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05-25-2013, 09:37 PM | #81 | |
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The conflict between the Historical Jesus and the Imaginary Jesus is a trope going back to the Biblical claim that many denied that Jesus Christ appeared in the flesh. It is misleading to confine this debate within an academic theory of historiography. |
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05-25-2013, 11:04 PM | #82 | |||||
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Many terms are abused in ordinary communication and we need to overcome the colloquial, the everyday misuse of terms otherwise we just don't communicate in a serious manner. It gets to a stage when people can say either "hot" or "cool" and mean the same thing. In a forum focused on history you should be using terms related to the subject in a formal, yes, technical, manner. Quote:
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05-26-2013, 01:55 AM | #83 | |||
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The debate about the historical Zeus is settled in the negative, although there is still uncertainty about how the myth of Zeus evolved. The Indian Sky God Dyaus Pita is argued to be an etymological source for Zeus Patera, Jupiter and Deus Pater, but there must also be other historical sources for these myths. Similarly, Jesus Christ has an origin in the Jewish concept of the Anointed Saviour, and the debate is whether the Gospel depictions combine this ideal source with information about an actual person, or whether the purported historical details are actually fictional. Quote:
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05-26-2013, 02:28 AM | #84 |
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Robert, I agree with spin here? Why? Because this "real" Jesus incarnated is a matter of faith - the one you have still has the Holy Spirit as his dad, is incarnated.
A historical Jesus is an ordinary bloke, there are various possibilities, rabbi, revolutionary etc. The child of a centurion idea may mean the concept of an hj is much earlier, but the modern one is definitely around the time of modern biblical criticism, which is only a couple of hundred years ago. Starter with Hume? |
05-26-2013, 02:32 AM | #85 |
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Maybe it is not an hj v mj distinction. Maybe we need to describe a continuum of jesi and or christs, with clear dates attached to them.
Starting with Cyrus and ending with "he's just a man" ? |
05-26-2013, 03:23 AM | #86 | ||||
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05-26-2013, 03:49 AM | #87 |
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Oh well, I find spin's comments incomprehensible. Here is how I read this discussion - grateful any clarification if I have misunderstood
It appears that spin believes in the historical Jesus, since he says the relevant distinction in the Bible is between the "real" Jesus and the imaginary one. He presented this idea of a "real" (non imaginary) Jesus in his critique of my argument that the imaginary Jesus is the only real one. And now spin refuses to defend this obscure traditional belief in Jesus that he has apparently advanced. His withdrawal from the debate is apparently because clarification of his obscure ideas on the meaning of history and the "real Jesus" is beneath his dignity, for unstated reasons. |
05-26-2013, 03:54 AM | #88 | |||
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05-26-2013, 04:10 AM | #89 | |
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The term 'real' has changed considerably in meaning over the ages. For the medieval scholastics, "realism" was what we now call "idealism", the religious claim that ideas are real things. The conflicting modern theory was that ideas are just the names of entities, the Ockhamite philosophy known as nominalism. As science advanced, the tables were turned on the scholastics, and only material things were considered real. That is the modern view, asserting the mind-independent existence of a visible real world. Now Clive seems to be saying not only that faith can reveal reality, but that the second person of the holy trinity is the child of the third person, in a novel trinitarian twist. Bringing faith into the picture makes Jesus dependent on mind, hardly a realist picture in the modern sense. |
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05-26-2013, 04:28 AM | #90 |
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The second person is the child of the third person according to both Matthew and Luke!
This is the "real" Jesus - Mary as his mum and the Holy Spirit as his dad. Of course there is then another russian doll here, is Mary immaculately conceived to carry the holy child, and is she now as "mother of god" a member of the godhead quaternity? Turtles and myth all the way down! (and up!) Were there at least two inventions of an historical Jesus? One the son of a centurion, and the later eighteenth century one, thinking there was some residue left after cutting away all the miracles? |
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