Originally posted by amateur51
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Charlies dodgy influence strikes again
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Originally posted by Simon View Post...Most scholars, even atheists, accept that many of the gospel writings fit historical patterns of accurate reporting.
But what does “many of the gospel writings fit historical patterns of accurate reporting” actually mean, Simon? That they are in the style of accurate reports? That wouldn’t tell us that they were true, which I suspect is what is at the back of it all.
The fact is that there is no contemporary account to support any of the Gospel stories, or of any of the Gospel characters, save those whose main role was unconnected with Christianity, such as Herod and Pontius Pilate. There were historians around, most notable of whom was perhaps the Jewish philosopher Philo of Alexandria (notable because of a deep interest in Jewish biblical history). He was born well before Jesus and died twenty years after him, but he never made one reference to him in a huge body of work.
The only known references to Jesus from someone who was not a Christian are two short passages from the huge Jewish history written by Josephus Flavius, a Jew from Jerusalem. His wrings date from about 93 CE (AD), but we don’t have the original, only later copies. The trouble is that both passages use language that no 1st-Century Jew would have used but that early Christians did. “Messiah” was a holy name no Jew would have written, “wise man” was a Christian, not Jewish, term for Jesus in the early centuries. Also, the passages were discovered by Eusebius of Caesarea in the early 4th Century, who is known to have forged other material about Jesus. The opinion of ‘most scholars’ (outside the fundamentalist churches) is that they are forgeries inserted into Flavius’s writings.
The earliest surviving fragment of the New Testament is a short passage from Stephen that is dated to about 70 CE. The original versions of all four gospels are lost. There is a good case made for an earlier gospel, known as Q, from which the gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke originate, but that is lost too. None of the gospels purports to be by an eye-witness (people are often surprised by this, but it is so). Among the many early versions of the Gospels that survive there are known later interpolations.
One example is Mark 16: 9-20. The earliest versions end at verse 8. Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James, and Salome have found the tomb empty. A young man clothed in white says that Jesus is not there, and tells them tell the disciples that he has gone to Galilee and will appear there. But the women run off and tell no-one, because they are afraid. That is where Mark’s Gospel ended. After the 4th Century, someone added the last 12 verses, which tell of Jesus’s appearances. He sends the disciples into the world to teach the Gospel, saying that believers will be saved and unbelievers damned. He says that “in my name shall they cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick and they shall recover”. Then he ascended into heaven.
These appalling verses are responsible each year for the deaths of several fundamentalist pastors from snake bites (if they die, it’s because they didn’t believe strongly enough, not because they were handling venomous snakes). And it’s all based on a later text that doesn’t appear in the very earliest versions.
One that surprises many is that the story of the woman taken in adultery (John 8: 3-11) is also a 9th Century interpolation. It doesn’t appear in any of the early versions at all.
Then there’s the issue of inconsistencies. When was Jesus born? Matthew tells us that King Herod the Great was alive at the time of Jesus’s birth (the massacre of the innocents and, indeed, the tale of Salome depend on it). The accepted dates for Herod are 74/3 BCE-4BCE (there are good records, both Jewish and Roman), four years earlier than convention has it, but that is allowable. The problem is the second Christmas story, found in Luke 2: 1-5, where we are told that Cyrenius (or Quirinius) was governor of Syria when Caesar Augustus decreed a census that meant Joseph and his pregnant wife Mary had to travel to Bethlehem.
We know that Cyrenius could not have carried out this census before 6 CE, because he didn’t become governor of Syria till then (he held it till 12 CE). Therefore Jesus was born either before Herod died in 6 BCE, or after Cyrenius became governor of Syria ten years later.
Despite all this, Jesus may well have existed, but later writings dating from well after his death cannot provide evidence. And it is very difficult to support the contention that “many of the gospel writings fit historical patterns of accurate reporting”, let alone that "most scholars" support it.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostBut what does “many of the gospel writings fit historical patterns of accurate reporting” actually mean, Simon? That they are in the style of accurate reports? That wouldn’t tell us that they were true, which I suspect is what is at the back of it all.
The fact is that there is no contemporary account to support any of the Gospel stories, or of any of the Gospel characters, save those whose main role was unconnected with Christianity, such as Herod and Pontius Pilate. There were historians around, most notable of whom was perhaps the Jewish philosopher Philo of Alexandria (notable because of a deep interest in Jewish biblical history). He was born well before Jesus and died twenty years after him, but he never made one reference to him in a huge body of work.
The only known references to Jesus from someone who was not a Christian are two short passages from the huge Jewish history written by Josephus Flavius, a Jew from Jerusalem. His wrings date from about 93 CE (AD), but we don’t have the original, only later copies. The trouble is that both passages use language that no 1st-Century Jew would have used but that early Christians did. “Messiah” was a holy name no Jew would have written, “wise man” was a Christian, not Jewish, term for Jesus in the early centuries. Also, the passages were discovered by Eusebius of Caesarea in the early 4th Century, who is known to have forged other material about Jesus. The opinion of ‘most scholars’ (outside the fundamentalist churches) is that they are forgeries inserted into Flavius’s writings.
The earliest surviving fragment of the New Testament is a short passage from Stephen that is dated to about 70 CE. The original versions of all four gospels are lost. There is a good case made for an earlier gospel, known as Q, from which the gospels of Matthew, Mark and Luke originate, but that is lost too. None of the gospels purports to be by an eye-witness (people are often surprised by this, but it is so). Among the many early versions of the Gospels that survive there are known later interpolations.
One example is Mark 16: 9-20. The earliest versions end at verse 8. Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James, and Salome have found the tomb empty. A young man clothed in white says that Jesus is not there, and tells them tell the disciples that he has gone to Galilee and will appear there. But the women run off and tell no-one, because they are afraid. That is where Mark’s Gospel ended. After the 4th Century, someone added the last 12 verses, which tell of Jesus’s appearances. He sends the disciples into the world to teach the Gospel, saying that believers will be saved and unbelievers damned. He says that “in my name shall they cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick and they shall recover”. Then he ascended into heaven.
These appalling verses are responsible each year for the deaths of several fundamentalist pastors from snake bites (if they die, it’s because they didn’t believe strongly enough, not because they were handling venomous snakes). And it’s all based on a later text that doesn’t appear in the very earliest versions.
One that surprises many is that the story of the woman taken in adultery (John 8: 3-11) is also a 9th Century interpolation. It doesn’t appear in any of the early versions at all.
Then there’s the issue of inconsistencies. When was Jesus born? Matthew tells us that King Herod the Great was alive at the time of Jesus’s birth (the massacre of the innocents and, indeed, the tale of Salome depend on it). The accepted dates for Herod are 74/3 BCE-4BCE (there are good records, both Jewish and Roman), four years earlier than convention has it, but that is allowable. The problem is the second Christmas story, found in Luke 2: 1-5, where we are told that Cyrenius (or Quirinius) was governor of Syria when Caesar Augustus decreed a census that meant Joseph and his pregnant wife Mary had to travel to Bethlehem.
We know that Cyrenius could not have carried out this census before 6 CE, because he didn’t become governor of Syria till then (he held it till 12 CE). Therefore Jesus was born either before Herod died in 6 BCE, or after Cyrenius became governor of Syria ten years later.
Despite all this, Jesus may well have existed, but later writings dating from well after his death cannot provide evidence. And it is very difficult to support the contention that “many of the gospel writings fit historical patterns of accurate reporting”, let alone that "most scholars" support it.
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostBut what does “many of the gospel writings fit historical patterns of accurate reporting” actually mean, Simon? That they are in the style of accurate reports? That wouldn’t tell us that they were true, which I suspect is what is at the back of it all.
...
Despite all this, Jesus may well have existed, but later writings dating from well after his death cannot provide evidence. And it is very difficult to support the contention that “many of the gospel writings fit historical patterns of accurate reporting”, let alone that "most scholars" support it.
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scottycelt
Pab, I'm no historian but surely inconsistencies in reporting a story have been with us since time immemorial and do not in themselves cause doubt in the main story ...?.
We may have different stories of what happened to Richard III's body after he was killed but nobody really doubts that he was killed merely because of these inconsistencies? Even the site of the Battle of Bosworth is disputed by some, so would we then conclude the actual battle may never have actually occurred? In an ironic sort of way such inconsistencies are rather reassuring as these tend to disprove any 'conspiracy theory'.
Searching the free and open evidence provided in WIKI seems to be pretty conclusive.
The telling sentence here is ...<Virtually all modern scholars of antiquity agree that Jesus existed,[1][2][3][4] and biblical scholars and classical historians regard theories of his non-existence as effectively refuted>
That does not prove in itself the complete accuracy or not of any later writings ( the lack of contemporary records may be explained by initial persecution of Christians) but it does surely establish Jesus as a recognised historical figure by 'virtually all modern scholars' and hopefully may allay some of your doubts?
Hope this response is even half as worthy as those of Ams & Floss ...
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Pikaia
On April 30th 1945 Hitler committed suicide. The following day Doenitz announced that Hitler had died the same day, May 1st, fighting the enemy alongside his troops. So when people have an agenda the truth cannot be expected to survive one day, let alone several decades. That is one reason why we should be highly suspicious of the gospels.
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tony yyy
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostThe only known references to Jesus from someone who was not a Christian are two short passages from the huge Jewish history written by Josephus Flavius, a Jew from Jerusalem. His wrings date from about 93 CE (AD), but we don’t have the original, only later copies.
Regarding homeopathy, again it doesn't prove or disprove anything but I can't resist sharing this with those who haven't seen it before: http://www.interhomeopathy.org/tritu...ight_of_saturn
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Julien Sorel
Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostOne that surprises many is that the story of the woman taken in adultery (John 8: 3-11) is also a 9th Century interpolation. It doesn’t appear in any of the early versions at all.
There doesn't seem to be much support for this http://www.bible-researcher.com/adult-hills.html - but it would seem a curious text for a 9th century interpolation. I'd not have thought 9th century Christianity was an especially forgiving or non-misogynistic environment (in other words, I wonder why someone would have added that of all narrative details?)
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Originally posted by tony yyy View PostRegarding homeopathy, again it doesn't prove or disprove anything but I can't resist sharing this with those who haven't seen it before: http://www.interhomeopathy.org/tritu...ight_of_saturn
what a great website
I love this one
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Originally posted by MrGongGong View PostWonderful stuff
Meanwhile Charlie still gets away with his inflential lobbying....bong ching
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostPab, I'm no historian but surely inconsistencies in reporting a story have been with us since time immemorial and do not in themselves cause doubt in the main story ...?. Early persecution of Christians can explain lack of contemporary records of particular events.
We may have different stories of what happened to Richard III's body after he was killed but nobody really doubts that he was killed merely because of these inconsistencies? Even the site of the Battle of Bosworth is disputed by some, so would we then conclude the actual battle may never have actually occurred? In an ironic sort of way such inconsistencies are rather reassuring as these tend to disprove any 'conspiracy theory'.
Searching the free and open evidence provided in WIKI seems to be pretty conclusive.
The telling sentence here is ...<Virtually all modern scholars of antiquity agree that Jesus existed,[1][2][3][4] and biblical scholars and classical historians regard theories of his non-existence as effectively refuted>****
That does not prove in itself the complete accuracy or not of any later writings ( the lack of contemporary records may be explained by initial persecution of Christians) but it does surely establish Jesus as a recognised historical figure by 'virtually all modern scholars' and hopefully may allay some of your doubts?
Hope this response is even half as worthy as those of Ams & Floss ...
You are on very thin ice when you say "surely inconsistencies in reporting a story have been with us since time immemorial and do not in themselves cause doubt in the main story". Yes, true witnesses do have inconsistencies between their statements - it's something that gives them the 'ring of truth' - but there's inconsistencies and inconsistencies. I gave just one of perhaps a thousand or more inconsistencies. How did Judas die? - by hanging himself [Matthew 27: 5] or by falling headlong and bursting asunder so that his bowels spilled out [Acts 1:18]? Was Jesus a descendant of David through Joseph [Matthew] or Mary [Luke]? And if through Joseph, then how? Who found the empty tomb (I won't go through the accounts here, but they are each different in the identity of the finder or finders, the circumstances of the finding and what happened after that)?
These are not insignificant matters that can be glossed over easily. I am not saying that there should be complete agreement, but I do think there are serious problems when accounts are actually in conflict with each other. The Bible is believed by many to be the inspired word of God; it is a pity that an omnipotent being could not have ensured more consistency.
****[Be a little wary of statements like these. Many such scholars (most of the earlier ones) are or were Christians seeking to prove the truth of the biblical accounts. To accept their views uncritically would be as useful as to accept uncritically the writings of an avowed anti-theist seeking to disprove the accounts. Fortunately there are many scholars who act in a disinterested way. Bart Ehrman is one and he seems to believe Jesus existed. Although the fact (if it is that) of Jesus's existence says nothing about whether any of the things attributed to him are true.]Last edited by Pabmusic; 19-02-13, 12:25.
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Originally posted by tony yyy View PostRegarding homeopathy, again it doesn't prove or disprove anything but I can't resist sharing this with those who haven't seen it before: http://www.interhomeopathy.org/tritu...ight_of_saturn
One of the comments sums it up -
Your testing method assumes that the "remedy" has a beneficial effect and you are merely recording the results. This entire "study" is crap scientifically, in that you never run a blind test to determine if a telescope can change the chemical makeup of a substance in the first place. This is just crazy.
Of course, there's no response (it was posted in August 2012 - plenty of time for the author of the article to respond)
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