Originally Posted by The Norseman View Post
I do appreciate your polite response, by the way.
I try, but sometimes some people make it difficult. (not you).
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I thought Carrier included that in the third sentence of my quote above? "...Jesus the Political Revolutionary or Zealot Activist..."
I will see about getting some of Robert Eisenman's work to peruse; but does he make a distinction between Jesus the Zealot and Jesus the Zealot Activist? To me, they are one and the same.
They are big thick books full of little technical nuances concerning that and many other related questions. There were Zealots, and then there were Zealots, does that help?
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It addressed a point which was never made by me, which is that someone keeps talking about absolute certainty in this thread. IanS does continue to point out that some of the major HJ players actually do discuss HJ as definitely existing. I think that's why it's continually mentioned -- this so-called consensus of historians do NOT actually have the same Jesus in mind when they, individually, proclaim an ACTUAL corporeal Jesus.
That is the thrust of my quoting of Richard Carrier; an actual Historian is commenting on the fragmented field of HJ theories and suppositions and there is no actual consensus, which has been argued ad nauseum in these threads.
OK. I've seen IanS wave around a Bart Ehrman quote to that effect, but Ehrman knows enough about Ancient History to know that there is no certainty here. If he said that, he was wrong or he has been quoted out of context. What can I say? I'm not Bart Ehrman, I don't even like his videos very much, he has an annoying voice IMO.
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Not to speak for another JREF member or even yourself, but maybe it'd be more precise for you to say you simply believe in a Jesus the Zealot and not continue to compound the confusion by then throwing in some other vagaries such as "a Jewish preacher". As I have shown, there are many, many different and some contradictory ideas of what "a Jewish preacher" really means.
I don't want to force my interpretation on anyone else, so I don't say Zealot when I'm talking about the Consensus opinion.
By saying "Jewish Preacher" I mean that the core sayings associated with this (very minimal and tentative) HJ are part of a Jewish Tradition, rather than say Persian or Greek. That's all. That's why there is so much variation amongst scholars, what we do know can fit a multitude of Jesuses (?).
But there is always the chance that something new (I mean old) will be dug up.
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Is that then a Nazorean Zealot that you believe existed?
Nazoreans were like John the Baptist, living in the wilderness off what grew naturally. etc They could be very Zealous for the Law.
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Other than the gospels -- and I am earnest about this question; no gotchas here -- what evidence convinced you that Jesus described outside of the gospels was a Nazorean Zealot preacher?
Well, the Dead Sea Scrolls mostly. They describe the exact person I mean and he is called there "The Teacher Of Righteousness". A lot of Scholars disagree with this idea, for lots of different reasons. The major one I've seen so far is the dating. I'm still hopeful that will sort itself out.
So I'm not just a mindless sheep swallowing the consensus whole. I think there is some pretty dodgy reasoning in there too, but we can't throw the baby out with the bathwater. We need some kind of Historical method or chaos reigns.