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08-24-2013, 07:07 AM | #231 | ||
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No manuscript of the Jesus story has ever been found in Galilee or Jerusalem and dated to the time of John the Baptist. Non-Apologetic sources wrote nothing of Nazareth and Nothing of Jesus of Nazareth. Apologetic sources admitted that there was NO acknowledgment by Jews that the Messiah had come. The story of Jesus as the LORD and Baptized by John is a monstrous FABLE. Mark 1:3 KJV Quote:
Essentially, the author of gMark, introduce his Jesus as a Myth character. The 'Lord' is a Mythological character in Jewish Scripture and the Septuagint. |
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08-24-2013, 07:46 AM | #232 | |
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[t2]John started a messianic expectation group John got whacked His supporters continued expectantly Paul had his revelation about a savior/messiah already having saved Paul converts a lot of people to his already saved religion Paul dies and his proselytes speculate about the relationship between Jesus and John If John is Elijah, then Jesus is Elisha, so John passes the mantle by baptizing Jesus[/t2] do you think that the criterion of embarrassment would say that it was historically likely that Jesus was baptized by John? You'll still get a later redactor deciding that it would be good to clarify a bit about baptism. |
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08-24-2013, 07:57 AM | #233 | |||
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I am not clear why equating the Son of Man with Messiah may be begging the question, Andrew. Jesus makes the connection himself, first at C-P (8:29-31) and then answering the high priest. If Jesus answers the question "are you the Christ" by "I am", then I do not see any reason to doubt that when he predicts in 10:33-34 : "Behold, we are going up to Jerusalem; and the Son of man will be delivered to the chief priests and the scribes, and they will condemn him to death, and deliver him to the Gentiles; and they will mock him, and spit upon him, and scourge him, and kill him; and after three days he will rise." he means that the "Son of Man" is the "Messiah". It looks as though Mark fully intended to deploy the SoM as a christological title. I am doubtful in the utility of searching for "pre-Christian tradition" since the suffering and manner of death of the Messiah was supplied by Paul. Best, Jiri |
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08-24-2013, 08:14 AM | #234 | ||
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It is clearly stated that John the Baptist PREPARED the way of the LORD using a passage found in Hebrew Scripture or the Septuagint. The Lord is the God of the Jews in Hebrew Scripture and the Septuagint. Mark 1 Quote:
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08-24-2013, 09:17 AM | #235 | ||
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08-24-2013, 09:28 AM | #236 | ||
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You are the one who referred to posts as "irrational" while simultaneously introducing the irrationality of supposed "mainstream scholars" Quote:
It is illogical to presume that gMark is an historical account of Jesus when every single account of Jesus in gMark of Jesus is either fiction, implausible or without corroboration by non-apologetic sources. The Jesus character, the Lord, was unknown by John the Baptist and was ONLY recognized when the Holy Ghost bird descended upon him and there was a voice from heaven. The criterion of embarrassment cannot be applied or it is irrational to apply it to the baptism fables in the Gospels. |
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08-24-2013, 03:03 PM | #237 | |||||
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08-24-2013, 06:08 PM | #238 | ||
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Best, Jiri |
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08-24-2013, 11:28 PM | #239 | |
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There is no actual evidence that gMatthew reflects real historical accounts. The Baptism event as described in gMatthew must have been or most likely was made up. |
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08-25-2013, 05:19 AM | #240 | |||||||||||
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Consider the legends concerning Dietrich von Bern. In the middle ages they were known over the geographical area from Sweden to Austria. They tell of a hero who hailed from Verona (<-Bern) and "Dietrich" is a form of the name we know as "Theoderic", as in the famous Gothic king of Italy who ousted Odoacer. In fact Dietrich of legend is Theoderic, who inspired a vast body of stories, mostly unrelated to any historical events, though some of the other figures are also known from the past, including Attila (called "Etzel"), who died the year before Theoderic was born. If we only had the legends, you could strip away all the stories and end up clutching a few names. Through "reductio ad absurdum" you could then conclude that there is no history to be found in these stories and dismiss Dietrich von Bern as having been a figment of middle ages storytelling. Fortunately, we have external indications that Theoderic was a successful leader ("Theoderic the Great"), though not located at Verona but at Ravenna, and ultimate source on whom the legends developed. The religion that has maintained the tradition around Jesus doesn't need the translation of the figure of Jesus into a historical figure. That translation reflects the desire of scholars wanting to have a version of Jesus to suit their historicizing consciousness. Quote:
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