ruach1
Muse
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2005
- Messages
- 561
Usually this is where I begin to duck.I mean this in the nicest possible way:
The King surpassed my expectations.
Usually this is where I begin to duck.I mean this in the nicest possible way:
Usually this is where I begin to duck.
The King surpassed my expectations.![]()
Yes, which is why the Black Panthers were so much more effective than Martin Luther King.
Um, wait a minute...
How so?There is also the matter that if Jesus were wholly mythical, we should expect the New Testament to look radically different than it does.
Like the 10 years separating his birth, or the wholly illogical journey of his parents to Bethlehem.We would probably see a portrayal that was more consistently idealized and larger-than-life. Jesus' purported activities would be about as hard to fit into a historical timeframe as Robin Hood's.
He had to die in some manner, otherwise the authors would have had to explain away the new kingdom which didn’t exist, that the messiah was sent to form.We probably would not even see him portrayed as having been crucified.
The bible, when used by such as ruach1 is self referencing and contradictory. Not until you take it apart and examine each does is it understandable in context; however, the believers are loath to do so for it might tear apart a favorite bit of text.If that's your standard then say bye-bye to most of history. Also, how do you consider the gospels self-referencing if Jesus didn't write them? Or how do you interpret letters from Paul and others regarding "an event" as self-referencing?
Point: most of the millions that believe the text haven’t actually bothered to read them. They merely parrot what they’ve been told the texts say.If you are being genuine (but not too bright or well read) or awkward or superficial (or otherwise mis-reading the text), then don't try to deceive or burst the bubble of millions of people who have read and believed the texts as most see them,
the wholly illogical journey of his parents to Bethlehem.
He had to die in some manner
As for my statement of the historical Jesus being settled, it hasn’t been.
The only "internal inconsistencies" are in different versions of the same story. That is perfectly consistent with 4 different authors writing about the same legendary character, sort of like if four different authors wrote about Robin Hood.
If they all came up with different stories, would that be evidence that Robin Hood existed?
There are a few likely contenders for the existence of a person ultimately used as a sort of blueprint for Jesus, but Jesus having existed, as most Christians believe, is unsubstantiated at best.
I am not sure why that is. If your saviour is going to stay dead then it might be illogical. If your saviour is going to come triumphantly back to life then it makes for a nice dramatic contrast.If you are going to pick a death for a mythical savior, crucifixion is one of the worst choices, which makes it a very odd thing to make up.
He was never really in the running for the Jewish messiah as he didn’t fulfill any of the OT messianic prophecies.That said, you are missing the point, which is that Jesus is portrayed as having died a death that in the eyes of most Jews disqualified him from being the Messiah,
A wholly illogical journey that would be quite unnecessary in a mythical Jesus who could have been "born" in the right town in the first place.
Crucifixion was relatively common at the time. How else is society going to sacrifice someone to a god in which they don’t believe?It also looked pretty ridiculous to the pagans. If you are going to pick a death for a mythical savior, crucifixion is one of the worst choices, which makes it a very odd thing to make up.
I never said Jesus was wholly mythical. I said “…but Jesus having existed, as most Christians believe, is unsubstantiated at best.”What is also telling is that the few who do try to argue that Jesus was mythical consistently end up with a web of distorted facts and speculation.
jjramsey
Crucifixion was relatively common at the time. How else is society going to sacrifice someone to a god in which they don’t believe?
There is also the matter that if Jesus were wholly mythical, we should expect the New Testament to look radically different than it does.
How so?
We would probably see a portrayal that was more consistently idealized and larger-than-life. Jesus' purported activities would be about as hard to fit into a historical timeframe as Robin Hood's.
So you think Jesus was God because he was shown to be imperfect and not larger than life? How does that make any sense?
On the other hand, why does human weakness indicate existance?
It is not so much the weakness itself as it is either the embarrassing nature or the shear mundaneness of some of the material about Jesus. These are less likely to be made up because no one would want to make them up.