The Norseman
Thank you for the kind words.
On the cup thing, what I'm interested in is what the earliest version of the story was. With luck, that would help frame the "historical Jesus" hypothesis with some specificity. It won't decide the issue, but it might help define what the issue is. Besides, it's a puzzle, and I like puzzles.
The idea that Jesus would play-act cannibalistic vampirism at a Jewish dinner table is absurd. Late versions of the story, like
John, do frankly depict Jesus as saying things that disgust Jews and alienate his own supporters. See chapter 6, especially verse 48 ff. This may be great creative writing, but it is wildly unrealistic.
I think early versions of the story, even if the story was entirely made up, would not depict Jesus being crudely disgusting. However, the earliest version of the story that we actually have does show Jesus using body-and-blood imagery for food. (Not at a dinner table, though, and nothing is said about who eats the food which Jesus describes.)
So, we have a puzzle, interesting (to me) in its own right, whether Jesus is a fictional character or a real person instead. How did the story go, if it was intended to be realistic, but included such an unJewish element? The alternative I propose is that the offensive business didn't occur at a dinner table, and did occur in a context where it was plainly symbolic, advanced the plot of the story, and didn't involve anybody pretending to eat someone else. The business might still be strange and dsiturbing, but at least it isn't absurd.
Hans
OK, then, so much for levity. Let me state the point prosaically.
Paul restricts what Paul says about this character's actions in time and space to things that Paul says real people are also capable of. That lends no support to Paul intending the character to be non-human. If we can't determine what order of being Paul means, then it fails to bear at all.
Persistent differences among personal opinions, including differing opinions about the weight of evidence, are to be expected when the evidence is thin, as is the case here. The situation does, however, somewhat gut the point of you and I discussing Paul. If you cannot locate evidence that, in your estimation, bears upon Paul's personal opinion about Jesus' humanity, but only "maybe yes, maybe no," then we need to be discussing something else instead.
IanS
What I wrote to Hans is also my reaction to many of your points. You asked whether the
1 Thessalonians convinces me. Yes, Paul describes himself elsewhere as a participant in some of the behavior described there. I believe the passage reflects Paul's characterization of relationships among human beings on Earth. If Jesus is a suspected non-human, then so are Jews, their prophets, Paul's readers and Paul himself.
I cannot prove that Paul consistently thought that he himself was a flesh and blood human being, and
2 Corithians 12: 1 ff. may be offered in evidence. Paul says outright that on at least one occasion he didn't know if he was corporeal or not. Paul also told his readers that they would fly, so maybe he doesn't think they are on Earth, either. But if nobody in Paul is definitely flesh and blood, and everybody in Paul can fly, then there is little point in our discussing whether a specific character in Paul is flesh and blood or not.
IanS, part deux
Jesus appears on earth like any other human (though he is the superhuman scion of a supernatural God in heaven). He performs many wondrous miracles (though they are always the sort of things anyone at the time could have imagined), he tells of many wondrous things and makes all sorts of prophetic statements with great insight etc (though he never reveals anything at all unknown to the proto-science or medicine of the time), etc.
We are apparently not discussing Paul any more, and we also skip
Mark. Jesus' paternity isn't addressed there, and Jesus does nothing that other people don't do similar things. There is nothing "supernatural" about Jesus that isn't supernatural about the human race generally until
Matthew, and even after that,
Acts will depict disciples and non-disciples (Simon of Samaria, some hapless exorcists) alike doing Jesus-stuff.
The idea that Jesus is superhuman is late, IMO, and develops as the tales are retold. What Jesus is early on is conscious of what time it is. He thinks that God is now returning to history. God does miracles again, as he did in bygone days (in the story books that Jesus read from). Jesus presides at miracles, he doesn't "do" miracles. Other people, ordinary people, can also preside. The magic is all around; you just tap into it. You don't even have to be right with God.
Later on? Well, Jesus was mistaken about what time it is, wasn't he? It's still early in the end of days, not quite the very end yet. Jesus isn't coming back soon, so maybe we need to beef up the stories about how special he was when he was here. Less presiding, more doing.
You and I do things every day that a First Century person would see as a miracle, including what I am doing right now, sending an internet message. I also do less technical things, for which I know the expalnation and they would not. If I told them God did it for me, and would do the same for them, they would plausibly buy it. Why not, if I really do it, they really have some of the same results (placebo healing, "exorcism," ...), and there is no lively competing explanation available to them?