Bart Ehrman on the Historical Jesus

Status
Not open for further replies.
My belief that there was a historical Jesus is based on the admittedly thin evidence provided by Tacitus in the Annals and the possibility that what Josephus wrote of the execution of James did originally contain the words, "Jesus, who was called Christ." I accept that this may well not be the case, since the earliest copies of the Antiquities dates from ca. 1100.

Beyond these two references, we have no non-Christian evidence of the existence of Jesus. We can, however, reasonably infer that Jesus was put to death by the Romans for sedition, specifically for claiming to be the anointed of God (Hebrew meshiach, Aramaic meshiha, Greek christos), hence king of the Jews. As a messianic pretender, he would have had an apocalyptic mindset. This apocalypticism is certainly expressed in all the gospels, specifically: Mark 8:31 -9:1 (parallel verses Mt. 16:27, 28; Lk.9:26, 27), Mark 13 (parallel verses in Mt. 24, Lk. 21) and John 5:25 - 29, among others. We also have Paul's belief, expressed particularly, in his first epistle to the Corinthians, in the imminent end of the world.

As to Jesus having complicity in his own arrest due to a deluded belief that God would raise him from the dead, you will note that I express that as my own theory.

I once again invite you to disclose your positions on the subjects discussed in this thread.

O.K., here goes.

First off, it is plainly impossible for any layman to forgo the exercise of standing on others' shoulders in assessing 99.9% of the available data on this figure. The difference is, most responsible readers like me are ready to acknowledge that. Mythers aren't. We can't read Koine Greek. Specialists can. We don't have access to original mss. Specialists do. These are limitations that we share with most posters on this board -- and with mythers.

The reason why I embark with great reluctance on addressing your question is that mythers pretend they have access to a higher truth, having "shed their childhood programming", notwithstanding their frequently poor access to primary materials. Mythers effectively proclaim that they have taken the correct "disillusion" pill against the "pernicious matrix". Professional secular scholars, on the other hand, who are all that responsible posters can go on, have apparently not "shed their programming", not taken the right "pill", in the myther view. "Tsk, tsk, tsk" -- say the bigoted mythers (or mythtics) -- "They haven't taken the 'disillusion' pill." Thus, successive generations of research -- often pursued conscientiously against appalling bigoted headwinds (look up some of the fundies' diatribes against the Jesus Seminar) -- are rendered effectively "useless". Now, anyone who pretends, like the mythers, to have access to a higher truth or the right "pill" is automatically useless as a "discussionist". One can just as well respond to mythers with "@^%*^$E#$#$@&%***$&#@#$^$&$%&*#%" as with anything coherent. It will have precisely the same impact either way: to wit, none.

One tactic that I've encountered (among many) from creationists, for example, is "You're the one asserting that evolution is a driving force; so the burden is not on me to disprove it but on you to prove it". Similarly, whether one responds to mythers with "#%&^@^#%&^&%#" or with something coherent instead, mythers can come back just as easily with identical ex cathedra pronouncements that because the responsible professionals' "case" has not _in_ _their_ _opinion_ been "proven" (even though 21st-century historiography for ancient times deals in the relatively more likely, thank you very much, and not the "proven" at all -- DUH), the mythers therefore proclaim -- a lot of them -- no obligation to defend themselves against the plain data that professional researchers have conscientiously assembled at all.

Excuse me, Reality Check: The secular fully accredited scholars do have the requisite access to Koine Greek and original materials that makes recourse to their peer-vetted research the only sensible option -- DUH. It involves that hated word, "consensus". Consensus is generated through peer-vetting. Peer-vetting is where it's at. Get used to it.

Mythers claim that secular scholars' shoulders are useless in light of the mythers' having taken the needed "pill" to free themselves from a malicious cultural "matrix", and the scholars not, and this bigotry against secular professional scholars is what ensures the futility of presenting anything here that is dependent on scholarship-consensus, just as presenting anything that reflects scientists'-consensus is futile against creationists.

Still, you've asked me a question, and I've reluctantly decided to answer it, however futile the exercise, given the pervasive anti-scholar bigotry on the web. I am aware that this answer has little practical value in a "discussion" of this kind.

Professional scholarly consensus today comes down on the side of the Paul letters being the earliest extant documentation on Jesus the teacher. A number of Pauline letters, though, are forged, meaning one must be as strict as possible in confining the Pauline letters to those that are most likely authentic. The consensus is that seven of them are. However, one view circumscribes that even further, to four only:

http://books.google.com/books?id=A5... Man and the Myth Paul authentic four&f=false

At this link, you can read up on a certain Morton from the '60s, who analysed the letters and found only these four surviving the "cut": Galatians, Romans, Corinthians 1, Corinthians 2.

Clearly, Morton's methods were strongly criticised by some. I only cite Morton as but one example of a few especially strict voices, merely to shew why it may be best to err on the side of too few authentic sources, rather than too many, for whatever reason. The four Paulines that even Morton accepts as genuine also have the relatively largest preponderance of references (among all the Paulines, genuine, doubtful and forged) to Jesus as a human with a human biography. This is a relatively preponderant characteristic they share with all seven of those Paulines which the dreaded consensus accepts as genuine: 1 Thessalonians, Galatians, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Philemon, Philippians, and Romans. If that preponderant characteristic is just a coincidence, then I offer a bridge for sale.................

The four Morton Paulines are typical of arguably the earliest written documentation we have on Jesus the teacher. At the same time, your examples of Tacitus and Antiqs. 20 (the account of James becoming a pulp) are probably the most disinterested. From both sets of documents emerge an historic human figure.

Only with these first as a working foundation does it make any sense to then apply the philological strata that modern academic scholarship has painstakingly assembled for the rest of the data, applied primarily to certain sayings in the Synoptics and in GThomas. Here is where "multiple attestation", as the academics behind the dreaded consensus term it, comes in. But even "multiple attestation" should be applied circumspectly.

For instance, since modern research appears to have achieved consensus that some written details in GMark, for instance, have been simply transcribed directly in GMatthew and GLuke, one can dismiss such details as purely reflective of one source, GMark, and not three. In such instances, "multiple attestation" is not relevant.

But on the other hand, if contexts for other passages/details in GMatthew and/or GLuke and/or both appear independent from GMark, then "multiple attestation" is more relevant, not in proving anything (again, this is dealing with ancient history, remember), but in rendering such details relatively more rather than less likely. A series of shared sayings falls in the latter independent category.

The dreaded consensus has now determined that a nexus of shared characteristics bears out a singularity of voice and style in a small "family" of sayings found in GMatthew, in GLuke -- and even in GThomas, even though the latter may be anywhere from as early as GMark to as late as the early 2nd century. That nexus of shared characteristics comprises, among other things, peculiarly Aramaic structures of speech, a highly colloquial way of framing certain statements, and/or a heavy dependence on the mundane details of living day-to-day in order to make a point.

Taking together the foundation of the least suspect Paulines, the scanty details in Tacitus/Antiqs. 20 and the shared sayings multiply attested in GMatthew, GLuke and GThomas, it is possible to extract an account of an eccentric rabbi who aroused the ire of the Roman authorities and got nailed.

For some perverse reason, I'm not allowed here to construct any written out sequences extracted from primary source material (and even this basic universal academic term, primary source, is disallowed by mythers at one point in the big RatSkep thread!), so here instead is a crude list of the passages you'll have to look up for yourself in constructing precisely what I view as the basics for a _more_ _likely_ bio of the purely human teacher, Jesus of Nazareth. (I provide the Luke cites for the shared sayings.)

If you want to see these cites as a straightforward text without constantly going back and forth from cite to cite, you'll have to take that up with the mods. The one exception I make here in risking direct quotes instead is the nexus of disinterested extra-Biblical materials you've already cited. If even quoting those directly gets me in trouble, then I give up!



Galatians 1:18

1 Corinthians 2:8

1 Corinthians 7:10

1 Corinthians 9:5

1 Corinthians 9:14

1 Corinthians 11:23

Romans 6:4

Luke 11:21-2

Luke 11:33

Luke 12:2

Luke 12:10

Luke 13:18-9

Luke 13:30

Luke 19:26

Josephus: Antiquities, 20 -- "Since Ananus was that kind of person, and because he perceived an opportunity with Festus having died and Albinus not yet arrived, he called a meeting of the Sanhedrin and brought James, the brother of Jesus (who is called 'Messiah') along with some others. He accused them of transgressing the law, and handed them over for stoning."

Tacitus: Annals, 15:44 -- "But all human efforts, all the lavish gifts of the emperor, and the propitiations of the gods, did not banish the sinister belief that the conflagration was the result of an order. Consequently, to get rid of the report, Nero fastened the guilt and inflicted the most exquisite tortures on a class hated for their abominations, called Christians by the populace. Christus, from whom the name had its origin, suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberius at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilatus, and a most mischievous superstition, thus checked for the moment, again broke out not only in Judaea, the first source of the evil, but even in Rome, where all things hideous and shameful from every part of the world find their centre and become popular."



Now, these are only the basics from which the most likely biographical details can be reconstructed. Far more sophisticated work is then possible, once one has established the basics culled out here. Striking family resemblances are readily detectable between these basic cites and other related material that is also multiply attested -- in the stricter construction of that term. Chiefly, this involves the sayings: The Luke sayings cited here have similarities to additional sayings similarly shared between GMatthew and GLuke and bearing similar linguistic characteristics. Much in the GLuke Sermon On The Plain, for instance (the bulk of Luke, Chapter 6), seems cut from the identical cloth as the cites here, and since portions of it also appear in different contexts in GMatthew, it appears _likely_ (that dreaded word again) that the bulk of the GLuke Sermon On The Plain in Luke's Chapter 6 may be just as fully historical as the cites provided above.

Extrapolations of such a sort are highly useful in determining which aspects of the extant data are more or less likely to be related to all the cites provided above. But that is a complex exercise requiring intimate knowledge of the myriad idioms in Koine Greek, of a level that I cannot possibly pretend to have.

Finally, there is another key term in this equation, along with "consensus": "consilience". There is no such thing as one "clincher" here. Instead, what is involved is a conglomeration of various pieces of data that together form a picture, however fragmented, of what an ancient tattered jigsaw puzzle of a bio might look like. There are maybe a hundred or so similar figures in ancient times who all lived at the fringes of society for whom we have only the scantest documentation. Jesus the human teacher is only one of those. It's not any one datum that clinches his historic existence. Rather, it's the consilience of various pieces of data that, together, make Jesus of Nazareth's historicity more likely than not.

That will never satisfy the mythers because they take ancient history to be the equivalent of a mathematical or a scientific theorem with some kind of "elegant proof" as the end point. News flash: It isn't. Consilience is all we have to shew the greater likelihood rather than lesser likelihood of the historical existence of fringe counter-culturalists like Jesus of Nazareth. If likelihoods are not your speed, then ancient history is not for you.

I think this answers your question sufficiently. Too much is involved here to just answer the question in the cut-and-dried way you may have expected. Instead, the pedagogic equivalent of reinventing the wheel is needed to make my answer in any way honest or useful. Hence the inordinate time taken to respond, and the guarded nature of my conclusions. The latter, though, is emphatically shared with every professional scholar today tasked with summarizing the chief conclusions in this field. I didn't set out to make this post long. Unfortunately, though, to make this post honest and not misleading, home truths had to be addressed one by one by one, and the necessary results can not be synthesized on a postage stamp.

I will however -- and this is probably a disastrous mistake on my part, given the dishonesty of some mythers I've encountered -- take the risk of suggesting that there are two tiers of conclusions as to the Jesus-the-human-teacher bio: The top tier, based strictly on the cites provided above, concludes that Jesus was a victim of Roman jurisprudence, because he introduced a new kind of superstition of an uncertain nature, geared partly around social redress (see Luke 13:30). He had at least two brothers, one of whom was named James. The second tier takes all of that as a given, and then, extrapolating from further Aramaicisms and other similar stylistic ticks and textual patterns, enfolds the additional notion that Jesus called for a radically uniform even-handed approach to all people, enemies included, a call that didn't sit well with various demographics of all sorts, leaving him vulnerable to the very first trumped-up charge that might come along.

An irony in all this is that even though I'm the first to maintain that we ignore the enlightened insights of a Jesus or a Mandela at our immediate peril -- in this age of WMDs and ecological loss where the smallest tripwire could annihilate humanity practically immediately -- I am far from applying the forbearance in both Jesus and Mandela to my own daily life, being, as everyone here knows, too irate with the general complacency of the uneducated and the callous of today to maintain cordiality for longer than a nanosecond or two, if that. I am hardly proud of that -- quite the contrary in fact -- but unfortunately, it seems that if the day will ever come when I can control my temper better, that will be the day when hell (which I don't believe in) will freeze over first.

I have endeavored here to be useful in a way I haven't tried to be for a long time. In the past, posts of this sort have been twisted and perverted by hate speech from mythers calculated purely to demonize one whole portion of humanity: academe. This is why I was so reluctant to indulge in the same futile exercise all over again. But I've given in to the urge again -- goodness knows why! -- and have even inveighed here against another demographic of my own choosing, mythers. Really smart and really constructive -- not. But really typical as well.

Realistically,

Stone
 
Yes, unfortunately.
It was even higher than that originally.

I still haven't the whole book, but one day I hope to 'find' the entire copy (or afford the academic price).
That said, even the preview sections from Google Books are worth the read.
Thanks for the advice, JaysonR., I'll do that tonight after work.
 
...rant snipped...
Professional scholarly consensus today comes down on the side of the Paul letters being the earliest extant documentation on Jesus the teacher. A number of Pauline letters, though, are forged, meaning one must be as strict as possible in confining the Pauline letters to those that are most likely authentic. The consensus is that seven of them are. However, one view circumscribes that even further, to four only:

http://books.google.com/books?id=A5... Man and the Myth Paul authentic four&f=false

At this link, you can read up on a certain Morton from the '60s, who analysed the letters and found only these four surviving the "cut": Galatians, Romans, Corinthians 1, Corinthians 2.

Clearly, Morton's methods were strongly criticised by some. I only cite Morton as but one example of a few especially strict voices, merely to shew why it may be best to err on the side of too few authentic sources, rather than too many, for whatever reason. The four Paulines that even Morton accepts as genuine also have the relatively largest preponderance of references (among all the Paulines, genuine, doubtful and forged) to Jesus as a human with a human biography. This is a relatively preponderant characteristic they share with all seven of those Paulines which the dreaded consensus accepts as genuine: 1 Thessalonians, Galatians, 1 and 2 Corinthians, Philemon, Philippians, and Romans. ...
The four Morton Paulines are typical of arguably the earliest written documentation we have on Jesus the teacher. At the same time, your examples of Tacitus and Antiqs. 20 (the account of James becoming a pulp) are probably the most disinterested. From both sets of documents emerge an historic human figure.

Only with these first as a working foundation does it make any sense to then apply the philological strata that modern academic scholarship has painstakingly assembled for the rest of the data, applied primarily to certain sayings in the Synoptics and in GThomas. Here is where "multiple attestation", as the academics behind the dreaded consensus term it, comes in. But even "multiple attestation" should be applied circumspectly.

For instance, since modern research appears to have achieved consensus that some written details in GMark, for instance, have been simply transcribed directly in GMatthew and GLuke, one can dismiss such details as purely reflective of one source, GMark, and not three. In such instances, "multiple attestation" is not relevant.

But on the other hand, if contexts for other passages/details in GMatthew and/or GLuke and/or both appear independent from GMark, then "multiple attestation" is more relevant, not in proving anything (again, this is dealing with ancient history, remember), but in rendering such details relatively more rather than less likely. A series of shared sayings falls in the latter independent category.

The dreaded consensus has now determined that a nexus of shared characteristics bears out a singularity of voice and style in a small "family" of sayings found in GMatthew, in GLuke -- and even in GThomas, even though the latter may be anywhere from as early as GMark to as late as the early 2nd century. That nexus of shared characteristics comprises, among other things, peculiarly Aramaic structures of speech, a highly colloquial way of framing certain statements, and/or a heavy dependence on the mundane details of living day-to-day in order to make a point.

Taking together the foundation of the least suspect Paulines, the scanty details in Tacitus/Antiqs. 20 and the shared sayings multiply attested in GMatthew, GLuke and GThomas, it is possible to extract an account of an eccentric rabbi who aroused the ire of the Roman authorities and got nailed.

...rant snipped...

Galatians 1:18

1 Corinthians 2:8

1 Corinthians 7:10

1 Corinthians 9:5

1 Corinthians 9:14

1 Corinthians 11:23

Romans 6:4

Luke 11:21-2

Luke 11:33

Luke 12:2

Luke 12:10

Luke 13:18-9

Luke 13:30

Luke 19:26

Josephus: Antiquities, 20 -- "Since Ananus was that kind of person, and because he perceived an opportunity with Festus having died and Albinus not yet arrived, he called a meeting of the Sanhedrin and brought James, the brother of Jesus (who is called 'Messiah') along with some others. He accused them of transgressing the law, and handed them over for stoning."

Tacitus: Annals, 15:44 -- "But all human efforts, all the lavish gifts of the emperor, and the propitiations of the gods, did not banish the sinister belief that the conflagration was the result of an order. Consequently, to get rid of the report, Nero fastened the guilt and inflicted the most exquisite tortures on a class hated for their abominations, called Christians by the populace. Christus, from whom the name had its origin, suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberius at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilatus, and a most mischievous superstition, thus checked for the moment, again broke out not only in Judaea, the first source of the evil, but even in Rome, where all things hideous and shameful from every part of the world find their centre and become popular."



Now, these are only the basics from which the most likely biographical details can be reconstructed. Far more sophisticated work is then possible, once one has established the basics culled out here. Striking family resemblances are readily detectable between these basic cites and other related material that is also multiply attested -- in the stricter construction of that term. Chiefly, this involves the sayings: The Luke sayings cited here have similarities to additional sayings similarly shared between GMatthew and GLuke and bearing similar linguistic characteristics. Much in the GLuke Sermon On The Plain, for instance (the bulk of Luke, Chapter 6), seems cut from the identical cloth as the cites here, and since portions of it also appear in different contexts in GMatthew, it appears _likely_ (that dreaded word again) that the bulk of the GLuke Sermon On The Plain in Luke's Chapter 6 may be just as fully historical as the cites provided above.

Extrapolations of such a sort are highly useful in determining which aspects of the extant data are more or less likely to be related to all the cites provided above. But that is a complex exercise requiring intimate knowledge of the myriad idioms in Koine Greek, of a level that I cannot possibly pretend to have.
... Rather, it's the consilience of various pieces of data that, together, make Jesus of Nazareth's historicity more likely than not.

...

I will however ... take the risk of suggesting that there are two tiers of conclusions as to the Jesus-the-human-teacher bio: The top tier, based strictly on the cites provided above, concludes that Jesus was a victim of Roman jurisprudence, because he introduced a new kind of superstition of an uncertain nature, geared partly around social redress (see Luke 13:30). He had at least two brothers, one of whom was named James. The second tier takes all of that as a given, and then, extrapolating from further Aramaicisms and other similar stylistic ticks and textual patterns, enfolds the additional notion that Jesus called for a radically uniform even-handed approach to all people, enemies included, a call that didn't sit well with various demographics of all sorts, leaving him vulnerable to the very first trumped-up charge that might come along. ...

Stone, once your rants are snipped, what's left is a most interesting take of the possible historicity of Jesus.
Why waste your time with ranting?
Why not let people read your ideas and make up their own minds on the subject?
 
Stone, once your rants are snipped, what's left is a most interesting take of the possible historicity of Jesus.
Why waste your time with ranting?
Why not let people read your ideas and make up their own minds on the subject?

Because their minds are already made up. I no longer write to persuade (that was me in another life). I only write to set the record straight.

I'm glad you find my take "interesting". Evidently, you don't find it persuasive, though, or you would have most likely said so. <shrug> Thanks for taking the trouble to spruce up the posting, however. I suppose that shows a modicum of appreciation for the time I took to write all that out.

Stone
 
Because their minds are already made up. I no longer write to persuade (that was me in another life). I only write to set the record straight.

I'm glad you find my take "interesting". Evidently, you don't find it persuasive, though, or you would have most likely said so. <shrug> Thanks for taking the trouble to spruce up the posting, however. I suppose that shows a modicum of appreciation for the time I took to write all that out.

Stone

The truth of a post has nothing to do with it's length or the time it takes you to compose it.
 
The truth of a post has nothing to do with it's length or the time it takes you to compose it.

But its length does impact on the degree to which other posters will respond. One of the reasons why I dragged back at first from responding to Tim's query (as to where I fall when it comes to the basics for an historical human bio for Jesus the rabbi) was the sheer intricacy of the data patterns that need to be addressed in properly explaining the professional academic HJ (Historical Jesus) position. One simply can't address all that on a postage stamp:p (And if the mods disapprove of this use of the tongue emoticon, I'd like to know why they provide one in the first place.) Since one can't address these patterns on a postage stamp, I knew that the necessary details, even in a polite version, such as Pakeha provides, would prove far too long for anyone to respond seriously. There's just too much there, and I knew going in that there would be too much, which is why I dragged back from responding to Tim's query for so long. Here we are after I sent something in after all, and the response so far speaks for itself. Not one poster, not even Pakeha, addresses a single one of my bullet points. And those that seemed poised to address my rather detailed post in the first place, such as Tim who lodged the query, have evidently lost interest. For all these reasons, I'm not surprised that it has proved a waste of time. Of course, I knew in advance it would be a waste of time, but I did it anyway -- goodness knows why -- and we wonder just why I gave up doing detailed posts like this long ago in favor of just dressing down myther woo in shorter posts serving as wake-up calls instead. I won't try a detailed post like this one again. I've learned my lesson.

Stone
 
Regardless of the relationship between the Synoptic Gospels, and assuming that Mark is the earliest and a major source for Matthew and Luke, they, along with John, are useless as legitimate historical / biographical material on Jesus. There is very little in them that isn't material derived from one of four basic sources. These sources are: the Jewish Scriptures, Jewish apocalypticism and recent events seen through an apocalyptic lens, pagan mythology, and Greek literature.

Some material in the gospels can be examined for authenticity based on plausibility. For example, the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday, which people throwing down their garments and palm fronds, so the donkey Jesus was riding didn't have to tread on the bare ground, the crowds shouting, "Hosannah!" which means, "Save us!" (and, by extension, "Free us!") is all supposed to have happened while the Romans stood by idly. This doesn't square with what Josephus has to say about the Roman response to Theudas and other would be messiahs. It was swift, decisive and brutal.

Also, Pilate's humanity toward Jesus and his fear of the mob demanding Jesus' death doesn't square with what Josephus says of Pilate's response to a mob in the section of Antiquities just before the Testamentum Flavianum. Nor does it square with the fact that Pilate was the protege of Lucius Aelius Sejanus.

Paul's letters give us no narrative history of Jesus except his institution of the eucharist at the last supper and Paul's assertion that he rose from the dead.

So, we are left with Josephus and Tacitus, who only mention Jesus in passing.
 
Last edited:
These sources are: the Jewish Scriptures, Jewish apocalypticism and recent events seen through an apocalyptic lens, pagan mythology, and Greek literature.

Show me precisely which published scholars itemize each of these "sources" and where and how they derive each one. Thank you.

Some material in the gospels can be examined for authenticity based on plausibility. For example, the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem on Palm Sunday, which people throwing down their garments and palm fronds, so the donkey Jesus was riding didn't have to tread on the bare ground, the crowds shouting, "Hosannah!" which means, "Save us!" (and, by extension, "Free us!") is all supposed to have happened while the Romans stood by idly.

Show me where I make any claim that the details for this entry are historical. I showed you the material which is most likely historical*. Show me where that material gives these "entry" details. I thought you were addressing my post.

This doesn't square with what Josephus has to say about the Roman response to Theudas and other would be messiahs. It was swift, decisive and brutal.

Also, Pilate's humanity toward Jesus and his fear of the mob demanding Jesus' death doesn't square with what Josephus says of Pilate's response to a mob in the section of Antiquities just before the Testamentum Flavianum.

Shew me where Pilate's "humanity" is referenced in the material* I selected. Boy oh boy, here I was regretting that my post required my getting into the weeds too much. Evidently, I underestimated the possibility of slippery rote responses like this one and the need to actually get into the weeds _even_ _more_!

HERE ARE MORE WEEDS -- and don't pretend you aren't perfectly aware of this. OBVIOUSLY, Pilate gets more and more "humane" with each Synoptic, until GJohn, which isn't even a Synoptic(!), where Pilate is a virtual saint! Coincidence? Hardly. Pilate is unscrupulously sugar-coated more and more as the Jesus movement gets more and more estranged from the Jewish community. Mark, Tacitus and Josephus tilt more toward Pilate "throwing the switch" than others. The later texts don't -- DUH. Show me where any of that has any bearing at all on what I wrote -- or why the hell I should have to point it out all over again now.

Nor does it square with the fact that Pilate was the protege of Lucius Aelius Sejanus.

Paul's letters give us no narrative history of Jesus except his institution of the eucharist at the last supper and Paul's assertion that he rose from the dead.

Wrong: They also tell us he had family around who were married, that he viewed preaching as a legit way to earn a living, that he preached on marriage and divorce, and that he was crucified and then buried, all plainly referenced in the Paul cites I provided.

You didn't read my post. You've just provided a rote response with no regard to context at all. I've wasted my time -- as usual. (And people wonder why I'm such a grouch.)

Stone

=========================

* Galatians 1:18

1 Corinthians 2:8

1 Corinthians 7:10

1 Corinthians 9:5

1 Corinthians 9:14

1 Corinthians 11:23

Romans 6:4

Luke 11:21-2

Luke 11:33

Luke 12:2

Luke 12:10

Luke 13:18-9

Luke 13:30

Luke 19:26

Josephus: Antiquities, 20 -- "Since Ananus was that kind of person, and because he perceived an opportunity with Festus having died and Albinus not yet arrived, he called a meeting of the Sanhedrin and brought James, the brother of Jesus (who is called 'Messiah') along with some others. He accused them of transgressing the law, and handed them over for stoning."

Tacitus: Annals, 15:44 -- "But all human efforts, all the lavish gifts of the emperor, and the propitiations of the gods, did not banish the sinister belief that the conflagration was the result of an order. Consequently, to get rid of the report, Nero fastened the guilt and inflicted the most exquisite tortures on a class hated for their abominations, called Christians by the populace. Christus, from whom the name had its origin, suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberius at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilatus, and a most mischievous superstition, thus checked for the moment, again broke out not only in Judaea, the first source of the evil, but even in Rome, where all things hideous and shameful from every part of the world find their centre and become popular."
 
Last edited:
...I'm glad you find my take "interesting". Evidently, you don't find it persuasive, though, or you would have most likely said so. <shrug>
To tell the truth, as far as I'm concerned the ranting and abusive tone are a tremendous barrier to even wanting to read what you write.
I don't know why you find such tactics desirable in a discussion of what is, after all, just text analysis.

But down to the texts.
Does Paul have priority to Mark or Mark have priority to Paul?
I don't mean to imply one had influence over the other, rather simply which is earlier.
 
You can add my name to the list of people put off by your argumentative tone Stone. I'm not sure why you were worried about posting quotes to support your position, it's usually only a problem if you quote long passages without sourcing them.

So let's see what you've got on this list:

* Galatians 1:18:
Galatians 1:18-19
New International Version (NIV)
18 Then after three years, I went up to Jerusalem to get acquainted with Cephas[a] and stayed with him fifteen days. 19 I saw none of the other apostles—only James, the Lord’s brother.

1 Corinthians 2:8:
1 Corinthians 2:8
English Standard Version (ESV)
8 None of the rulers of this age understood this, for if they had, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory.

1 Corinthians 7:10:
1 Corinthians 7:10
English Standard Version (ESV)
10 To the married I give this charge (not I, but the Lord): the wife should not separate from her husband

1 Corinthians 9:5:
1 Corinthians 9:5
English Standard Version (ESV)
5 Do we not have the right to take along a believing wife,[a] as do the other apostles and the brothers of the Lord and Cephas?

1 Corinthians 9:14:
1 Corinthians 9:14
English Standard Version (ESV)
14 In the same way, the Lord commanded that those who proclaim the gospel should get their living by the gospel.

1 Corinthians 11:23:
1 Corinthians 11:23-26
New International Version (NIV)
23 For I received from the Lord what I also passed on to you: The Lord Jesus, on the night he was betrayed, took bread, 24 and when he had given thanks, he broke it and said, “This is my body, which is for you; do this in remembrance of me.” 25 In the same way, after supper he took the cup, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood; do this, whenever you drink it, in remembrance of me.” 26 For whenever you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.

Romans 6:4:
Romans 6:4
New International Version (NIV)
4 We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life.

Luke 11:21-2:
Luke 11:21–22
21 When a strong man, fully armed, guards his own palace, his goods are safe; 22 but when one stronger than he attacks him and overcomes him, he takes away his armor in which he trusted and divides his spoil.

Luke 11:33:
33 “No one lights a lamp and puts it in a place where it will be hidden, or under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, so that those who come in may see the light. 34 Your eye is the lamp of your body. When your eyes are healthy,[a] your whole body also is full of light. But when they are unhealthy, your body also is full of darkness. 35 See to it, then, that the light within you is not darkness. 36 Therefore, if your whole body is full of light, and no part of it dark, it will be just as full of light as when a lamp shines its light on you.”


Luke 12:2:
Luke 12:2-3
New International Version (NIV)
2 There is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed, or hidden that will not be made known. 3 What you have said in the dark will be heard in the daylight, and what you have whispered in the ear in the inner rooms will be proclaimed from the roofs.

Luke 12:10:
Luke 12:10
New International Version (NIV)
10 And everyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but anyone who blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven.

Luke 13:18-9:
18 Then Jesus asked, “What is the kingdom of God like? What shall I compare it to? 19 It is like a mustard seed, which a man took and planted in his garden. It grew and became a tree, and the birds perched in its branches.”

Luke 13:30:
Luke 13:30
New International Version (NIV)
30 Indeed there are those who are last who will be first, and first who will be last.”

Luke 19:26:
Luke 19:26
New International Version (NIV)
26 “He replied, ‘I tell you that to everyone who has, more will be given, but as for the one who has nothing, even what they have will be taken away.

I'm guessing there must be something special about the original Greek, because these verses don't look too special in English to me.
 
Last edited:
Does Paul have priority to Mark or Mark have priority to Paul?
I don't mean to imply one had influence over the other, rather simply which is earlier.

Paul appears to be the earlier. I'm not familiar with the specific arguments as to why, only the general proposition: A fairly intensive series of scholarly analyses from an array of related historic disciplines have resulted in a high level of probability that the seven authentic Paulines, at least, those singled out in my big post, are probably earlier than Mark. That may have partly to do with the colloquial tone of some of the writing in the authentics. But that latter point is strictly my own general sense, reading between the lines of the very general syntheses that I've read on this so far. I'm not as familiar with Pauline scholarship as I am with the Synoptic sayings scholarship.

In addition, it could be quite possible that the non-authentic Paulines (like Timothy, etc.) could be considerably later than Mark, perhaps as late as 100 or 110 (2nd century)? But that you'd have to take with even more grains of salt. What I know for sure is that the seven authentic Paulines are uniformly judged as earlier than any Gospel, including Mark. They may even be earlier than the hypothetical Q Gospel* -- if the Q Gospel ever existed in written form at all rather than oral.

Stone

============

* The Q Gospel is a hypothetical lost Gospel that may have been the earliest source for a nexus of highly colloquial Jesus sayings found in both GMatthew and GLuke. Those sayings, though, may have constituted some kind of circulating oral tradition instead.
 
Nicely done. Let's take the risk of matching these up with the texts of the two extra-Biblicals at the bottom, and we will arguably have in one place the closest we can come to a -- relatively -- reliable bio. If the mods get angry at this "text wall", at least they'll be angry with both of us! :-)

* Galatians 1:18:
Quote:
Galatians 1:18-19
New International Version (NIV)
18 Then after three years, I went up to Jerusalem to get acquainted with Cephas[a] and stayed with him fifteen days. 19 I saw none of the other apostles—only James, the Lord’s brother.
1 Corinthians 2:8:
Quote:
1 Corinthians 2:8
English Standard Version (ESV)
8 None of the rulers of this age understood this, for if they had, they would not have crucified the Lord of glory.
1 Corinthians 7:10:
Quote:
1 Corinthians 7:10
English Standard Version (ESV)
10 To the married I give this charge (not I, but the Lord): the wife should not separate from her husband
1 Corinthians 9:5:
Quote:
1 Corinthians 9:5
English Standard Version (ESV)
5 Do we not have the right to take along a believing wife,[a] as do the other apostles and the brothers of the Lord and Cephas?
1 Corinthians 9:14:
Quote:
1 Corinthians 9:14
English Standard Version (ESV)
14 In the same way, the Lord commanded that those who proclaim the gospel should get their living by the gospel.
1 Corinthians 11:23:
Quote:
1 Corinthians 11:23-26
New International Version (NIV)
23 For I received from the Lord what I also passed on to you: The Lord Jesus, on the night he was betrayed, took bread, 24 and when he had given thanks, he broke it and said, “This is my body, which is for you; do this in remembrance of me.” 25 In the same way, after supper he took the cup, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood; do this, whenever you drink it, in remembrance of me.” 26 For whenever you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes.
Romans 6:4:
Quote:
Romans 6:4
New International Version (NIV)
4 We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life.
Luke 11:21-2:
Quote:
Luke 11:21–22
21 When a strong man, fully armed, guards his own palace, his goods are safe; 22 but when one stronger than he attacks him and overcomes him, he takes away his armor in which he trusted and divides his spoil.
Luke 11:33:
Quote:
33 “No one lights a lamp and puts it in a place where it will be hidden, or under a bowl. Instead they put it on its stand, so that those who come in may see the light. 34 Your eye is the lamp of your body. When your eyes are healthy,[a] your whole body also is full of light. But when they are unhealthy, your body also is full of darkness. 35 See to it, then, that the light within you is not darkness. 36 Therefore, if your whole body is full of light, and no part of it dark, it will be just as full of light as when a lamp shines its light on you.”
Luke 12:2:
Quote:
Luke 12:2-3
New International Version (NIV)
2 There is nothing concealed that will not be disclosed, or hidden that will not be made known. 3 What you have said in the dark will be heard in the daylight, and what you have whispered in the ear in the inner rooms will be proclaimed from the roofs.
Luke 12:10:
Quote:
Luke 12:10
New International Version (NIV)
10 And everyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but anyone who blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven.
Luke 13:18-9:
Quote:
18 Then Jesus asked, “What is the kingdom of God like? What shall I compare it to? 19 It is like a mustard seed, which a man took and planted in his garden. It grew and became a tree, and the birds perched in its branches.”
Luke 13:30:
Quote:
Luke 13:30
New International Version (NIV)
30 Indeed there are those who are last who will be first, and first who will be last.”
Luke 19:26:
Quote:
Luke 19:26
New International Version (NIV)
26 “He replied, ‘I tell you that to everyone who has, more will be given, but as for the one who has nothing, even what they have will be taken away.


Josephus: Antiquities, 20 -- "Since Ananus was that kind of person, and because he perceived an opportunity with Festus having died and Albinus not yet arrived, he called a meeting of the Sanhedrin and brought James, the brother of Jesus (who is called 'Messiah') along with some others. He accused them of transgressing the law, and handed them over for stoning."

Tacitus: Annals, 15:44 -- "But all human efforts, all the lavish gifts of the emperor, and the propitiations of the gods, did not banish the sinister belief that the conflagration was the result of an order. Consequently, to get rid of the report, Nero fastened the guilt and inflicted the most exquisite tortures on a class hated for their abominations, called Christians by the populace. Christus, from whom the name had its origin, suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberius at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilatus, and a most mischievous superstition, thus checked for the moment, again broke out not only in Judaea, the first source of the evil, but even in Rome, where all things hideous and shameful from every part of the world find their centre and become popular."



If all this isn't useful, I'd like to know what is!

BTW, if you'd like to know where I got the impression that the mods don't like a series of quotes since they view it as a sheer "data dump", you can check these out --

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=261879

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=261858

http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?p=9350940#post9350940

Stone
 
Because their minds are already made up. I no longer write to persuade (that was me in another life). I only write to set the record straight.

The amount of effort you put into those posts seem to indicate otherwise. Besides, I don't think you can determine if someone's mind is closed by such a shallow knowledge of their person.

EDIT: In other words, your tone will only improve and your ability to convince others too, if you don't assume that they won't listen beforehand.
 
Last edited:
Nicely done. Let's take the risk of matching these up with the texts of the two extra-Biblicals at the bottom, and we will arguably have in one place the closest we can come to a -- relatively -- reliable bio. If the mods get angry at this "text wall", at least they'll be angry with both of us! :-)



...

If all this isn't useful, I'd like to know what is!

...
Stone

So, if I'm following this argument, there is something about the colloquial nature of those quotes from Luke that makes them look like they came from an Aramaic speaking Rabbi.

Is that right?
 
So, if I'm following this argument, there is something about the colloquial nature of those quotes from Luke that makes them look like they came from an Aramaic speaking Rabbi.

Is that right?

Yes. There are wheels within wheels, of course, making it a bit more complex than that. But that's essentially the gist of it.

If we unwrap that a bit further, the (relatively) colloquial style is sometimes associated with tell-tale Aramaicisms, or sometimes merely smacks of oral/colloquial turns of speech in either Greek or Aramaic that suggest an extremely early provenance for certain sayings. Likewise, the Aramaicisms are sometimes associated with suggestively oral and colloquial turns of speech, or sometimes merely Aramaic in structure without necessarily being colloquial. Both elements sometimes overlap, however, and in that overlap _may_ be seen the earliest snapshot we have of Jesus the rabbi's "voice".

Add to that the fact that these particular sayings appear in three apparently independent textual branches -- Matt./Luke, Mark & Thomas -- and we have a working model of multiple attestation here that points to a likelihood that such combined Aramaic-+-colloquial passages are an offshoot of a common and extremely early source ............ perhaps those Aramaic colleagues who personally heard some of Jesus's sermons? Once the linguistic/stylistic thumbprint for these common passages above is analyzed, many scholars can detect a similar thumbprint in the bulk of the Sermon On The Plain in Luke Chapter 6, even though much less of that material is duplicated in Mark and Thomas.

One thing that makes this kind of analysis so useful is the concurrent emergence of much in the mouth of Jesus, particularly in GJohn, that is manifestly unlike these suggestive passages altogether! Their sheer grandiloquence smacks much more of the "writer's lamp" than the bustling places of ordinary life so typical of the parallel passages spotlighted earlier. So even as we can detect aspects in certain passages that do smack of authenticity, that very analysis helps us also detect the phoniness in much else, such as huge swaths of GJohn.

Apparently, a book by Maurice Casey goes into all this in some detail, but I've not yet read it and do not recall the title.

Thanks for asking the question.

Stone
 
Last edited:
Yes. There are wheels within wheels, of course, making it a bit more complex than that. But that's essentially the gist of it.

If we unwrap that a bit further, the (relatively) colloquial style is sometimes associated with tell-tale Aramaicisms, or sometimes merely smacks of oral/colloquial turns of speech in either Greek or Aramaic that suggest an extremely early provenance for certain sayings. Likewise, the Aramaicisms are sometimes associated with suggestively oral and colloquial turns of speech, or sometimes merely Aramaic in structure without necessarily being colloquial. Both elements sometimes overlap, however, and in that overlap _may_ be seen the earliest snapshot we have of Jesus the rabbi's "voice".

Add to that the fact that these particular sayings appear in three apparently independent textual branches -- Matt./Luke, Mark & Thomas -- and we have a working model of multiple attestation here that points to a likelihood that such combined Aramaic-+-colloquial passages are an offshoot of a common and extremely early source ............ perhaps those Aramaic colleagues who personally heard some of Jesus's sermons? Once the linguistic/stylistic thumbprint for these common passages above is analyzed, many scholars can detect a similar thumbprint in the bulk of the Sermon On The Plain in Luke Chapter 6, even though much less of that material is duplicated in Mark and Thomas.

One thing that makes this kind of analysis so useful is the concurrent emergence of much in the mouth of Jesus, particularly in GJohn, that is manifestly unlike these suggestive passages altogether! Their sheer grandiloquence smacks much more of the "writer's lamp" than the bustling places of ordinary life so typical of the parallel passages spotlighted earlier. So even as we can detect aspects in certain passages that do smack of authenticity, that very analysis helps us also detect the phoniness in much else, such as huge swaths of GJohn.

Apparently, a book by Maurice Casey goes into all this in some detail, but I've not yet read it and do not recall the title.

Thanks for asking the question.

Stone

OK. Thanks.

Still the skeptic in me says that even if these sayings can be shown to have an Aramaic origin, that doesn't necessarily mean they came from anyone called Jesus.

They might be quotes from Hillel or Hanan or any one of many 1st century preachers.
 
Paul appears to be the earlier. ...
Thanks for your thoughtful reply, Stone.
Your explanation of why Paul has priority was most interesting and leaves me wondering just how much has actually been lost of those 1st century sayings.
That said, don't you find it intriguing that one of the earliest teachings we know of refers to not allowing women to leave their husbands?
According to Paul, anyway.
 
Show me precisely which published scholars itemize each of these "sources" and where and how they derive each one. Thank you.

Of course, to answer this would require a post of encyclopeic length. You might try reading Gospel Fictions by Randel Helms. You could also read The Homeric Epics and the Gospel of Mark by Dennis MacDonald.

Alternatively, you could point out a particular narrative in the gospels or in a specific gospel and ask me what I think is its source.

Show me where I make any claim that the details for this entry are historical. I showed you the material which is most likely historical*. Show me where that material gives these "entry" details. I thought you were addressing my post.

I don't recall asserting that you did accept the Palm Sunday narratives as historical. I was simply making a point about the gospels as historical documents. If you didn't immediately jump into your abrasive confrontational mode, you might actually see that.

Shew me where Pilate's "humanity" is referenced in the material* I selected. Boy oh boy, here I was regretting that my post required my getting into the weeds too much. Evidently, I underestimated the possibility of slippery rote responses like this one and the need to actually get into the weeds _even_ _more_!

Again, I was referring here to the gospels, in which Pilate is represented as being reluctant to put Jesus to death; and again, you've assumed that I'm criticizing you and attacking your views when I'm not.

HERE ARE MORE WEEDS -- and don't pretend you aren't perfectly aware of this. OBVIOUSLY, Pilate gets more and more "humane" with each Synoptic, until GJohn, which isn't even a Synoptic(!), where Pilate is a virtual saint! Coincidence? Hardly. Pilate is unscrupulously sugar-coated more and more as the Jesus movement gets more and more estranged from the Jewish community. Mark, Tacitus and Josephus tilt more toward Pilate "throwing the switch" than others. The later texts don't -- DUH. Show me where any of that has any bearing at all on what I wrote -- or why the hell I should have to point it out all over again now.

Yes, you and I are in agreement on this. Generally speaking, the later the gospel, the more intensely the Jews are blamed and the more Pilate is humanized. Again, your assumption that what I wrote was an antagonistic response to your post is unwarranted.

Wrong: They also tell us he had family around who were married, that he viewed preaching as a legit way to earn a living, that he preached on marriage and divorce, and that he was crucified and then buried, all plainly referenced in the Paul cites I provided.

Paul's letters tell us nothing about his life other than that he had a family, that he instituted the eucharist at the last supper, that he was crucified and that he rose from the dead. They mention nothing about his baptism, miracles, etc. They do mention Jesus' views on marriage and divorce, but that's about it. As I said in my post, the Pauline epistles tell us next to nothing about the events in the life of Jesus.

You didn't read my post. You've just provided a rote response with no regard to context at all. I've wasted my time -- as usual. (And people wonder why I'm such a grouch.)

Stone

I don't wonder why you have such an abrasive personality. I just assume it's your problem and not mine.

. . . (snip) . . .

Josephus: Antiquities, 20 -- "Since Ananus was that kind of person, and because he perceived an opportunity with Festus having died and Albinus not yet arrived, he called a meeting of the Sanhedrin and brought James, the brother of Jesus (who is called 'Messiah') along with some others. He accused them of transgressing the law, and handed them over for stoning."

Tacitus: Annals, 15:44 -- "But all human efforts, all the lavish gifts of the emperor, and the propitiations of the gods, did not banish the sinister belief that the conflagration was the result of an order. Consequently, to get rid of the report, Nero fastened the guilt and inflicted the most exquisite tortures on a class hated for their abominations, called Christians by the populace. Christus, from whom the name had its origin, suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberius at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilatus, and a most mischievous superstition, thus checked for the moment, again broke out not only in Judaea, the first source of the evil, but even in Rome, where all things hideous and shameful from every part of the world find their centre and become popular."

I have no idea why you're posting the passages from Josephus and Tacitus as though I'm disputing them. I already said that I accept the passage from Tacitus as being genuine and what many see as problems in the passage from Josephus. Personally I have less problems with it than many do; but I still accept the possibility that the phrase "who was called Christ," could have been added by a later copyist.
 
Last edited:
Not one poster, not even Pakeha, addresses a single one of my bullet points.
Stone



The reason why, what you describe as your own "detailed" and "properly explained” “intricacy of data patterns" is as you describe it a "waste of your time", is that it's all the same stuff which has been presented here countless times before in these recent HJ threads.

And that’s probably also the same reason why most here choose not to spend their time acceding to your demands for people to reply to what you call your “bullet points”.

Though your constant ranting about so-called “mythers” producing “bigotry” “dishonesty” and "hate speech” etc. is obviously another turn-off. Eg see below from just one of your posts -


O.K., here goes.

First off, …..

….
…. Mythers aren't …. mythers pretend …. Mythers effectively proclaim …. in the myther view. "Tsk, tsk, tsk" …. mythers (or mythtics)….. appalling bigotedpretends, like the mythers respond to mythers with "@^%*^$E#$#$@&%***$&#@#$^$&$%&*#%" …. mythers can come back … , the mythers therefore proclaim … Mythers claim that … the mythers' having taken …
… That will never satisfy the mythers … the dishonesty of some mythers I've encountered ….


twisted and perverted by hate speech from mythers.
 
pakeha

That said, don't you find it intriguing that one of the earliest teachings we know of refers to not allowing women to leave their husbands?
According to Paul, anyway.
Well... it was sexually symmetric.

1 Corinthians 7: 10-11

To the married, however, I give this instruction (not I, but the Lord): A wife should not separate from her husband - and if she does separate she must either remain single or become reconciled to her husband - and a husband should not divorce his wife.

The earliest Gospel version we have of the teaching referenced, Mark 10: 2-12 is also sexually symmetric, even though the question posed apparently wasn't, according to our informant:

The Pharisees approached and asked, “Is it lawful for a husband to divorce his wife?” They were testing him.

He said to them in reply, “What did Moses command you?”

They replied, “Moses permitted him to write a bill of divorce and dismiss her.”

But Jesus told them, “Because of the hardness of your hearts he wrote you this commandment. But from the beginning of creation, ‘God made them male and female..For this reason a man shall leave his father and mother and the two shall become one flesh.’ So they are no longer two but one flesh. Therefore what God has joined together, no human being must separate.”

In the house the disciples again questioned him about this. He said to them, “Whoever divorces his wife and marries another commits adultery against her; and if she divorces her husband and marries another, she commits adultery.”
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Back
Top Bottom