Belz...
Fiend God
What a big lie.
I'm seeing a pattern, here.
What a big lie.
dejudge said:I do not believe such absurdities.
Yes you do.
dejudge said:The same fundies that you are calling crazy are on your side arguing that HJ did exist using the same Bible too.
Craig B said:Therefore I am a fundie. OK?
Yes, but that's not what people here are saying.
The point is that the existence of the text itself, and the religion that corresponds to it, is evidence. What conclusion can we draw from that ?.Well, some people think it's insufficient to reach any conclusion. Others, who seem a bit more knowledgeable on the topic, from my point of view, seem to conclude a minimal Jesus. But ideologues on both sides of the debate will assert certainty: that there definitely WAS a Jesus, dammit, or that he's all-myth, full stop, also dammit.
I think the latter two positions are untenable. The two former are at least debatable
Actually, there have been attempts to infer aspects of Shakespeare's character from the plays - for example, quite a common idea is that he was a secret Catholic, based on various Catholic-sounding ideas in the plays.
But it's a risky business. For example, if a novelist writes about dodgy semi-criminal characters (as Joseph Conrad does sometimes), does this mean either he is a dodgy character, or wants to be? Not really.
But this is quite different from HJ, where we have actual documents which describe somebody (Jesus), and historians can argue about whether such a character did exist, or is mythical, or gasp! forged.
Is there any other piece of hagiography that would be whose very existence would be considered evidence of the saint-in-question's historicity?
Is there any other piece of hagiography that would be whose very existence would be considered evidence of the saint-in-question's historicity?
Unfortunately, those documents are hagiography, aren't they?
I believe there are authentic Pauline letters, and (less tenaciously) that there was a real person behind the Jesus stories, like most scholars. Scholars are fake fundies too? How fascinating. You should write a book.Another blatant big lie.
OK? Maybe you are a Fake Fundie.
You talk like a fundie.
You Use the same bible like a fundie.
You use the Gospels like a fundie.
You believe there are authentic Pauline letters like a fundie.
You believe there was an HJ like a fundie.
The same fundies that you call crazy argue like you.
What quacks like a duck and walks like a duck but is not a duck?
A FAKE Duck.
That's not what I said: I said the text is evidence. I didn't say it was evidence FOR historicity. I simply asked what conclusions we can draw from that evidence (biblical and otherwise) ?
Why is it unfortunate? I don't think anybody is claiming that the early Christian documents are factual documentaries, are they?
It's up to the historians, to evaluate such texts, and any other material, and then make various arguments, as to historicity, legendary or mythical status, forgery, and so on.
Study of the biographies of saints.In what other discipline are we expected to take hagiography seriously?
Belz... said:That's not what I said: I said the text is evidence. I didn't say it was evidence FOR historicity. I simply asked what conclusions we can draw from that evidence (biblical and otherwise) ?
No, Belz... you wrote
"...The point is that the existence of the text itself, and the religion that corresponds to it, is evidence. What conclusion can we draw from that ? "
It might sell - 'Fake Fundies - or, The Bible is a Pack of Lies', by one who knows. Soon to be filmed in Hollywood with major stars and minor stars and dogs, and other stuff.
You wrote:
"But this is quite different from HJ, where we have actual documents which describe somebody (Jesus), and historians can argue about whether such a character did exist, or is mythical, or gasp! forged."
In what other discipline are we expected to take hagiography seriously?
After all, those documents you mentioned are simply hagiography, aren't they?
If you are referring to the Christian view of Jesus, then that is quite different from the historical view.
...But this is quite different from HJ, where we have actual documents which describe somebody (Jesus), and historians can argue about whether such a character did exist, or is mythical, or gasp! forged.
45 So also it is written: The first man Adam was made a living soul, the last Adam a life-giving spirit.
Belz... said:That's not what I said: I said the text is evidence . I didn't say it was evidence FOR historicity. I simply asked what conclusions we can draw from that evidence (biblical and otherwise) ?
No, Belz... you wrote
"...The point is that the existence of the text itself, and the religion that corresponds to it, is evidence. What conclusion can we draw from that ? "
That's exactly the same thing. The text is evidence, from which you draw a conclusion. What is the distinction you're seeing ?
The existence of the texts, like the existence of anything else, has to be explained. In the HP case an explanation is easily found, and it excludes the reality of the hero. The books are intentionally composed as fiction.... You might as well argue that the existence of the Harry Potter texts and the fanclubs all over the world is evidence of the existence of Harry Potter.
You wrote:
"But this is quite different from HJ, where we have actual documents which describe somebody (Jesus), and historians can argue about whether such a character did exist, or is mythical, or gasp! forged."
In what other discipline are we expected to take hagiography seriously?
After all, those documents you mentioned are simply hagiography, aren't they?
I'm not sure what you mean by 'simply hagiography'; also, you don't present any reasoning behind this view.
If you are referring to the literary genre of hagiography, they contain miracles and so on, but also accounts of the lives of the people concerned.
If you are saying that the gospels are 100% supernatural, I don't think that's correct. They also describe Jesus teaching, preaching, telling parables, interpreting the Torah, arguing with another Jewish sect about Jewish law, and so on. As far as I can see, in my limited reading, these are plausible activities for a 1st century charismatic and apocalyptic preacher.
If you are referring to the Christian view of Jesus, then that is quite different from the historical view.
Very true.I'm not sure what you mean by 'simply hagiography'; also, you don't present any reasoning behind this view.
Accounts which I think you'll find are generally discounted as fiction, especially with the tales concerning the earlier saints.If you are referring to the literary genre of hagiography, they contain miracles and so on, but also accounts of the lives of the people concerned.
If you are saying that the gospels are 100% supernatural, I don't think that's correct. They also describe Jesus teaching, preaching, telling parables, interpreting the Torah, arguing with another Jewish sect about Jewish law, and so on. As far as I can see, in my limited reading, these are plausible activities for a 1st century charismatic and apocalyptic preacher.
If you are referring to the Christian view of Jesus, then that is quite different from the historical view.
Perhaps I've misunderstood you, though.
What do you think the existence of the NT texts is evidence of?