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06-15-2013, 08:58 AM | #161 | ||||||
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It would be an amazing coincidence if a cosmic Christ cult arose in Rome independent of a later "terrestrial" Christ cult in Judea. I wouldn't say that Christianity was purely Hellenistic, but by that time everybody was "Hellenized" anyway. I think they were a later generation of people whose parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents had converted to the Judean religion in the previous century. Their forebears worshipped YHWH in temples in the diaspora, but they weren't ethnic Jews. Over time, rifts developed between the ethnically Jewish Kohenim and Hasidim and their Gentile converts, resulting in some Gentiles leaving and starting their own form of Judaism. This all happened long before the fall of the temple. |
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06-15-2013, 09:13 AM | #162 | ||
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06-15-2013, 09:30 AM | #163 | |
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Why did Apollos, who was preaching the religion of John and thus speaking, as christians believed, about Jesus truly, need to be taken aside and corrected? We can see a Johannine religion, which was a species of messianism. Paul admits, when he was still adherent to conservative Judaism, to having hassled messianists. But when he had his revelation concerning Jesus, he went to Jerusalem to speak with the Jewish messianists, who showed no apparent interest in his new theology. They parted amicably, but Paul later took the opportunity to repudiate Cephas for his lack of adherence to Jewish practices unless browbeaten by agents of James. These guys certainly didn't follow the teachings of Jesus, when he was made say he fulfilled the law and it wasn't necessary any more. Nobody apparently told the Jerusalem messianists. So Paul turned his back and proselytized in Anatolia and Greece. We have no evidence for belief in Jesus prior to Paul, so what really makes anyone think that the earliest Jesus believers were Jewish?? |
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06-15-2013, 09:35 AM | #164 | |
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True and not true. Certain Jewish sect were not as open to Hellenism as others. This was also a socioeconomic division with wealth favoring Hellenism. Many of the poor Jewish peasants had less Hellenistic influence in their lives, and would have looked at this as a perversion of their religion. Like the Zealots, who had a zeal for tradition and law. Even the Pharisees were split on this. |
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06-15-2013, 09:37 AM | #165 | |
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That Messiah could be killed was an idea which pre-dates Christianity by at least a century, if not more. There are references to the "suffering servant" Messiah Ben Joseph concept in the Dead Sea Scrolls, as well as in the Talmud. One line of thought was that there would be two Messiahs, because the Messianic prophecies in the Tanakh are so varied and contradictory that it seems impossible for one person to fulfill them all. As for the idea that the Jews killed their Messiah, this is a perfect explanation for why YHWH would allow the Romans to destroy Jerusalem and the Temple. Clearly, the Jews must have done something to annoy YHWH - and the OT makes it pretty clear that annoying YHWHJ always leads to ugly consequences for the Jews. It makes perfect sense that one group among the Diaspora Jews would have latched onto such an explanation. It makes even more sense when you recognize that there was a widely-held belief that Messiah would come and overturn the Roman rule. In fact, the events which precipitated the destruction of the Temple were motivated at least in part by the belief that Messiah would arise to lead the Jews to victory. And since many OT prophecies place Messiah in the Temple, its destruction would mean that either A) Messiah could not come until the Temple was rebuilt, or B) Messiah had already come, but had not been recognized. Since there was a proliferation of Messainic wannabes during the Roman occupation, there were any number of candidates available for those who thought Messiah might have already come. The Jesus stories might well be based on a compilation of many such wannabes. |
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06-15-2013, 09:48 AM | #166 | ||||||
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The authors who wrote about the character called Jesus claimed he was born AFTER his mother was made pregnant by a Ghost or that he was God the Creator. The Pauline writer claimed Jesus was made a Quickening Spirit. It was already known in antiquity in Greek mythology that Perseus was born of a Virgin. Justin's Dialogue with Trypho Quote:
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06-15-2013, 09:51 AM | #167 | |
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06-15-2013, 09:56 AM | #168 | |||
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I am under the impression that it is more than just the claims of numerous Church Fathers, including Papias, that support an early text of aramaic origin. The few quotations Jerome gave, I thought, are considered to support the claim to having Aramaic origins. You sure about the claim of a later text? Heretical, yes, but later? I thought they rejected it because of its adherence to Mosiac law--something consistent with an early Jewish-Christian Nazarene sect. |
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06-15-2013, 10:03 AM | #169 | |||
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06-15-2013, 10:11 AM | #170 | |||||
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