McWay,
I appreciate that as a fundamentalist Christian you aren't capable of rational thought on this subject, but you're just being dishonest here.
Hardly!
...and how is this "visitation" from god resulting in Mary's pregnancy any different from the blueprint laid out by the Mystery Religions?
Simple! There's no sex involved, PERIOD. God isn't having any sex with Mary. Mary is a virgin, when she has Jesus (i.e. PRIOR TO her conception and birth of Jesus Christ, she has no sex with humans, gods in the guise of humans, or anyone else).
...I didn't claim so. I doubt you could quote a post of mine asserting this. What I did do was explain how the metaphors used in the nativity story clearly coincide with the allegorical astrological description of the 25th December dawn. I remember using the word "indirectly".
Yes, you did and Yes, I can! As for your "indirectly", you were asked to show what verses in the account of Jesus correspond to Dec. 25 date. So far, you have produced NOTHING!!!
...this is just dishonest wordplay.
The phrase used to describe the "wise men" is "magi". Magi are stargazing wandering priest-kings who always travel in threes (lunar, solar and stellar experts). I suspect that you are using gospels that are modern translations from English to English.
Make up your mind, here. Are they priests or are they kings? You're the one with the dishonest word play, attempting to use your "slash" techniques, in order to make the data from the Jesus account fit your pre-conceived (and ill-supported) claims. Plus, what I said was that Scripture does NOT give the specific number of wise men.
Extra-Biblical traditions have the number of wise men as being anywhere from two to twelve. Western tradition usually affixes the number at three, because of the three gifts given to Christ: gold, myrrh, and frankencense. And they are described as priests, astrologers, and men of science. That does NOT automatically equate to "kings".
From WordNet Search 3.0, "Magi":
Noun
S: (n) Wise Men, Magi ((New Testament) the sages who visited Jesus and Mary and Joseph shortly after Jesus was born; the Gospel According to Matthew says they were guided by a star and brought gifts of gold and frankincense and myrrh; because there were three gifts it is usually assumed that there were three of them)
S: (n) magus (a magician or sorcerer of ancient times)
S: (n) magus (a member of the Zoroastrian priesthood of the ancient Persians)
...I'd love to know the specific line of scripture that says this. I certainly don't remember it.
Either way, it STILL conforms to the astrological blueprint.
So, you don't remember it; yet you claimed with certainty that the wise men attended Jesus' birth. That's rich!!! This is why I post specifics, because (unlike you) I can actually support my statements with actual references, not speculation and vague generic assertions. As I said before, only 2 books of the Bible chronicle Jesus' early life (Let me make this easy on you; it's Matthew).
Matt. 2:7, 16:,
Then Herod, when he had privily called the wise men, enquired of them diligently what time the star appeared. Then Herod, when he saw that he was deceived by the wise men, was exceedingly angry. And he sent forth and put to death all the male children who were in Bethlehem and all its districts from TWO YEARS AND UNDER, according to the time which he had determined from the wise men....the Gospel of Mary Magdalene says otherwise. But then again, you couldn't possibly entertain a source document that predates any of the canonical gospels could you?
One, who says that it predates the canonical Gospels? Two, we have four Gospels that make no indication of Jesus being married vs. one that does. Not good odds, there, especially with one Gospel, detailing Jesus' passing the care of his MOTHER (not his wife) to one of His disciples, as He's dying.
Furthermore, had Mags been Jesus' wife, one of His brothers would have redeemed her, upon Jesus' death anyway. That was according to Hebrew law.
So, any way you slice it, your skewed claims about her being Jesus' wife just don't work.
...Mary Magdalene, as Jesus' wife, is the first and sole witness to the risen Jesus.
Incorrect, on several fronts.
1) Mags ain't Jesus' wife.
2) She wasn't the only one who saw Him. Mary (His mother), Salome, the disciples (including the one who claimed that He wouldn't believe that it was Jesus, UNTIL he touched the wounds in Jesus' hands and side).
...the assertion of Papal Infallibility has only ever been used twice regarding articles of faith. One of those fundamental tenets of Christianity is the belief that Jesus rose from the dead and was subsequently assumed bodily into heaven.
The other fundamental tenet of Christianity backed by Papal Infallibility is the belief that Jesus' mother Mary REMAINED A VIRGIN for her entire life till she was also assumed bodily into heaven.
Again, you are using gospels that have been translated from English to English... previous to Vatican II the phrases in question were ALWAYS translated as "cousins" rather than "siblings" and the phrase "Jesus' brothers" was always translated as "members of Jesus' extended family" or "Jesus' cousins".
You mean just as you claimed that only the wife and mother would visit the tomb....OOOPS!!! There were other women there, according to the Gospels.
This has NOTHING to do with the Pope. And, lest you forget, there's at least one NON-Biblical source confirming the existence of one of Jesus' siblings (that would be Josephus, who commented on the death of
"the brother of Jesus, who was called Christ, whose name was James").
Therefore, this whole issue of Mary's perpetual virginity is basically moot. And, nowhere in Scripture is it stated that Mary is assumed into heaven, anyway.
Those are the FOLKLORE versions of those gods stories.
...Sol Invictus is crucified.
So were the thieves, next to Jesus. These were the Romans, who had a thing for crucifying people.
...Osiris was either nailed to a tree or nailed to a rack before he was dismembered, his body parts were then spread to the FOUR CARDINAL POINTS (The Southern Cross constellation) and pieces of him did end up stuck in trees.
Aren’t you using the “folklore”, when referring to Osiris’ dismemberment? Yet, you complain about my using that, when demonstrating just how off-the-mark these figures are, in comparison to Jesus (i.e. Osiris stays in the underworld, the land of the DEAD, thus disqualifying him from any resurrection).
Same goes for Attis and his self-inflicted gonad removal.
...Issa, the Kasmiri/Pakistani/Indian version of Jesus was actually crucified Roman style, in Jerusalem by the Romans on the orders of Pilate.
Some references would be nice. But providing references ain’t your forte’.
The Mystery Religion versions of Achilles; Tammuz; Attis; Mithras; Horus; Hercules and even Pythagoras (the mathematician) are all crucified on either a tree; tau or cross.
You're just being dishonest here McWay... you dismiss well made arguments and quality source documents, then CHOOSE to misconstrue some other tiny detail so you can run with that as the thrust of your counter argument.
Rather than continuously nitpick with patently false assertions like a Creationist, perhaps you could explain how it is (in your opinion) that the Jesus story so closely mimics the astrological dying/resurrecting godman blueprint?
The Luke
You're flip-flopping, again. First you brag that no one that name a specific detail. Then, once the details are given, you resort to silly games, trying to qualify "tiny" details from "major" ones, when your claims are easily demonstated to be FALSE and inaccurate.
Then, you continue your contortions by switching to the “folklore” versions of those other figures, when you think you can find a match between them and Jesus; then, you switch to the alleged “mystery versions” (the specifics to which YOU STILL HAVE YET TO PROVIDE), when you can’t.