RE: Would They Die for a Lie?
December 18, 2018 at 9:53 am
(This post was last modified: December 18, 2018 at 9:56 am by Jehanne.)
(December 17, 2018 at 1:06 pm)Drich Wrote:(December 11, 2018 at 5:26 pm)Jehanne Wrote: Drich,
What your own quotes prove is that the Empire persecuted some early Christians for political reasons and not for their religious beliefs.
Then why were they identified as being christian they were killed and if they renounced the faith they were spared?
Did you even think or read the letter between pliny the younger (the governor and the emperor?)
They only qualification for death was the fact that the followers would not renounce christianity. they were even tortured to see if they would recant their faith if they did they lived if they didn't they were executed. and the emperor supported this!
Again put everything aside besides these two facts if the stated they were believers they died and if the recanted their beliefs they lived. this was written out in a well document vetted letter between a regional governor and the then emperor of rome. You can not get or official than that. the fact that the only condition for killing christians if they would not recant the faith PROVES RELIGIOUS PERSECUTION!
(December 16, 2018 at 8:35 pm)Jehanne Wrote: The earliest Christians did not believe that Jesus was "king"; all of that came later.that's not true. He was sent before pilate by the sanhedrin because he claimed to be king of the jews. then pilate asked if this was true, He said his kingdom is not of this earth. even so he was beaten and crucified with a sign above his head that stated "king of the Jews."
It's like everything you say is wrong..
maybe you ought ask questions rather than make definitive statements with no backing. It doesn't seem to suit you very well.
Drich,
No one in classical/Roman studies thinks like you do, or your Evangelical apologists.
Yes, the Empire did persecute some early Christians, but for political and not religious reasons; the Empire also persecute other groups for other reasons. And, yes, thousands (not millions) of early Christians did die, but just many thousands also recanted and lived.
As for the literalness of the Gospels, few modern scholars take those accounts of Pilate seriously.
(December 17, 2018 at 6:15 pm)Vicki Q Wrote:(December 16, 2018 at 8:35 pm)Jehanne Wrote: The earliest Christians did not believe that Jesus was "king"; all of that came later.
I'm not at all sure what you mean by this. Please unpack. Paul called Jesus Kyrios ('Lord', a Caesar designation), thereby denying that the emperor was Kyrios. And so on and so on and so on.
(December 16, 2018 at 8:33 pm)DeistPaladin Wrote: The point of the OP is that religious fanaticism and persecution prove nothing.
This needs careful definitions, but going with what I think you/he are saying:
The examples given merely demonstrate that people will die for a belief they have, even if that belief is incorrect. The Waco thing is moreover rather more complex, in that there's a lot of vagueness around who did what and why.
Maybe a counter-example or two could be found in which people died for something they knew to be untrue. That doesn't alter the fact that such things are extremely rare. For the very earliest Christian disciples to head off in different directions into a lifetime of getting beaten up and killed, without at some point eventually going 'You know what, I'm just going back home to watch box sets on Netflix because this is rubbish', strikes me as really quite unbelievable.
I mean you have to believe in what you're doing to put yourself through all this:
Ouch.
Vicky,
You need to read more modern New Testament criticism; here is a wonderful text:
A Brief Introduction to the New Testament 4th Edition
Dawn