Belz...
Fiend God
Well, dejudge said
I know what he said, and meant.
He's arguing that Paul is mythical, now, so I seriously doubt there's anything in the NT that he considers historical.
Well, dejudge said
It seems he did a pretty good job of separating his scholarship from his religion when he wrote the 3 volume "History of Rome". Check out the book's Table of Contents:Well, maybe because he was a Victorian-era Christian preacher and apologist who was unable or unwilling to separate his scholarship from his religion. Perhaps it is best to let Profeesor Arnold speak for himself:
"I take the works of St. John and St. Paul as our foundation, because, in the first place, we find in them the historical basis of Christianity; that is to say, we find the facts of our Lord's miracles, and especially of his resurrection, and the miraculous powers afterwards continued to the church, established by the highest possible evidence. However pure and truly divine the principles taught in the gospel may be, yet we crave to know not only that we were in need of redemption, but that a Redeemer has actually appeared; not only that a resurrection to eternal life is probable, but that such a resurrection has actually taken place. This basis of historical fact, which is one of the great peculiarities of Christianity, is strictly within the cognizance of the understanding; and in the writings of St. John and St. Paul we have that full and perfect evidence of it which the strictest laws of the understanding require"
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/13151...-h/13151-h.htm
Can't beat full and perfect evidence. It's even better than genuine, reliable and credible evidence, and miles ahead of Chinese whispers.
You do realize that it is normal for abnormal things to happen, right? You seem to like television programs as a source. OK. I'll bet there's a daily television program in your market largely devoted to abnormal events that actually happened. It's called "news." Check it out.?
Romans would be familiar with ghost stories, normally about those who die violently or whose remains are irregularly handled. Why would they suspect trickery if such stories reached them? They hadn't outsourced the wetwork; they did it themselves. If they did somehow come to suspect trickery, then what do you propose they should have done about it?
It makes sense - even the forgers were themselves forged.
Then one has to wonder why Bart Ehrman said Paul's Thessalonians is usually dated 49 CE. He says this in his latest book "Did Jesus Exist" on page 118. So about 19 years after the crucifixion, Paul is writing letters to an already established church.
Here is another quote of Bart Ehrman on page 164 of his latest book "Did Jesus exist?":
"And it is important to remember that Jews were saying that Jesus was the crucified messiah in the early 30s. We can date their claims to at least 32 CE, when Paul began persecuting these Jews. In fact, their claims must have originated even earlier. Paul knew Jesus's right-hand man, Peter, and Jesus's brother James. They are evidence that this belief in the crucified messiah goes all the way back to a short time after Jesus's death."...
Where did Bart Ehrman use the word forgeries or is that your word. Do you have a source where he used that word?You forgot to mention that the same Bart Ehrman admitted the Gospels are forgeries and they are not eyewitness accounts.
Nothing really major, that affects major church doctrine. When there are over 5000 manuscripts out there, there is bound to be some minor copying errors. And since there are so many manuscripts out there the original writings can be known very accurately by comparing them. In fact we don't even need the original manuscripts because the early church fathers quoted the New Testament books so many times in their own writings that we can recreate the whole NT just from their quotes of it (except for a few sentences.)You forgot to mention that Bart Ehrman admitted the NT accounts of Jesus are riddled with historical problems, discrepancies and events that could not have happened...
Nothing really major, that affects major church doctrine. When there are over 5000 manuscripts out there, there is bound to be some minor copying errors
dejudge presumably means that none of the gospels is believed to have been written by the person whose name it bears. Ehrman certainly takes this view also. To dejudge that makes them forgeries, even though the texts of the gospels contain no indication of authorship, so that a reasonable person would call this misattribution and not forgery.Where did Bart Ehrman use the word forgeries or is that your word. Do you have a source where he used that word?
I read Hamilton's Mythology in seventh grade. That was a while ago. Now I read big boy books. There's lots of stuff in them that Ms Hamilton omitted.You are confusing Roman times with the later Middle Ages. I have Edith Hamilton's Mythology in my personal library and there is one ghost story in it.
We seem to have fast-reversed past Roman times all the way back to the Odyssey. Great book, but not the sort of ghost story we're talking about. Try Pliny's letter to SuraThe person had to descend to the underworld make a blood sacrifice before they could even communicate with ghosts.
Three, really, the first being a violent death. I've already said that those three things go together nicely. Why would I need to remember something which I just discussed?Also remember you have TWO events close together: missing body and reports of this person being seen.
I don't recall any Romans being said to have seen the ghost. Why would any Roman think some subject people's spook story was evidence that anybody had faked their death? How? "Unknown means," according to the story, would include Roman soldiers failing to kill a guy they'd already beaten half to death. Not that that isn't exceptionally possible, but a ghost story isn't much reason to believe it happened in any particular case.Why would the Roman assume it was a disembodied ghost rather then a person that through unknown means faked their death?
dejudge presumably means that none of the gospels is believed to have been written by the person whose name it bears. Ehrman certainly takes this view also. To dejudge that makes them forgeries, even though the texts of the gospels contain no indication of authorship, so that a reasonable person would call this misattribution and not forgery.
Craig B said:But in fact dejudge is being naughty again. In his opinion the whole of the NT, not merely the gospels, is a real forgery - not merely a misattribution - concocted for purposes of deception, centuries later. Bart Ehrman has never suggested anything of the sort. So for dejudge to invoke the support of Bart Ehrman is more than a little unjustified and misleading.
.... When there are over 5000 manuscripts out there, there is bound to be some minor copying errors. And since there are so many manuscripts out there the original writings can be known very accurately by comparing them. In fact we don't even need the original manuscripts because the early church fathers quoted the New Testament books so many times in their own writings that we can recreate the whole NT just from their quotes of it (except for a few sentences.)
You don't know what forgery means.
OK then let me be the first to reply that it's POSSIBLE that the Jesus belief started from not-a-man. But that it's the problem here. The problem is that, assuming we want to reach a conclusion at all ("I don't know" is perfectly acceptable), which of the alternatives is more probable ? Dejudge likes to remind us that I said the evidence is terrible. How about MJ with its zero evidence ?
...Rather, HJ is arrived at via a combination of arguments, e.g. multiple sources, parsimony, extra-biblical references, references to Jesus' earthly life in various NT documents, and so on.
There are also counter-arguments to various opposing arguments to HJ, e.g. the argument from silence, the lack of contemporary references, the possibility of a 'celestial Jesus sect', and so on.
So it is quite a complex cluster of arguments and counter-arguments.
How convenient? Everybody in the boat had the same illusion. ...
...6) The best argument the HJ side seems to have is minimize Jesus actual presence to just above nil...
... When there are over 5000 manuscripts out there, there is bound to be some minor copying errors. ...
A not-a-man or any of the other possiblities.
'The MJ' is something I don't think exists outside of HJ advocates' desire to have a specific adversary to spar.
Actually, mass witnessing to the supernatural is something we know happens. Fatima's the classic example.
Quite so. Just as I said.At page 182 of "Did Jesus Exist?" Bart Ehrman specifically stated that the Gospels were not written by Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
The Gospels in the NT Canon are forgeries.
dejudge presumably means that none of the gospels is believed to have been written by the person whose name it bears. Ehrman certainly takes this view also. To dejudge that makes them forgeries, even though the texts of the gospels contain no indication of authorship, so that a reasonable person would call this misattribution and not forgery.
At page 182 of "Did Jesus Exist?" Bart Ehrman specifically stated that the Gospels were not written by Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
The Gospels in the NT Canon are forgeries.
And you are completely wrong. There are many reasons to conclude that an historical Jesus probably existed. Continually repeating the falsehood that there isn't any evidence doesn't make it true.My fundamental argument is that you have no evidence for your HJ [the assumed obscure criminal].
An ongoing search for something doesn't mean that it doesn't exist. There is an ongoing search for the chemical processes that lead to the formation of simple, self-replicating polymers that are the origin of life. The fact that biologists are still searching does not mean that chemical abiogenesis is a dead end idea. And there are many things in the remote past that happened, but are forever lost to us. It's not a matter of, "It only happened if we can prove it". Historians have to deal with a great deal of uncertainty about the past. Without the ability to say, "Based on the fragmentary evidence that we have available, we think that this is probably what happened", we'd have almost no history at all.My argument is that there is an ON-GOING Search for HJ for hundreds of years without success and that this is the THIRD attempt to find an HJ.
That's right. And in the unlikely event that definitive proof of who Jesus was ever comes to light, then the quest for understanding who he was will end. But keep in mind that the quest for understanding electromagnetism went on for centuries as well, and even today, the quest to understand how it relates to all the other physical forces, particularly gravity, is still ongoing and very enigmatic. Science isn't just a bunch of asserted certainties; a bunch of authoritative facts. The whole of human learning is a quest for knowledge passing from generation to generation. What you haven't yet realized is that you are still relying on the argument from authority that claimed supremacy in your religious experience. You mistake "we don't know" for a sign of failure. You still expect to support your new anti-religious ideas with the same assertions of certainty that you formerly used to defend it.If there was an established HJ there would be no need for a Quest lasting hundreds of years.
I'll leave it to the experts. Maybe you should as well?Please, just go and help find evidence your assumed obscure dead criminal.
You may be lucky.
You say that because you don't understand how rational thought works. If something is plausible, it means that it is possible based on known naturalistic causes.Your obscure dead criminal is NOT Plausible without evidence--that is my argument.
If my wife comes upstairs from the garage and says that her car won't start, my first hypothesis is going to be that the battery is dead. I do not yet have any evidence that this is the case, but it is still a plausible explanation for why the car won't start.
Actually, it is you who clearly doesn't know the definition of "forgery".You don't know what forgery means.
At page 181-182 of "Did Jesus Exist?" Bart Ehrman argues that there are many books of the NT, not only the Gospels, that are either mis-attributed or forged.
At page 182 of "Did Jesus Exist?" Bart Ehrman specifically stated that the Gospels were not written by Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.
The Gospels in the NT Canon are forgeries.
Why are you embarrassing yourself? You obviously have not read "Did Jesus Exist?"
Ehrman did state that Matthew, Mark, Luke and John did not write the Gospels.