Elagabalus
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2013
- Messages
- 7,051
...We are not even sure if Paul men "brother" in the biological or spiritual sense...
That is simply false, Maximara. It is only the Mythicists who keep claiming this.
...We are not even sure if Paul men "brother" in the biological or spiritual sense...
You're having a laugh, aren't you? Do we have a James appearing hundreds of years after the existence of the Temple and the governorship of Pilate and the preaching of John, saying "I am Jesus' brother"? If we do, it's not the same as the evidence of Paul and Acts.Hong Xiuquan, the leader of the Taiping Rebellion 1850 to 1864, said he was the younger brother of Jesus. Does this mean we have "credible evidence for a historical Jesus" in the 19th century? No so why in the name of logic should it be so for the 1st century?
Yeah but you're forgetting the thing that I said which led to this conversation: are you or I qualified to determine what evidence is geuine or credible when it comes to historical research?
Doesn't evaluating evidence depend on what you are investigating.Absolutely. Of course any educated person should know very well what is credible evidence vs. what is not.
And it's not credible evidence to cite gospels written anonymously as late religious copies by unknown people who had never known Jesus and who never named any sources as people who had told them any first hand accounts of Jesus, but who repeatedly insisted that he was supernatural and miraculous at every turn. And with no independent contemporary confirmation of any part of it at all.
That is certainly not credible as a source of reliable evidence.
You don't understand what's happening. IanS has picked up on something I find absurd; that is, that the only sources of information about Jesus must be people who claimed to know him personally. Every time I post something, IanS will immediately post some message containing a reference to this. But he will not address my objection to this criterion of validity of testimony.Doesn't evaluating evidence depend on what you are investigating.
It means that consensus of scholars is worthless. Do you understand the examples now? If you want the truth, go to the margins and listen to the small number of dissidents. Even if what they say sounds like woo. I think that's what we're being told.
Every stride and leap in knowledge has been initially against the "consensus".
Scientists ridiculed and marginalized Alfred Wegener for proposing the Continental Drift theory and the "consensus" derided and ignored him for a fool who was not qualified in the field of the "consensus".
From here
Despite much opposition, the view of continental drift gained support and a lively debate started between "drifters" or "mobilists" (proponents of the theory) and "fixists" (opponents).
Ah, now I remember what it reminds me of: conspiracy theorists and woo-woos, who say exactly the same thing, citing Einstein and Galileo.
IanS and I have discoursed before.You don't understand what's happening. IanS has picked up on something I find absurd; that is, that the only sources of information about Jesus must be people who claimed to know him personally. Every time I post something, IanS will immediately post some message containing a reference to this. But he will not address my objection to this criterion of validity of testimony.
It's his way of arguing. Being provocative. The other thing he's done that with recently is in reference to my point that I don't read from lists of books and videos that people send me. As as soon on as he read that, he started to bang on about books I should read.
That's how IanS engages in discourse.
As I say, it's best left alone.
To be clear: Just a man, rather than a virgin-born Son of the Holy Ghost. That was later.
The evidence is in the letters of Paul and the Gospel of Mark, which are the earliest Christian writings we have. I hope you will admit that the Gospel of Mark appears to portray Jesus as a man with a mother and brothers and sisters? So at least the Gospel of Mark supports this.
Now on to Paul...
Well, I'll show you mine and you show me yours.
(1) Paul calls Jesus "anthropos" (man) twice:
Rom 5:15 But not as the offence, so also [is] the free gift. For if through the offence of one many be dead, much more the grace of God, and the gift by grace, [which is] by one man [anthropos], Jesus Christ, hath abounded unto many.
1 Cor 15:20 But now is Christ risen from the dead, [and] become the firstfruits of them that slept.
21 For since by man [came] death, by man [anthropos] [came] also the resurrection of the dead.
Paul uses "anthropos" many times in his letters, and it ALWAYS means "human person".
(2) There are quite a lot of "seed of" statements as well. I'm not aware of any literature that has a non-human being being called a "seed of" a presumably living person. I won't go into them, but how do you read them in light of the contents of Paul?
(3) Romans 9:
Rom 9:3 For I could wish that I myself were accursed from Christ for my brethren, my *countrymen according to the flesh, 4 who are Israelites, to whom pertain the adoption, the glory, the covenants, the giving of the law, the service of God, and the promises; 5 of whom are the fathers and from whom, according to the flesh, Christ came...
Again, the obvious reading is Christ is a descendent of Jews. What is your reading of the above?
If you mean "son of God", then note that Paul says that any human can be a son of God in Rom 8:
Rom 8:14 For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God
So, over to you. How do you read the above? And can you show me where in the letters of Paul he describes Jesus as "a supernatural spiritual scion of Yahweh in the heavens"?
Well I’m not surprised you have not read it. Because I asked you a couple of years back whether you had had read certain books, to which you said that you had, but then when I asked you to tell me what was said on specific pages of those books, you corrected yourself and said that in fact you had not read any of those particular sceptical books.
If you, or any HJ posters in these threads, want to know why academic sceptic authors, like Avalos, are so critical of the profession of biblical studies, then instead of burying your head in the sand and persisting with your mistaken beliefs about these individuals as “expert historians”, you really do need to read why academics such as Avalos and many others in recent years are now so critical of biblical studies.
If instead, all you ever do is read the bible, read books by traditional biblical scholars like Ehrman, Crossan, Sanders and the rest, then you will never begin to understand why there is a very serious problem with the credibility, and even the actual veracity or truthfulness, of what has passed as expert knowledge of Jesus and the bible for so long ....
.... IOW, if you are going to argue that sceptics are wrong to distrust biblical scholars, then you really do need to read what sceptical academics say, and not what we all know has been said for generations by the Christian Church.
... must read books that argue "for" or "against"? What a totally weird idea.
Ah, now I remember what it reminds me of: conspiracy theorists and woo-woos, who say exactly the same thing, citing Einstein and Galileo.
But here I am just pointing out to you that a senior professor of biblical studies has written a book describing what he has seen first hand as the religious bias and the continuation of ancient allegiances to Christianity still continuing today in that profession, and explaining why he thinks the profession itself is not credible in what most of it's scholars still claim as evidence for truths in the bible. You can get the book free of charge on inter-library loans in the UK, of course.
Do you have a video or images to illustrate a straw man standing on a slippery slope ending in a poisoned well? I'd like to see that.
Belz, you wondered Do you follow now? If you're touting a fringe woo theory, or are a victim of one, something like this is what you've got to say:
All correct changes of theory started off against the consensus. (Which is an obvious tautology, by the way, as well as being self-evidently true.) Fine. But then the woo merchants try to imply that the contrary is also true - that all statements made against the consensus are correct. Or at the very least, that statements are more likely to be correct if they are against current scholarly consensus.
There is a huge advantage in this if you want to make money by selling nonsensical books. You make the readers feel like geniuses by flattering them that the know it all wise guys of the Academy don't know zilch, but if you read this book by Acharya S (or whoever) you'll be better informed than the consensus of scholars, without the necessity of all that boring study process.
I really do feel that some posters here have fallen victim to this kind of intellectual scam.
Sure he did. In his book Ehrman mentions the following:
1. There are numerous independent accounts of Jesus' life in the sources lying behind the Gospels
2. There are extensive writings from one first-century author, Paul, who acquired his information within a couple of years of Jesus' life and who actually knew, first hand, Jesus' closest disciple Peter and his own brother James.
Had he only wished to point out whom he meant, he might have shown this by another appellation, and called him the son of Cleophas, as the Evangelist does.
But as he considered that he had a share in the august titles of the Apostles, he exalts himself by honoring James; and this he does by calling him “the Lord's brother,” although he was not by birth His brother, but only so reputed.
It's not a warning, backhanded or forehanded. It's a description of how things are proceeding in IanS's discourse with me in particular.IanS and I have discoursed before.![]()
No offense intended, but this sort of backhanded warning never reflects favorably on the author, I recommend against it in the future. Thank you kindly.
It's not a warning, backhanded or forehanded. It's a description of how things are proceeding in IanS's discourse with me in particular.
Educated people read books for and against a certain topic.
...must read books that argue "for" or "against"? What a totally weird idea.
To be clear: Just a man, rather than a virgin-born Son of the Holy Ghost. That was later.
The evidence is in the letters of Paul and the Gospel of Mark, which are the earliest Christian writings we have. I hope you will admit that the Gospel of Mark appears to portray Jesus as a man with a mother and brothers and sisters?
I don't think anyone here disputes that the Jesus of the Bible did not exist.
What?? You cannot be serious. Your post reflects the absurdity of the HJ argument.
You must HAVE forgotten that everyone here who claim Jesus existed make reference to him in the Bible.
Craig B openly uses the 'biography' of Bible Jesus found in gMark, gMatthew, the Epistles to the Romans and Galatians.
The MULTILATED 'biography' of Bible Jesus is the fundamental 'biography' of HJ.
The Greater Fool said:If Jesus were a fraud (or deluded, or both) would we be forced to accept the his fraud (or delusion, or both) as truth in order to determine if he was real, or more likely real than not? Do the written references of those that knew him, or knew of him, or knew a relative of his, or heard reports of him, become useless because they believed the fraud (or dulusions, or both)?
I don't think anyone here disputes that the Jesus of the Bible did not exist. This is not the question at hand. The question is: Is there a historic person that could form the basis for the myth?
It's rather like the myth of King Arthur. It is known it is a myth, because there was no King Arthur, no Camelot, No Merlin, no magic, and on and on. But is there a historic figure (or multiple) that were the seed for the myth. Saying "No, because there is no Merlin and no Magic" rather misses the point.
In your "reality" only!
In the real reality of facts and reason and logic and rational erudite reading of things on all sides of an issue you are utterly wrong!
If only you understood the value of reading things that do not support your biases and wishful thinking then maybe you would have realized that.
It would behoove you to start reading books that disagree with your cherry picked snippets from fairy tales that your wishful thinking would love for them to have been true and worthy of all the special pleading which then you use to circularly argue for your fabricated rationalized "facts" as proof for your cherry picked bits.... and round and round you go with nary a pause to look outside the circle of appeal to biased invested authority and appeal to majority and encircled by straw men all around to obscure any possibility of seeing anything that might aggravate the throbbing cognitive dissonance.
You are debating the actual existence of a Mythical Jesus. No one here believes the Mythical Jesus exists.
The Greater Fool said:The Historical Jesus discussion, at least the discussion I see being attempted, is about a human that may have been the seed for the myth.