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non-Christians question about Jesus ?

 
 
husker
 
  1  
Reply Mon 9 Jan, 2006 11:11 pm
interesting in timing, topic, or wording?
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rosborne979
 
  1  
Reply Mon 9 Jan, 2006 11:16 pm
husker wrote:
interesting in timing, topic, or wording?


Something I hadn't given much thought to before.

I've seen a show on PBS which tried to recreate the physical image of Jesus, and also a show which implied that such a man actually existed around that time.

But I had never considered whether or not I believed either of those two shows, and in general whether I actually thought the Jesus of christian mythology actually lived at one time.

After giving it some thought I decided that I don't know nearly enough on the subject to make an informed decision either way. I also realized that I wouldn't really care very much either way.
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husker
 
  1  
Reply Mon 9 Jan, 2006 11:24 pm
but you did think a little about it - cool
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echi
 
  1  
Reply Mon 9 Jan, 2006 11:38 pm
I think it's likely that the myth does trace back to a real person, but that person was not as Christianity describes. I'd guess he was some sort of gnostic or essene, as Setanta suggests.
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Beena
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 06:53 pm
Re: non-Christians question about Jesus ?
husker wrote:
I have a question (serious if you don't mind)
I was wondering how many of you believed that there was a actual person named Jesus (New Testament) that was portrayed in the the bible?
Leaving out if he was the actual Son of God or not.


Reasons why a person named Jesus, as portrayed in the Bible or more precisely in the New Testament might have existed -

- "There is no smoke without fire" and so there would be no controversy around or about Him if He didn't exist.
- People believed in Him and His sayings and so many got power and that is how I believe Christianity got power and so Rome became Christian eventually.
- "Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely" and so once Rome became Christian, Christianity got too much power perhaps and so some things in Christianity probably got manipulated. It's not just possible but highly probable.
- The sayings of Christ, someone said that, so where is the problem in believing that it was Christ Himself who said that?

I could just go on and on, but I guess the above is enough!
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husker
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 08:43 pm
Re: non-Christians question about Jesus ?
Beena wrote:
husker wrote:
I have a question (serious if you don't mind)
I was wondering how many of you believed that there was a actual person named Jesus (New Testament) that was portrayed in the the bible?
Leaving out if he was the actual Son of God or not.


Reasons why a person named Jesus, as portrayed in the Bible or more precisely in the New Testament might have existed -

- "There is no smoke without fire" and so there would be no controversy around or about Him if He didn't exist.
- People believed in Him and His sayings and so many got power and that is how I believe Christianity got power and so Rome became Christian eventually.
- "Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely" and so once Rome became Christian, Christianity got too much power perhaps and so some things in Christianity probably got manipulated. It's not just possible but highly probable.
- The sayings of Christ, someone said that, so where is the problem in believing that it was Christ Himself who said that?

I could just go on and on, but I guess the above is enough!

sort of reminds one of the USA
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Doktor S
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 08:48 pm
Beena,
Would you say the many parallels between jesus and mithras/horus/krishna/ et al (older god men myths) are strictly co-incidence?
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timberlandko
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 08:51 pm
Quote:
a while back, and not for the 1st time, [url=http://www.able2know.com/forums/viewtopic.php?p=1678270#1678270]timber[/url] wrote:


... Apart from internal reference derived wholly and exclusively from the Abrahamic Mythopaeia itself, what evidence have you for these claims? To my knowledge, no independent, direct historical reference to anything you've mentioned there exists. I submit there is no forensically, academically, scientifically valid evidence for the existence either of the Biblical Jesus nor the Biblical Moses.


Leaving Moses for later discussion, let's examine the actual historicity of the Biblical Jesus. Those who've followed earlier discussions of mine pertaining to this particular point may experience a deja vu moment; indeed I previously have written just about exactly what follows. Feel free to ship over it if you've seen it before Laughing

Those arguing for the historicity of Jesus point frequently to Tacitus: Annals 15:44, which translates, " ... "derived their name and origin from Christ, who, in the reign of Tiberius, had suffered death by the sentence of the Procurator Pontius Pilate". More on Tacitus' reference in a bit, but first, there are a few other nearly contemporary references from other writers cited as historical proof, as well. Apologists for the Historicity of Jesus make much of the little on which they have to draw.

Frequently mentioned in similar vein to the Tacitus "proof" is Josephus' Testimonium Flavianum, from Antiquities of the Jews 18:63-64, which translates, " ... About this time there lived Jesus, a wise man, if indeed one ought to call him a man. For he was one who wrought surprising feats and as a teacher of such people as accept the truth gladly. He won over many Jews and many of the Greeks. He was the Messiah. When Pilate, upon hearing him accused by men of the highest standing amongst us, had condemned him to be crucified, those who had in the first place come to love him did not give up their affection for him. On the third day he appeared to them restored to life, for the prophets of God had prophesied these and countless other marvelous things about him. And the tribe of the Christians, so called after him, has still to this day not disappeared." Frequent mention also is made of Josephus, Antiquities 20:9.1, which translates " ... so he ("he" in the passage referring to one Ananus, eldest son of High Priest Ananus ... timber) assembled the Sanhedrin of judges, and brought before him the brother of Jesus, who was called Christ, whose name was James, and some others and when he had formed an accusation against them, he delivered them to be stoned."

Of the two Josephus references, the second, often termed the "Jamesian Passage" is accorded by historians somewhat more provenance than the first, or Testimonium Flavianum passage, which generally is accepted to be if not a whole later addition, at the very least a later-edited expansion by a 3rd Century transcriber of Christian agenda. However, neither passage is universally accepted as original, at least as currently known, to Josephus' Antiquities. There are questions arising both from contextual positioning - word usage and phrasing - and apparent internal contradictions arising from considering the passages with the overall Antiquities. It is known that Origen, a renowned 3rd Century Christian scholar and a key figure in the early evolution of Christianity, referenced the Testimonium Flavianum. It is known too that the style and word usage of the Testimonium Flavianum, while not particularly characteristic of Josephus' practice, is wholly consistent with Origen's style and usage.

Highlighted here in blue are the phrases which give scholars difficulty: " ... About this time there lived Jesus, a wise man, if indeed one ought to call him a man. For he was one who wrought surprising feats and as a teacher of such people as accept the truth gladly. He won over many Jews and many of the Greeks. He was the Messiah. When Pilate, upon hearing him accused by men of the highest standing amongst us, had condemned him to be crucified, those who had in the first place come to love him did not give up their affection for him. On the third day he appeared to them restored to life, for the prophets of God had prophesied these and countless other marvelous things about him. And the tribe of the Christians, so called after him, has still to this day not disappeared." Particularly of note is the "Messiah" reference; numerous times throughout Antiquities and his other writings, Josephus specifically and unambiguously bestows the title "Messiah" on his own patron, the Emperor Trajan. Perplexing as well is that Josephus wrote much more expansively of John The Baptist and of other zealots and cult figures among the Jews ... writings all devoid of any Jesus, Christ, or Christian reference. A last eyebrow raiser lies in the reverent tone with which Christ is described - not at all fitting either with Josephus' style or general contemporary sentiment.

None of that by itself is damning evidence, but neither is there unambiguous provenance. While it is entirely plausible Josephus wrote of Jesus, it cannot be proven that he did, and there is plentiful credible argument he did not.

Turning to Tacitus, the sole relevant passage in Annals does nothing more than confirm that at the time Tacitus was writing, there was a cult styled as "Christians", the members of which professed a belief that their self-purported central cult figure, "Christ", had died a martyr at the hands of Pilate, "Procurator of Judea" during the reign of Tiberius. That alone raises serious question as to any provenance derived thereby. While the Tacitus text suffers from none of the provenance difficulties afflicting the Josephus examples, in no way is it independent evidence of anything other than that a cult known as Christians had a tradition involving the death of their putative namesake. The key point of difficulty historians have with the oft-cited Tacitus passage is that he terms Pilate "Procurator", whereas the actual office held by Pilate was Prefect - a terminology distinction error very unlike, in fact otherwise unevidenced in, anything else ever written by Tacitus. It is, however, an error echoed in the Gospels, though nowhere else. Too, he refers to Jesus by the Graeco-Christian religious title "Christos", an honorific, as opposed to the almost universally observed contemporary Roman practice of referring to personages other than nobility or signal military accomplishment (which itself generally conveyed nobility) by given names further delineated by patronymics or regional identifiers; Abraham son of Judah, for instance, or Simon of Gaza. One must strongly consider the possibility Tacitus was working not from Roman records in this instance, but rather recounting what he had been told by or heard of Christians.

Other 1st Century writers, Suetonius, Thalus, and Pliny the Younger, also are thought by some to offer independent historical evidence of Jesus.

A passage from Suetonius' Lives of the Caesars, specifically Claudius 5.25.4, translates, "Since the Jews constantly made disturbances at the instigation of Chrestus (the contextual reference is to action taken in 49 CE by Claudius, then Emperor ... timber) expelled them from Rome." Several things stand out here. First, and perhaps least troubling, is that "Chrestus" actually is a common latinization of a known Greek proper name wholly unrelated to the messianic religious title "Christ", or "Christos". Second, there is no reference to "Christians", but rather those being discussed are given the appellation "Jews", and finally, the events described took place in 49 AD, disturbances instigated in Rome by one Chrestus, an individual apparently present both temporally and locationally regarding the disturbances - nearly 2 decades after the accepted date of Jesus' death. The only connection to Jesus or to Christians is the similarity of spelling between the name "Chrestus" and the title or honorific "Christos". Most interesting is that Pliny the Elder, writing much closer to the times in which the incidents reportedly took place, mentions Christians and/or Christ not at all.

With Thalus, we delve even deeper into ambiguity; no first person text survives, and the earliest reference to Thalus describing the crucifixion as having been accompanied by "earthquake and darkness", echoing Gospel accounts, is to be found in the 3rd Century writings of Julius Africanus, a Christian writer and leader. No contemporary record of any such occurrence in or near Judea/Palestine during the 1st Century exists ... a surprising circumstance had there been in fact unexplained mid-day darkness coincident with earthquake. That sorta thing tends to get noticed, and written about, big time. That it might have been left unremarked by any other than the Gospelers and possibly Thalus beggars the imagination.

Turning to Pliny the Younger, his voluminous correspondences with the Emperor Trajan bear frequent mention of Christians in Asia Minor, their beliefs and their practices in context of dissent against and resistance to Roman authority, and amount to discussions of how best to deal with the bother and disturbance fostered by the Christian cult. There is no mention whatsoever of Jesus, and the only reference to "Christ" is to be found in the term "Christians".

In short, history tells us nothing about the historicity of Jesus beyond that there was an offshoot cult of Judaism known as Christians, they had traditions, beliefs and practices, and that Roman Authority thought none too highly of them.


I think the conclusion there bears repeating, so I'll repeat it:

In short, history tells us nothing about the historicity of Jesus beyond that there was an offshoot cult of Judaism known as Christians, they had traditions, beliefs and practices, and that Roman Authority thought none too highly of them.
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Greyfan
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 09:00 pm
I think there was a historical Jesus, though I doubt very much that we have an accurate record of anything he actually said, or did, or believed.

A Unitarian minister of my acquaintance stated that the most likely true event in the gospels is the crucifixion, since at the time such a death was so ignoble and disgraceful it would be unlikely any writer would use it unless it was a fact too well known to gloss over. Wise men and miracles you might invent; gruesome deaths of that nature you wouldn't.

A book that may be of interest to anyone looking for a skeptical view of Jesus is Misquoting Jesus, by Bart Ehrman. Although it is on my nightstand, I haven't read it yet. (I don't buy everything I read. Unfortunately, I don't read everything I buy either.)
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Doktor S
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 09:04 pm
Quote:

A Unitarian minister of my acquaintance stated that the most likely true event in the gospels is the crucifixion, since at the time such a death was so ignoble and disgraceful it would be unlikely any writer would use it unless it was a fact too well known to gloss over.

Humm..unless I am mistaken, crucifiction was one of the more economical, and thus popular and common methods of execution used by the romans. It seems likely any writer that both knew this and wanted to keep a hint of accuracy to his writings may include this form of execution for his protagonist.
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Greyfan
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 09:11 pm
Doctor S....I almost spelled it crucifiction as well.

While you are certainly correct, his point was that there was nothing glorious about such a death. Contrasted with the obviously fictional birth story, it lacks poetry.

My understanding is that none of the gospels were written by eyewitnesses. The oldest, Luke, was produced 40 years after the events described. The most recent, John, 300 years after the fact. By that time the original story, whatever it was, must have gone through many changes.
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Green Witch
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 09:19 pm
I think most historians do believe there was a person who became the Christian Jesus. It's the miracles and fantastical elements that raise the questions. One of the best scholarly books on the topic is "Who Killed Jesus" by John Dominic Crossan. He examines all the historical evidence of the time and finds that such a person lived and was crucified by the Romans.
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Eorl
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 09:24 pm
husker, yes I think Jesus was more likely to have existed than not. (Name specifics not important)

The plot gets more complicated without him, and I'm a big fan of Occam's razor.
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timberlandko
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 09:25 pm
Doktor S wrote:
Humm..unless I am mistaken, crucifiction was one of the more economical, and thus popular and common methods of execution used by the romans. It seems likely any writer that both knew this and wanted to keep a hint of accuracy to his writings may include this form of execution for his protagonist.

Indeed. Mass crucifixions were not uncommon; instances are recorded of miles of crucified condemned ling both side of major roads after battles and uprisings. That was extreme, and not at all commonplace, but in normal practice, the cross was roughly equivalent to the fabled gallows of the American West of legend - every town of any size sported one or two or more. The uprights generally were more or less permanent fixtures, and the condemned would be tied, or less commonly nailed, to a crossbar wich then would be hoisted into place, a notch in the crossbar fitting into a matching notch on the upright and then be lashed into place. An interesting anatomical note; when nailing was used, the nails were driven through the lower forearm, just behind the wrist,, the nail passing between ulna and radius, the 2 major forearm bones. The physiology of the hand, typically portrayed as the site of Jesus' crucifixion wounds, is such that the weight of an adult typically would be more than sufficient to rip even a very large diameter, large-headed nail or spike through the attachment point; hand and wrist bones aren't very strong, whereas nailing through the gap between ulna and radius provides a secure mounting. The Romans knew anatomy, and the Romans were nothing if not meticulously efficient.

Just one more problem for the Gospel accounts.
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Setanta
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 09:27 pm
You like needlin' them imaginary friend folks, don'tcha Big Bird?
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Eorl
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 09:29 pm
needlin' em? .....I've seem him nail them a few times....!!!

oops, sorry...
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Doktor S
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 09:29 pm
I think there may have been a person on whom 'jesus' was based. I also suspect this person may have lived maybe 3 or 4 hundred years before the christians think he did. Maybe longer.
I also think 'jesus' is legend built apon myth built on myth. In other words, not based on a man, but based on a legend based on a legend based on a legend that may have been based on a man.
This is pure conjecture, however, just opinion formed from extensive research as well as frequent bobble readings and study.
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timberlandko
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 09:30 pm
Some of 'em make it so easy they invite it, Set.
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timberlandko
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 09:37 pm
Green Witch wrote:
I think most historians do believe there was a person who became the Christian Jesus.

I submit that is an erroneous impression; Christian apologists make the claim by the ream and volume, but few if any legitimate, accredited historians say there is any evidence for the historicity of the Biblical Jesus. Some will go as far as to allow the possibilty is there, and express a personal preference, while acknowledging the evidence simply isn't there, but thats about it.
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husker
 
  1  
Reply Tue 10 Jan, 2006 10:02 pm
Setanta wrote:
You like needlin' them imaginary friend folks, don'tcha Big Bird?


one word comes to mind nihilist visit www.anus.com
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