Paul's letters?

Quote:
Originally Posted by Grog View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by Tenorikuma View Post
Christianity as we know it started, in some sense, with an individual named Paul preaching a religious message. There was most likely an individual named Cephas as well, preaching a similar, but rival, gospel.

One of the remarkable things about Christianity is that practically nothing about it resembles the religion of its supposed founder, Jesus, or the message the founder allegedly preached, except when anachronistic or anti-Jewish teachings he never could possibly have taught are placed in his mouth.
We know from Paul's own writings that Christianity existed before Paul. Paul cannot be the individual to whom we can attribute the origins of Christianity, nor really "Christianity as we know it" considering the very considerable differences between the Christianity that Paul taught and the Christianity now practiced.

There is one important similarity: to Paul and to modern Christians, Jesus is a being who does not exist on Earth and communicates to his followers through revelation.
Duvduv is offline  
 

Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -8. The time now is 12:13 PM.

Top

This custom BB emulates vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2015, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.