TimCallahan
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2009
- Messages
- 6,293
At
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=9500791&postcount=102
Pgwenthold falsely asserts that there's no controversy over Josephus's not referencing Jesus! Now, that is a fringe take on Josephus's blatant reference to Jesus in Antiqs XX. Pgwenthold not only adopts the fringe take on the blatant Antiqs XX reference as no reference at all! He twists that fringe take into a "fact" in his offensive question.
You first refer to things like "Josephus also mentions an Egyptian false prophet", etc., etc. Fine. No problem. But Pgwenthold then piles on with knee-jerk myther propaganda by asking "thoughtfully": "If all these other sources" [including Josephus] "are telling us about whacked messiahs, why didn't they say anything about Jesus?" ........... YUK!
Josephus bloody well does say something about Jesus, acc. to many scholars, thank you very bloody much! To pretend Josephus doesn't do just that -- as if it's now a "fact" that Josephus didn't reference Jesus rather than a fringe opinion that he didn't -- as Pgwenthold does in his question -- constitutes a sneaky underhanded slimeball insertion of a fringe take on Josephus in order to deliberately circulate a bad penny "assuming" no Jesus reference in Josephus at all. Wrong.
It's as if no debatable takes on the Antiqs XX passage exist at all, as if no controversy exists of any kind(!), as if only the myther fanatics have it right! That's a laugh.
It's one thing to maintain a fringe opinion. It's quite another to maintain no other opinion exists! It's one thing to argue the merits of one particular claim in a heated controversy. It's quite another to act as if no controversy exists! -- And on top of that, to also turn one fringe opinion in that controversy into a "fact".
This is why the sneaky tactics in Pgwenthold's question are beneath contempt.
Stone
With all due respect, I think you're reading motivations into people's posts that simply aren't there. Regarding the area I hilited, I suggest you argue against what the person says, rather than making what borders on a personal attack. It's possible to completely disagree with someone's point of view while still accepting that person as an honorable human being.
As to the mention of "Jesus, who was called the Christ," in Josephus, the reasons that it may have been either a deliberate or innocent alteration are:
1) There are several people names Jesus to be found in his writings. It was, after all, a common name among Jews of the first century.
2) James, a variant of Jacob, was also an extremely common.
3) The writings of Josephus are transmitted documents, rather than preserved documents. In the process of transmission editors can add material. Of course, in the case of the T.F., the material is plainly intrusive. This is not the case with Antiq. 20:9:1. The earliest extant copies of the works of Josephus date from the eleventh century (from the site, bolding added):
Josephus wrote all of his surviving works after his establishment in Rome (c. AD 71) under the patronage of the Flavian Emperor Vespasian. As is common with ancient texts, however, there are no surviving extant manuscripts of Josephus' works that can be dated before the 11th century, and the oldest of these are all Greek minuscules, copied by Christian monks.[60] (Jews did not preserve the writings of Josephus because they considered him to be a traitor.[61])
One oddity about the passage is that Josephus does not mention a Jesus alleged to be the Christ elsewhere. Yet, he does give a fair amount of detail on the rather minor figure, Theudas. In Antiq. 20:5:1 Josephus says of Theudas that he was a magician, that he persuaded a large number of people he was a prophet, that he gathered his followers at the River Jordan, saying he would divide the water; and that Cuspius Fadus sent a cavalry troop against Theudas. They killed many of Theudas' followers, captured many others and cut off Theudas' head. All this amounts to only a paragraph. An alleged Christ, or messianic pretender alluded to in Antiq. 20:9:1, should have warranted a paragraph, like that on Theudas.
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