.
Personally, I always assumed an historical Jesus behind the story, but having read a few books from the mythicist viewpoint as well as the historical, it seems that from a Jewish/Hellenist cultural and historical view of the early centuries, a mythical Christ falls into place in that it makes more sense to view Jesus Christ as never having existed, at least not as a man that walked the earth. The earliest Christian writings which include the Epistles describe a spiritual Christ that resided in the spiritual realm, that sacrificed his "blood and flesh" in a heavenly sanctuary and was known to apostles through revelation, visions.
Philo laid down the theological groundwork for Christianity without mentioning a Christ or writing of a Jesus even though he was in Jerusalem at the supposed time of Jesus' crucifixion. He did write of Pontius Pilate, although his portrayal of a ruthless Pilate is in stark contrast to that of the concerned and caring Pilate portrayed in the Gospels. His son of God was spiritual, a mediator between God and man also referred to as the Word or Logos.
The author of Mark may have taken from different traditions such as a Christ cult from Jerusalem and a Jesus community from Galilee that had no known connection to a crucified and risen Christ and combined them to write his Gospel of a Jesus of Nazareth.
There are books and websites that cover a great deal of the aspects involved. The following I recommend in terms of this discussion:
http://www.rationalrevolution.net/artic ... istory.htm
http://www.jesuspuzzle.com/
.
Mythical Christ Gains Favour
Moderator: Moderators
- achilles12604
- Site Supporter
- Posts: 3697
- Joined: Mon Jun 19, 2006 3:37 am
- Location: Colorado
Post #42
Easyrider is right in this observation. Claiming that Mark, Paul, Luke or anyone else writing in that time period was inventing fiction is a hard position to defend. This is because now you are making a strong claim that it impossible to support with evidence.Easyrider wrote:
d. Thomas wrote:The author of Mark wrote that Jesus gave him this name when writing his gospel fiction.
Why the "fiction" claim? What evidence is there for that?
Yes there are unprovable factors regarding the Gospels. Yes some of the accounts may have grown with time. However, claiming that the entirety of the works of the NT are fiction, is a bold and unprovable claim, especially in light of supporting factors, many of which have been examined and discussed at great length on this very forum.
Of course I should certainly allow you to shed now light onto our examiniation of these documents. So by all means, present your case that every one of these documents is forged and "fiction" rather than having a core value of truth.
If possible please account for all the evidence rather than taking the tact of picking and choosing what to present, and ignoring anything which hurts your case.
It is a first class human tragedy that people of the earth who claim to believe in the message of Jesus, whom they describe as the Prince of Peace, show little of that belief in actual practice.
Post #44
achilles12604 wrote:Easyrider is right in this observation. Claiming that Mark, Paul, Luke or anyone else writing in that time period was inventing fiction is a hard position to defend. This is because now you are making a strong claim that it impossible to support with evidence.Easyrider wrote:
d. Thomas wrote:The author of Mark wrote that Jesus gave him this name when writing his gospel fiction.
Why the "fiction" claim? What evidence is there for that?
Yes there are unprovable factors regarding the Gospels. Yes some of the accounts may have grown with time. However, claiming that the entirety of the works of the NT are fiction, is a bold and unprovable claim, especially in light of supporting factors, many of which have been examined and discussed at great length on this very forum.
Of course I should certainly allow you to shed now light onto our examiniation of these documents. So by all means, present your case that every one of these documents is forged and "fiction" rather than having a core value of truth.
If possible please account for all the evidence rather than taking the tact of picking and choosing what to present, and ignoring anything which hurts your case.
When I read of virgin births, heavens parting, a booming voice from above, raisings of the dead, rising from the dead and ascending bodily into heaven, I get a clue that I am reading fiction.
- achilles12604
- Site Supporter
- Posts: 3697
- Joined: Mon Jun 19, 2006 3:37 am
- Location: Colorado
Post #45
You begin your approach from the position it must be false?d.thomas wrote:achilles12604 wrote:Easyrider is right in this observation. Claiming that Mark, Paul, Luke or anyone else writing in that time period was inventing fiction is a hard position to defend. This is because now you are making a strong claim that it impossible to support with evidence.Easyrider wrote:
d. Thomas wrote:The author of Mark wrote that Jesus gave him this name when writing his gospel fiction.
Why the "fiction" claim? What evidence is there for that?
Yes there are unprovable factors regarding the Gospels. Yes some of the accounts may have grown with time. However, claiming that the entirety of the works of the NT are fiction, is a bold and unprovable claim, especially in light of supporting factors, many of which have been examined and discussed at great length on this very forum.
Of course I should certainly allow you to shed now light onto our examiniation of these documents. So by all means, present your case that every one of these documents is forged and "fiction" rather than having a core value of truth.
If possible please account for all the evidence rather than taking the tact of picking and choosing what to present, and ignoring anything which hurts your case.
When I read of virgin births, heavens parting, a booming voice from above, raisings of the dead, rising from the dead and ascending bodily into heaven, I get a clue that I am reading fiction.
Then how can you possibly expect to reach an unbiased conclusion if you distrust one side completely before beginning based on prior prejudice?
I realize it is impossible to be totally neutral. Even being FAIR is extreamly difficult. However, beginning from the perspective that there is no supernatural just because, is essentially beginning your examination from the extream left rather than even trying to be close to the middle and letting your findings guide your path.
This would be like determining the benifits of Democracy and capitolism from the viewpoint of Karl Marx. You will never reach a fair examination of the evidence.
It is a first class human tragedy that people of the earth who claim to believe in the message of Jesus, whom they describe as the Prince of Peace, show little of that belief in actual practice.
Post #46
d.thomas wrote:
Why should this story be different than all the others, especially the number of stories of other miracle workers from generally the same time and area that read very much the same, following the same plot and general outline.
Lotan wrote:And who exactly fits that outline? Vague resemblences are a poor basis on which to make claims.
In the first century of the Common Era, there appeared at the eastern end of the Mediterranean a remarkable religious leader who taught the worship of one true God and declared that religion meant not the sacrifice of beasts but the practice of charity and piety and the shunning of hatred and enmity. He was said to have worked miracles of goodness, casting out demons, healing the sick, raising the dead. His exemplary life led some of his followers to claim he was a son of God, though he called himself the son of a man. Accused of sedition against Rome, he was arrested. After his death, his disciples claimed he had risen from the dead, appeared to them alive, and then ascended to heaven. Who was this teacher and wonder-worker? His name was Apollonius of Tyana; he died about 98 A.D., and his story may be read in Flavius Philostratus's Life of Apollonius.
-- from Randall Helms, Gospel Fictions, p. 9
- juliod
- Guru
- Posts: 1882
- Joined: Sun Dec 26, 2004 9:04 pm
- Location: Washington DC
- Been thanked: 1 time
Post #47
Hey EasyR, I wouldn't be so fast here, if I was you. If Q didn't exist, then certainly Jesus never existed either. If Q was a set of authentic sayings of Jesus, then it would be just about the only connection to an original christianity. Since most of Mark can be identified as extracts of OT scripture, the risk is that if you reject Q then you dissolve Jesus.I'm still waiting on some credible evidence that Q ever existed and is more than a rambling hypothesis.
I believe that that already happened, while Lotan thinks that is nearly happened.
DanZ
Post #48
achilles12604 wrote:You begin your approach from the position it must be false?d.thomas wrote:achilles12604 wrote:Easyrider is right in this observation. Claiming that Mark, Paul, Luke or anyone else writing in that time period was inventing fiction is a hard position to defend. This is because now you are making a strong claim that it impossible to support with evidence.Easyrider wrote:
d. Thomas wrote:The author of Mark wrote that Jesus gave him this name when writing his gospel fiction.
Why the "fiction" claim? What evidence is there for that?
Yes there are unprovable factors regarding the Gospels. Yes some of the accounts may have grown with time. However, claiming that the entirety of the works of the NT are fiction, is a bold and unprovable claim, especially in light of supporting factors, many of which have been examined and discussed at great length on this very forum.
Of course I should certainly allow you to shed now light onto our examiniation of these documents. So by all means, present your case that every one of these documents is forged and "fiction" rather than having a core value of truth.
If possible please account for all the evidence rather than taking the tact of picking and choosing what to present, and ignoring anything which hurts your case.
When I read of virgin births, heavens parting, a booming voice from above, raisings of the dead, rising from the dead and ascending bodily into heaven, I get a clue that I am reading fiction.
Then how can you possibly expect to reach an unbiased conclusion if you distrust one side completely before beginning based on prior prejudice?
I realize it is impossible to be totally neutral. Even being FAIR is extreamly difficult. However, beginning from the perspective that there is no supernatural just because, is essentially beginning your examination from the extream left rather than even trying to be close to the middle and letting your findings guide your path.
This would be like determining the benifits of Democracy and capitolism from the viewpoint of Karl Marx. You will never reach a fair examination of the evidence.
To suggest that those who consider the laws of physics to be valid are communists is an attempt at being neutral in all of this?
Post #49
Sorry, should have provided first before submitting.achilles12604 wrote:You begin your approach from the position it must be false?d.thomas wrote:achilles12604 wrote:Easyrider is right in this observation. Claiming that Mark, Paul, Luke or anyone else writing in that time period was inventing fiction is a hard position to defend. This is because now you are making a strong claim that it impossible to support with evidence.Easyrider wrote:
d. Thomas wrote:The author of Mark wrote that Jesus gave him this name when writing his gospel fiction.
Why the "fiction" claim? What evidence is there for that?
Yes there are unprovable factors regarding the Gospels. Yes some of the accounts may have grown with time. However, claiming that the entirety of the works of the NT are fiction, is a bold and unprovable claim, especially in light of supporting factors, many of which have been examined and discussed at great length on this very forum.
Of course I should certainly allow you to shed now light onto our examiniation of these documents. So by all means, present your case that every one of these documents is forged and "fiction" rather than having a core value of truth.
If possible please account for all the evidence rather than taking the tact of picking and choosing what to present, and ignoring anything which hurts your case.
When I read of virgin births, heavens parting, a booming voice from above, raisings of the dead, rising from the dead and ascending bodily into heaven, I get a clue that I am reading fiction.
Then how can you possibly expect to reach an unbiased conclusion if you distrust one side completely before beginning based on prior prejudice?
I realize it is impossible to be totally neutral. Even being FAIR is extreamly difficult. However, beginning from the perspective that there is no supernatural just because, is essentially beginning your examination from the extream left rather than even trying to be close to the middle and letting your findings guide your path.
This would be like determining the benifits of Democracy and capitolism from the viewpoint of Karl Marx. You will never reach a fair examination of the evidence.
To suggest that those who consider the laws of physics to be valid are communists is an attempt at being neutral in all of this?
- achilles12604
- Site Supporter
- Posts: 3697
- Joined: Mon Jun 19, 2006 3:37 am
- Location: Colorado
Post #50
I was addressing the approach to the evidence from different viewpoints.d.thomas wrote:achilles12604 wrote:You begin your approach from the position it must be false?d.thomas wrote:achilles12604 wrote:Easyrider is right in this observation. Claiming that Mark, Paul, Luke or anyone else writing in that time period was inventing fiction is a hard position to defend. This is because now you are making a strong claim that it impossible to support with evidence.Easyrider wrote:
d. Thomas wrote:The author of Mark wrote that Jesus gave him this name when writing his gospel fiction.
Why the "fiction" claim? What evidence is there for that?
Yes there are unprovable factors regarding the Gospels. Yes some of the accounts may have grown with time. However, claiming that the entirety of the works of the NT are fiction, is a bold and unprovable claim, especially in light of supporting factors, many of which have been examined and discussed at great length on this very forum.
Of course I should certainly allow you to shed now light onto our examiniation of these documents. So by all means, present your case that every one of these documents is forged and "fiction" rather than having a core value of truth.
If possible please account for all the evidence rather than taking the tact of picking and choosing what to present, and ignoring anything which hurts your case.
When I read of virgin births, heavens parting, a booming voice from above, raisings of the dead, rising from the dead and ascending bodily into heaven, I get a clue that I am reading fiction.
Then how can you possibly expect to reach an unbiased conclusion if you distrust one side completely before beginning based on prior prejudice?
I realize it is impossible to be totally neutral. Even being FAIR is extreamly difficult. However, beginning from the perspective that there is no supernatural just because, is essentially beginning your examination from the extream left rather than even trying to be close to the middle and letting your findings guide your path.
This would be like determining the benifits of Democracy and capitolism from the viewpoint of Karl Marx. You will never reach a fair examination of the evidence.
To suggest that those who consider the laws of physics to be valid are communists is an attempt at being neutral in all of this?
If you read carefully, you can see that I created a litterary analogy. I used the comparison of two known items to reflect on the relationship of two other, seperate items.
In short, I didn't compare belief in physics to communism as you claim I did. I compared the approach of two political and economic systems. And I seperately compared the approach of two viewpoints of beliefs.
Now feel free to comment on the content of my post and if indeed your approach to he evidence could possibly hinder you from a fair and unbaised analysis.
Last edited by achilles12604 on Mon Apr 02, 2007 11:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
It is a first class human tragedy that people of the earth who claim to believe in the message of Jesus, whom they describe as the Prince of Peace, show little of that belief in actual practice.