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#5705721 / #1 |
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Regular Member
Join Date: December 2006
Location: Indiana
Posts: 108
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Enjoy this debate and chime in. It's a debate I'm involved in. To my own dismay I'm partially agreeing with the extremely obnoxious and childish J.P. Holding that Jesus was a historical person who founded the Jesus cult (my view can be found below his on the left side). But, I'm also agreeing with Dr. Frank Zindler of American Atheists, that the Jesus figure was made up of many mythical elements. My position is a middle one between theirs that fits the data better.
What I find completely unjustifiable is that Holding accepts all of the elements in the Gospels as historically reliable. And what I find somewhat odd is that Zindler thinks I have the burden of proof (since textual evidence is usually considered good evidence until shown otherwise), and he doesn't present a theory of how such a cultic movement began in the first place. http://www.opposingviews.com/questio...torical-figure |
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#5705787 / #2 |
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Moderator - CSS, BC&H
Join Date: June 2000
Location: Los Angeles area
Posts: 29,360
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The format of that debate is hard to follow. I gave up after clicking on a few posts, since it didn't seem that anyone has anything new to say. Is there a way of displaying the posts in a message board type format? Or could you point out anything of particular interest?
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#5705797 / #3 |
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Regular Member
Join Date: April 2005
Location: USA
Posts: 398
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Agree with Toto.. the debate is hard to follow in that format.
The following quote is taken from one of Frank Zindler's entries in the debate: "The question can probably be laid to rest by noting that as late as the sixteenth century, according to Rylands, a scholar named Vossius had a manuscript of Josephus from which the passage was wanting." Is there anything to this claim? I've read other commentaries that say Vossius had a copy of Josephus that did not contain the passage on Jesus, but that is all I could find -- the claim. Is there an article available that discusses this manuscript somewhere? |
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#5705825 / #5 | |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2005
Location: Midwest
Posts: 4,787
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Ben. |
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#5705920 / #8 |
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Veteran Member
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I'm bemused about this "Verified Expert" crud, especially when they don't seem to know much about doing history at all. Verified by whom? Expert in what?
More importantly does anyone understand the notion of a "verified witness"? One doesn't let just anyone provide testimony in a court case. There has to be a way of verifying testimony. There is no "presumption of truth unless shown otherwise". There is only "make your case based on evidence". Bernstein and Woodward had to test the veracity of Deep Throat, so too do those who would like to use the gospels as historical sources. spin |
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#5706031 / #9 |
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Regular Member
Join Date: December 2006
Location: Indiana
Posts: 108
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I agree with everyone about the format. It is indeed hard to follow. They have some kind of standard for what makes a person a verified expert, but what it is I don't know. It's just that not anyone can debate anything. They want people with degrees, books, or people they consider "important" for one reason or another to debate the issues, that's all.
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#5706250 / #10 | |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: February 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 8,108
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Why is that? The textual evidence claimed Jesus was concieved of the Holy Ghost and was born of a virgin, tempted on the pinnacle of the Temple, raised a man from the dead after four days, was transifugured, brought some prophets, dead for hundred of years, back to life, resurected and ascended through the clouds as witnessed, all these are good textual evidence for a myth. You cannot ignore the best textual evidence and then use your belief as a substitute. Your belief cannot match the good textual evidence that Jesus was a myth. Eusebius, and the church writers all use the very same good textual evidence to claim Jesus was Divine. And, by the way, Tacitus, Suetonius, and Pliny never mentioned the word Jesus at all in their writings. |
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#5706379 / #11 | |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: May 2007
Location: Arizona
Posts: 1,302
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#5706411 / #12 | |||
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Veteran Member
Join Date: March 2006
Location: Falls Creek,
rural Australia
Posts: 5,240
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In answer to this rhetorical(?) question at your website, here is a quote from the Acts of John: Quote:
Best wishes, Pete |
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#5706509 / #13 | |
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Veteran Member
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The fact that he's not mentioned by any of his contemporaries means that - at the least - Jesus wasn't as popular as the gospels portray him to be. So he can't both accept *all* of the elements of the gospels as true and think that the silence from Jesus' contemporaries isn't a compelling argument. |
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#5706634 / #14 | ||
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Veteran Member
Join Date: March 2004
Location: Dallas, TX
Posts: 8,185
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Holding has manipulated you into accepting his hidden critical premise that the NT was intended by the authors to be objective history. You are now left on the defensive trying to argue that the authors, though well intentioned, were simply wrong. Yet, there is no reason to even suspect they were attempting to accurately record history. |
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#5706694 / #15 | |
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Veteran Member
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People write text for self-aggrandizement, for group aggrandizement, to please patrons, to convince others, to inform others, to organize thoughts, too alienate people. Text isn't evidence for anything until it can be shown to be evidence. To show its status, you need to be able to indicate when it was written -- which gives it the opportunity to represent what it was written about from direct knowledge --; you need to indicate where it was written; you need to deal with why it was written -- a harder concern, but just as necessary, because it will reflect on the ostensible content. You also need to consider if it was based on direct access to the purported information or whether it was mediated access through other sources. The naivety level of "textual evidence is usually considered good evidence until shown otherwise" is what allows media manipulation of unprepared populations for the aims of their governing powers. You need to consider information as though you were going into a court of law, seeking a conviction based on it. You must be able to show its relevance or the court will reject its content without hearing it. Once you've validated your witness's testimony, ie turned it into evidence, then it can be evaluated. (The court is only an analogy to point out your responsibilities in prosecuting your case.) You cannot seriously rely on simpleton claims such as "textual evidence is usually considered good evidence until shown otherwise". It allows you to assume most of the job you have to do and dismisses your results as unfounded. spin |
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#5706804 / #17 | ||
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Regular Member
Join Date: December 2006
Location: Indiana
Posts: 108
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http://www.opposingviews.com/argumen...jesus-movement Have you read through the other thread here on textual evidence? And have you read agnostic Biblical scholar Bart D. Ehrman's book, Jesus: Apocalyptic Prophet on the New Millennium? What I have argued for stands squarely within the ovewhelming consensus of peer-reviewed scholars. We could all be wrong. It's possible that there never was a historical Jesus. I grant that. When it comes to textual evidence found in the past it is considered precious to historians. There is much more to be said about this evidence than a line or two that I wrote. And there is much I can agree with you about. We must verify that evidence, date it, and so forth. I think you are reading into my claim much more than I mean by it, and unjustifiably so. In any case, first read through my argument and come back here if you want to dispute what I said. I learn from every honest critic. |
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#5706809 / #18 | |||
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Regular Member
Join Date: December 2006
Location: Indiana
Posts: 108
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#5706813 / #19 |
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Regular Member
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Quite true. I always ask myself "Who is telling me this, why are they telling me this and how the F* do they know?"
In most cases it is easiest to lie in written text. The writer has more time to construct the lies and more important there is no body language to give him away. |
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#5706824 / #20 | |
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Regular Member
Join Date: December 2006
Location: Indiana
Posts: 108
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But my skeptical control beliefs would kick in if the note said, "On this spot Zeus was born." So I agree with you about those things in the NT that describe miracles. They didn't happen. But that does not mean there was no miracle worker who was believed to do miracles. That is a non-sequitur. |
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#5706862 / #22 | |||
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Veteran Member
Join Date: February 2006
Location: the fringe of the caribbean
Posts: 8,108
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If we ignore Homer's description of Achilles, then it can be claimed that Achilles has an historical core. Quote:
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You cannot compare the information of Jesus of the NT with Benny Hinn. Benny Hinn is alive today. I suggest you use Achilles or other entities described similarly to Jesus of the NT where there are no confirmed or credible sources to support their existence. Now, would you accept an author as credible who wrote a book about Benny Hinn where everything that was written him was found to be false? Would you think the parts of the book that you could not verify about Benny Hinn would be true just because they appeared plausible? So, if an author gives the incorrect date of birth of Hinn, where he was born, the incorrect names of parents, false statements about his brothers and sisters, where he went to school, where he lived as a child, and where he worked, would you think that if the author claimed Benny Hinn shaved on the 15th of March 2008, that such information is likely to be true? The fact is that the writers of the Jesus stories are not credible, the things that can be tested in their Jesus stories all turned out to be false or unlikely to have occurred. |
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#5706886 / #23 |
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Regular Member
Join Date: December 2006
Location: Indiana
Posts: 108
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So, several of you are sure that Jesus never existed? Okay, I guess. It's easy to be a skeptic, isn't it? You may be correct. I don't doubt this. But deal with all of my argument, not just bits and pieces of it. There is no single piece of evidence that supports the view that Jesus was a historical person. You would clearly not do this in any other historical study or you could end up denying the Holocaust, for that’s the same method the deniers use to deny it happened. Each single piece of evidence does not bear the weight of the whole story so they doubt each one on its own terms and conclude it never happened. But that’s not how historical studies should be done. It’s the convergence of evidence.
I do not hope to convince you. And poking holes in my argument doesn't show you are correct until you provide a better theory with fewer holes and more evidence for it than I do. The evidence you have seems to be an argument from silence to me. One can be skeptical of almost ANY claim in the past. Since this is the is the case one must not be so skeptical but instead treat textual evidence as prima facia true. Which means the burden of proof is on the person who denies the text (leaving aside miraculous claims which we can easily deny). Sure we must date the text, and seek to confirm it, but in the absence of independent coroboration we must give it the benefit of the doubt. Again, there is much more to be said. Cheers. |
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#5706900 / #24 | |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: June 2006
Location: The Netherlands
Posts: 2,090
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Quote:
Sure, as in 100%? Of course not. The textual tradition says that Paul is earliest. Paul knows Jesus through divine revelation. That is the prima facie evidence that Jesus is a fiction/myth. Now if you want to provide some physical evidence to show that Paul is mistaken or can show that NT scholarship, itself, is mistaken regarding Paul's place in it's textual tradition, please do so. Until then, based on what we have, myth seems to fit the prima facie evidence the best. |
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#5706902 / #25 | |
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Veteran Member
Join Date: March 2006
Location: Falls Creek,
rural Australia
Posts: 5,240
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Dear John,
We have 2 C14 citations - gJudas at 290 CE and gThomas (NHC) at 348 CE (both plus or minus 60 years). How does the C14 confirmation sit with your theory of christian origins? Quote:
Best wishes, Pete |
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