For the sake of clarification:
1) Paul does not mention any of the miracles attributed to Jesus either in the Synoptic Gospels or that of John. Nor does he mention any of the teachings of Jesus from the sermon on the mount. He also doesn't mention any of the pericopes recorded in the gospels, such as that of, the beheading of John the Baptist, the anointing woman or the woman taken in adultery. Further, he does not allude to any of the parables of Jesus. He claims in Galatians that the only source of his gospel is his direct revelation of Jesus (Gal. 1:11, 12) and goes on to say that he did not confer with those who knew Jesus (Gal. 1:16, 17) and adds that he got nothing from those reputed to be of importance among the followers of Jesus (Gal. 2:6, 7). So, his main, perhaps only source of his "knowledge" of Jesus was his own hallucination.
2) As to Gal. 4:4, the idea that Jesus was born of a woman merely says he was a human being. Had Paul asserted the virgin birth, as did Matthew and Mark, or had he asserted that Jesus was the divine Logos of John, that would amount to something.
3) The assertion that he was a descendant of David is something I overlooked. However, what I was focusing on and responding to was whether or not Paul made reference to any of the miracle attributed to Jesus. He didn't.
4) I don't see where you get two brothers in Paul's epistles. Galatians only refers to James.
5) Concerning the hilited area, I already said that the institution of the eucharist was one of the only things Paul said about Jesus.us. I probably should have included the crucifixion. However I do believe I mentioned that Paul said Jesus was resurrected and appeared to a number of people. His post-resurrection appearances differ from those in the gospels, which differ from each other.
6) Given that Paul's only real knowledge of Jesus was his hallucinatory revelation, his admonition about not divorcing may only have come from what he observed as practiced by Jewish followers of Jesus.
7) Finally, and once again, it isn't necessary or even particularly intelligent to insult those with whom you disagree. In fact, it's childish. Hence, your post was edited by the moderators for breech of rules 0 and 12.
This position seems centered on the idea that the historical Jesus actually told his followers to eat his flesh and drink his blood as Ehrman posits. Is that really considered a bedrock historical fact? Justin Martyr seems to suggest otherwise:
"For the apostles, in the memoirs composed by them, which are called Gospels, have thus delivered unto us what was enjoined upon them; that Jesus took bread, and when He had given thanks, said, "This do ye in remembrance of Me, this is My body;" and that, after the same manner, having taken the cup and given thanks, He said, "This is My blood;" and gave it to them alone. Which the wicked devils have imitated in the mysteries of Mithras, commanding the same thing to be done. For, that bread and a cup of water are placed with certain incantations in the mystic rites of one who is being initiated, you either know or can learn."
Now Justin clearly is talking about the Christian Eucharist, yet he doesn't mention wine. Justin is writing in the middle of the 2nd century and is stating that the Christian Eucharist uses water ... and that this is the same thing that the Mithraists do. How could there be a rich oral tradition from the 30s CE that Justin flat out got wrong? This suggests that there was no oral tradition about the Eucharist that matches our current tradition in the middle of the 2nd century. The oral tradition can only be used to verify a historical Jesus if the oral tradition is consistent and didn't start somewhere else.
IanS, while the DDS could be a possible source for the institution of the Eucharist, wouldn't there be a more direct source in the Passover meal itself?
Here's something posted on the subject of the Last Supper in the RatSkep monster thread I found most interesting.
http://www.rationalskepticism.org/christianity/historical-jesus-t219-24040.html#p1294301
This wasn't discussed much at the time over there.
Can the better informed posters here say if this reasoning has been refuted or shown to be weak?
No, I think Justin is saying that the Mithraic ceremony used water. The Christian ceremony uses both, that is, watered wine. That was the typical table drink.Now Justin clearly is talking about the Christian Eucharist, yet he doesn't mention wine. Justin is writing in the middle of the 2nd century and is stating that the Christian Eucharist uses water ...
Deny as you will, and fib about me as you incessantly do, the fact endures that what we have of Paul discusses Jesus as having once been a mortal man. Paul describes no miracle involving that mortal man during his earthly life, but a miracle occurs the third day when the mortal man who was Jesus had been dead. Beginning at that time, a lot of people see a ghost. BFD.But probably not if you persist in saying that Paul’s letters are credible evidence of Jesus because they don’t present Jesus as a miraculous figure. Because that’s clearly untrue.
There is exactly one fact alleged about Jesus' earthly life: he was crucified. Do you seriously propose that despite having "persecuted" Wayists before his conversion, Paul didn't already know that this was what Wayists believed about Jesus?We, who are Jews by nature and not sinners from among the Gentiles, who know that a person is not justified by works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Christ Jesus that we may be justified by faith in Christ and not by works of the law, because by works of the law no one will be justified.But if, in seeking to be justified in Christ, we ourselves are found to be sinners, is Christ then a minister of sin? Of course not! But if I am building up again those things that I tore down, then I show myself to be a transgressor.For through the law I died to the law, that I might live for God. I have been crucified with Christ; yet I live, no longer I, but Christ lives in me; insofar as I now live in the flesh, I live by faith in the Son of God who has loved me and given himself up for me.I do not nullify the grace of God; for if justification comes through the law, then Christ died for nothing.
. . . (snip) . . . Tim
On your six points (best not to comment on moderator activity):
1 ~ There is no textual basis for asserting that Paul's "gospel" in Galatians 1 and 2 coincides with the entirety of his confident beliefs about Jesus' life. Throughout his letters, including Galatians, Paul acknowledges contacts with the James Gang and familiarity with what others teach about Jesus. Affirmatively, his "gospel" need be no more than this, Galatians 2: 15-21.
There is exactly one fact alleged about Jesus' earthly life: he was crucified. Do you seriously propose that despite having "persecuted" Wayists before his conversion, Paul didn't already know that this was what Wayists believed about Jesus?
2 ~ No Gospel except Matthew asserts a virgin birth. Luke depicts Mary saying she was a virgin when she learned that she would, in the unspecified future, give birth. Mark doesn't mention Mary's sex life. Paul will be dead before Matthew is composed. There is no basis at all for retrojecting Mathhew's misreading of Isaiah onto Paul's unambiguous statement that Jesus was born as lifelong Jewish men are born. That the two works are bound in the same physical book was a decision made by third parties long after both authors were dead.
3 ~ The money phrase is according to the flesh, as if there is some other way to be crucified, die and be entombed. Paul thinks the ghost he and others saw is the ghost of a man.
4 ~ 1 Corithians 9: 5; I would not assume that the relationship is kinship; I would say that it is suggestive that Paul was told and believed that Jesus had eartthly associates who later on were Paul's competitors.
5 ~ What difference do tales of Jesus' post-resurrection appearances, consistent or inconsistent, make for his earthly life? He's already dead. His importance to Paul is what Paul thinks Jesus did after dying. Jesus' life is important to Paul mainly since having had one is the only way to die, and having lived as a Jew is the only way to be raised from the dead as a Jew.
6 ~ You supposed "given" was addressed at point 1. I have some reservation about this. The Gospels could have been written from a knowledge of Paul, rather than Paul referring to some pre-existing Jesus tradition. Paul is, however, placing a constraint on a historical Jesus who counts, as I discussed in that thread. That constraint is topical for Ehrman.
Ian
Deny as you will, and fib about me as you incessantly do, .... .
Nobody disputes that Paul thought Jesus had participated in wonders, but Paul only mentions wonders that came after Jesus had died. Paul didn't describe Jesus participating in any miracles while Jesus was alive on Earth.if you persist in saying that Paul’s letters are credible evidence of Jesus because they don’t present Jesus as a miraculous figure.
In the same Galatians passages, Paul says he spent two weeks with Cephas, and some unspecified amount of time with James. What do you think that was? Silent prayer?Paul specifically says he got nothing from James and company.
That's not in dispute. It's whether she's still a virgin when she is pregnant. Luke doesn't say. Gabe says to the virgin at 1: 31, you will conceive; he doesn't say when, and he certainly doesn't say before you've done what mommies and daddies who love each other very much do.Concerning the hilited area: No, Luke actually says Mary was a virgin (Lk. 1:26, 27, bracketed material added for clarification, bolding also added):
I think Paul could have thought he had "seen a ghost," my words, not his. I think Paul could have believed that 500+ other people saw a ghost, too. Did later people make up more stories? Yes; at least what's in Matthew's tomb scene never happened, that's a slam dunk. Luke-Acts?. Hard to say; these are the same people who supposedly saw Jesus, before he died, chatting with Moses and Elijah and then heard a voice in the clouds. They saw his ghost fly off afterwards? Why the hell not?My point about Paul's description of the post-resurrection appearances of Jesus is that they differ from all of the gospels, which all differ from one another, which strongly implies that they were all made up stories.
I think there was "some" pre-existing Jesus tradition, but there's no way to tell whether Paul's teaching on divorce was part of it, or something Paul made up and put into Jesus' mouth. All we know is that the later Gospels depict Jesus teaching, to an extent, directly contrary to what's in the Hebrew Bible. If that happened, then that would be distinctive - a Jewish preacher changing the written Torah, and making no bones about it. That was then, this is now, deal with it.Could you clarify this last point?
pakeha quoting somebody else
No, I think Justin is saying that the Mithraic ceremony used water. The Christian ceremony uses both, that is, watered wine. That was the typical table drink.
Justin Martyr believed that Mithras worship's ritual meal was taken from Daniel and Isaiah, with a little help from the Devil:
http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf01.viii.iv.lxx.html
Under the circumstances, I don't think we have new information here about the eucharist or its institution.
Ian
Deny as you will, and fib about me as you incessantly do, the fact endures that what we have of Paul discusses Jesus as having once been a mortal man. Paul describes no miracle involving that mortal man during his earthly life, but a miracle occurs the third day when the mortal man who was Jesus had been dead. Beginning at that time, a lot of people see a ghost. BFD.
Tim
On your six points (best not to comment on moderator activity):
1 ~ There is no textual basis for asserting that Paul's "gospel" in Galatians 1 and 2 coincides with the entirety of his confident beliefs about Jesus' life. Throughout his letters, including Galatians, Paul acknowledges contacts with the James Gang and familiarity with what others teach about Jesus. Affirmatively, his "gospel" need be no more than this, Galatians 2: 15-21.
There is exactly one fact alleged about Jesus' earthly life: he was crucified. Do you seriously propose that despite having "persecuted" Wayists before his conversion, Paul didn't already know that this was what Wayists believed about Jesus?
2 ~ No Gospel except Matthew asserts a virgin birth. Luke depicts Mary saying she was a virgin when she learned that she would, in the unspecified future, give birth. Mark doesn't mention Mary's sex life. Paul will be dead before Matthew is composed. There is no basis at all for retrojecting Mathhew's misreading of Isaiah onto Paul's unambiguous statement that Jesus was born as lifelong Jewish men are born. That the two works are bound in the same physical book was a decision made by third parties long after both authors were dead.
3 ~ The money phrase is according to the flesh, as if there is some other way to be crucified, die and be entombed. Paul thinks the ghost he and others saw is the ghost of a man.
4 ~ 1 Corithians 9: 5; I would not assume that the relationship is kinship; I would say that it is suggestive that Paul was told and believed that Jesus had eartthly associates who later on were Paul's competitors.
5 ~ What difference do tales of Jesus' post-resurrection appearances, consistent or inconsistent, make for his earthly life? He's already dead. His importance to Paul is what Paul thinks Jesus did after dying. Jesus' life is important to Paul mainly since having had one is the only way to die, and having lived as a Jew is the only way to be raised from the dead as a Jew.
6 ~ You supposed "given" was addressed at point 1. I have some reservation about this. The Gospels could have been written from a knowledge of Paul, rather than Paul referring to some pre-existing Jesus tradition. Paul is, however, placing a constraint on a historical Jesus who counts, as I discussed in that thread. That constraint is topical for Ehrman.
I haven't gotten around to reading Ehrman's Did Jesus Exist? yet, so I'm curious about thid statement made by him on the Huffington Post:
With respect to Jesus, we have numerous, independent accounts of his life in the sources lying behind the Gospels (and the writings of Paul) -- sources that originated in Jesus' native tongue Aramaic and that can be dated to within just a year or two of his life (before the religion moved to convert pagans in droves). Historical sources like that are is pretty astounding for an ancient figure of any kind.
This is the first time I've heard of such sources. Does anyone know what Ehrman is talking about?
pakeha quoting somebody else
No, I think Justin is saying that the Mithraic ceremony used water. The Christian ceremony uses both, that is, watered wine. That was the typical table drink.
Justin Martyr believed that Mithras worship's ritual meal was taken from Daniel and Isaiah, with a little help from the Devil:
http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/anf01.viii.iv.lxx.html
Under the circumstances, I don't think we have new information here about the eucharist or its institution. ...
Concerning the hilited area: No, Luke actually says Mary was a virgin (Lk. 1:26, 27, bracketed material added for clarification, bolding also added):
In the sixth month [of Elizabeth's pregnancy] the angel Gabriel was sent from God to a city in Galilee named Nazareth to a virgin betrothed to a man whose name was Joseph, of the house of David, and the virgin's name was Mary.
There's a further argument for this. Luke says in 1:5 that the annunciation of John the Baptist's conception happened during Herod the Great's (*) reign. But then in 2:2, Joseph and Mary go to Bethlehem during Quirinius' reign. There's a 10 year gap in between. Or, of course, the great historian Luke f***ed up. (**)That's not in dispute. It's whether she's still a virgin when she is pregnant. Luke doesn't say. Gabe says to the virgin at 1: 31, you will conceive; he doesn't say when, and he certainly doesn't say before you've done what mommies and daddies who love each other very much do.
. . . (snip) . . .
Tim
In the same Galatians passages, Paul says he spent two weeks with Cephas, and some unspecified amount of time with James. What do you think that was? Silent prayer?
That's not in dispute. It's whether she's still a virgin when she is pregnant. Luke doesn't say. Gabe says to the virgin at 1: 31, you will conceive; he doesn't say when, and he certainly doesn't say before you've done what mommies and daddies who love each other very much do.
I think Paul could have thought he had "seen a ghost," my words, not his. I think Paul could have believed that 500+ other people saw a ghost, too. Did later people make up more stories? Yes; at least what's in Matthew's tomb scene never happened, that's a slam dunk. Luke-Acts?. Hard to say; these are the same people who supposedly saw Jesus, before he died, chatting with Moses and Elijah and then heard a voice in the clouds. They saw his ghost fly off afterwards? Why the hell not?
I think there was "some" pre-existing Jesus tradition, but there's no way to tell whether Paul's teaching on divorce was part of it, or something Paul made up and put into Jesus' mouth. All we know is that the later Gospels depict Jesus teaching, to an extent, directly contrary to what's in the Hebrew Bible. If that happened, then that would be distinctive - a Jewish preacher changing the written Torah, and making no bones about it. That was then, this is now, deal with it.
From a "historical Jesus" point of view, then, this would be a marker that we've got the right guy, and not some other Jesus with some other ragtag bunch of hangers-on who got himself killed the way the Romans liked to do it. This sort of thing is Ehrman's job to sort out.
Oddly enough, Genesis 14: 18-20. I don't know which Christian first wrote in as many words that it is wine. Justin Martyr does refer to watered wine as regular, in 65 of the First Apology, about 150-160 CEWhen is the first reference to the cup of the Last Supper actually containing wine?
No, he said he didn't get his gospel from other people, and apparently defines his gospel as what I quoted in the earlier post, Galatians 2: 15 ff. If not, then he hasn't defined gospel and so cannot be said to have said anything definite at all. And either way, he says it in the context of disclosing a two week confab with Cephas. If you want to define his words for him, for your own use, then peachy, but you can't attribute the resulting joint composition to him.Whatever he was doing, Paul asserts that he got nothing from those who knew Jesus, however much he talked to them.
Supernatural interest in a future pregancy does not imply that the conception will occur without the lady having had sexual intercourse. I doubt the thought would occur except that Matthew misread Isaiah, about which "Luke" holds his silence. (I actually read it as Gabe telling Mary that God wouldn't mind, just this once, if she gave Joe a helping hand, so to speak, in stepping up to the plate. Then again, I have a dirty mind. Then again again, unwed Ruth did the same for Boaz, and according to Luke, they are among Jesus' ancestors on both sides.)So Gabriel is telling her she will have a supernatural birth, even though she doesn't have a husband.
Don't they all. Nevertheless, that's what in the text we are discussing. With or without the five hundred, I do think there is a plausibly original passage that says Paul isn't alone in seeing this ghost, and that he is the most recent one to do so among the apostolic class.As to the 500+ brethren, this may be a later interpolation. The passage shows signs of tampering.
...
Oddly enough, Genesis 14: 18-20. I don't know which Christian first wrote in as many words that it is wine. Justin Martyr does refer to watered wine as regular, in 65 of the First Apology, about 150-160 CE
http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0126.htm
Mark 14:25 seems to be the first overt suggestion that it is wine (Jesus won't drink the "fruit of the vine" again until he drinks it new in the Kingdom of God). All the synoptics follow Paul and stay with "cup" for the institution narrative itself (the incident isn't in John). The basis for inferring watered wine is that would be what would typically be in a cup at table (where the synoptics, but not Paul, place the action). The Didache, which is hard to date, is again suggestive, speaking of the holy vine of David, but it's still a cup. ...
Moses then, who was the first of the prophets, spoke in these very words: "The sceptre shall not depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between his feet, until He come for whom it is reserved; and He shall be the desire of the nations, binding His foal to the vine, washing His robe in the blood of the grape." Genesis 49:10
To fib is nicer than to lie, Ian.
Nobody disputes that Paul thought Jesus had participated in wonders, but Paul only mentions wonders that came after Jesus had died. Paul didn't describe Jesus participating in any miracles while Jesus was alive on Earth.
The letters are evidence of what Paul believed about Jesus, that Jesus was a human being who did his best work conspicuously late in his career, after he had died. Included in that evidence, however, is that Paul didn't disclose a basis for knowing whether Jesus really had had an earthly career. Meeting up with Paul was another of Jesus' later accomplishments, it seems.
I haven't gotten around to reading Ehrman's Did Jesus Exist? yet, so I'm curious about thid statement made by him on the Huffington Post:
With respect to Jesus, we have numerous, independent accounts of his life in the sources lying behind the Gospels (and the writings of Paul) -- sources that originated in Jesus' native tongue Aramaic and that can be dated to within just a year or two of his life (before the religion moved to convert pagans in droves). Historical sources like that are is pretty astounding for an ancient figure of any kind.
This is the first time I've heard of such sources. Does anyone know what Ehrman is talking about?
And Mary said to the angel, "How can this be, since I have no husband?"
And the angel said to her,
"The Holy Spirit will come upon you,
and the power of the MOst High will overshadow you;
therefore the child to be born will be called holy,
the Son of God. . . ."
So Gabriel is telling her she will have a supernatural birth, even though she doesn't have a husband.
.
So, Paul describes a man who was born to a Jewish woman, who said a few things over his food shortly before he was crucified. All that's in the Gospels. None of it is miraculous.But Paul does not describe any part of those gospels stories - he does not describe the miracle parts, but he does not describe any of the other parts of those stories either!
Paul professes to believe something about Jesus' earthly life, but provides little detailed information about the basis for his beliefs. That being the case, I do not propose that "Paul’s letters are credible evidence of Jesus," contrary to your claim about me.I’m not sure what you mean ...