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Did Jesus Actually Exist?

 
 
hanumanchalisayantra
 
  0  
Reply Mon 23 Mar, 2015 12:41 am
Yes God exist . Whatever the form may be .. God have different form . So one dont have to waste time and energy to such question i think.
FBM
 
  2  
Reply Mon 23 Mar, 2015 02:14 am
@hanumanchalisayantra,
That reminds me of the The Official God FAQ
0 Replies
 
argome321
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Mar, 2015 04:39 am
@Finn dAbuzz,
Yes Jesus Alou and his brothers Matty and Felipe played for the San Francisco Giants
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Mar, 2015 03:22 pm
@argome321,
Felipe Rojas Alou started out in the New York Giants farm team organization, and also payed for the Lake Charles Giants and the Phoenix Giants, before being called up to the majors to play with the NL Giants, who had skipped out on their rent and moved to San Francisco.

I think the evidence is clear that he was a Giants Polytheist. Praise Dog.
argome321
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Mar, 2015 03:26 pm
@Setanta,
Quote:
Felipe Rojas Alou started out in the New York Giants farm team organization, and also payed for the Lake Charles Giants and the Phoenix Giants, before being called up to the majors to play with the NL Giants, who had skipped out on their rent and moved to San Francisco.

I think the evidence is clear that he was a Giants Polytheist. Praise Dog.

you either as old as I am or know Baseball history,

All three brothers appeared in a major league game e in the outfield before they were traded ?
Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Mon 23 Mar, 2015 03:31 pm
@argome321,
At one time, the Alou brothers were the Giants' outfield . . .
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  3  
Reply Sat 11 Apr, 2015 05:48 pm


Many people shared the name. Christ's given name, commonly Romanized as Yeshua, was quite common in first-century Galilee. (Jesus comes from the transliteration of Yeshua into Greek and then English.) Archaeologists have unearthed the tombs of 71 Yeshuas from the period of Jesus' death. The name also appears 30 times in the Old Testament in reference to four separate characters—including a descendent of Aaron who helped to distribute offerings of grain (2 Chronicles 31:15) and a man who accompanied former captives of Nebuchadnezzar back to Jerusalem (Ezra 2:2).






The long version of the name, Yehoshua, appears another few hundred times, referring most notably to the legendary conqueror of Jericho (and the second most famous bearer of the name). So why do we call the Hebrew hero of Jericho Joshua and the Christian Messiah Jesus? Because the New Testament was originally written in Greek, not Hebrew or Aramaic. Greeks did not use the sound sh, so the evangelists substituted an S sound. Then, to make it a masculine name, they added another S sound at the end. The earliest written version of the name Jesus is Romanized today as Iesous. (Thus the crucifix inscription INRI: "Iesus Nazarenus Rex Iudaeorum," or "Jesus of Nazareth, King of the Jews.")


The initial J didn't come until much later. That sound was foreign to Aramaic, Hebrew, Greek, and Latin. Not even English distinguished J from I until the mid-17th century. Thus, the 1611 King James Bible refers to Jesus as "Iesus" and his father as "Ioseph." The current spelling likely came from Switzerland, where J sounds more like the English Y. When English Protestants fled to Switzerland during the reign of the Catholic Queen Mary I, they drafted the Geneva Bible and used the Swiss spelling. Translators in England adopted the Geneva spelling by 1769.


In contrast, the Old Testament was translated directly from the original Hebrew into English, rather than via Greek. So anyone named Yehoshua or Yeshua in the Old Testament became Joshua in English. Meanwhile, the holy book of the Syrian Orthodox church, known as the Syriac Bible, is written in Aramaic. While its Gospels were translated from the original Greek, the early scribes recognized that Iesous was a corruption of the original Aramaic. Thus, the Syriac text refers to Yeshua.


Bonus Explainer: What was Jesus' last name? It wasn't Christ. Contemporaries would have called him Yeshua Bar Yehosef or Yeshua Nasraya. (That's "Jesus, son of Joseph" or "Jesus of Nazareth.") Galileans distinguished themselves from others with the same first name by adding either "son of" and their father's name, or their birthplace. People who knew Jesus would not have called him Christ, which is the translation of a Greek word meaning "anointed one."


Got a question about today's news? Ask the Explainer.


Explainer thanks Joseph P. Amar of the University of Notre Dame and Paul V.M. Flesher of the University of Wyoming.






Brian Palmer writes about science,
neologist
 
  1  
Reply Sat 11 Apr, 2015 06:27 pm
@edgarblythe,
Good work, Edgar
0 Replies
 
FBM
 
  2  
Reply Sat 11 Apr, 2015 06:32 pm
@edgarblythe,
OK, so his last name wasn't Christ, but at least tell me that his middle initial is F.
edgarblythe
 
  2  
Reply Sat 11 Apr, 2015 06:43 pm
@FBM,
I thought it was H.
My step father thought the last name was "On a Crutch."
FBM
 
  1  
Reply Sat 11 Apr, 2015 07:23 pm
@edgarblythe,
Ah. Maybe it's a regional thing. I usually say, "Jesus F*cking..."
0 Replies
 
Ionus
 
  -1  
Reply Sat 11 Apr, 2015 11:54 pm
@edgarblythe,
Quote:
Christ's given name, commonly Romanized as Yeshua, was quite common in first-century Galilee. (Jesus comes from the transliteration of Yeshua into Greek and then English.)


(AHEM) The word Iesus is the Latin form of the Greek Iesous, which in Hebrew (with the Phonecian alphabet) is Y'shua and in English Joshua and in Spanish Jesus . As the prefixing of a Hebrew name with Y' meant "from God" or "God's", it can also be written as YWHW'shua or simplified as Y'shua . Putting a vowel in between the Y and shua is to aid pronunciation in the western languages .

Quote:
the Old Testament was translated directly from the original Hebrew into English, rather than via Greek.
Thats surprising . Which version of the OT was translated (KJ's ?) and where did they get Hebrew versions of ALL of the OT ?
0 Replies
 
Setanta
 
  2  
Reply Sun 12 Apr, 2015 02:10 am
@FBM,
His middle initial was "H"--our father, which art in heaven, Holloway be thy name . . . Jeebus Holloway Christ.
layman
 
  -2  
Reply Sun 12 Apr, 2015 02:21 am
@Setanta,
Wrong. The "H" stands for Herbert.
usery
 
  1  
Reply Tue 14 Apr, 2015 01:51 am
@layman,
And he's still around, omg.

"If you had just one question" would it be:

Is it true your boy was named after you, "Harold be thy name"?

0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Thu 2 Jul, 2015 02:05 pm


https://richarddawkins.net/2015/06/the-jesus-question-a-conversation-with-dr-robert-m-price/
0 Replies
 
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Thu 2 Jul, 2015 02:23 pm
@edgarblythe,
edgarblythe wrote:

My step father thought the last name was "On a Crutch."


Over here it's "On a bike."
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Thu 2 Jul, 2015 05:11 pm
@izzythepush,
In his HS yearbook he signed his name "IYAMWUTIYAM"
0 Replies
 
chai2
 
  0  
Reply Fri 3 Jul, 2015 07:55 am
@Setanta,
Setanta wrote:

His middle initial was "H"--our father, which art in heaven, Holloway be thy name . . . Jeebus Holloway Christ.


My ex-husband said Jesus H Christ all the time.

When I asked him what the H stood for, he said "Hubba Bubba"
FBM
 
  1  
Reply Fri 3 Jul, 2015 08:40 am
Jeebus Stump-Jumpin' Christ.



OK, I just made that up.
0 Replies
 
 

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