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Rewriting the bible
#81
RE: Rewriting the bible
Quote:BTW, the gospel story of John the Baptist is good evidence that there is a historical kernel to the life of Jesus.

In "Drums Along The Mohawk" there are appearances by Benedict Arnold, Nicholas Herkimer, and Joseph Brandt. That does not make the main characters, Gil and Lana Martin, any less fictional.



Moving on.

Quote:I'm sure the fat cats among the Jews were fairly satisfied with the situation, but I doubt that the peasants were dancing in the fields.

Do you think the peasants were dancing in the fields, ever? In a fairly short period time Judahite peasants went from Judahite overlords to Babylonian overlords to Persian overlords holding the whip? Do you think they celebrated when the Babylonians left? I doubt they even noticed. The commons was virtually an irrelevancy in antiquity. Revolts were led by disaffected nobles who, when so inspired, brought out their retainers to do the actual fighting.

On top of that, though, have you ever noticed that there is one thing which is conspicuously absent in Herod the Great's reign? Popular unrest. The nobility was pissed about him but his massive building projects provided employment ( and therefore wealth) to the commons at the expense of the nobles. It's a complex subject by itself, though.

Quote:So why would this fictitious story about a Palestinian Jew evolve in the Hellenic world of the 2nd century?

Because it was not unique (there were many dying and resurrected gods throughout the ANE.) Remember, the earliest xtian art we have depicts "jesus" as a clean-shaven, Greco-Roman, toga-wearing, philosopher. Odd, no?

Quote:Paul is mentioned in the epistles of Clement (ca 95 CE), Ignatius (ca 110 CE)

But are those real or pseudoepigraphic bullshit?

http://www.bible.ca/history-ignatius-for...-250AD.htm

Somewhere around here was a discussion about Clement of Rome who seems to be as fictional as Ignatius. The Xtian Forgery Mill was going great guns by the 3d-4th century. I'll see if I can find the Clement reference.

Quote:In any case, you must know, or should know, that there was no authoritative committee, at least not for over 1000 years.


Athanasius was writing his commentary on what should go in the canon some 40 years after the earliest bible we have: The Codexes Vaticanus and Sinaiticus. Vaticanus is missing 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon, and Revelation which indicates that the process was still going on long after the so-called bible was written. IN addition there are numerous verses and phrases from other books which did not make the cut....or which were added in later for political purposes.

The issue remains not that we have this nonsense in the 4th century but that we have no record of it in the first.

Quote: In his Antiquities (ca 94 CE) modern scholars almost universally accept the references to James, the brother of Jesus, and to the story of the imprisonment and execution of John the Baptist. There is a broad consensus that the reference to Jesus himself contains an authentic kernel, but it has been subject to Christian interpolation.

Deist-Paladin is much more of a hardliner on the James reference. I see it as an innocent mistake by a later scribe. Some xtian scribe sees the word "christos" in the text and wets his pants shrieking "There's Jesus!" But what did "christos" mean to Josephus? It was an act of anointing a king or high priest and virtually everyone in that passage with the exception of the two Romans was anointed at one time or another. So a helpful scribe moving a marginal note into the text does not impress me....but neither does it rise to the level of full-blown forgery as the Testimonium Flavianum does.

The JtheB tale does not conform to the gospel accounts. We have only the gospel tales linking the two anyway. So what?

Quote:There's lot of fantastic shit in Herodotus, but I wouldn't dismiss him as 100 per cent fable.

I regard Herodotus as a gullible old fool. There is a lot of fantastic shit in Pliny's Natural History, too. But there is not a word about a dead criminal coming back to life.
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#82
RE: Rewriting the bible
(November 11, 2014 at 12:59 pm)xpastor Wrote:

Excellently written xp, well rounded unbiased information.
For Religion & Health see:[/b][/size] Williams & Sternthal. (2007). Spirituality, religion and health: Evidence and research directions. Med. J. Aust., 186(10), S47-S50. -LINK

The WIN/Gallup End of Year Survey 2013 found the US was perceived to be the greatest threat to world peace by a huge margin, with 24% of respondents fearful of the US followed by: 8% for Pakistan, and 6% for China. This was followed by 5% each for: Afghanistan, Iran, Israel, North Korea. -LINK


"That's disgusting. There were clean athletes out there that have had their whole careers ruined by people like Lance Armstrong who just bended thoughts to fit their circumstances. He didn't look up cheating because he wanted to stop, he wanted to justify what he was doing and to keep that continuing on." - Nicole Cooke
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#83
RE: Rewriting the bible
"Once upon a time Bronze Age tribesmen with no understanding of science made up a mythology to explain things they did not understand. Since then the mythology has been used to slaughter millions, enslave millions, control billions and justify some of the most horrific crimes in human history. It has also given rise to several other mythologies and the followers of the three main mythologies have been slaughtering each other ever since. Three thousand years later, people are still doing it.

The end. Please let it end!"

Playing Cluedo with my mum while I was at Uni:

"You did WHAT?  With WHO?  WHERE???"
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#84
RE: Rewriting the bible
Min, I'm going to drop this controversy now. (Just a few more jabs. Wink)

From my perspective you are clutching at straws to deny the historical existence of JC. I suppose from your perspective, I am clutching at straws to affirm his historical existence.

My only interest in the topic is determining what is most plausible historically.

I certainly have no sentimental attachment to JC. I regularly present him as an apocalyptic preacher who thought the world was going to end in his time. I reject the historicity of all the miracles. They were added later by the church, as were any assertions that he was giving his life as a ransom. I don't think much of his moral teaching, which was eloquently expressed but utterly impractical as it was based on the premise that the world would end any day now—take no thought for the morrow, etc., etc. I also agree that the mythological elements were added on, e.g., the dying and rising god.

It is interesting that with all this taken out we still know a lot about his teaching and have pretty accurate summaries of his actual words, which is remarkable for a backwoods preacher in that era. What I regard as authentic are the apocalyptic pronouncements and all the parables, which most people do not realize are apocalyptic too, all about the imminence of the kingdom of heaven.

In fact, the mixture of the apocalyptic teaching with all the other material which convinces me that there is a historical kernel. I can understand how a failed apocalyptic prophet could be transformed into a miracle-working savior god who rises from the dead. I can't see why people in the second century creating the figure of a savior god would toss in the failed prophecies of the end. The apocalyptic material is there because he really uttered those words and they were preserved in his followers' memory and eventually written down, simply because they were from a collection of Jesus sayings.
If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people — House
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#85
RE: Rewriting the bible
Quote:From my perspective you are clutching at straws to deny the historical existence of JC. I suppose from your perspective, I am clutching at straws to affirm his historical existence.

Yes. I have no straws to clutch at, though. That is the problem. Not straw #1. Like you, I certainly have no attachment to the story. I suspect where we differ is that you are still attaching a historical plausibility to the idea which I simply cannot see. What we know of Greco-Roman literature at the time is that such tales were a dime a dozen. It's a little more disquieting when it happens in our time.

In Carrier's book he mentions that in 1945, Betty Crocker was named the second most popular woman in America by Fortune Magazine, behind Eleanor Roosevelt. http://www.pbs.org/food/the-history-kitc...y-crocker/

The only problem is that Betty Crocker is fictitious - a creation of an advertising campaign in 1921. So we have evidence for how such tales can grow even in relatively modern times. Then of course there are the somewhat earlier examples of William Tell and Ned Ludd.

The point being that a real person is not necessary for tales to grow. They didn't have Snopes back then.
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#86
RE: Rewriting the bible
(November 12, 2014 at 7:31 pm)Minimalist Wrote:
Quote:From my perspective you are clutching at straws to deny the historical existence of JC. I suppose from your perspective, I am clutching at straws to affirm his historical existence.

Yes. I have no straws to clutch at, though. That is the problem. Not straw #1. Like you, I certainly have no attachment to the story. I suspect where we differ is that you are still attaching a historical plausibility to the idea which I simply cannot see. What we know of Greco-Roman literature at the time is that such tales were a dime a dozen. It's a little more disquieting when it happens in our time.

In Carrier's book he mentions that in 1945, Betty Crocker was named the second most popular woman in America by Fortune Magazine, behind Eleanor Roosevelt. http://www.pbs.org/food/the-history-kitc...y-crocker/

The only problem is that Betty Crocker is fictitious - a creation of an advertising campaign in 1921. So we have evidence for how such tales can grow even in relatively modern times. Then of course there are the somewhat earlier examples of William Tell and Ned Ludd.

The point being that a real person is not necessary for tales to grow. They didn't have Snopes back then.
My argument is that one or more of those fantastic dime-a-dozen fables got attached to a person who really existed, and the cracks show because what was accidentally preserved of his authentic teaching doesn't mesh very well with the fairy tales.

I'd never heard the one about Betty Crocker. My all-time favorite example of myth-making is the story of the Angels of Mons. Within a few months everyone in Britain believed it although the author protested that he had just been writing a totally dictional short story.
If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people — House
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#87
RE: Rewriting the bible
Yes, I understand you fully. My point is that a real person/event is not necessary for these stories to grow.

Ptolemy I is supposed to have invented the god "Serapis" to replace Osiris as a consort for Isis and thus meld Greek and Egyptian culture. I suppose anyone who objected got a spear point up his ass. Doubtlessly an effective means of discouraging consent. But did the first group to hear the story really believe it?

That's another good addition to the catalog of examples, too.
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#88
RE: Rewriting the bible
(November 6, 2014 at 9:38 am)dimaniac Wrote:
Quote:The thing is, the story is utter nonsense.
God created logic so he doesn't have to follow its laws

Christians create that because they weren't following the ways and words of Yehoshua. They rewrote the true laws and added stories to suit their purposes under that umbrella. There is no way that John the Baptist ate locusts and honey. Manna Pancakes and honey, yes. Yehoshua definitely would not eat meat, but they rewrite to make it ok for them. Dietary restrictions were HUGE parts of their lives all the way back to Moses. "Thou Shalt Not Kill" is not even correct. The words "lo tirtzach" mean "Thou Shalt Not Kill Anything Whatsoever". This was a DIETARY EDICT, not a moral edict. You cannot eat something you kill. They were fruitarian. This is the TRUE LOGIC, Christianity evolves to suit their own agendas.
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#89
RE: Rewriting the bible
Yeah.

Quote:A salesman from a major chicken fast food chain walked up to the Pope and offers him a million dollars if he would change "The Lord's Prayer" from "give us this day our daily bread" to "give us this day our daily chicken." The Pope refused his offer. Two weeks later, the man offered the pope 10 million dollars to change it from "give us this day our daily bread" to "give us this day our daily chicken" and again the Pope refused the man's generous offer. Another week later, the man offered the Pope 20 million dollars and finally the Pope accepted. The following day, the Pope said to all his officials, "I have some good news and some bad news. "The good news is, that we have just received a check for 20 million dollars. The bad news is, we lost the Wonder Bread account!"
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#90
RE: Rewriting the bible
(November 13, 2014 at 4:46 am)Firewalker Wrote: The words "lo tirtzach" mean "Thou Shalt Not Kill Anything Whatsoever". This was a DIETARY EDICT, not a moral edict. You cannot eat something you kill. They were fruitarian.
No they weren't.

Dumbass.
For Religion & Health see:[/b][/size] Williams & Sternthal. (2007). Spirituality, religion and health: Evidence and research directions. Med. J. Aust., 186(10), S47-S50. -LINK

The WIN/Gallup End of Year Survey 2013 found the US was perceived to be the greatest threat to world peace by a huge margin, with 24% of respondents fearful of the US followed by: 8% for Pakistan, and 6% for China. This was followed by 5% each for: Afghanistan, Iran, Israel, North Korea. -LINK


"That's disgusting. There were clean athletes out there that have had their whole careers ruined by people like Lance Armstrong who just bended thoughts to fit their circumstances. He didn't look up cheating because he wanted to stop, he wanted to justify what he was doing and to keep that continuing on." - Nicole Cooke
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