Author |
Topic Search Topic Options
|
Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 01:12 |
SteveG wrote:
Dean wrote:
Against my better judgement, but here goes nothing...
Tacitus wrote of christians in 112CE and Suetonius in 119CE, both during their account of the reign of Nero and the burning of Rome in 64CE so they were not writing about a real person as such so their source for the origins of christianity are most likely to have come from the christians themselves, either from the gospels (such as Mark, written some 40 years earlier) or simply as common knowledge.
AFAIK the Dead Sea Scrolls, despite being fairly comprehensive on the torah and ketuvium books (especially those concerned with mosaic law), are actually extremely fragmented and thin on texts from the nevi'im History books.
SteveG wrote:
However, the chronicles of these writers was the media of it's age and that these accounts are independent of the gospels only falls into focus when supported against the histories written by the Jewish historian Josephus, at approximately the same time, on behalf of the Roman emperor Trajan after the Romans destroyed Jerusalem in 70 CE. Josephus did plainly state, without much fanfare in a unadorned passage (when stripped of an inane later Christian introjection) about Christ, that he did actually live and was crucified by Pontius Pilate, along with many other Jews for sedition. |
Well, no. It doesn't. Aside from the blatantly obvious observation that once the text had been corrupted by later christian embellishment, (of which there is very little doubt) then its veracity becomes highly questionable, one also has to ask where Josephus came by this piece of information in 93CE if not from the christians themselves? So using the claims of the christians to prove the provenance of the claims of the christians is the very definition of a circular argument. There is nothing to show that Josephus' account was independent of the gospels given that three of the four gospels were written before his Testimonium Flavianum.
Now, I haven't actually come down on one side or the other as to whether Jesus existed or not, and I don't see much reason to vote either way.
SteveG wrote:
Edit: Btw, The Dead Sea Scrolls maybe highly fragmented, but what is legible does not conflict with any of the writings of the Hebrew canon.
|
I never said they did, so what's your point?
| Here goes nothing? Correct, as you put nothing of value forward. |
Dismissing and thus ignoring the question I posed regarding the source of Josephus' information as "nothing of value" is cute, but not unexpected. My judgement proves to be right again.
SteveG wrote:
Forgive me. I don't have time, or the eyesight, for a good old dust up these days so I'll make this as brief as possible.
First off, the removal of interpolations form Josephus' writing of Jesus from the writings commonly known as the Antiquities is and has been widely excepted by generations of biblical scholars, and is believed to put forward an accurate account that Jesus of Nazareth actually lived and was crucified for sedition by the Roman prefect known in the New Testament as Pontius Pilate. Josephus, unlike the gospels, makes no apologies and holds the Romans accountable for their brutal mistreatment and murder of numerous Jews during their 30 year occupation of Judea.
Secondly, Josephus' also related the lives of New Testament figures John the Baptist and James the Brother of Jesus, without any fantastic Christian invention such as miracles, resurrection, etc., similar to his depiction of Jesus. Not ironically, Josephus' messianic comrades of temple priests actually killed James on the steps of the great temple in Jerusalem.
There is no apologetics in any of Josephus' writings regarding these people and events. |
So what? You appear to put great weight on this observation but it does not make what he actually wrote any more factual if he doesn't cite his sources.
Note here I am not stating as absolute fact that Jesus did not exist and that Pilate didn't have him executed (I've not opined on that at all, nor will I), I merely point out that none of the non-christian historians can be regarded has wholly independent of any previous christian version, either oral or written, as you (and others) seem to imply. Therefore claiming these as evidence that Jesus did exist isn't as conclusive as it first appears.
SteveG wrote:
I place Josephus' quote on Jesus below with the later interpolation and with the interpolation removed so that other members can see what we're discussing:
About this time there lived Jesus, a wise man, if indeed one ought to call him a man. For he was one who performed surprising deeds and was a teacher of such people as accept the truth gladly. He won over many Jews and many of the Greeks. He was the Christ. And when, upon the accusation of the principal men among us, Pilate had condemned him to a cross, those who had first come to love him did not cease. He appeared to them spending a third day restored to life, for the prophets of God had foretold these things and a thousand other marvels about him. And the tribe of the Christians, so called after him, has still to this day not disappeared. Flavius Josephus: Antiquities of the Jews, Book 18 chapter 3,3 Redacted without the later Christian interpolations:About this time there lived Jesus, a wise man, if indeed one ought to call him a man. For he was one who performed surprising deeds and was a teacher of such people as accept the truth gladly. He won over many Jews and many of the Greeks. He was (called) the Christ. And when, upon the accusation of the principal men among us, Pilate had condemned him to a cross. And the tribe of the Christians, so called after him, has still to this day not disappeared.
This long held belief by academics to the accuracy of Josephus' passage on Jesus is supported by scholars as faithful as N.T. Wright to as sceptical as John Dominic Crossan and Reza Aslan. This is no way a circular argument. However, you are free to accept it or reject as you wish. |
The redacted version is what it says on the tin - an a priori reconstruction of what academics believe the original could have said. Argue as much as you like, unless the original text as Josephus wrote it is rediscovered then all we have are educated guesses as to what the actual wording was. Agapius, an Arabic christian writing some 700 years after Eusebius, cited Josephus yet his quotation does not contain the words christ or christian, which is curious to say the least in light of the later redacted version that does.
I find it highly unlikely that the Testimonium is a forgery or later invention (IMO that claim is just silly blustering) but once a text has been corrupted any attempt to recreate the original, however well-meaning, can only be a guess.
However, none of that is particularly relevant if the source of Josephus' information is unknown. If, as I suggested with Tacitus and Suetonius, this was simply based upon common (i.e. oral) knowledge then consider then where that oral history came from and who maintained the oral tradition in the intervening years.
SteveG wrote:
As for the Dead Sea Scrolls, I wanted to make sure that I understood you correctly. With two thirds of the known Old Testament remarkably preserved for two millennia and first written a thousand years before that, I thought that you would give some credit to a oral tradition that had only been around for 60 years. Not a lot of time when compared with two thousand years for DDS, is it? |
Then you thought wrong as there is no correlation between how old a written text is and the time-interval of an oral tradition, as someone once said: "Oral sources can also evolve over time and be corrupted.". Oral traditions also include hearsay, mythology and invention.
My only point about the Dead Sea scrolls was they are not a factual history book and I strongly doubt that they were ever intended to be.
Edited by Dean - January 25 2017 at 02:37
|
What?
|
|
Davesax1965
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 23 2013
Location: UK
Status: Offline
Points: 2839
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 01:34 |
Many Bible proponents seem to totally ignore the Old Testament. Whilst being, or striving to be the meek little forgiving lamb of BabyJesus, they tend to ignore that the Old Testament was a bit different.
And it's very often misinterpreted.
For example, 2 Samuel 12.31. King David captures the town of Rabbeh.
King James version -
"And he brought forth the people that were therein, and put them under saws, and under harrows of iron, and under axes of iron, and made them pass through the brickkiln: and thus did he unto all the cities of the children of Ammon. So David and all the people returned unto Jerusalem."
So, good old KD has the inhabitants tortured by sawing in half and passes them through a brick kiln. Praise the Lord.
Later interpretations go like this....
"He brought out the troops who were there and put them to work with saws, hoes, and axes. He did the same to all the Ammonite cities. Then David and all the troops returned to Jerusalem."
Yeah right. So the Bible is totally open to interpretation.
Jesus ? No thank you. I don't buy into it or any other religion. Religion is the fear of death. Having nearly died, I didn't go for the "deathbed conversion" - I just accepted that was that, lights out. I see no proof for religion, I see no proof of any life after death, and if Jesus existed - highly debatable - I certainly can't see any proof that he was the "son of God".
Edited by Davesax1965 - January 25 2017 at 01:35
|
|
|
Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 02:10 |
lazland wrote:
What I find most unutterably depressing about yet another thread designed to goad those of us who believe in the nature of God, or who try to take an intellectual opinion and view on such matters, is that it was started by a chap who, according to his profile, is fifty bloody three. 53.... A year older than me. I thought Eddie was about 17. It is clearly his mental age. I find these threads horrible, because they seem designed simply to goad and cause trouble. They inevitably succeed. I regard both Dean and you as being two of the best members of this site, and I dislike it a lot when your exchanges result in conflict. |
Alas, if I am involved then conflict is inevitable as I will invariably question any claim that is presented as truth if it cannot be proven as such. Science (in which I include history and archaeology but not historical commentary) is not about certainty and absolute truths.
lazland wrote:
At the end of the day, threads like this will never have members such as Dean, you, and others, including me, agreeing. |
I'm fine with disagreements, it only hacks me off when it gets personal. It saddens me when the argument is replaced by dismissiveness and belittlement.
lazland wrote:
In fact, they are depressing, because reasonable debate, which I love, is hijacked by blithering bloody idiots who simply seem to really enjoy merely taking the piss out of honestly held beliefs. |
I despise that behaviour, you'll see none of that from me. I know I should make a stand against such posts when they are made but I also know that feeding a troll is succumbing to the goading rather than rising above it.
lazland wrote:
I will not name him, but I have received a PM from one such member, a highly respected member of the site, who really hates these things, and has been tempted to leave because of it. |
I suspect I know of who you mean. to paraphrase Spock: he has been, and always shall be, my friend.
lazland wrote:
This is where, I believe, that moderation needs to be a damned sight stronger here. Posts designed to goad should simply be hidden, and only those designed to inform and influence allowed to remain on view. |
I can't fully agree here but then I've never been in favour of strong moderation here or anywhere. I see those kinds of posts as what they are and the people who make them for what they are. While they may think it makes them look smart, it just shows them up as bigoted idiots, and that evidence should remain for all to see. (IMO).
|
What?
|
|
Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 02:20 |
SteveG wrote:
I think you just said that we're all idiots, Logan. Fair enough, but Dean hasn't responded yet.
Just kidding. |
only just...
|
What?
|
|
twseel
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 15 2012
Location: abroad
Status: Offline
Points: 22767
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 02:27 |
EddieRUKiddingVarese wrote:
twseel wrote:
Watch out Aussie, these admins have banned some respectable men before... |
Is that a warning or a threat? |
A warning, certainly no threat, what could I threaten you with? To be fair I don't really notice any insulting or trolling in Eddie's posts... He seems to discuss the existence of Christ in the same way he would the life of Ötzi the Iceman, involving science but also employing some light-hearted(granted, sometimes juvenile) speculation, which might then seem insulting to people who view Christ in a higher personal regard than mr. Ötzi for example, I guess...
|
|
|
Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 02:36 |
twseel wrote:
EddieRUKiddingVarese wrote:
twseel wrote:
Watch out Aussie, these admins have banned some respectable men before... |
Is that a warning or a threat? | A warning, certainly no threat, what could I threaten you with?To be fair I don't really notice any insulting or trolling in Eddie's posts... He seems to discuss the existence of Christ in the same way he would the life of Ötzi the Iceman, involving science but also employing some light-hearted(granted, sometimes juvenile) speculation, which might then seem insulting to people who view Christ in a higher personal regard than mr. Ötzi for example, I guess... |
As a point of clarification (speaking as an ex-admin) respectable men only get banned here when they then become unreasonable men.
Edited by Dean - January 25 2017 at 02:36
|
What?
|
|
twseel
Forum Senior Member
Joined: December 15 2012
Location: abroad
Status: Offline
Points: 22767
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 02:42 |
Dean wrote:
twseel wrote:
EddieRUKiddingVarese wrote:
twseel wrote:
Watch out Aussie, these admins have banned some respectable men before... |
Is that a warning or a threat? | A warning, certainly no threat, what could I threaten you with?To be fair I don't really notice any insulting or trolling in Eddie's posts... He seems to discuss the existence of Christ in the same way he would the life of Ötzi the Iceman, involving science but also employing some light-hearted(granted, sometimes juvenile) speculation, which might then seem insulting to people who view Christ in a higher personal regard than mr. Ötzi for example, I guess... |
As a point of clarification (speaking as an ex-admin) respectable men only get banned here when they then become unreasonable men.
|
That's sensible, though some of the less reasonable have also turned to be amongst the most enjoyable, except for some who were just insufferable!
|
|
|
Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 03:21 |
The Dark Elf wrote:
Tacitus (who could never be confused as a Christian apologist) and Suetonius (Nero's biographer) both mentioned Christian persecution during Nero's reign (54 AD to 68 AD).
It's interesting that a sect who worshiped an allegedly fictitious personage would be noticeable enough in Rome, a city of 2 million people at the time, that Nero would consider persecuting them. This, just after the alleged conspiracy to create this legendary person (with the aid of Joseph Campbell and various world myths obviously readily available for perusal at the Golgotha Branch of the Jerusalem Public Library) no more than 30 years previously in the backwaters of Judea.
Considering Tacitus was alive during the Great Fire of Rome in 64 AD, one would not assume his history as apocryphal:
"Therefore, to stop the rumor [that he had set Rome on fire], he [Emperor Nero] falsely charged with guilt, and punished with the most fearful tortures, the persons commonly called Christians, who were [generally] hated for their enormities. Christus, the founder of that name, was put to death as a criminal by Pontius Pilate, procurator of Judea, in the reign of Tiberius, but the pernicious superstition - repressed for a time, broke out yet again, not only through Judea, - where the mischief originated, but through the city of Rome also, whither all things horrible and disgraceful flow from all quarters, as to a common receptacle, and where they are encouraged. Accordingly first those were arrested who confessed they were Christians; next on their information, a vast multitude were convicted, not so much on the charge of burning the city, as of "hating the human race."
Not a very flattering portrait of Christians (or Nero, for that matter). |
Tacitus was 8 years old during the Fire of Rome and in all probability residing over 600km further north, while Suetonius was born a year after Nero died.
This makes their accounts circumstantial evidence rather than testimonial evidence, which isn't necessarily a bad thing since all scientific evidence of historical events can be regarded as circumstantial, but it does mean that any conclusions have to be through inference rather than proven fact. Again, nothing wrong with that, we do it all the time but it does mean this has to be beyond reasonable doubt.
|
What?
|
|
BaldFriede
Prog Reviewer
Joined: June 02 2005
Location: Germany
Status: Offline
Points: 10261
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 04:28 |
Anthony Burgess gave an interesting version of the story of crucifixion and resurrection in his novel "The Kingdom of the Wicked". I highly recommend this book.
|
BaldJean and I; I am the one in blue.
|
|
yesstiles
Forum Newbie
Joined: February 06 2004
Status: Offline
Points: 11
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 05:41 |
I appreciate your posts Lazland.
It's amazing to me how far some people on this board have fallen into their own minds, which they glorify every chance they get.
How is it people question the existence of a historical person of such magnitude? Do you also question the existence of Genghis Khan and Alexander the Great? The Bible is an accepted historical work by the Smithsonian, as well as any myriad of secular scholars.
|
|
Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 08:02 |
This is tough - low-post count says "be kind" but a join date of Feb 2004 asks "why should I?"
yesstiles wrote:
I appreciate your posts Lazland. |
We all do.
yesstiles wrote:
It's amazing to me how far some people on this board have fallen into their own minds, which they glorify every chance they get. |
yesstiles wrote:
How is it people question the existence of a historical person of such magnitude? |
Do you really want me to answer that? I seriously don't believe that you do.
yesstiles wrote:
Do you also question the existence of Genghis Khan and Alexander the Great? |
Nope, but I do question the existence of Robin Hood, King Arthur (Pendragon), Beowulf and the entire pantheon of Egyptian, Greek and Norse gods (for example).
yesstiles wrote:
The Bible is an accepted historical work by the Smithsonian, as well as any myriad of secular scholars. |
Well, except that they don't, and certainly not every word of it.
Edited by Dean - January 25 2017 at 08:04
|
What?
|
|
lazland
Prog Reviewer
Joined: October 28 2008
Location: Wales
Status: Offline
Points: 13634
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 09:59 |
HackettFan wrote:
Lazland wrote:
As I have said before, none of this makes folk such as I right when we profoundly believe in the Divine. It does, though, allow us to state that there is at least some historical basis behind the scripts which tell of the times.
I will say this about Jesus, and this as someone who is a believer in the Divine, and someone extremely interested in both the period, and its impact across the millennia. I actually think that Jesus is best viewed as what he was historically. | When I look back on the period, I tend to envision original Christianity looking a whole lot more Gnostic than Orthodox. A Gnostic, would believe in a holy spirit form of Jesus even prior to crucifixion, and, I presume, downplay the importance of a historical Jesus. What is your perspective on this? Why is historical veracity so often presented as a prerequisite for spiritual authenticity in Orthodox Christianity?
| Interesting. The trouble a lot of modern, thinking, Christians have, especially those who, like me, tend towards the Jew in Jesus, is that the Gnostic movement lost, and their attitudes and beliefs in the nature of Christ obliterated from the official early church post Constantine. This was, btw, the actual historical intervention by the Empire. Jesus was not, as has been suggested, invented by the Romans for some spurious reason, the reasoning behind which I still fail to comprehend despite having looked at the relevant posts again, but his church most certainly did become Roman in nature following its adoption by the Empire, even to the point of a rigid hierarchy and set of instructions as to the nature of the divinity and how we should all worship it. It is mainly for this reason that I do not attend church particularly often. Much of the creeds there are, I freely admit, interpretations and rules which have been passed down by powerful figures down the centuries. My own relationship with both God and Jesus is a deeply personal one, and I feel free to place my own belief system to it, one which, actually, takes from many different cultures and beliefs in the nature of the divine. In a previous post, addressed to Dean, I believe, I joked about Jon Anderson, but, actually, I rather like his amalgam of many faiths, although there are bits I shy away from. I dislike intensely any statement that "because it says this in that verse of the Bible, it must be unerringly accurate for all of time, because it is the word of God". In much the same way that we are born, go through childhood, mature, and, hopefully, achieve some form of wisdom as we get older (too old, in my case ), I believe that we as a race are still infants, awaiting a growing up phase into adolescence. A changing understand of, and relationship with, God is a part of that process.
|
Enhance your life. Get down to www.lazland.org
Now also broadcasting on www.progzilla.com Every Saturday, 4.00 p.m. UK time!
|
|
SteveG
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 11 2014
Location: Kyiv In Spirit
Status: Offline
Points: 20609
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 12:19 |
Dean wrote:
SteveG wrote:
Dean wrote:
Against my better judgement, but here goes nothing...
Tacitus wrote of christians in 112CE and Suetonius in 119CE, both during their account of the reign of Nero and the burning of Rome in 64CE so they were not writing about a real person as such so their source for the origins of christianity are most likely to have come from the christians themselves, either from the gospels (such as Mark, written some 40 years earlier) or simply as common knowledge.
AFAIK the Dead Sea Scrolls, despite being fairly comprehensive on the torah and ketuvium books (especially those concerned with mosaic law), are actually extremely fragmented and thin on texts from the nevi'im History books.
SteveG wrote:
However, the chronicles of these writers was the media of it's age and that these accounts are independent of the gospels only falls into focus when supported against the histories written by the Jewish historian Josephus, at approximately the same time, on behalf of the Roman emperor Trajan after the Romans destroyed Jerusalem in 70 CE. Josephus did plainly state, without much fanfare in a unadorned passage (when stripped of an inane later Christian introjection) about Christ, that he did actually live and was crucified by Pontius Pilate, along with many other Jews for sedition. |
Well, no. It doesn't. Aside from the blatantly obvious observation that once the text had been corrupted by later christian embellishment, (of which there is very little doubt) then its veracity becomes highly questionable, one also has to ask where Josephus came by this piece of information in 93CE if not from the christians themselves? So using the claims of the christians to prove the provenance of the claims of the christians is the very definition of a circular argument. There is nothing to show that Josephus' account was independent of the gospels given that three of the four gospels were written before his Testimonium Flavianum.
Now, I haven't actually come down on one side or the other as to whether Jesus existed or not, and I don't see much reason to vote either way.
SteveG wrote:
Edit: Btw, The Dead Sea Scrolls maybe highly fragmented, but what is legible does not conflict with any of the writings of the Hebrew canon.
|
I never said they did, so what's your point?
| Here goes nothing? Correct, as you put nothing of value forward. |
Dismissing and thus ignoring the question I posed regarding the source of Josephus' information as "nothing of value" is cute, but not unexpected. My judgement proves to be right again.
SteveG wrote:
Forgive me. I don't have time, or the eyesight, for a good old dust up these days so I'll make this as brief as possible.
First off, the removal of interpolations form Josephus' writing of Jesus from the writings commonly known as the Antiquities is and has been widely excepted by generations of biblical scholars, and is believed to put forward an accurate account that Jesus of Nazareth actually lived and was crucified for sedition by the Roman prefect known in the New Testament as Pontius Pilate. Josephus, unlike the gospels, makes no apologies and holds the Romans accountable for their brutal mistreatment and murder of numerous Jews during their 30 year occupation of Judea.
Secondly, Josephus' also related the lives of New Testament figures John the Baptist and James the Brother of Jesus, without any fantastic Christian invention such as miracles, resurrection, etc., similar to his depiction of Jesus. Not ironically, Josephus' messianic comrades of temple priests actually killed James on the steps of the great temple in Jerusalem.
There is no apologetics in any of Josephus' writings regarding these people and events. |
So what? You appear to put great weight on this observation but it does not make what he actually wrote any more factual if he doesn't cite his sources.
Note here I am not stating as absolute fact that Jesus did not exist and that Pilate didn't have him executed (I've not opined on that at all, nor will I), I merely point out that none of the non-christian historians can be regarded has wholly independent of any previous christian version, either oral or written, as you (and others) seem to imply. Therefore claiming these as evidence that Jesus did exist isn't as conclusive as it first appears.
SteveG wrote:
I place Josephus' quote on Jesus below with the later interpolation and with the interpolation removed so that other members can see what we're discussing:
About this time there lived Jesus, a wise man, if indeed one ought to call him a man. For he was one who performed surprising deeds and was a teacher of such people as accept the truth gladly. He won over many Jews and many of the Greeks. He was the Christ. And when, upon the accusation of the principal men among us, Pilate had condemned him to a cross, those who had first come to love him did not cease. He appeared to them spending a third day restored to life, for the prophets of God had foretold these things and a thousand other marvels about him. And the tribe of the Christians, so called after him, has still to this day not disappeared. Flavius Josephus: Antiquities of the Jews, Book 18 chapter 3,3 Redacted without the later Christian interpolations:About this time there lived Jesus, a wise man, if indeed one ought to call him a man. For he was one who performed surprising deeds and was a teacher of such people as accept the truth gladly. He won over many Jews and many of the Greeks. He was (called) the Christ. And when, upon the accusation of the principal men among us, Pilate had condemned him to a cross. And the tribe of the Christians, so called after him, has still to this day not disappeared.
This long held belief by academics to the accuracy of Josephus' passage on Jesus is supported by scholars as faithful as N.T. Wright to as sceptical as John Dominic Crossan and Reza Aslan. This is no way a circular argument. However, you are free to accept it or reject as you wish. |
The redacted version is what it says on the tin - an a priori reconstruction of what academics believe the original could have said. Argue as much as you like, unless the original text as Josephus wrote it is rediscovered then all we have are educated guesses as to what the actual wording was. Agapius, an Arabic christian writing some 700 years after Eusebius, cited Josephus yet his quotation does not contain the words christ or christian, which is curious to say the least in light of the later redacted version that does.
I find it highly unlikely that the Testimonium is a forgery or later invention (IMO that claim is just silly blustering) but once a text has been corrupted any attempt to recreate the original, however well-meaning, can only be a guess.
However, none of that is particularly relevant if the source of Josephus' information is unknown. If, as I suggested with Tacitus and Suetonius, this was simply based upon common (i.e. oral) knowledge then consider then where that oral history came from and who maintained the oral tradition in the intervening years.
SteveG wrote:
As for the Dead Sea Scrolls, I wanted to make sure that I understood you correctly. With two thirds of the known Old Testament remarkably preserved for two millennia and first written a thousand years before that, I thought that you would give some credit to a oral tradition that had only been around for 60 years. Not a lot of time when compared with two thousand years for DDS, is it? |
Then you thought wrong as there is no correlation between how old a written text is and the time-interval of an oral tradition, as someone once said: "Oral sources can also evolve over time and be corrupted.". Oral traditions also include hearsay, mythology and invention.
My only point about the Dead Sea scrolls was they are not a factual history book and I strongly doubt that they were ever intended to be.
|
Your opinion proves to be right?
By what court of opinion? Sorry,
but that seems bit cute. Could you please back that up with an argument instead of just stating a claim that you are right.
As for my stating “a written source cannot be compared to an
oral source “, that's because a written tradition thousands of years old cannot be compared to an oral tradition
thousands of years younger because of a phenomenon called “diffusion” which is
the cross pollination of ideas and motifs that filter from one culture to
another with advent of world exploration, territorial conquest and
technological advances in communication from one area of the world to another. This
is not the case with Christian gospels in first century Judea.
That Josephus has documented known Biblical figures is not
a priori that he “must have known about these figures from early
Christians”. The common counter view is based on the observation that he does not go into the
details of the cult beliefs of the Christians, as he had with the little
known Jewish sect that he identifies as the Essenes, whose practices,
asceticism being the most notable, he found incredible and worthy of relating in his writings.
The crux if the argument is this: If he had received his information from early Christians, or from early gospel sources,
would not Josephus have written of the bizarre death and resurrection stories
at the center of the Christian faith? And would not Josephus have related the
Christians’ take on Jesus’ coming apocalyptic return as Josephus himself was
also of the messianic mindset and led a faction of the Jewish rebellion prior
to his defection to the Romans? This omission seems too incredible if Josephus
received his information from Christian sources and not from some form of
Temple archives, of which he had free reign to as he was a direct decedent of
the Temple’s renowned Chief Priest Jonathon. I stated in an earlier post that disputing Jesus’ existence was not impossible, but difficult. I've seen no
persuasive argument that moves me to retract that claim.
Edited by SteveG - January 25 2017 at 13:53
|
|
SteveG
Forum Senior Member
Joined: April 11 2014
Location: Kyiv In Spirit
Status: Offline
Points: 20609
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 12:35 |
Dean wrote:
SteveG wrote:
I think you just said that we're all idiots, Logan. Fair enough, but Dean hasn't responded yet.
Just kidding. |
only just... |
More than only just, old man. Any arguments or engagements I have with you are a guarantee that I have to raise my game and be on my toes. That's something that I can only say of only a few people on this site.
Edited by SteveG - January 25 2017 at 12:37
|
|
EddieRUKiddingVarese
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 04 2016
Location: Aust
Status: Offline
Points: 1802
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 15:05 |
Logan wrote:
^^^ Thanks Lazland (Steve). And noted.
EddieRUKIddingVarese wrote:
Logan, note my previous response (in particular that I am the OP of this Thread too), to Lazland I think in this case he is the incendiary one noting that he brought up the subject of nationality not me, then proceeds to come back with insulting comments such as "all Australians were immature w**kers descended from nothing more than the degenerate filth of convicted prisoners in Britain". Note I never stated on here anything of such unmitigated inappropriate personal bashing- trying to cover it up by stating "I do not, btw, hold any of those views, excepting the immature w**ker bit, of course." does not work on any level...........
Two your second point my reason for doing the Japanese jokes thread is two fold, firstly I'd made a joke regarding Trump and the Japanese Whaling of Minke Whales in my Career Advice for Donald Trump Thread, which secondly was closed without notice by DamoXt7942, hence my Japanese jokes thread- which was titled Are Japanese Jokes ok? |
Eddie: It's important to always note context, and Steve's Australian "If I were to start a thread stating...", which was part of many ifs that he was not condoning, does not really seem wrong to me. Never-the-less, he apologized for it. Calling you an immature w**ker is a personal attack, and a matter of opinion, but it's being used as parallelism. I'm not condoning the immature w**ker bit, but I understand the temptation to create such a grammatical construct in response to your response on his earlier comment. I like to play with words, and it is a sort of word play.
The Japanese jokes thread concerned me particularly when I realized that Keishiro had closed one of your threads (when I closed that thread I hadn't even considered that it could possibly be about you going so low as to make that thread as a response to someone who is Japanese and made a call on the appropriateness of the Trump thread). It is important to note that Keishiro did not hide your joke about Japanese whaling in the Trump thread, although I probably would have because of the derogatory term Japs. Instead he hid various posts which had silly, spammy, and perverse images in them and then locked the topic because of its dis-respectfulness, spammy qualities, divisiveness and its inanity. I see a serious lack of evidence that his nationality had anything to do with it, and Keishiro is a very even-tempered and rational professional.
EDIT: And by the way, if you get a post hidden and/or a topic locked, that should be taken as a warning so you should be more careful after that. Having one topic locked, then coming out with another problematic one in response is not advisable behavior.
Had a call while I was composing this, so probably more posts have popped up in the meantime that I haven't read. |
Logan that is BS, simply using if's is not an adequate cover if that were the case I could say that if I was an unreasonable man, which I not I would say the Lazyland was a arrogant short sight dinosaur that still believes that the earth is flat but I'm a reasonable man so I would say that.
Now giving the amount of sh*t I'm received for posting these threads- which everyone seems to enjoy posting on - I think I will forget posting anymore of them because this place has become a boys club amongst certain members which I find distasteful - so come up with your own thread Ideas you lazy so and so's
|
"Everyone is born with genius, but most people only keep it a few minutes" and I need the knits, the double knits!
|
|
The Dark Elf
Forum Senior Member
VIP Member
Joined: February 01 2011
Location: Michigan
Status: Offline
Points: 13063
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 16:01 |
EddieRUKiddingVarese wrote:
Now giving the amount of sh*t I'm received for posting these threads- which everyone seems to enjoy posting on - I think I will forget posting anymore of them because this place has become a boys club amongst certain members which I find distasteful - so come up with your own thread Ideas you lazy so and so's |
You posted a thread topic that everyone but you (evidently) consider to be inflammatory and now you're whining that the replies are not to your liking? As an atheist I will readily tell you my beliefs, but I won't go out of my way to attack others for their religious affiliations, nor question their beliefs regarding their specific deity. Coming from America, you have the freedom to have your own delusions -- as long as they don't infringe on other people's freedoms (which, unfortunately, often happens because of religiosity).
And acting like you did everyone a favor posting this thread is a f**king joke. So please, do forget posting your inane threads. No one will lose sleep over their absence.
I suggest that a moderator close this thread. There's really nothing more worthwhile to discuss.
|
...a vigorous circular motion hitherto unknown to the people of this area, but destined to take the place of the mud shark in your mythology...
|
|
CosmicVibration
Forum Senior Member
Joined: February 26 2014
Location: Milky Way
Status: Offline
Points: 1396
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 20:29 |
lazland wrote:
HackettFan wrote:
Lazland wrote:
As I have said before, none of this makes folk such as I right when we profoundly believe in the Divine. It does, though, allow us to state that there is at least some historical basis behind the scripts which tell of the times.
I will say this about Jesus, and this as someone who is a believer in the Divine, and someone extremely interested in both the period, and its impact across the millennia. I actually think that Jesus is best viewed as what he was historically. | When I look back on the period, I tend to envision original Christianity looking a whole lot more Gnostic than Orthodox. A Gnostic, would believe in a holy spirit form of Jesus even prior to crucifixion, and, I presume, downplay the importance of a historical Jesus. What is your perspective on this? Why is historical veracity so often presented as a prerequisite for spiritual authenticity in Orthodox Christianity?
|
Interesting. The trouble a lot of modern, thinking, Christians have, especially those who, like me, tend towards the Jew in Jesus, is that the Gnostic movement lost, and their attitudes and beliefs in the nature of Christ obliterated from the official early church post Constantine. This was, btw, the actual historical intervention by the Empire. Jesus was not, as has been suggested, invented by the Romans for some spurious reason, the reasoning behind which I still fail to comprehend despite having looked at the relevant posts again, but his church most certainly did become Roman in nature following its adoption by the Empire, even to the point of a rigid hierarchy and set of instructions as to the nature of the divinity and how we should all worship it.
It is mainly for this reason that I do not attend church particularly often. Much of the creeds there are, I freely admit, interpretations and rules which have been passed down by powerful figures down the centuries.
My own relationship with both God and Jesus is a deeply personal one, and I feel free to place my own belief system to it, one which, actually, takes from many different cultures and beliefs in the nature of the divine. In a previous post, addressed to Dean, I believe, I joked about Jon Anderson, but, actually, I rather like his amalgam of many faiths, although there are bits I shy away from.
I dislike intensely any statement that "because it says this in that verse of the Bible, it must be unerringly accurate for all of time, because it is the word of God". In much the same way that we are born, go through childhood, mature, and, hopefully, achieve some form of wisdom as we get older (too old, in my case ), I believe that we as a race are still infants, awaiting a growing up phase into adolescence. A changing understand of, and relationship with, God is a part of that process. |
Although my historical background very limited I’m of a
similar mindset. The early Gnostics were
much closer to the original teachings of Jesus.
I would think that it was much more of an inner science than outer
rituals. They also imparted the concept of reincarnation which is now shunned
for some silly reason.
I always liked Jon Andersons lyrics but trying to figure
them out is almost as hard as trying to figure out Biblical text. Close to the Edge is one of my favorite
albums, both musically and lyrically. Here’s an example of one such verse. At least with this one I was on the right
track.
‘A seasoned witch
could call you from the depths of your disgrace’ – that means your higher self
will eventually bring you out of your dark world.”
http://yesworld.com/2012/12/jon-anderson-talks-yes-close-to-the-edge-track-by-track/
However, with Roundabout I was way off base, I swore it
was about reincarnation. Boy was I
wrong. What I’m trying to illustrate
here is just how difficult it is to interpret modern day works from someone
that may have little insight. Now take
ancient texts, even more cryptic in nature, that were written by those with
incredibly deep insight into creation.
I
think the concept of creation actually paints an incorrect picture. A better
way of looking at it is that an infinitesimal part of God’s infinite Being became
the universe. God’s presents is reflected and can be accessed within every
single atom of creation.
On a side note, there are many physicists that believe
in a holographic universe. Check out
some of the many youtube videos on this subject by the genius himself, Leonard
Susskind.
I agree that we are all still just infants, both
intellectually and spiritually. Science
knows less than 5% and tries to extrapolate the rest from what little they do
know. Who knows, given enough time,
perhaps before this universe expires, science will finally figure out all the
mechanics of it. But even with that
spectacular feat, science and the human intellect will still not be able to
completely comprehend any one single thing.
The finite human intellect is incapable and will never fully understand
a mere pebble.
So does this mean we are
doomed to forever wonder? Of course not..
One of the things that all the great masters wanted to impart on us is that we
are not just this meat suite that we carry around with us. We are divine beings capable of transcending our
ego and the thoughts of the ego. Nothing is impossible for us; time, space, life
and death as well as nature herself can be transcended.
And will be transcended, no soul can wallow in delusion
forever.
|
|
HackettFan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 20 2012
Location: Oklahoma
Status: Offline
Points: 7951
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 22:43 |
lazland wrote:
HackettFan wrote:
Lazland wrote:
As I have said before, none of this makes folk such as I right when we profoundly believe in the Divine. It does, though, allow us to state that there is at least some historical basis behind the scripts which tell of the times.
I will say this about Jesus, and this as someone who is a believer in the Divine, and someone extremely interested in both the period, and its impact across the millennia. I actually think that Jesus is best viewed as what he was historically. | When I look back on the period, I tend to envision original Christianity looking a whole lot more Gnostic than Orthodox. A Gnostic, would believe in a holy spirit form of Jesus even prior to crucifixion, and, I presume, downplay the importance of a historical Jesus. What is your perspective on this? Why is historical veracity so often presented as a prerequisite for spiritual authenticity in Orthodox Christianity?
|
Interesting. The trouble a lot of modern, thinking, Christians have, especially those who, like me, tend towards the Jew in Jesus, is that the Gnostic movement lost, and their attitudes and beliefs in the nature of Christ obliterated from the official early church post Constantine. This was, btw, the actual historical intervention by the Empire. Jesus was not, as has been suggested, invented by the Romans for some spurious reason, the reasoning behind which I still fail to comprehend despite having looked at the relevant posts again, but his church most certainly did become Roman in nature following its adoption by the Empire, even to the point of a rigid hierarchy and set of instructions as to the nature of the divinity and how we should all worship it.
It is mainly for this reason that I do not attend church particularly often. Much of the creeds there are, I freely admit, interpretations and rules which have been passed down by powerful figures down the centuries.
My own relationship with both God and Jesus is a deeply personal one, and I feel free to place my own belief system to it, one which, actually, takes from many different cultures and beliefs in the nature of the divine. In a previous post, addressed to Dean, I believe, I joked about Jon Anderson, but, actually, I rather like his amalgam of many faiths, although there are bits I shy away from.
I dislike intensely any statement that "because it says this in that verse of the Bible, it must be unerringly accurate for all of time, because it is the word of God". In much the same way that we are born, go through childhood, mature, and, hopefully, achieve some form of wisdom as we get older (too old, in my case ), I believe that we as a race are still infants, awaiting a growing up phase into adolescence. A changing understand of, and relationship with, God is a part of that process. |
Sincerely asked, sincerely answered and genuinely appreciated. BTW, Your last paragraph sounds like a tinge of Gnosticism.
Edited by HackettFan - January 25 2017 at 22:46
|
A curse upon the heads of those who seek their fortunes in a lie. The truth is always waiting when there's nothing left to try. - Colin Henson, Jade Warrior (Now)
|
|
HackettFan
Forum Senior Member
Joined: June 20 2012
Location: Oklahoma
Status: Offline
Points: 7951
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 23:27 |
CosmicVibration wrote:
Although my historical background very limited I’m of a similar mindset. The early Gnostics were much closer to the original teachings of Jesus. I would think that it was much more of an inner science than outer rituals. They also imparted the concept of reincarnation which is now shunned for some silly reason. |
Yes, if I recall things right (I may not), the Messiah was supposed to be preceded by a return of the Prophet Isaiah. There is some inconsistency about whether John the Baptist should be acknowledged as the Prophet Isaiah reincarnated. But I don't recall any difficulty with the concept of reincarnation itself.
|
A curse upon the heads of those who seek their fortunes in a lie. The truth is always waiting when there's nothing left to try. - Colin Henson, Jade Warrior (Now)
|
|
Dean
Special Collaborator
Retired Admin and Amateur Layabout
Joined: May 13 2007
Location: Europe
Status: Offline
Points: 37575
|
Posted: January 25 2017 at 23:44 |
SteveG wrote:
Dean wrote:
Against my better judgement, but here goes nothing... |
Dean wrote:
My judgement proves to be right again. |
Your opinion proves to be right?
By what court of opinion? Sorry,
but that seems bit cute. Could you please back that up with an argument instead of just stating a claim that you are right. |
Every time I get involved with a discussion with you I react badly to something you type which may have seemed innocuous to you but for some reason pushes all the wrong buttons in me, in the early days they resulted in me getting angry, then resentful, finally I've came to expect and accept them so experience mild disappointment and move on, and then after our last exchange I realised that the cause problem was me, not you so I vowed to simply avoid your posts. So, against my better judgement I chose to reply to your comments on one of my posts here, fully expecting some throw-away remark from you to piss me off, which it did and rather than brush it off and move on I responded in kind - ergo my judgement proved to be right. QEf**kingD.
So now, having proved myself right I am walking away from this exchange, as I should have done the last time I said that.
Edited by Dean - January 25 2017 at 23:44
|
What?
|
|