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06-18-2013, 05:20 PM | #241 | |
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We have the writings of Philo, Josephus, Tacitus and Suetonius. Vespasian was the Prophesied Messianic ruler, Healer and Savior in the Roman Empire. See Wars of the Jews 6.5.4, Wars of the Jews 7, Tacitus Histories 4, Tacitus Histories 5 and Suetonius "Life of Vespasian". |
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06-18-2013, 05:32 PM | #242 | |
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06-18-2013, 05:33 PM | #243 |
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I don't see how that can be right, since military resistance continued to be attempted even after the destruction of the Temple.
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06-18-2013, 05:39 PM | #244 | ||
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False, on both counts. Not only do you not explain how Christianity started, it started prior to the fall of the temple. Romans ruled with the sword, and crushed Jews time and time again. The fall of the temple was not a demonstration at all, Jews knew all to well the might of the Roman sword. Fact is Jews knew all to well, and fought anyway, its why they sent a backwater character like Pilate to deal with these stubborn people. |
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06-18-2013, 05:40 PM | #245 | |
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Its not right, as you say. Its a case of forcing evidence to fit his hypothesis. |
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06-18-2013, 06:05 PM | #246 | ||
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The demonstration of Roman temporal power was a primary cause of the rise of Christianity, with the recognition by Christians that they could not fight Rome using swords and had to use words. The small number of Jews who kept fighting were easily suppressed. |
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06-18-2013, 06:20 PM | #247 | ||||
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The core of an empire does not require universal consent at the periphery, but it does require that the conversation occurring in the belly of the beast accepts that the imperial actions are legitimate. So the trust required is among Romans, and the lack of trust felt by subjugated people is a secondary factor, easily explained away by those who buy in to the imperial story. By comparison, the USA lost its imperial war in Vietnam in large part because of a loss of faith within the USA. Quote:
Your comments about Pilate and the temple confuse me. Of course the fall of the temple demonstrated Roman power. The subsequent Jewish military resistance failed, while the Christian spiritual resistance succeeded. |
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06-18-2013, 06:52 PM | #248 | ||||||
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Schwartz is reacting to the Brill Josephus Project's editorial team (Mason, et al.) using "Judean" throughout their translation of Josephus's works, rather than "Jew." In his view, it is "political correctness" that made the team choose "Judean." Because it sounds remote, unfamiliar, and historical, unlike "Jew" --- and we've seen what can happen when dumb Christians read stories about ancient Jewry and translate it to the immediate present. (10) There is no good reason not to treat Ioudaios just like Rhomaios. All "Romans" were Roman regardless of whether they were in or from Rome or not. Yes there is, actually. Rhomaios, as far as I know, never carried any intrinsic religious connotation. Ioudaios did. It was probably only within the Jewish religious community that technical terms like "proselyte of the gate," Ger tzedek, Ger toshav, theosobei, and so forth, were used. The outside world made little to no distinction between theosobei who worshipped in synagogues and ethnic Joudaioi. |
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06-18-2013, 06:56 PM | #249 |
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Would that history unrolled that simply. Despite Gibbon, there was far more than Xtianity involved in the Roman Empire's demise, ranging from barbarians to lead in food vessels.
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06-18-2013, 07:05 PM | #250 |
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