Belz...
Fiend God
Gee I'd like someone to propose a scenario for the birth of Christianity that fits known history better than the HJ one.
Gee I'd like someone to propose a scenario for the birth of Christianity that fits known history better than the HJ one.
Gee I'd like someone to propose a scenario for the birth of Christianity that fits known history better than the HJ one.
The Great Revolt totally disrupted Jewish life and people were desperate for answers about the fall of Jerusalem and the Roman occupation. Stories arose about a messiah who had come and saved the Jewish nation but his salvation was of a spiritual nature rather than a political one. As scholars studied the OT the stories coalesced about a rabbi who was killed yet triumphed over the Romans. Details were added to details til a coherent story was woven together.
The problem is that an HJ is not necessary to get Christianity going.
It is clear the people that wrote about the HJ were making stuff up.
I am just not sure that an HJ is the simpler explanation and the more likely explanation for the origin of Christianity.
It might have happened like that, but your story implies that Christianity arose in the Jerusalem area. I'm not sure of that even, but perhaps the evidence is better for that than I realize. Could Christianity have arisen amongst Hellenistic Jews living in the Jerusalem area, Hellenistic Jews displaced from the Jerusalem area or even Gentiles members of a God-fearer group? It seems like pinning that down should be easier than pinning down whether there was an HJ, but as near as I can tell it isn't even possible to do that. And some people like to throw the Essenes into the mix as well.
I do think it's interesting that Christianity arose during the time of rebellions against the Romans. It seems like there is a clue there as to what might have happened but I don't know how to interpret that clue with regard to the rise of Christianity. It is also interesting that the Jews had come through a big civil war not that long before the time of the hypothetical HJ and the tension between the Hellenistic Jews and the traditionalists who won the civil war may not have totally disappeared by the time of the hypothetical HJ. Maybe there's a clue there to what went on as well, but I don't know what to make of it.
The rebellions against Rome play a role in what I think of as the standard Christian history narrative. The theory is that the Jerusalem Jewish Christians (the James group) that had founded Christianity were wiped out in the one of the two big rebellions against the Romans and that's the reason that all evidence of them disappeared. Maybe. But maybe they just never existed in the first place.
I never said it was. I said it's the best scenario we have so far. How often do I have to repeat this ?
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You know that virtually all the cities in Judea were destroyed in that war, not just Jerusalem, don't you?
You should also be aware that there were "Christians" in Rome before the War.
Tacitus calls them "Chrestians" or "Christians" depending on who you trust, but later Christians had no doubt that Nero persecuted them for burning Rome around the time that James was killed in the early 60s.
Have you read Josephus' "War"? I think you might find answers to some of your questions there.
http://www.biblestudytools.com/history/flavius-josephus/
The evidence for Christians living in Rome in the early 60's seems to consist of something that Tacitus wrote in about 116 CE. I think this evidence is problematical. There are various arguments against the reliability of the evidence. FWIW, Richard Carrier doesn't believe the passage was forged, but even if it wasn't Tacitus could have been basing the paragraph on what Christians told him. My guess right now is that there weren't enough Christians in Rome in the early 60's for Nero to have given a crap about them so I doubt that the interpretation of the passage that Nero made the Christians scape goats for the fires is accurate.
ETA: Thanks for the link. I haven't looked at it yet and I am procrastinating right now and the guilt is building up so I think I'm going to move on to doing something productive. And even if the guilt isn't enough to motivate me, my wife's patience at my procrastination might be wearing thin. So I think I better look at it later.
The evidence for Christians living in Rome in the early 60's seems to consist of something that Tacitus wrote in about 116 CE. I think this evidence is problematical. There are various arguments against the reliability of the evidence. FWIW, Richard Carrier doesn't believe the passage was forged, but even if it wasn't Tacitus could have been basing the paragraph on what Christians told him. My guess right now is that there weren't enough Christians in Rome in the early 60's for Nero to have given a crap about them so I doubt that the interpretation of the passage that Nero made the Christians scape goats for the fires is accurate.
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Yes, I've come across opinions on the matter of Nero's persecution of Christians as being made of whole cloth. Could the whole subject have been made up?
Yes, I've come across opinions on the matter of Nero's persecution of Christians as being made of whole cloth. Could the whole subject have been made up?
The problem is that an HJ is not necessary to get Christianity going. It is clear the people that wrote about the HJ were making stuff up. I realized I haven't presented good evidence for this but I am fairly sure that Christianity grew out of an existing religious offshoot of Judaism. The records of that initial group, if they ever existed are completely lost so nobody will never know what went on in that group during the formation of Christianity.
davefoc said:It certainly seems plausible to me that the group instead of making almost everything up made everything up or perhaps the initial beliefs of the group with regard to the messiah just morphed into something else as the religion developed.
The problem is that an HJ is not necessary to get Christianity going. It is clear the people that wrote about the HJ were making stuff up. I realized I haven't presented good evidence for this but I am fairly sure that Christianity grew out of an existing religious offshoot of Judaism. The records of that initial group, if they ever existed are completely lost so nobody will never know what went on in that group during the formation of Christianity.
It certainly seems plausible to me that the group instead of making almost everything up made everything up or perhaps the initial beliefs of the group with regard to the messiah just morphed into something else as the religion developed.
The problem is that an HJ is not necessary to get Christianity going. It is clear the people that wrote about the HJ were making stuff up. I realized I haven't presented good evidence for this but I am fairly sure that Christianity grew out of an existing religious offshoot of Judaism. The records of that initial group, if they ever existed are completely lost so nobody will never know what went on in that group during the formation of Christianity.
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When you say "people that wrote about the HJ were making stuff up" and say "I realized I haven't presented good evidence for this", why don't you just note the fact that the biblical writers were very clearly taking their Jesus stories from the OT?
It's fairly obvious that the OT was a source for the biblical stories of Jesus, is it not?
Paul even repeatedly says he obtained all his knowledge of Jesus from “scripture“, from what “is written” and from “revelation”.
Where is the great mystery in guessing where the Jesus stories came from?
I did mention it has to fit with known history, Tsig. How do you support your speculation ?
When you say "people that wrote about the HJ were making stuff up" and say "I realized I haven't presented good evidence for this", why don't you just note the fact that the biblical writers were very clearly taking their Jesus stories from the OT?
It's fairly obvious that the OT was a source for the biblical stories of Jesus, is it not?
Paul even repeatedly says he obtained all his knowledge of Jesus from “scripture“, from what “is written” and from “revelation”.
Where is the great mystery in guessing where the Jesus stories came from?
Just curious, but why do you rule out the DSS here?