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05-23-2013, 09:48 PM | #201 | ||
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05-24-2013, 05:08 AM | #202 | |||||
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Pharisees, Sadducees, and Essenes Quote:
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The longer paragraph descends into some more BS. The Pharisees didn't propose an Oral Law but an Oral Tradition as we have discussed before. The Oral Law is a Rabbinic concept. The concept of them not believing in an afterlife is from Josephus and Mark so far as I understand it. This is probably versus a claim in the Talmud that they did if Dufi can find it. |
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05-24-2013, 05:27 AM | #203 |
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It wouldn't matter the source because you wouldn't accept it anyway. Their belief in the afterlife was influenced by the Greeks. Their belief in any punishment only covered this world according to theplain meaning of the Torah text, and not the next world.
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05-24-2013, 05:32 AM | #204 | ||
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This is the criteria. where is the broken pottery of 2 1/2 million Israelites? The new wells? The gravesites of 2 1/2 millions of that era The new farms, the terraced slopes, the new cisterns dug by 2 12 million people No, the criteria are OBVIOUS. It would leave very obvious artifacts in vast quantity that suddenly appear. Now, archeologists have been intensely excavatiing Israel for well over a century and the obvious artifacts we would expect of 2 1/2 new inbitants are not found as the MUST be if there was any truth to exodus. Your rhetorical question is meaningless. Even if we cut the OT numbers by a factor of ten, the resultiing 250,000 new inhabitants would have changed the face of Paslestine dramatically. Anybody who has read the books about israelite archaeology knows the movement to hill top settlements changed the archaeology and was easiily discernable in numbers far, far less than 2 1/2 millions. The 30,000 or so Philistines made obvious changes easily found. The basic torah makes claims that leave no room for error. but it has alll proven false. untrue. Nobody iis going to became an orthodox jew based on this nonsense. 2 1/2 million Jews march into palestine and immediately disappear from the archaeological record. And that shows us it is all an ancient lie wriitten by a lying preist many years later. Cheerful Charlie |
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05-24-2013, 05:38 AM | #205 | |
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Where do we find someone saying that the Sadducees believed in the afterlife? |
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05-24-2013, 05:49 AM | #206 | ||
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The Flood of Noah and the Flood of Gilgamesh This has a table in the back comparing similarities. I'd stop short of calling them identical. My impression is that this was copied from a source as opposed to being some local campfire story. Babylonian_law and Assyrian Law obviously influenced the bible. http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/...4_0_03317.html Quote:
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05-24-2013, 05:59 AM | #207 |
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Oh is that all you want? For us to lay out what we would consider proof of the Exodus? Is that all? Here it is:
A date, within a certain reasonable margin for error, typical for events of the era. AND Evidence of the Exodus in Egypt: Different Pharaohs clearly identified, (real names within the conventional chronology) evidence of large hebrew population, evidence of the plagues (via records, or a big collection male mummies all hastily prepared and stuffed in tombs together, economic downturn caused by the calamities and deaths, etc) AND Evidence of the wandering in the desert: Encampments etc, as described in recent posts. AND Evidence of the arrival and conquest of Caanaan. This obviously cannot be established without FIRST establishing a date, because as is pointed out, various cities claimed to have been conquered were abandoned at certain times. You must establish a date that links evidence in Egypt with evidence in Caanaan, because that is the crux of the issue. A local disturbance in Caanaan cannot be claimed as evidence of the Exodus, unless it happens at the proper time relative to disturbances in Egypt. Good luck. |
05-24-2013, 07:50 AM | #208 |
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And, as token of goodwill and fairness, I will give evidence of my position: That people can make up ridiculously false stories about the past, cloak them in the garb of religion, and have large numbers of people believe them without question, even though there is absolutely no archaelogical evidence to support them. The evidence of this I submit is:
Joseph Smith and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints. The Mormon belief system revolves around the idea that there was a vast civilization here in North America, which was visited by the resurrected Jesus. This civilization was later destroyed by the ancestors of the present Native Americans, and its writings were preserved and passed down to Smith himself. Of course, there is absolutely no archaeological evidence to support this, yet is believed by many. I submit that this story was obviously invented, and passed down as doctrine of faith. That many 'scholars' and theologians have written in defense of this, and that they are not stupid people, despite being wrong. That this is analogous to the situation of the Exodus and the Jews. |
05-24-2013, 08:02 AM | #209 | |||
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Instead of getting further into the weeds, it may be a good idea to discuss the point and that is that these stories were stories that the people in this region were familiar with and therefore were used in one form or another in the scripture as the religion evolved. I don't believe this was an over-night process. The Hebrew religion evolved over centuries. |
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05-24-2013, 08:27 AM | #210 | |||
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The idea is that they took the Canaanite stuff and discarded what they didn't like and in some cases made things different just on general principles. He dates a lot of the Torah to mid first temple times, which seems dubious to me. On the other hand I'm not sure how his opinions are viewed by more radical scholars. For example, he considers the bird sacrifices in Leviticus a later addition. These discussions would be much more interesting without the craziness (for lack of a better term) of the "traditional" view. Do we really want to argue with someone who claims Moses wrote the Torah, when we are in the 21st century? The issue of the source is very interesting, I suspect it had to be written. Maybe something from the Assyrians. |
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