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08-01-2013, 10:22 PM | #61 | |||
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The man's name is Anthony Le Donne. I did not label him an apologist. He is not an apologist. But his training is in theology, and he is a committed Christian. He has made the statement that the crucifixion is an absolute fact, when everyone knows that there is no evidence of Jesus' crucifixion outside of the New Testament. I posit that this is some evidence of bias or at least a blind spot in his view of history. I generally do not label anyone as an apologist unless they themselves claim to be an apologist. |
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08-03-2013, 03:15 PM | #62 | |
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Review by Adam Kirsch
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08-03-2013, 04:57 PM | #63 | ||
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In the early Jesus community Jesus was the Son of God--Not a "gentle shepherd" or a Zealot. |
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08-03-2013, 08:52 PM | #64 | ||||
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For all the controversy surrounding this book, it is standard fare and not on the cutting edge of what we know at all. Here's another example: Quote:
That being said, YES, a "Muslim" writer has every right to write a book about Jesus (and that's really why I bought the book anyway). |
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08-04-2013, 01:24 AM | #65 | |||||
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Based on your reference, Aslan book may be filled with logical fallacies like Ehrman's Argument for the Historical Jesus of Nazareth. Quote:
It is completely irrational to assume a character called the Son of God, born of a Ghost, did actually exist and had a real human family when the character was unknown outside the Bible and was NOT even seen or reported to be seen by the very authors of the stories except AFTER he was dead. Quote:
If all that can be presumed to be factual is the crucifixion then there are probably thousands of candidates for an historical Jesus. |
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08-04-2013, 08:33 AM | #66 | |
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Return of the Jesus Wars by Ross Douthat
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08-04-2013, 09:18 AM | #67 | ||
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08-04-2013, 10:19 AM | #68 |
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08-04-2013, 10:41 AM | #69 |
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I've been patiently following this thread as well as one on the Classics List (I keep forgetting to unsubscribe).
The impression I get is this: Reza Aslan has published a popular level book (not a scholarly tome) that describes Jesus from a Muslim perspective, which has nothing whatsoever invested in his alleged divinity. I think he is correct when he says the only incontrovertible fact about Jesus is that he was crucified, and that this was the punishment the Romans put to those considered rebellious towards Roman hegemony, whether they called them "murderers (of masters)," "robbers," "evildoers," etc. All guerilla fighters have been called those things. Almost every negative assessment has been because the message of a Jesus who was a failed anti-Roman rebel is inconvenient. Christians, whether conservative or liberal, as well as the non-believers brought up in Christian society, are not comfortable with that kind of Jesus. Aslan's picture of Jesus is basically that of S G F Brandon (Jesus the Zealot) mixed in with a social perspective influenced by J D Crossan (Birth of Christianity, etc). It has long been established that the Greek term translated "Zealot" was not invented until the time just before the 1st Jewish rebellion. The idea that extreme economic exploitation of the subject peoples was the norm resonates with the POV of many Muslims (because they see the USA as modern day Romans). I had an Iranian friend in college (late 1970s), who explained to me that in his country the US was seen as a creature with its tentacles in every developing country sucking their life juices from them leaving only the dry shell behind. This was before the Khomeini revolution that toppled the Shah Mohamed Reza Pahlavi, seen as an American puppet, and he made me swear not to tell anyone because the Shah had informants everywhere, and those informed against had a bad habit of disappearing, even from the USA. Funny thing is, the Zealot Jesus of Brandon is incompatible with Crossan's social revolutionary counter cultural 1960s student radical Jesus. However, the inconvenience of the message that Jesus could have been reacting to good ol' American (and in general Western) style economic exploitation drives folks to "kill" (marginalize) the messenger (Aslan). DCH |
08-04-2013, 11:57 AM | #70 |
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What do you mean? He is a scholar.
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