How do you know which are true and which are fabrications?
It would be reasonable indeed, were it not for the fact there's no published archeological evidence to support such a supposition. In fact, all the archeologists have found in the area of Nazareth for the 1st century are tombs.
No pottery, as would be expected in an inhabited area, nothing.
Except those tombs, dating from after 70 CE.
I've asked several times now for archeological evidence of occupation of Nazareth during the first century.
Don't you think it's time to come up with something, Crossbow?
Why refuse?
It would be much more interesting to relink your source and explain why it trumps the published findings, don't you think?
Crossbow, sorry you didn't get the joke.
I'll go over it again for you.
IanS posted
I replied
It's a reference to the Roman razing Jerusalem to the ground in 70 CE, Crossbow.
But as HM also notes, this is completely inconsistent with what we know about how the Romans acted, especially considering what information we have about what happened. They didn't crucify insignificant rabel rousers. Sure, they might disembowel them if they got uppity, but crucifixion?
Well, by using common sense, one can determine what parts of the Gospels are fabrications.
Then, one by corroborating other things in Gospels with other data sources, then one may be able to determine what parts of the Gospels are true.
And for the things that do not fit into either case, then one will have to be satisfied that one cannot know if it is fabrication or true.
Well, by using common sense, one can determine what parts of the Gospels are fabrications.
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... snipped for relevance ...
I don't want to be part of the testy exchange going on, but I do want to question this apparently simple answer.
That is, the whole "historical Jesus" research project is anything but common sense.
For example, supposing that Dr. Richard Carrier is correct in identifying formal structures that have been used in designing Mark's gospel -- formal structures that would be unlikely to occur in a bald historical account, but which are the result of deliberate design?
Would that tend to indicate that all the events in the Gospel are completely untrue, or were some of them true but fitted (or "shoehorned") into an elaborate formal structure?
(The structure being of the abcdeedcba "arch" or "bookends" type.)
www.youtube.com/watch?v=X59gMzXcby4
A general question that is neither intended to be answered literally, nor is it rhetorical:
What events in the Gospels can be corroborated by other events?
I wrote my response to Crossbow before I saw Calebprime's post. It seems like we are roughly on the same page here and if Crossbow would prefer to respond to just one of the posts it would be fine with me if he responded to just Crossbow.
I thought the video below did a better job of making the case that the Gospels are written in the style of myth than the video linked to by Calebprime and the recording is of a little higher quality.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2e7uhaed594
I stand corrected. Sorry all.![]()
This is what happens when you try and force facts to conform with your preconceived notions.But as HM also notes, this is completely inconsistent with what we know about how the Romans acted, especially considering what information we have about what happened. They didn't crucify insignificant rabel rousers. Sure, they might disembowel them if they got uppity, but crucifixion?
OK, I think that I see what you are getting at.
If so, then please refer to Post #287 in this thread and see if it addresses your question or not.
Thanks.
Items 3, 4, 5, & 6 are facts that don't go to what in the gospel accounts that aren't obviously historical might be true. The Robin Hood stories usually mention King John. There was a King John but it doesn't mean there was a real Robin Hood.[I added the item numbers]
1. the conjunction of stars/planets which occurred at, or near, the birth of Jesus,
2. that there was person named Jesus,
3. that there was a King Herod of Judea,
4. the Roman occupation of Judea,
5. that there were a number of people at the time of Jesus who claimed to be the messiah who did things like faith healing, exorcisms, magic tricks, and so on,
6. the Romans did crucify people, in fact at least a thousand people, in Judea,
Third, since the Gospels were written well after the death of Jesus by people who had very little, if any, personal contact with Jesus, then there are parts of the Gospels which are flat-out wrong. Things like the virgin birth, coming back from the dead, and so on. I mentioned these facts in an earlier posting which you may have missed.
Fourth, in spite of the numerous flaws with the Gospels, never the less, there are things in the Gospels which can be corroborated.
A few that come to mind are:
the conjunction of stars/planets which occurred at, or near, the birth of Jesus,
that there was person named Jesus,
that there was a King Herod of Judea,
the Roman occupation of Judea,
that there were a number of people at the time of Jesus who claimed to be the messiah who did things like faith healing, exorcisms, magic tricks, and so on,
the Romans did crucify people, in fact at least a thousand people, in Judea,
and I am sure that there are many other such things, but I have not done a complete inventory of them.
I hope this helps!
It would be reasonable indeed, were it not for the fact there's no published archeological evidence to support such a supposition. In fact, all the archeologists have found in the area of Nazareth for the 1st century are tombs.
No pottery, as would be expected in an inhabited area, nothing.
Except those tombs, dating from after 70 CE.
I've asked several times now for archeological evidence of occupation of Nazareth during the first century.
Don't you think it's time to come up with something, Crossbow?
I already did just that, however you have continually ignored that data.
However, if this issue so very to you then please post explain why it is so terribly important to you that no one was living in Nazareth during the first century. ...
...During the lifetime of Mary, Joseph and Jesus, it is believed the population did not exceed 500. Nazareth was a small Jewish village where people knew one another, and like Jesus, lived, prayed and studied in the Jewish tradition. They gathered in the synagogue, meeting for prayer and holidays. To this day, visitors can see the Synagogue Church, dating from the Crusader period, which was built to commemorate the spot where it is believed Jesus prayed and preached (see Nazareth sites and attractions).
I disagree that the Gospels resemble "fiction" more than any other broad genre of "personal narrative literature."FWIW, I believe (even as a person that thinks an HJ existed) that the evidence for this view is very thin. Carrier did a far better job than I could have explaining why the Gospels appear to be works of fiction. The simple reading of the Gospels suggest that they are just made up stories. Carrier has gone way beyond that and showed in great detail of why the structure of the Gospels suggests they are just fiction.
The fact that people may have first written the gospels 50 to 100 years after the death of Jesus, is not in itself a reason to say they must be wrong. That length of time is not what forced them to write fictional nonsense about miracles and the supernatural. The reason the gospels cannot be trusted in what they say about Jesus is because what they say about him is so often physically impossible and certainly untrue.
We are only concerned with what the gospels say about Jesus. Nobody is disputing that 1st century gospel writers knew that places like Jerusalem and Galilee existed, or that there were Roman rulers (or that there were stars in the sky).
John, whose author is exceptionally skilled, is the first Gospel to state that it was written to advocate that its reader adopt a belief not already held.....
I only saw the movie (and don't recall if I watched it all the way through). What I saw seemed to be entertainment. Maybe people who already had Scientology training would see more religious content in it than I did.In rather the same fashion that L. Ron Hubbard wrote "Battlefield Earth"?
davefoc
I disagree that the Gospels resemble "fiction" more than any other broad genre of "personal narrative literature."
Mark made the canon without any statement of its purpose and despite critical acknowledgment that its author had fit stories and incidents into a chronological framework of his own devising. That an imposed framework would exhibit high-order regularity is evidence only for a proposition not in dispute, that the author of Mark is a human being.
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No, I spoke of what survives (if anything) of the original Mark. Surviving original Mark is distinguished from canonical Mark or specific manuscript Mark's. For most practical purposes in our dicsussions, the phrase has meant a defensible candidate for being the oldest or second-oldest known written versions of the Jesus stories we discussed.You said in earlier posts that you are using what you described as an “original” copy of g-Mark.
IanS
No, I spoke of what survives (if anything) of the original Mark. Surviving original Mark is distinguished from canonical Mark or specific manuscript Mark's
IanS
For most practical purposes in our dicsussions, the phrase (my highlight above) has meant a defensible candidate for being the oldest or second-oldest known written versions of the Jesus stories we discussed..
In my postings about Mark, I use of a variety of translations, occasionally supplemented by resources describing the Greek being translated.
Obviously, no translation is "original." I am unsure how you could be confused about what I use, or why, if someone had made the antiquarian book find of the century, you would first hear about it here from me.