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08-14-2013, 07:18 AM | #31 |
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Ehrman, Apocalyptic Prophet of the New Millennium, Oxford, 1999, p.135, writes:
[t2]when Jesus talks about himself as the Son of Man in the Gospels—as he frequently does—there's no way to know... whether that's the way he actually talked or if that's how Christians—who believed he was the Son of Man—"remembered" him talking. But in sayings like Mark 8:38, there is no indication that he is talking about himself.... ...since Christians thought Jesus was the Son of Man, it seems unlikely that they would make up a saying in such a way as to leave it in question whether he was referring to himself. That means Jesus probably did say the words now found in Mark 8:38.[/t2] Here we see Ehrman attempt to assert this criterion of embarrassment, while providing himself with elements that could help him see why the argument is fallacious. He reasonably assumes that there are two instances in time indicated by sayings where 1) the son of man refers to someone else and 2) the son of man refers to himself. Then for some reason he assumes a kind of uniformity of all christians across time such that they believed Jesus was the son of man, so that (some) christians could not have believed Jesus referred to someone else, so that when the son of man referred to someone else "Jesus probably did say" that. He does not conceive that we may be looking at formulations from two different stages in the christian tradition each shaped by the christians who passed on their tradition. We don't know the needs of the writers. We can only overlay our own prejudices with a tool like embarrassment. |
08-14-2013, 08:22 AM | #32 | |
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The "criterion of embarrassment" is an excellent criterion because it is a reliable indicator of how human beings behave. The problem is in knowing how to apply it to someone other than ourselves. Can we really know that something was embarrassing to someone else when they don't explicitly state that it was? Sometimes we can be very confident, based on all the other information that is related. In those cases there may always be another explanation, of course. But to throw out the criteria simply because we can never "know" how another culture might perceive something would be foolish. It's an excellent criterion. |
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08-14-2013, 08:43 AM | #33 | ||
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I'm sure we can find some real instances when it's valid to point out that someone mentions something that he considers to be embarassing, but historical Jesus scholars don't seem to be dealing with cases like that. |
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08-14-2013, 08:56 AM | #34 | |
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As to whether it was 'embarrassing' to Mark or not, we cannot say one way or the other as to whether it was. All we know is that it WAS embarrassing to OTHERS, and as so it MAY HAVE been embarrassing also to Mark, but that he left it in because it was a critical to explaining how/why Jesus started his own ministry. To dismiss all this embarrassment simply because we don't know what Mark really thought about it is to throw away 'evidence' that is meaningful. |
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08-14-2013, 09:12 AM | #35 | |||||
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We are about to get a load of codswallop that you paint for yourself as "common sense". Yet again, we come to a topic in which there is nothing common Quote:
Perhaps if they act like you. Quote:
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Someone else can hold your hand. |
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08-14-2013, 09:19 AM | #36 | |||||
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The Baptism event was a Sign to IDENTIFY the Son of God. The story of the Baptism of Jesus was NOT ever claimed to be embarrassing by the Jesus cult of antiquity. The Baptism of Jesus by John was fabricated to introduced a Holy Ghost and that God was PLEASED with the baptism of Jesus by the Holy Ghost. Every author of the Gospel claimed that the Holy Ghost entered Jesus or descended upon him at the Baptism by John. Mark 1 Quote:
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08-14-2013, 09:23 AM | #37 |
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08-14-2013, 09:40 AM | #38 | ||
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08-14-2013, 09:49 AM | #39 | |||
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08-14-2013, 10:08 AM | #40 | |
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It is extremely disturbing to me when the Baptism of Jesus is Singled out as a most PLEASING event yet people mis-represent the very Bible which they seem to believe.
There are ONLY two PLEASING events in the Jesus story-- the Baptism and the Transfiguration of Jesus. When will this blatant erroneous debunked fallacy end? The Baptism of Jesus when the Holy Ghost descended upon him is one of the MOST significant event in the early fables of Jesus. Mark 1 Quote:
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