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Bart Ehrman on the Historical Jesus

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[ . . . ] Again, Marcion used the writings of Empedocles. gLuke is completely CONTRARY to Marcion's teachings. [ . . . ]

Apparently it would be more accurate to say Marcion was accused of using the writings of Empedocles.

http://books.google.es/books?id=8Yi...=PA222#v=onepage&q=Marcion Empedocles&f=false

http://books.google.es/books?id=Obw...=PA452#v=onepage&q=Marcion Empedocles&f=false

http://books.google.es/books?id=P3D...g=PA30#v=onepage&q=Marcion Empedocles&f=false

It would seem the relation between Marcion and Empedocles is not quite so clearly defined as one might think from reading the early church fathers.
 
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Apparently it would be more accurate to say Marcion was accused of using the writings of Empedocles.

http://books.google.es/books?id=8Yi...=PA222#v=onepage&q=Marcion Empedocles&f=false

http://books.google.es/books?id=Obw...=PA452#v=onepage&q=Marcion Empedocles&f=false

http://books.google.es/books?id=P3D...g=PA30#v=onepage&q=Marcion Empedocles&f=false

It would seem the relation between Marcion and Empedocles is not quite so clearly defined as one might think from reading the early church fathers.

It would seem the relation between Marcion, gLuke and the Pauline Corpus is not so clearly defined from reading WRITINGS of ANTIQUITY.

It would be more accurate to say Marcion was FALSELY accused of Mutilating gLuke and the Pauline Corpus.

The earliest known source to claim Marcion mutilated gLuke and the Pauline Corpus is "Against Heresies" attributed to Irenaeus.

"Against Heresies" is a most bogus source, is filled with massive historical problems, discrepancies, contradictions and events that most likely did not happen.


Virtually everything that is written about the dates of authorship, chronology, authors and some contents of books in the NT Canon in "Against Heresies" have been REJECTED not only by Apologetics of ANTIQUITY but also Scholars today.

Marcion's teaching was clearly defined in "Refutation of All Heresies" attributed to Hippolytus and attest that Marcion PREACHED about ANOTHER God--NOT the God of the Jews.

gLuke and the Pauline Corpus are about the God of the Jews and that God SENT his Son Jesus Christ.

Marcion taught people to SPEAK Blasphemies and to DENY that the God of the Jews was the Creator and that Jesus was SENT by God.
 
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And where, what I previously said was that the indisputable fact about that, is that all we have as those gospels, are much later anonymously written Christian copies. Supposedly anonymous copies of gospels originally written by other anonymous people under the assumed names of Mark, Mathew Luke and John, but where even those original anonymous authors make clear that they themselves had never known Jesus, and where they were merely passing on legendary stories from yet more distantly anonymous informants who themselves had also never known Jesus, but who believed that Jesus had once had disciples who had known Jesus and witnessed him doing all sorts of things which 1800 years later have turned out be quite certainly impossible supernatural fiction.

The inescapable point is that writing like that cannot possibly be a reliable source of it’s non-credible stories of a messiah than none of it’s anonymous authors ever knew.

And it’s in that respect that the analogy to the inadmissibility of anonymous hearsay evidence in jury trials is directly comparable. Where, in most advanced western democracies the courts have long since agreed that such testimony is completely unfit to put before a jury, for the reason that it is inherently too unreliable and would be very likely to risk misleading any jury into entirely false beliefs and incorrect decisions.

(...)
Paul’s letters and the non-biblical writing from sources such as Tacitus and Josephus, fall into a slightly different category from the gospels. But without yet again going into each of those cases, they too are all way below the lowest acceptable objective (and that really means “honest” or “genuine”) standard of reliability or credibility at all.

I'm not discussing now the reliability of the Gospels, but the Pauline epistles. It is very difficult because you go round and round but never go to the essential question.

In what are the Pauline epistles different from the gospels and why they are not acceptable?

Do you believe the Pauline epistles can be dated in the middle of the First Century or in the period between the First and Second Centuries? Why?
 
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Apparently it would be more accurate to say Marcion was accused of using the writings of Empedocles.

http://books.google.es/books?id=8Yi...=PA222#v=onepage&q=Marcion Empedocles&f=false

http://books.google.es/books?id=Obw...=PA452#v=onepage&q=Marcion Empedocles&f=false

http://books.google.es/books?id=P3D...g=PA30#v=onepage&q=Marcion Empedocles&f=false

It would seem the relation between Marcion and Empedocles is not quite so clearly defined as one might think from reading the early church fathers.

You’re right, pakeha, the notion that Marcion “used the writings of Empedocles” is simply another of the many false claims or charges levied against him by various fathers, in this instance Hippolytus, proving little, if anything at all.

“This (heretic) having thought that the multitude would forget that he did not happen to be a disciple of Christ, but of Empedocles, who was far anterior to himself, framed and formed the same opinions—namely, that there are two causes of the universe, discord and friendship.

… These, then, are the opinions of Marcion, by means of which he made many his dupes, employing the conclusions of Empedocles. And he transferred the philosophy invented by that (ancient speculator) into his own system of thought, and (out of Empedocles) constructed his (own) impious heresy. But I consider that this has been sufficiently refuted by us, and that I have not omitted any opinion of those who purloin their opinions from the Greeks, and act despitefully towards the disciples of Christ, as if they had become teachers to them of these (tenets).”
 
Having seen the way the wind is blows and after duly smearing the competition, as is his wont, and having now adopted Doherty’s celestial Jesus as his own, Richard Carrier’s new ‘peer reviewed’ book, the Historicity of Jesus, is apparently shortly due for release.

Judging from the book’s index and Carrier’s own remarks, and despite his "The first thing to know is, forget about all the other mythicist theories’, it mostly seems to promise a re-hashing of what’s already been said before, if not better.

Carrier states that “we have no writings from ‘church fathers’ until the late second century, a century and a half after the movement began and almost a century after the Gospels were even written”, so I can only assume that he maintains the existing status quo on Gospel dating, as for Markan priority.

As already noted, ubiquitous sophistry and musings premised on the Gospels (which except for the Gospel of John, weren’t in fact ‘written’ at all, but largely composed from pre-existent manuscripts) having been written way before 170, are likely to be innately flawed from the start.

In order to ostensibly bolster his case, expect to see numerous Paul quotes, despite Robert Price’s warning that ‘the Pauline epistles reveal themselves to the discerning reader to have exactly the same sort of limitation as the Gospels do: both are collections of fragments and pericopae contributed and fabricated by authors and communities of very different theological leanings’.

Or how, ’Paul does not have a unitary voice, is not a single author whose implied opinions might be synthesized and parroted. He is not even a single historical figure’ and that there is ‘no author, no authority, only texts -- and finally not even texts but fragments’. As observed by one reviewer: ’The Pauline epistles we have show the flow and the arguments back and forth at the various bridge points’.

And apart from the fact, in order to explain Gospel Content, there’s no need of Paul at all. The available evidence clearly demonstrates a flow of second-century manuscripts, many gnostic in character much like Paul’s, with each author successively adding their own embellishments, and this on the heels of the Gospels of Peter, Hebrews and Egyptians, as well as epistles the like of Peter, James, and Jude, all culminating some time after 170 in the four canonical gospels, and that without any discernable input here from Paul’s work whatsoever.

As Price also notes: ‘But the first collector of the Pauline Epistles had been Marcion.’ Before Marcion, there is simply no evidence that Paul’s epistles were in general circulation, or known to the Mediterranean world at large.

Carrier: "There is some evidence of mythicist sects that slipped through medieval church censors and selectors. The New Testament itself mentions a rival sect teaching that the Gospels were fabricated myths (2 Peter 1:16-2:2, commonly agreed to be a forged letter most likely originating in the second century). ). And manuscript evidence suggests that the second century apocryphal text The Ascension of Isaiah originally depicted Jesus being killed by Satan and his demons in the lower heavens (and not on earth), exactly as the mythicist thesis proposes.”

No doubt, with even the Gospel of Mark hinting at gnostic overtones, but citing the spurious Second Epistle of Peter, possibly written as late as 170, contributes little that’s new, especially since it shares a number of passages with the much earlier Epistle of Jude. Much the same applies to The Ascension of Isaiah.

The simple fact remains that the early Christians pursued many different beliefs, in various forms and locales and at various times, including among Gnostic groups (of which Paul’s may have been but one) and Jewish-Christians. Even if it can be shown that one of the numerous sects viewed their version of Jesus in an identical way to what Carrier and Doherty suggest, what does it actually prove?

Carrier: “The battle for historicity was fought and won between 60 and 120 AD. Precisely the period we conspicuously have no texts from.”

I daresay that by 120 AD the battle was still anything but won!

Carrier: "But we don’t expect more than hints to survive. Because the sect that gained power in the fourth century and decided what documents to preserve or quote and which to discard or leave in silence had no reason to preserve anything that challenged their version of Christian origins. We thus see that east of the Roman Empire, a sect of Christians beyond their reach still believed Jesus was killed around 80-70 B.C. (under the reign of king Jannaeus) and not under Roman rule a century later. This sect was in fact the original Torah observant sect, still called the Nazorians (as I explained in Part I, one of the original names for the Christian movement). But we only know about this because Epiphanius chanced once to mention it, and this was the only sect the authors of the Babylonian Talmud knew. We otherwise have not a single surviving document from or about them.

So arguments from silence cannot prevail against mythicism. We have no reason to expect any such evidence to survive, and yet still even have some hints in the evidence that did survive."

Flimsy, to say the least – if not rather bizarre in lieu of the bottom paragraph. According to earlychristianwritings.com, the Ascension of Isaiah seems to have been redacted in stages over a long period of time. If the text had not been compiled into one work by the third century, most of the materials existed by the time of the second half of the second century.

Carrier: “It’s important to reiterate that the mythicist thesis does not deny that Jesus was originally regarded as having become incarnate, as a human man, manufactured from Davidic flesh, and was then killed and buried (and rose again). It just holds that this all occurred in the lower heavens, not on earth.”

I was under the impression that the ‘mythicist thesis’ embraced a mix of scenarios.

Carrier: “In my experience (and by now I have a lot at this) the ‘vast majority’ of experts in this field are astonishingly ignorant of many pertinent facts, and even assert things confidently that are indisputably false, or make arguments that are indisputably fallacious.”

Ain’t it the truth …

Carrier: “Mythicists generally agree with both; they simply regard the first apostle (most likely Peter) to be the actual founder of the movement, not Jesus. On our view, at that point the apostles (like Peter) only claimed to be receiving communications from Jesus by revelation (as in Galatians 1). The Gospels had not yet been written. Their version of Jesus only came to be popularized half a century later, when no evidence indicates any of the first apostles were still around. Who was writing in the late first century about the various ‘alternative sects’ of Christianity then, when the Gospels were first spreading a historical version of Jesus? We don’t even have a single name.”

I think that many consider Peter to be mere fiction. The Gospels’ version of Jesus was popularized a mere half century after Peter …

As Carrier suggested versus Erhman’s text, keep your money where it belongs, friends, in your wallets.
 
Having seen the way the wind is blows and after duly smearing the competition, as is his wont, and having now adopted Doherty’s celestial Jesus as his own, Richard Carrier’s new ‘peer reviewed’ book, the Historicity of Jesus, is apparently shortly due for release. [ . . . ]

I haven't followed Carrier's latest work, but I was struck by your mention of Doherty's celestial Jesus.

Gerard BollandWP published that idea back in the day
[ . . . ] He believed that the basis for Christianity developed among strongly syncretised, Hellenized Jews in Alexandria and Judeophile Greeks in the early Common Era. These early beliefs revolved around a mythical Chrestos figure, and were not connected to a nationalistic Messiah figure. Among the influences in these theosophical circles were Gnosticism and Hermeticism. Philo’s writings were also a step in this development, especially the concept of the Logos.

The development of Christianity took place during the first century in the decades after the Second Temple’s fall when the mythic Chrestos figure became transformed into the legendary Jesus. [ . . . ]

Off to read more
This is Klaus Schilling's summary and translation of Gerardus Bolland's "De Evangelische Jozua" from 1907, available on http://www.radikalkritik.de/Bolland_jozua.pdf. Although Bolland's book lacks chapter divisions and has excursions and repetition, the main thought is quite easy to follow, unlike certain modern liberal theologians of note.
http://www.egodeath.com/BollandGospelJesus.htm

And also to see what Carrier has to say about Bolland.
 
You’re right, pakeha, the notion that Marcion “used the writings of Empedocles” is simply another of the many false claims or charges levied against him by various fathers, in this instance Hippolytus, proving little, if anything at all.

The notion that Marcion published 10 Pauline letters is simply another of the many false claims made recently.

There is no actual evidence of antiquity or recovered manuscript which shows that Marcion published 10 Pauline letters which completely contradicted his own teachings of Dualism.

In "First Apology" attributed to Justin, the contemporary of Marcion, it is claimed Marcion TAUGHT people to DENY Jesus was Sent by God.


Galatians 4:4 KJV But when the fulness of the time was come , God sent forth his Son, made of a woman, made under the law,

Macion teachings completely contradict those in the Pauline Corpus.

Ephrem's Against Marcion III--These are two things from which the Marcionites have deflected, for they are not willing to call our Lord 'the Maker,' nor (do they admit) that He was (sent) by the Maker.

It is a false claim that Marcion publish 10 Epistles of Paul.

Marcion preached about CHRESTUS--the Good One--NOT the Pauline Christus.


Ephraem's Against Marcion III--"But," it is said, "though the Just One is mighty, the Good One is nevertheless mightier than He."


Marcion's CHRESTUS---the Good One--was Greater than the Pauline God.
 
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I'm not discussing now the reliability of the Gospels, but the Pauline epistles. It is very difficult because you go round and round but never go to the essential question.

In what are the Pauline epistles different from the gospels and why they are not acceptable?

Do you believe the Pauline epistles can be dated in the middle of the First Century or in the period between the First and Second Centuries? Why?




Apart from their very different content, the difference that I was talking about in the case of Paul's letters (vs. the gospels), is that they are at least claimed to be written by the named author himself, and are thus supposed to be his own first hand account of what he actually experienced.

But the reason they are still not credible as evidence of a living Jesus is that Paul makes absolutely clear that he had never known any preacher named Jesus. And apart from that one contentious never again repeated reference to “James the lords brother” in a Christian copy written 150 years later, there is no mention of Paul ever meeting anyone else who credibly claimed to have known Jesus either.

And it's quite clear from Paul's letters that Paul really knew nothing at all about any earthly life of Jesus. I think Ellegard is probably correct when he says, for example, that everything that Paul says about his belief in Jesus is in fact theological rather than factual, and that in the very few places in his letters where Paul appears to speak as if he was describing Jesus as a real person, he in fact qualifies that by saying those particular statements were “according to scripture” and/or known to him by “revelation”.

So that is again, not “acceptable” (to use your word) as credible evidence that Paul ever knew a living Jesus, or ever actually knew anything about a living Jesus.

And that’s apart from the fact that whereas for most of the last 2000 years, afaik the Christian church had maintained, and almost everyone unquestioningly believed, that all 13 of Paul’s letters were genuinely written by Paul himself, now almost everyone accepts that around half of them are actually later “fakes” written by other unknown people posing as “Paul”. So that fact alone puts a huge question mark over the authenticity and veracity/truthfulness of any of that writing under the name of “Paul”.

Finally - do I “believe the Pauline epistles can be dated in the middle of the First Century or in the period between the First and Second Centuries? And why? … I really have no specific idea of what the dates would be for any original writing by Paul. Though it appears that the earliest thing we have for “Paul” is P46, which was not written by Paul but by some unknown persons around 200AD, and where afaik P46 also includes all the “faked” letters too.

But if P46 is the earliest extant example, then all we can know is what was written in P46 circa.200AD … we have no idea what Paul may have really written prior to P46. And I doubt if we can have much if any idea of what date that would be either.
 
Apart from their very different content, the difference that I was talking about in the case of Paul's letters (vs. the gospels), is that they are at least claimed to be written by the named author himself, and are thus supposed to be his own first hand account of what he actually experienced.

Which Paul is Paul himself? There are 13 letters under the name of Paul with perhaps as much as 7 different authors.

Why should there be an historical Paul merely because there are letters with the name PAUL?

There is no corroborative evidence from antiquity of an historical Paul as described in Acts and the Pauline Corpus.

Paul is a bogus invention in attempt to historicise the resurrection of Jesus on the THIRD Day.

1 Corinthians 15:15 KJV---Yea, and we are found false witnesses of God; because we have testified of God that he raised up Christ: whom he raised not up , if so be that the dead rise not.

1 Corinthians 15:8 KJV---And last of all he was seen of me also, as of one born out of due time.

Galatians 1:1 KJV----Paul, an apostle, (not of men, neither by man, but by Jesus Christ, and God the Father, who raised him from the dead)

Romans 10:9 KJV---That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved .


1 Thessalonians 1:10 KJV---And to wait for his Son from heaven, whom he raised from the dead, even Jesus, which delivered us from the wrath to come .

The Pauline writings are established fiction and have no historical or theological value for the early development of the Jesus cult of Christians.
 
As someone very tired of seeing this thread rise to the active list - let me pose a few questions and points.

1/ Who cares ?

It is obvious that an anti-Roman movement called christianity came at of the ME in that era and influences the world even today. It seems quite likely that, like all political movements, there was a leader or leaders and promoters. Does it matter for practical purposes if the claimed leader called "Jesus" was actually a composite of several leaders ? Does it matter that admirers have made outlandish attributions for this leader ?

The motive force behind this thread seems to be anti-christian zealots uncomfortable with diversity of opinion.

Anti-Roman? Chrestianity as presented in the Gospels and Acts was very PRO-Roman. The only thing the denomination of Chrestianity that rose to the top was anti it was anti-Jewish


2/ Stay on topic ?

It is excruciatingly clear that many elements from other religions and myths and claims of miracles were attributed to the Jesus character. These have absolutely no bearing on whether a single historical character was foundational to the movement. Any rational skeptical person should have massive objections to claims of about rising from the dead or multiplying bread&fish, but that has no bearing on whether there was an historical character at the center of this movement.

I agree and have used David Crockett and the Frozen Dawn of a totally fantastical tale involving as known historical person as an example of why this line of argument is nonsense. Now when it comes to the non supernatural elements you find the Gospels shoving their foot in their mouth clean to the hip is a much stronger indicator that the stories are made of whole cloth.

3/ Where is the evidence ?

All historical evidence (which is not much) and all "lore" and a common understanding of political movements points to the idea of a single foundational character for christianity. Where is there any evidence of an invented character or else an amalgam of several characters ? All of the strange attributions to this character make it hard to refute a claim of invention, but the existence of the movement implies some sort of leader/founder is extremely probable. Maybe I missed it in the past 200 pages - but 99% of posts seem pointless and/or off topic, so you'll forgive if I've missed it.

Actually things like the Cargo Cults in general and John Frum in particular as well Robin Hood show that this supposed understanding is incomplete. First there is no evidence that Chrestianity (how it was spelled in Acts until c450 CE) started out as a political movement. Religious movement yes but its political overtones would not be evident until centuries later.

Second, the idea a movement must have an actual leader and-or founder is garbage. Take Anonymous which formed in this century...who founded it? Better yet who leads it? The Greaser movement of the 1950s and the Hippy movement of the 1960s are other examples of movements that have no real founder and no real leader.

Finally the very concept holds to the Great Man hypothesis which as anyone who has watched any of James Burke's series knows is nearly entirely garbage. The Great Moment hypothesis borne out of system theory has shown that no person or idea is an island.
 
Second, the idea a movement must have an actual leader and-or founder is garbage. Take Anonymous which formed in this century...who founded it? Better yet who leads it? The Greaser movement of the 1950s and the Hippy movement of the 1960s are other examples of movements that have no real founder and no real leader.

Well, the very fact that there are Jesus cults today PROVE that ONLY BELIEF is required to start a religion.

The Christians today have NO actual evidence of their Jesus but BELIEVE their Jesus was a figure of history

Jesus cult Christians of antiquity and Jews did NOT worship men as Gods and that is precisely why they were persecuted.

If Jesus of Nazareth was an actual known man then the Jesus cult would be known as a Pack of Liars when they claimed Jesus was the Logos and God Creator born of a Ghost a Virgin.

The evidence of antiquity shows that the Jesus story and cult was initiated after the fall of the Jewish Temple.
 
The notion that Marcion published 10 Pauline letters is simply another of the many false claims made recently.

There is no actual evidence of antiquity or recovered manuscript which shows that Marcion published 10 Pauline letters which completely contradicted his own teachings of Dualism.

In "First Apology" attributed to Justin, the contemporary of Marcion, it is claimed Marcion TAUGHT people to DENY Jesus was Sent by God.

I think all of us realize by now that whatever anyone may say here, or present to the contrary, that you’ll simply keep on spouting the same claims. I dare say that if you devoted more time to research and less to posting the same repetitive assertions, we’d all profit.

The Evolution of the Pauline Canon by Robert Price, seems a fine place to start. (depts.drew.edu/jhc/Rpcanon.html)

As variously explained elsewhere: “The documents that make up the Marcionite Bible have not physically survived to modern times; all known copies were destroyed by the religious authorities when the Catholics gained political power in the fourth century. In spite of this destruction, the Marcionite Scriptures can still be restored. Many ancient Christian writers quoted from the extensively, described the differences between them and the official version of the scripture, and even wrote commentaries on them. By using these quotations and descriptions we can reconstruct the Marcionite text.

Marcion formed a canon of his own, which consisted of only eleven books, an abridged and mutilated Gospel of Luke, and ten of Paul’s epistles. He put Galatians first in order, and called Ephesians the Epistle to the Laodicaeans. He rejected the pastoral epistles, in which the forerunners of Gnosticism are condemned.”

The same link also suggests that Justin Martyr wrote a work against Marcion, now lost, as well contemplating a special treatise to that effect.

I furthermore note that prior to the canonical gospels, there existed a veritable swarm of gospels and other manuscripts which, as for Marcion’s ideas, differed greatly, if not drastically, from what later became the orthodoxy. The Marcionite version of Paul’s Epistles was apparently also significantly shorter than the later conventional versions.

After exploring past scholarly approaches to interpreting Paul – noting inter alia how “Van Manen locates the home of Paulinism at Antioch, or perhaps Asia Minor, beginning at the end of the first century or the start of the second, thriving by 150 C.E. Fragments of the writings of this gnostic Pauline circle were later compiled into the familiar epistles, each and all of which are in their present form redactional compositions, finally receiving a catholicizing overlay” – Robert Price in part concludes: -

“Marcion adapted the now-lost Ur-Lukas and combined it with his ten-letter Pauline Corpus to form the Apostolicon. As Knox perceived clearly, our canonical Luke tried to supplant Marcion's gospel, augmenting the pre-Marcionite Ur-Lukas with new, catholicizing and anti-Marcionite material of various sorts.

Canonical Luke succeeded in this effort (again, the longer displaces the shorter). And a la Knox, the Acts of the Apostles (with its Peter-clone Paul who writes no letters but only delivers them for the Twelve) was intended to replace the dangerous Corpus of ‘the apostle of the heretics.’ But, like Jacob, it only managed to usurp priority over Esau (even today subtly governing the way historical critics read the Pauline Epistles). The Pauline Corpus survived alongside it.

Since the Corpus could not be eliminated, Plan B was to reissue them in a sanitized edition, domesticated by means of the Pastoral stratum. From there on in, it became easier to destroy rival versions of the Pauline letters. The Gospels of Mark and Matthew were added. and so was John once it had undergone ‘ecclesiastical redaction’ ( Bultmann), just like Laodiceans and Ur-Lukas.

How interesting that, just as Acts has Paul chained to a Roman guard on either side, so are the most ‘heretical’ of New Testament writings escorted by watchful catholic sentinels on both sides: John is bracketed between Luke and Acts, Paul's letters between Acts and the Pastorals. They shouldn't offer any trouble.

Eventually, nondescript Catholic Epistles were spuriously ascribed to the Pillar Apostles so as to dilute Paul's voice yet further. There was even an attempt to fabricate an innocuous replacement for the Marcionite Laodiceans. It didn't catch on, though it did manage to fool Harnack ."

No need to reply.
 
Interesting that Robert Price considers the Gospel of Luke the first of the canonical gospels and, as I do, one primarily intended to combat the works of Marcion.

The Gospel of Matthew has always presented problems; many of its narratives and sayings of Christ belong to some of the oldest traditions, whereas it simultaneously contains internal evidence of a relatively late origin, particularly in the way it was in part seemingly written to be used by the church after it was fairly well established, together with affirming Church of Rome supremacy, and the addition of striking incidents etc not found in the other gospels.

The fact that Luke was compiled some time after the Gospel of Apelles renders it unsafe to date this gospel any earlier than 170. Establishing an exact date for each of the gospels is impossible, but it seems safe to assume that they came into being between 170 and 180, and then in the following order: Luke, Mark, John, Matthew.
 
I think all of us realize by now that whatever anyone may say here, or present to the contrary, that you’ll simply keep on spouting the same claims. I dare say that if you devoted more time to research and less to posting the same repetitive assertions, we’d all profit.

I think all of us realize by now that you spout repetitive assertions about Marcion that are baseless.

Your claim about that Marcion published 10 Epistles of the Pauline Corpus is compeletely unsupported by writings to Justin Martyr, Celsus, Hippolytus and Ephraem the Syrian.


Marcion preached about the Good God [CHRESTUS]--NOT the Pauline God and his Son Jesus.
 
Interesting that Robert Price considers the Gospel of Luke the first of the canonical gospels and, as I do, one primarily intended to combat the works of Marcion.

There is no actual evidence from antiquity to support the claim that the Gospel of Luke was the first Canonised Gospel.

Birth narratives, post resurrection stories and the ascension of Jesus are LATE additions to the Gospels in the NT.

The short gMark would be obsolete or of no practical use if it was composed AFTER gLuke.
 
I'm curious at which date these gospels actually emerged - as far as I was aware sure dates have not yet been established.

A related question: what dates do you think Doherty or Carrier suggest for these texts?

Let’s get John the Baptist out of the way first, proudfootz.

As far as I know, and I gladly stand corrected, Justin Martyr is the first to mention John. Marcion knows nothing of John, suggesting that the latter went directly from Josephus (assuming this particular passage is authentic) to Justin, and thence to Luke. Marcion published his work a few years after arriving in Rome, or around 145. Justin, discrediting him, knows Marcion, and probably wrote around the middle of the second century.

In that John the Baptist plays a key role in the canonical gospels and the Jesus saga, this little snippet alone would seem to indicate that the Gospels were composed at least no earlier than say 150, as solidly affirmed by the fact that Justin not only fails to mention the Gospels by name, but appears to have simply no knowledge of them.

Thanks for this.

I think perhaps the John cult came first but was unimportant to the epistolary cults, but when the 'gospel narrative' cults developed they tried to co-opt the John cult into their own story.

As well, in all the Christian writings up to 180, there doesn’t exist a single authentic mention of any of the canonical gospels, except for one by Theophilus in the early 170’s in respect of the Gospel of John. Neither is there any reliance whatsoever prior to that date on the contents found in the Gospels, over and above what already existed in preceding manuscripts. I think the first mention of Acts of the Apostles is by Irenaeus about 180.

I’m not going to present the relevant details here, but the writings of Irenaeus, Tertullian, and Clement of Alexandria, in the latter part of the second century, further clearly demonstrate that there existed a mutual accord between these three fathers, one aimed at the introduction and promotion of the canonical gospels as the final inspired word, and which happened to coincide with extending the authority of the Church of Rome beyond the borders of Italy itself.

Finally, Jerome in his Commentary on Matthew states:

“The Evangelist Luke declares that there were many who wrote gospels, which being published by various authors, gave birth to several heresies; such as that according to the Egyptians, and Thomas, and Matthias, and Bartholomew, that of the Twelve Apostles, and Basilides, and Apelles, and others, which it would be tedious to enumerate; in relation to these it will be enough at present to say, that there have been certain men, who endeavored, without the spirit and grace of God, rather to set forth some sort of account, than to publish a true history.”

Is this to be understood as indicating that Jerome believed gMatthew to be composed following gLuke?

As far as I’m aware, no scholar claims that Luke referred to any of the canonical gospels, which furthermore discredits the notion of Mark’s gospel being the first.

Origen, as well as others, add additional writings to those above, but suffice to say that the Gospel of Apelles was definitely written no later than the year 170.

(By the way, some scholar have observed that part of Apelles work focussed on the epistles of Paul, ‘which thereafter the whole church had to take more seriously, as the anti-Marcionite prologues to the canonical gospels make clear’, especially with reference to Luke whose prologue survives in both Greek and Latin.)

For sake of completeness, I’d also once more note that Hegesippus knew nothing of the canonical gospels, even though he’s said to have written five books on church history a few years after 180, traveling extensively to that end.

Given all of the foregoing, it is beyond me how any scholar can possibly maintain that the Gospels were in fact first-century productions!

You’d also like to know the dates applied by Doherty and Carrier.

Let’s first return, in part only, to Godfrey entry on Ehrman’s conclusions: -

“From Bart Ehrman’s Jesus, Interrupted, pp. 144-145:

It also appears that the Gospel writers know about certain later historical events, such as the destruction of Jerusalem in the year 70 ce . . . That implies that these Gospels were probably written after 70.

There are reasons for thinking Mark was written first, so maybe he wrote around the time of the war with Rome, 70 ce.

If Matthew and Luke both used Mark as a source, they must have been composed after Mark’s Gospel circulated for a time outside its own originating community — say, ten or fifteen years later, in 80 to 85 ce.

These are rough guesses, but most scholars agree on them.”

The dating of Mark stems largely from Jesus prophesying the 70 AD destruction of the Temple, with some Christian writers, and most scholars, latching on to this as evidence of its approximate date - with the other three gospels in turn dated respective to Mark. The problem here being, that this renowned event could have been inserted into the tale at any subsequent time whatsoever, even right up to 170 or 180 AD!

As Godfrey notes, we’re told that most scholars agree on a range of dates, ‘for a variety of reasons’, yet these seems to be more motivated by ideology than facts.

The following is mostly taken from Carrier’s review of Doherty’s Jesus Puzzle.

Carrier: “For example, there is no need at all for him to argue that Acts was written decades after Luke (a very disputable claim), since this has nothing to do with his thesis. He can work just as comfortably with Luke-Acts being a single unit composed at the end of the 1st or beginning of the 2nd century.”

Acts seems only to have been concocted a decade or so after Luke, and I doubt that Luke and Acts were composed by the same author, but the notion that they were composed ‘at the end of the 1st or beginning of the 2nd century’, for the reasons given earlier, strikes me as plain fanciful!

Carrier: “A special remark is needed for the most unfortunate example of hyperbole: Doherty's ad hominem, ‘no serious scholar dates either [Matthew or Luke] before the year 80’ (p. 194). Such a sentence has no business in anything a serious scholar writes. Several scholars whom I would indeed regard as serious, and competent, do in fact date these texts earlier (even if not greatly so), and Doherty seems to be maligning them here without the dignity of a trial. The fact is, there is no evidence these texts weren't written earlier, by at least a decade, maybe two--yes, it is unlikely, but not impossible, and arguing this certainly does not deprive me of the right to be called a serious scholar.”

Modern scholarship on full display!

Doherty (in his reply): “Rather, I would regard Mark (dating it perhaps a little earlier than the end of the first century) chiefly as an allegorical and ‘lesson’-oriented piece of writing, heavily employing midrash on scripture, to embody certain outlooks and practices within a sect centered somewhere in the Galilean/Syrian region. To what extent the later evangelists building on Mark (up to around 130?) also intended their Gospels as allegory, or may have accepted elements of Mark’s fictional creation as historical, is difficult to say.”

Why not simply suck our thumb!

Carrier: “For example, he argues that ‘if none of the sayings and deeds of Jesus found in the Gospels are attributed to him in the epistles,’ etc., then ‘the Gospels cannot be accepted as providing any historical data...’ (p. 26). Different interests, different styles, and different sources dictate the content of both.

Doherty: “My argument was a common sense one. If a story claims to present historical data, and yet a plethora of other documents from the same period and on the same subject fails to provide us with any of the detail of that story, big and small, we are justified in regarding the data of that story as ‘unreliable’.”

It’s hardly a question of which of the two sets of writings are acceptable as providing any historical data, seeing that, by their very nature, as well as intention, the one is as unreliable as the other.

The only way one could speak of Paul’s writings and the Gospels comprising a ‘plethora of other documents from the same period’ is if they both hailed from the first century … Our first witness to Paul’s writings is Marcion near the middle of the second century, rendering all that came before in this respect speculation. They simply represent different and non-interacting streams, unrecognized by the orthodoxy till the latter part of the second century by way of Acts of the Apostles.

Ask a simple question, and what do you get …

So it is your contention that the gospels emerged late in the 2nd century AD or later?

"people like Doherty and Carrier date the canonical gospels well nigh up to a century before they actually emerged, I can’t help but wonder about their other conclusions as well..."

...would seem to be an indictment of all virtually scholars in the field whose dating pretty much conforms to earlier dates.

(not that I necessarily agree with those dates either, just curious why Doherty and Carrier should be singled out for agreeing with standard dating schemes.)

Regarding the bolded quote above: No one seems to think the authors of gLuke 'referred' to gMark but simply appropriated large sections wholesale. In modern parlance this would be plagiarism (not an issue for composers of 'gospels' as Nag Hammadi has shown).

Is it your theory that gMark, gMatthew, and gJohn stole those bits from gLuke? But then, neither do they 'refer' to gLuke in the sense of acknowledging the debt.

My own take is that not all writers of savior-cult texts necessarily knew of or need be familiar with the texts of all other similar syncretic cults - thus the authors of the epistles could be unaware of the 'gospel narrative' form just as the authors of the 'gospels' could be ignorant of the epistolary cults even if they were contemporaries.

Perhaps you are using the term 'emerged' to be different from when they were composed?
 
I did a review of Doherty's latest book "Jesus: Neither God Nor Man", spread over 4 webpages. I created a table with the dates that Doherty proposes for some early texts on the second page, here:
http://members.optusnet.com.au/gakuseidon/JNGNM_Review2.html#2.4

He has the Gospel of Mark at around 90s CE, with gMatthew and gLuke within the first two decades of 2nd C CE. Not sure about gJohn though.

So, to follow DougW's dating, gMark actually emerged late in the 2nd century and gMatthew and gLuke actually emerging in the 3rd century.

"when people like Doherty and Carrier date the canonical gospels well nigh up to a century before they actually emerged, I can’t help but wonder about their other conclusions as well"

Good to know! ;)
 
Thanks for that summing up, DougW.
Wait.
Between Joseph and Justin Martyr we have no mention of John the Baptist?
I could find none, myself.
How interesting.
Is John the Baptist going to be another historical figure used to flesh out the Jesus story, after all?

That's the way I see it - that appears to me to be what Origen is doing: 'Josephus mentions John and James, therefore Jesus'.
 
Well, the very fact that there are Jesus cults today PROVE that ONLY BELIEF is required to start a religion.

The Christians today have NO actual evidence of their Jesus but BELIEVE their Jesus was a figure of history

Jesus cult Christians of antiquity and Jews did NOT worship men as Gods and that is precisely why they were persecuted.

If Jesus of Nazareth was an actual known man then the Jesus cult would be known as a Pack of Liars when they claimed Jesus was the Logos and God Creator born of a Ghost a Virgin.

The evidence of antiquity shows that the Jesus story and cult was initiated after the fall of the Jewish Temple.

This is a very precise and eloquent post.

The unreliability of the writings of the various 'christian' authors, their constant revisions, deletions, and additions, aside from the fact that they cannot even be reliably dated demonstrates that the faith in the 'historical Jesus' model isn't on any firmer ground than a literary origins model and indeed in many ways is less supported by way of evidence.
 
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