Author Topic: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?  (Read 68081 times)

MCWAY

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #225 on: November 25, 2008, 08:31:21 AM »
The Luke, Deicide, Necrosis,

Please let me see your explanation for Christianity's explosive growth in the 1st century in the mist of so much persecution, unlike all these ancient myths that you claim Christianity is a copy of? 

How did Christianity manage to grow so quickly in such a short period of time, then continue to grow in the mist of horrible persecution for almost 300 years before Christianity was finally legalized, before the Roman Catholic Church came into power?

The Bible has the only explanation.  Jesus Christ is not only real, but multitudes saw him die, then he rose from the dead and over 500 people saw him alive again. 

Unlike you, I do not have enough faith to believe otherwise.

But please, do state your alternative explanation for Christianity's rapid success and growth, while explaining why these many competing myths you talk about did not follow the same fate.

It's funny you should mention that, Loco. If you've had a chance to see "Who Is This Jesus? Is He Risen?", you may remember that it addressed this very same issue (I can pull up my thread for the video, if you like).

”Where did Christianity first begin, in terms of the organized proclamation that Jesus rose from the dead? Only one place on Earth, Jerusalem. There, least of all, could Christianity have ever gotten started, if the moldering body of Jesus of Nazareth were available, anytime after Sunday morning.” – Dr. Paul Meier, Russell H. Seibert Professor of Ancient History, Western Michigan University.

Another topic in discussion on that video is the non-Christian sources that documented the life of Jesus.

Indeed, people came even from the cities in Asia, sent by the Christians at their common expense, to succour and defend and encourage the hero. They show incredible speed whenever any such public action is taken; for in no time they lavish their all.  So it was then in the case of Peregrinus; much money came to him from them by reason of his imprisonment, and he procured not a little revenue from it. The poor wretches have convinced themselves, first and foremost, that they are going to be immortal and live for all time, in consequence of which they despise death and even willingly give themselves into custody; most of them. Furthermore, their first lawgiver persuaded them that they are all brothers of one another after they have transgressed once, for all by denying the Greek gods and by worshipping that crucified sophist himself and living under his laws. Therefore they despise all things indiscriminately and consider them common property, receiving such doctrines traditionally without any definite evidence. So if any charlatan and trickster, able to profit by occasions, comes among them, he quickly acquires sudden wealth by imposing upon simple folk. - Lucian of Samosata

loco

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #226 on: November 25, 2008, 08:46:14 AM »
"Nero fastened the guilt and inflicted the most exquisite tortures on a class hated for their abominations, called Christians by the populace. Christus, from whom the name had its origin, suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberius at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilatus, and a most mischievous superstition, thus checked for the moment, again broke out not only in Judaea, the first source of the evil, but even in Rome, where all things hideous and shameful from every part of the world find their centre and become popular."
- The non-Christian historian Tacitus
http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Annals_(Tacitus)/Book_15#44

Deicide

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #227 on: November 25, 2008, 09:12:08 AM »
The Luke, Deicide, Necrosis,

Please let me see your explanation for Christianity's explosive growth in the 1st century in the mist of so much persecution, unlike all these ancient myths that you claim Christianity is a copy of? 

How did Christianity manage to grow so quickly in such a short period of time, then continue to grow in the mist of horrible persecution for almost 300 years before Christianity was finally legalized, before the Roman Catholic Church came into power?

The Bible has the only explanation.  Jesus Christ is not only real, but multitudes saw him die, then he rose from the dead and over 500 people saw him alive again. 

Unlike you, I do not have enough faith to believe otherwise.

But please, do state your alternative explanation for Christianity's rapid success and growth, while explaining why these many competing myths you talk about did not follow the same fate.

Faith to believe otherwise? Mass undead, magic godmen, etc...I guess Mo-ham-head must have ascended to heaven on a winged horse because Islam was so successful? ::)

Here Robert Price refutes your silly notion that Christianity had no sociological variable of explanation...

http://www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com/rev_holding.htm

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Internet apologist James Patrick Holding (as he chooses to be known) has thus far seen fit to by-pass the pages of published books, though one can only imagine numerous evangelical publishers would love to have him. He maintains a website containing a whole raft of apologetical essays, most of them aiming to refute unbelievers and biblical critics, all of whom he considers to be enemies of the faith. He is amazingly prolific and erudite as well, though he seems to me sometimes perversely to misread his opponents’ arguments and to reduce them to strawman status. In the essay to be addressed here, Holding sets forth a wide-ranging version of an old argument one hears more and more these days from fundamentalist apologists: that the initial success of Christianity defies sociological common sense and demands a miraculous explanation. The sheer scope of the argument, as well as its increasingly common use in debate, make a critical review of it advisable.

Holding here attempts “to put together a comprehensive list of issues that we assert that critics must deal with in explaining why Christianity succeeded where it should have clearly failed or died out” like many another messianic cult. For example, that of Sabbatai Sevi in the seventeenth century. Holding deems it unlikely, first of all, that Christianity could have begun with the hoodwinking of a sufficient number of gullible dupes. Imposture is no basis for a successful religion, a notion asserted as if self-evident by many apologists past and present. And yet it is easy to show how Mormonism started with a hoax, though, given the paradoxes of human psychology, we cannot for that reason dismiss Joseph Smith as not also being a sincere religious founder. But a hoax it was, and here today, look at it: it is a thriving world religion in its own right. So such things can happen. On the other hand, I believe the parallels to Sabbatai Sevi are important and show how some of the greatest challenges facing early Christianity may have been overcome, especially the crushing defeat in the wake of Messiah's death. It also illustrates the thinking that led to retrospective claims of "passion predictions" and scriptural prophecies, as well as the framing of atonement theories as after-the-fact rationales of an embarrassing death. Plus resurrection appearance- and miracle- rumors. Most devastating of all, as I show in Beyond Born Again, the rapid, contemporary formation of legends, and that against the attempts to the Apostle (Nathan of Gaza) to prevent miracle-mongering, utterly destroys the apologist's claim that such legendary embellishment could not have taken place in the case of the Jesus tradition.

            Holding argues that “Christianity ‘did the wrong thing’ in order to be a successful religion” and that thus “the only way Christianity did succeed is because it was a truly revealed faith -- and because it had the irrefutable witness of the resurrection.” Here he serves notice that we will be asked to "admit" that miracles are the only way to account for the rise and success of Christianity. In any other field of inquiry this would be laughed off stage. I am thinking of a cartoon in which a lab-coated scientist is standing at the chalkboard, which is full of integers, and he is pointing to a hollow circle in the midst of it all, saying, "Right here a miracle takes place." Appealing to miracles as a needful causal link is tantamount to confessing bafflement. But in fact, there will be no need for this.

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Cross Examination

Citing 1 Corinthians 1:18 (“For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which are saved it is the power of God.”), Holding asks rhetorically, “Who on earth would believe a religion centered on a crucified man?” He contends that crucifixion was so repulsive and degrading a punishment that no one could have taken a crucified man seriously as a religious founder. On top of that, no one could have envisioned the notion of a god stooping to undergo such treatment. “This being the case, we may fairly ask… why Christianity succeeded at all. The ignominy of a crucified savior was as much a deterrent to Christian belief as it is today - indeed, it was far, far more so! Why, then, were there any Christians at all? At best this should have been a movement that had only a few strange followers, then died out within decades as a footnote, if it was mentioned at all. The historical reality of the crucifixion could not of course be denied. To survive, Christianity should have either turned Gnostic (as indeed happened in some offshoots), or else not bothered with Jesus at all, and merely made him into the movement's first martyr for a higher moral ideal within Judaism. It would have been absurd to suggest, to either Jew or Gentile, that a crucified being was worthy of worship or died for our sins. There can be only one good explanation: Christianity succeeded because from the cross came victory, and after death came resurrection! The shame of the cross turns out to be one of Christianity's most incontrovertible proofs!” This is completely futile and does not begin to take into account the religious appetite (in many people) for the grotesque and the sanguine. Just look at the eagerly morbid piety of Roman Catholics and fundamentalist advocates of "the Blood" who wallow in every gruesome detail of the crucifixion, real or imagined. Consider the box office receipts of Mel Gibson’s pious gore-fest The Passion of the Christ. In ancient times, think of the Attis cult which centered upon the suicide of its savior who castrated himself and bled to death. Street corner celebrations of such rites invariably attracted bystanders, even initially hostile ones, swept up in the music and chanting, to castrate themselves and join the sect on the spot!

And even if one stops short of the Christ Myth theory, one must still reckon with the possibility, as advocated by Bultmann and others, that the crucifixion of Jesus would still have been readily embraceable as a means of salvation because of the familiarity of the dying and rising god mytheme. It was a familiar religious conception, and no less so because of Hellenistic Judaism's martyrdom doctrine as glimpsed in 2 and 4 Maccabees, where the hideous deaths (much more fulsomely dwelt upon than the crucifixion is in the gospels) are set forth as expiations for the sins of Israel. See Sam K. Williams, The Death of Jesus as Saving Event.

Finally, crucifixion was not a taboo subject, as witnessed by the frequent occurrence of crucifixion in dream interpretation manuals, where dreaming of being crucified was typically taken as a good omen of impending success.



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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #228 on: November 25, 2008, 09:14:35 AM »
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Good Jews, Bad News?

Holding thinks that “Jesus' Jewishness…was also a major impediment to spreading the Gospel beyond the Jews themselves. Judaism was regarded by the Romans and Gentiles as a superstition. Roman writers like Tacitus willingly reported… all manner of calumnies against Jews as a whole, regarding them as a spiteful and hateful race. Bringing a Jewish savior to the door of the average Roman would have been only less successful bringing one to the door of a Nazi.” This is ludicrous. There were Roman anti-Semites aplenty, though this seems to have prevailed mainly during periods of Jewish revolt against Rome. But in fact, Judaism was quite attractive to Gentiles in general, Romans in particular, as witnessed by the number of conversions and the unofficial adherence of Gentile God-fearers (like Cornelius in Acts 10 and the Lukan Centurion who bankrolled the synagogue). It had the appeal of an "Oriental" religion as well as the sterling teaching of Ethical Monotheism to recommend it.

“The Romans… believed that superstitions (such as Judaism and Christianity) undermined the social system established by their religion – and… anyone who followed or adopted one of their foreign superstitions would be looked on not only as a religious rebel, but as a social rebel as well.” No, Judaism was considered a legitimate religion and for that reason Jews were exempt from military service. The Roman attitude seems to have been that an ancient religion was okay, even if silly by the standards of Romans like Juvenal, who felt the same way about the religion of Isis and Osiris, Cybele and Attis, etc. But these, too, were legal and quite popular. It was only new religions, like Christianity or the Bacchanalia (new to Rome), that aroused suspicion. (Holding will acknowledge this fact later, when it seems to prove useful to him.)

           

This Accursed Multitude

Furthermore, says Holding, “Christianity had a serious handicap [in] the stigma of a savior who undeniably hailed from Galilee -- for the Romans and Gentiles, not only a Jewish land, but a hotbed of political sedition; for the Jews, not as bad as Samaria of course, but a land of yokels and farmers without much respect for the Torah, and worst of all, a savior from a puny village of no account. Not even a birth in Bethlehem, or Matthew's suggestion that an origin in Galilee was prophetically ordained, would have [de]tached such a stigma: Indeed, Jews would not be convinced of this, even as today, unless something else first convinced them that Jesus was divine or the Messiah.” I cannot imagine anybody would have been this snobbish. Romans and other non-Palestinians could hardly have drawn much of a distinction between Galilee and Timbuktu. But even if they had been so choosy, does Holding seriously imagine that any such blue-nosed scoffer would have been convinced only by the miracle of the resurrection, as opposed to the assertion of the resurrection? They would no longer have been in a position to be convinced by the real thing, though they might have found the preaching of the resurrection emotionally or spiritually compelling, as many still do. It is foolish to argue in effect that "They were convinced by it, so it must have been convincing.  So you, too, should be convinced."

            Again, “Assigning Jesus the work of a carpenter was the wrong thing to do; Cicero noted that such occupations were ‘vulgar’ and compared the work to slavery.” Must early Christian preaching have won over the worst sort of snobs? No one, not even the special pleading Crossan, argues that Jesus was one of the Untouchables or Outcasts. Don't tell me there weren't plenty of people then as now who would not have relished the notion of a faith started by a rustic carpenter. But I think the identification of Jesus as a carpenter, a la Geza Vermes, was an early error, a Gentile misunderstanding of the Jewish acclamation that he was an erudite rabbi, skilled in scripture exposition. At any rate, it did not seem to hinder the fantastic success of Stoicism that one its most beloved sages, Epictetus, had been a slave, even less classy, one might suppose, than a carpenter.

“Placing Jesus' birth story in a suspicious context where a charge of illegitimacy would be all too obvious to make would compound the problems as well. If the Gospels were making up these things, how hard would it have been… to take an "adoptionist" Christology and give Jesus an indisputably honorable birth (rather than claiming honor by the dubious, on the surface, claim that God was Jesus' Father)?” Tell that to all the myth-mongers who ascribed divine paternity to their saviors and heroes! Must these miraculous nativities be factual, too?

 

Let’s Get Physical

Holding ventures that a fabricated religion such as he supposes critics imagine Christianity to have been, would never have chosen a version of exaltation for its hero that entailed a physical resurrection since many ancients are on record as finding the whole notion repugnant, preferring Platonic soul-survival. Indeed, many rejected the idea: Sadducees, some philosophers, even pagan Arabs in Muhammad's day. Does that mean no one else liked it? We never find denunciations of a belief that no one holds. I find fundamentalism grossly repugnant, but that doesn't mean everyone else does.

            Holding knows that many Jews did share the Christian belief in a physical resurrection, but he says this would not have facilitated their belief in Jesus’ resurrection, since Jews supposedly restricted resurrection to the end of the age (John 11: 23-24, “Jesus said to her, ‘Your brother will rise again.’ Martha said to him, ‘I know that he will rise again in the resurrection at the last day.’”) Holding, like all evangelical apologists, claim that belief in a man rising from the grave before the time, in the midst of “this age,” would have been unthinkable. Hence on the one hand, it cannot even have occurred to Christians as a possibility unless they knew Jesus had actually arisen. And on the other, it would have struck the ears of other Jews as the rankest heresy. But think of John the Baptist, transformed into a miracle-working entity by virtue of resurrection, according to the belief of many (Mark 6:14). Of course Mark makes it a false opinion, but the point is that such a belief, closely paralleling the resurrection kerygma of Jesus himself, was readily available in the immediate environment of early Christianity according to the gospels themselves.

As for the venue of the Gentile Mission, “what makes this especially telling is that a physical resurrection was completely unnecessary for merely starting a religion. It would have been enough to say that Jesus' body had been taken up to heaven, like Moses' or like Elijah's. Indeed this would have fit… what was expected, and would have been much easier to ‘sell’ to the Greeks and Romans.” But this only means the early Christians didn't concoct Christianity like a bunch of network execs fashioning a sitcom according to focus group surveys. The question is: where did they get the belief in resurrection that they were shortly (if not from the first) "saddled" with? It might have been because of a real resurrection, sure, but they might simply have inherited it from an environment more friendly to the idea.



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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #229 on: November 25, 2008, 09:16:55 AM »
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Too New to be True

Holding first argued that Judaism was repulsive to Romans, but now he has to switch hats. He says, correctly, that Romans paid grudging respect to Judaism because it had an ancient pedigree. “Old was good. Innovation was bad.” Thus a new faith like Christianity should have failed. Should we then conclude that no new religions ever started or were accepted on their appearance in the West? You just can't take the opinions of the intellectual caste as definitive for what everyone would have thought. Especially since the very expression of such opinions presupposes a regrettable (to these snobs) prevalence of precisely such "superstitions" as the snobs were condemning. Such faiths famously could and did succeed--even to the extent of becoming the official religion of Rome: Mithraism and even Baalism, for example. Holding argues as if the success of Christianity couldn't happen and so it must have taken a miracle for it to have happened. The scientific approach, taken by Rodney Stark (The Rise of Christianity) and others, is to take as established that it did happen and then explain it, not piously refuse to explain it and claim "It's a miracle!" With that utter abdication of the scientific method, we would still be in the Dark Ages.

Of course, no one denies there were persecutions of the Christian faith and, before that, the Isis and the Dionysus cults. They were occasioned by the fact that many, many people did like these religions and practiced them. That is why Juvenal has occasion in the first place to ridicule them, why Plutarch warns young matrons against them--because they were so prevalent, even among the aristocracy. Their husbands didn't like it, but they couldn't ultimately stop it.

Novelty was in large measure responsible for official distaste for the new faith. But as always, many people are looking for something new, however much the establishment hates and forbids it. And even they may eventually succumb: they yielded to Mithraism as the official state religion, and similarly later to Christianity. Hurdles are meant to be jumped, and hardy religions have jumped them. Christianity had much going for it, many noble features, just as Judaism did, and they won out.

 

Raising the Bar

Where, Holding wonders, would have potential converts have derived the wherewithal to repent of their nice, cozy sins to swallow the bitter pill of early Christian abstinence, if the whole thing were simply a matter of joining one more man-made religion? Can he ignore the fact that all the (very popular) Mystery Religions called their recruits to an initial stage of repentance and purification, too? 

And neither must we suppose that all Christians were heroic cross-bearers. The whole crisis of a second repentance seen in the Shepherd of Hermas and witnessed in Constantine's deferral of baptism to his deathbed attests to the general mediocrity of Christian lay behavior as the rule. They were all no doubt good folks, just not heroic like Jesus or the martyrs. As Stark (The Rise of Christianity) shows, the growth rate of Christianity seems to have matched that of analogous modern "new religions" like Mormonism and the Unification Church. One reason it expanded was its narrowness. Unlike other faiths, it insisted that theirs was the only way, so if you joined Christianity you left your other affiliations behind, whereas others could and did belong to several movements at once, with naturally watered down devotion to any one of them.

            Another way it grew was that Christianity provided a constant safety zone for assimilating Hellenistic Jews who wanted to slough off parochial Jewish ethnic markers like circumcision (already Paul is telling the Corinthian men not to undertake the epispasm operation to “undo” circumcision—ouch!) yet without abandoning the biblical tradition. Yet another growth factor was Christianity's opposition to abortion and infanticide, both quite common among pagans. This meant there were many more Christian women surviving to adulthood, perforce marrying pagan men and converting them. And of course the sterling conduct of Christians, ministering to the sick and destitute in times of plague and famine while pagan priests headed for their countryside villas, like Prince Prospero in Poe's Masque of the Red Death, must have attracted many of those helped--and justifiably so! Christianity has much to be proud of in all this. But we don't need any overt miracle to explain it.

            And as for the unlikelihood that a great number should have welcomed a new faith that offered moral guidance and discipline--I don't see a problem, unless one already takes for granted a doctrine of total depravity. 

 

Intolerance of Intolerance

Christianity began in the Hellenistic age of cosmopolitan tolerance. It was common for members of various religions to regard all the gods as the same, just wearing different names from nation to nation. Even some Jews, like the writer of the Epistle of Aristaeus, regarded Jehovah and Zeus as the same. One result was that anyone might join several different religions or cults simultaneously. So mustn’t Christianity have disgusted Roman society because of the new faith’s exclusivism? Mustn’t the preaching of Jesus as the only way to heaven have appeared a piece of tasteless bigotry? Surely no one would have found such a faith attractive, would they? Actually, it was a mixed bag. As I have just said, a la E.R. Dodds (Pagan and Christian in an Age of Anxiety) and Rodney Stark, exclusivism was also a factor accounting for Christian expansion, not necessarily making it unlikely. The same thing is evident in the modern day in Dean M. Kelly's famous book, Why Conservative Churches Are Growing: people feel they are getting the red meat of authentic Christianity with evangelicalism, not the vapid tofu of liberalism, so they flock to the clear notes of the fundamentalist/orthodox trumpet.

            On the other hand, what Holding notes about the guardians of the social order being enraged by this, or even some of the people, is true too: there were plenty of lynch mobs before Diocletian and Decius declared open season on Christians. But not everybody reacted the same way. And much of the reaction was conducive to Christian growth--even the persecutions! For, as Tertullian said, the blood of the martyrs was the seed of the church. And then what if significant elements of the establishment embrace the new faith? Things change rapidly.

            “Jews, too, would be intolerant to the new faith. Jewish families would feel social pressure to cut off converts and avoid the shame of their conversion. Without something to overcome Roman and even Jewish intolerance, Christianity was doomed.” But Christianity appealed to Hellenistic Jews and to Gentile God-fearers precisely because it offered Jewish morality, added to something like Mystery Religion salvationism (and this independent of the question of whether its symbolism and soteriology were borrowed from these faiths. Let's assume for the sake of argument that they weren't), and freedom from what Gentiles and assimilating Jews regarded as the burden of the Law. As Stark (chapter 3) shows, Hellenistic Jews found Christianity a bonanza!

No doubt Ebionite Jewish Christianity did eventually dry up on the vine for the reasons Holding gives: Non-Christian Jews came to associate the name Jesus with what appeared to them a new Gentile cult and wanted nothing to do with Torah-Christianity, either. The plaintive pleas of the latter, "But we're not like them! We're like you!" fell on deaf ears. Meanwhile, Gentiles faced with the choice of Law-free Christianity or Torah Christianity would surely choose the former, not so much because they were lazy, but because it seemed less inauthentic for them. Why should you have to adopt alien cultural markers to become a Christian?

 

An Omniscient Public

Holding next cites Acts 26:26, “For the king knoweth of these things, before whom also I speak freely: for I am persuaded that none of these things are hidden from him; for this thing was not done in a corner.” Here Paul is making his defense before King Herod Agrippa II. “The NT is filled with claims of connections to and reports of incidents involving ‘famous people.’ [For instance,] Herod Agrippa … ‘was eaten of worms’ as Luke reported in Acts 12:20-23. Copies of Acts circulated in the area and were accessible to the public. Had Luke reported falsely, Christianity would have been dismissed as a fraud and would not have ‘caught on’ as a religion. If Luke lied in his reports, Luke probably would have been jailed and/or executed by Agrippa's son, Herod Agrippa II… because that was the fellow Paul testified to in Acts 25-26… And Agrippa II was alive and in power after Luke wrote and circulated Acts.” No, sorry. For one thing, Luke’s account of the first Agrippa’s death sounds remarkably like that in Josephus (Antiquities 19:8:2) as well as the tale of the worm-devouring death of Antiochus Epiphanes in 2 Maccabees 9:9. For another, there are many reasons to think that Acts stems from the second century, and many scholars think so. Merely mentioning that opinion does not make it true. It does mean, however, that the reader is not entitled to take Holding’s assertion of Luke’s contemporaneity with Herod Agrippa II for granted either. To paraphrase C.S. Lewis, Agrippa "was dead and couldn't blow the gaff." It is typical of the Hellenistic novels to have fictional heroes interact with famous historical figures, just as in such novels today. Does Holding imagine that the spurious letters between Paul and Seneca must be authentic because otherwise somebody would have definitively put the hoax to rest? Look how hard it is to lay the ghost of Nicholas Notovitch's bogus Unknown Life of Jesus Christ which keeps getting revived after the public has forgotten both it and the refutations it garnered in earlier generations.

"People outside the area of Lystra may not have known enough about what happened in Lystra, or wanted to check it, but Christianity was making claims at varied points across the Empire, and there were also built in ‘fact checkers’ stationed around the Empire who could say something about all the claims central to Jerusalem and Judaea -- the Diaspora Jews.” Thus Acts’ stories must be true. But this is unrealistic and anachronistic--fact checkers? No doubt there were local skeptics who, as in the case of Sabbatai Sevi's miracle reports, denied anything was really going on, but who listens to them? Not the true believers. Like Holding himself, they will mount any argument so as not to have to take threatening factors seriously. Rastafarians refuse to belief Haillie Selassie died. Premies refuse to believe their Satguru's mom fired him. Also, does Holding expect us to accept that the temple of Diana in Ephesus collapsed at the preaching of John because it says so in the Acts of John?

“The NT claims countless touch-points that could go under this list. An earthquake, a darkness at midday, the temple curtain torn in two, an execution, all at Passover (with the attendant crowds numbering in the millions), people falling out of a house speaking in tongues at Pentecost…-- all in a small city and culture where word would spread fast.” Word spreads fast—word of what? Events and non-events. Rumors spread as fast as facts, faster even. And besides, a little event called the fall of Jerusalem supervened between the time described and the writing of the gospels and Acts. Any witnesses pro or con were long dead and unavailable. “In short, Christianity was highly vulnerable to inspection and disproof on innumerable points -- any one of which, had it failed to prove out, would have snowballed into further doubt, especially given the previous factors above which would have been motive enough for any Jew or Gentile to say or do something.” Oh please! If such claims were even made in the time of apostolic contemporaries, we have no way of knowing they were not as thoroughly and adequately refuted as the claims of Joseph Smith were. Christian tradition and documents would hardly inform us of the fact. And once Jerusalem fell, as it had before the New Testament was written, all hope of corroboration is sheer fantasy.

 

Sticks, Stones, and Names

Holding mounts a version of the argument from martyrdom that is slightly more nuanced than the usual one, and for that we may give him credit. He admits that we have no reliable information as to the possible martyrdom of any specific early Christians. Most of the supposed data comes from apocryphal, legendary sources like the fanciful Acts of Paul. But, following Robin Lane Fox, Holding widens the scope of social ostracism to which early Christians were subjected: “rejection by family and society, relegation to outcast status. It didn't need to be martyrdom -- it was enough that you would suffer socially and otherwise.” But this sword cuts both ways, if you are trying to determine its likely effect on the growth and consolidation of membership in a new religion. Such ostracism, when not spontaneously forthcoming at the hands of outsiders, is famously cultivated (even simulated) by "cults" who seek to cement the loyalty of new members by isolating them from natural family and old friends so they will bond more strongly with "brothers and sisters in the faith." This is why cult deprogramming was such a waste of time--it only drove the victim into the arms of the cult more deeply than ever.

But as for outright persecution, e.g., lynchings, seizure of property, just observe how the censured and persecuted Mormons reacted to such hardships--by succeeding fabulously! “It is quite unlikely that anyone would have gone the distance for the Christian faith at any time -- unless it had something tangible behind it.” Or, unless they believed it did, which no one doubts, and which is all Holding can ever show.

 

Monolithic Monotheism?

Holding has already expressed his reluctance to credit any ancient believing in a crucified god. But what about the general belief that Jesus was God incarnate? Would that notion have proven so repugnant to ancient Jews and Gentiles that none of them could have seriously entertained it—unless either irrefutable evidence for the resurrection (how is this a proof for the Incarnation?) forced one to accept it? But Holding, like C.S. Lewis and so many others who use the same argument, is stuck on the discredited notion that something like second-century rabbinic orthodoxy prevailed or even existed in the first centuries BC and AD. A lot of weird stuff was going on in the Holy Land and elsewhere that would later be forced out under the post-70 hegemony of the rabbis. One might as well ignore the diversity of theologies in Islam and conclude that the Fatimid Caliph al-Hakim was Allah incarnate, as the Druze maintain, or that Ali already was God in the flesh, as many Shi'ite sects believe today. How could such beliefs have arisen in the context of absolutely and fiercely monotheistic Islam? Well, it turns out it wasn't so monolithic, and neither was first-century Judaism. 

“And it would be no better in the Gentile world. The idea of a god condescending to material form, for more than a temporary visit, of sweating, stinking, going to the bathroom, and especially suffering and dying here on earth -- this would be too much to swallow!” But exactly such was believed of the various demigods, like Asclepius, Pythagoras, Apollonius. Besides, many early Christians did not believe in a genuine incarnation, but were docetists, and it is far from certain that Paul was a real incarnationist, with his talk of Christ taking on the likeness of human flesh, the form of a servant, etc. I for one do not take for granted that orthodox definitions of incarnation can be assumed for the earliest Christians.

 

Armchair Radicalism

“‘Neither male nor female, neither slave nor free.’ You might be so used to applauding this sort of concept that you don't realize what a radical message it was for the ancient world. And this is another reason why Christianity should have petered out in the cradle if it were a fake.” It is a notorious matter of debate even among “literalist” evangelicals whether statements like the one Holding quotes meant any more than that all the listed categories had equal access to salvation, or whether they also denoted the abolition of traditional social distinctions among Christians. We don’t know how progressive a face early Christians presented to their contemporaries. Besides, some of the pre-Socratic Sophists had already preached male-female equality, as did the Pythagoreans and Stoics. And Christians were by no means, except for Marcionites and Gnostics, quick to implement texts like Galatians 3:28, as the Pastoral Epistles show.

            “Note that this is not just to those in power or rich; it is an anachronism of Western individualism to suppose that a slave or the poor would have found Christianity's message appealing on this basis.” On the contrary, part of the appeal of such "cults" is that they offer esteem and honor to someone in the eyes of his brethren that he cannot achieve in the secular world. A slave could be a Christian leader.

“Christianity turned the norms upside down and said that birth, ethnicity, gender, and wealth -- that which determined a person's honor and worth in this setting -- meant zipola.” This is characteristic of all sectarian movements in their infancy. It is partly "Know-Nothingism," because education is disparaged, partly true egalitarianism, of course. But hardly unusual for a new religious movement. Buddhism, too, repudiated caste and succeeded. Is it the only true religion, too?

            “The group-identity factor makes for another proof of Christianity's authenticity. In a group-oriented society, you took your identity from your group leader, and people needed the support and endorsement of others to support their identity… Moreover, a person like Jesus could not have kept a ministry going unless those around him supported him. A merely human Jesus could not have met this demand and must have provided convincing proofs of his power and authority to maintain a following, and for a movement to have started and survived well beyond him. A merely human Jesus would have had to live up to the expectations of others and would have been abandoned, or at least had to change horses, at the first sign of failure.” This is outrageous special pleading. What about the Buddha, John the Baptist, Martin Luther King, Gandhi, and many others who were let down temporarily or permanently by their followers? And if there were anything special about such persistence, you needn't posit an incarnation. It would be adequate to say Jesus was strengthened by God. Were the indefatigable Paul and Peter God incarnate, too?

“If Christianity wanted to succeed, it should never have admitted that women were the first to discover the empty tomb or the first to see the Risen Jesus. It also never should have admitted that women were main supporters (Luke 8:3) or lead converts (Acts 16).” Similar traditions stem from the ritual mourning of women devotees of Tammuz (Ezekiel 8:14), Attis, Baal (Zechariah 12:11), etc. They are not supposed to be "evidence for the resurrection" any more than the Oberammergau Passion Play is. And plenty of Mystery cults gave leadership roles to women. That's part and parcel of sectarianism and its first-generation rejection of mainstream norms.

Holding appeals to the bumpkin status of Jesus, John, and Peter (Acts 4:13), and even of the early Christians generally, as another factor militating against the success of the new faith. On the contrary, the supposed illiteracy of prophets and founders is part of apologetic rhetoric, used of Jesus, Peter and John, Muhammad, and Joseph Smith so as to argue they must have been incapable of making this stuff up--"Flesh and blood hath not revealed it to thee, but my father in heaven." It is a common, predictable, and fictive topos, much like the common rhetorical trope that Paul uses in 1 Corinthians 2:1-2, the claim to have renounced or to be inept at clever rhetoric, to throw readers off the track and set them up to fall for it.

            Besides, how would Christianity's being "real" or "fake" as to miracle claims have anything to do with the success or failure of its progress in society decades later? Wouldn't we have to look to the strengths of the movement at the time? Or are we to picture the Holy Ghost hypnotizing people as they heard the gospel? If instead Holding means they found ancient Christian apologetics so compelling, then he must reproduce them for us to be convinced by. He can't adopt the approach of the Catholic Church, a call for "implicit faith," second-hand faith in the faith of the early Christians.

 
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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #230 on: November 25, 2008, 09:18:41 AM »
Quote
Standing Up for Jesus

Bruce “Malina and [Jerome] Neyrey note that in the ancient world, people took their major identity from the various groups to which they belonged. Whatever group(s) they were embedded in determined their identity. Changes in persons (such as Paul's conversion) were abnormal. Each person had certain role expectations they were expected to fulfill. The erasure or blurring of these various distinctions… would have made Christianity seem radical and offensive.” Right! Of course! That's what happens when people join new or different religions. Not everyone has the guts to do it (though many have long felt alienated, and have silently waited for some new option to present itself). Holding seems to be arguing that no one converts to new religions except by a miracle of God.

Holding, then, insists that ancient people, much more part of a group-mentality than we are, would not have been likely to break with family and convention to join a new sect. I doubt this, in view of the cosmopolitan character of the Hellenistic Roman Empire when it would have been scarcely less difficult than it is today to run into members of other religions. There was already beginning to be what Peter Berger calls a “heretical imperative” to choose for oneself. But this was probably less true for Palestinian Jews. And yet some did break with their ancestral creeds to joining Christianity. Or did they? Remember, Christianity would have begun among Jews. “Faith in Jesus” may not even have amounted to a sect allegiance any more than did Rabbi Johannon ben-Zakkai’s controversial belief in the messianic claims of Simon bar-Kochbah.

But let us admit that the earliest Christians, as well as other venturesome souls who went out on a limb and joined a new sectarian group, had a lot of guts. All honor to them! But is this miraculous? I know Holding is ultimately trying to say that the evidence for the resurrection must have been pretty darn compelling to prompt such wrenching changes. But it isn't in our day, nor is it even the reason most people give for such conversions. And even supposing there were a few eyewitnesses of the resurrection, assuming it happened, how many of the early conversions can they have accounted for? And then, once you look at the next generation of second- and third-hand converts, the air is out of the tire. "Hey Crispus! I heard this really convincing guy talk about a vision he had!" That is lame. "I guess you had to be there." I see early conversions as motivated by something else than clincher apologetics. "Have you believed because you have seen? Blessed are those who have not seen yet believe" (John 20:29). "Without having seen him you love him; though you do not see him now, you believe in him and rejoice with unutterable and exalted joy" (1 Peter 1:8)

 

Every Idle Word

In the ancient world, we are told, everybody kept an eye on everybody else. Little escaped a neighbor’s scrutiny. Surveillance and gossip were rife—much like today! “So now the skeptic has another conundrum. In a society where nothing escaped notice, there was indeed every reason to suppose that people hearing the Gospel message would check against the facts -- especially where a movement with a radical message like Christianity was concerned.” All salvationist sects required repentance and new birth. Jews required righteousness. What was so radical about it? “The empty tomb would be checked.” Maybe it was, and maybe it was found occupied, and maybe Christians with their will to believe found it as easy to ignore it as Creationists do the fossil record. Many people, after all, did not come to faith. Maybe this is why. We, at any rate, are in no position to check it out. And Holding begs the question by supposing that the earliest Christians even told such a story. I agree with Burton L. Mack (A Myth of Innocence: Mark and Christian Origins; The Lost Gospel: The Book of Q and Christian Origins; and Who Wrote the New Testament?) and others who suggest that the empty tomb story is a late addition to the preaching. 

“Matthew's story of resurrected saints would be checked out.” Two generations later? Not likely. Besides who would be reading/hearing this story but the members of Matthew's church in Antioch? “Lazarus would be sought out for questioning.” What, sixty or seventy years after event? He would be dead again by that time, supposing he was ever a historical character at all, and not just borrowed from the Lazarus of the Luke 16 parable. “Excessive honor claims, such as that Jesus had been vindicated, or his claims to be divine, would have been given close scrutiny.” By whom? It is a safe bet Malina and his Social Science colleagues do not mean to depict the ancients as mirror-image apologists as Holding does.

“And later, converts to the new faith would have to answer to their neighbors.” How many hearers of the resurrection preaching, which may not at first have included the empty tomb anyway, would have been in any position at all to "check it out"? "Master, I'd like several months off so I can travel over to Palestine and see if I can verify a story I heard from some street corner preacher, that a man rose from the dead over there fifty years ago. I'm hoping I can find his tomb, or maybe somebody who saw it a few days after the execution." And if we are thinking of hypothetical hearers of empty tomb claims in AD 34 or so, what makes Holding think they would be any more inclined to "check it out" than anybody in our day who heard Oral Roberts claiming he had witnessed a King Kong-sized apparition of Jesus in Tulsa one night?

            Besides, Holding's whole argument is misguided, as if one could adjudicate historical questions of what did happen by appealing to general tendencies of ancient temperaments and what would have happened. You can't just squeeze history out of peasant sociology, as Crossan does. He and Malina and the crew all tend to reduce Jesus to a mere instantiation of current trends, mores, etc.

 

“I Believe Because it is Absurd”

“Scholars of all persuasions have long recognized the ‘criteria of embarrassment’ as a marker for authentic words of Jesus. Places where Jesus claims to be ignorant (not knowing the day or hour of his return; not knowing who touched him in the crowd) or shows weakness are taken as honest recollections and authentic (even where miracles stories often are not!).” Surely, Holding reasons, the framers of a merely concocted religion would take more care to make their imaginary savior deity look good! Hence no one would take the gospel Jesus seriously—unless they had to. As usual, Holding grossly oversimplifies the historical situation. As John Warwick Montgomery observed, every gospel saying must have been offensive to somebody here or there in the early church. What offended Matthew (Jesus declining to be called "good," for example) did not offend Mark, and we may be able to suggest reasons Mark would have created it. At least no criterion of embarrassment will shield it. Other embarrassing sayings may yet be damage control, fending off something yet more embarrassing. Certainly Schmiedel was naive in thinking no Christian would ever have fabricated Mark 13:32, where Jesus says he does not know the time of the end. Obviously the point is to correct the impression of the immediate context that he did claim to know and that he was wrong, as C.S. Lewis (“The World’s Last Night”) admitted. For Jesus to disclaim knowledge was better than having him mistaken.

 

Junior Detectives

 “Encouraging people to verify claims and seek proof (and hence discouraging their gullibility) is a guaranteed way to get slammed if you are preaching lies. Let us suppose for a minute that you are trying to start a false religion. In order to support your false religion, you decide to make up a number of historical (i.e., testable) claims, and then hope that nobody would check up on them. What is the most important thing to do, if you have made up claims that are provably false? Well, of course, you don't go around encouraging people to check up on your claims, knowing that if they do so you will be found out!” Once a student in a class of mine insisted that the CEO of Proctor and Gamble had admitted on the Donahue TV show that he was a Satanist and that the corporate logo was Satanic symbolism as well. I told my student that this was an urban legend. Next time he brought in the crudely copied hand-bill he had read. It offered a New York City phone number and urged the reader to call and ask for the transcript of the show for so and so date. I called it. There was no connection at all with Donahue. The hoaxer had evidently assumed that the mere provision of this (fake) information would be so convincing as to deceive the reader into thinking just as my student did and just as Holding does. When the reader of 1 Corinthians 15 reads that Paul challenged him to go and ask the 500 brethren about their resurrection sightings, something Paul knew well the Corinthians would never have the leisure to do, he may be impressed, but Paul was taking no risks. The mere challenge in such a case functions as sufficient "proof." Note that he provides no clue as to the names or locations of these supposed witnesses. In the late Syriac hagiography, The Life of John Son of Zebedee,  the apostle similarly invites his hearers to check out the story of Jairus’ daughter, resurrected by Jesus. The idea is that the reader will understand that once upon a time the facts could have been checked out, even though it is too late for him personally to do so. This all proves nothing and indeed invites suspicion of imposture where it might not have arisen otherwise.

Holding imagines, with the eye of faith that calls thing which are not as though they were, that “Throughout the NT, the apostles encouraged people to check seek proof and verify facts: 1 Thessalonians 5:21 [says to] ‘Prove all things; hold fast that which is good.’” But this text refers, in context, to prophetic utterances which should not be dismissed out of hand but scrutinized, as in 1 Corinthians 14:29.

            “And when fledgling converts heeded this advice, not only did they remain converts (suggesting that the evidence held up under scrutiny), but the apostles described them as ‘noble’ for doing so: Acts 17:11[says,] ‘These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether those things were so.’” But this is only a much later description of a dubiously historical scene and in any case means only "See? The smart people agree with us!" And if Luke means us to take as representative the fanciful scripture "proofs" he has the apostles offer elsewhere in the book, we can hang it up right now.

 

Stigma and Dogma

“Christianity, as we can see, had every possible disadvantage as a faith… I propose that there is only one, broad explanation for Christianity overcoming these intolerable disadvantages, and that is that it had the ultimate rebuttal -- a certain, trustworthy, and undeniable witness to the resurrection of Jesus, the only event which, in the eyes of the ancients, would have vindicated Jesus' honor and overcome the innumerable stigmata of his life and death. It had certainty that could not be denied; in other words, enough early witnesses (as in, the 500!) with solid and indisputable testimony (no "vision of Jesus in the sky" but a tangible certainly of a physically resurrected body).” Finally we are reduced to this: It was plenty convincing to those in a position to know the inside story, so you ought to be convinced, too! Sorry, but I can only look at the meager fragments of evidence that survive, and they do not look promising.

If Holding deems the evidence for the resurrection to be so strong, then what is the point of all this business of “disadvantages” and so forth? Why beat around the bush rather than getting to the real business at hand? It is not as if he is shy to discuss the evidence in its own right, but the argument considered here is not only fallacious; it is wholly superfluous even if he is right in his other arguments for the resurrection.

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #231 on: November 25, 2008, 09:23:22 AM »
Faith to believe otherwise? Mass undead, magic godmen, etc...I guess Mo-ham-head must have ascended to heaven on a winged horse because Islam was so successful? ::)

Here Robert Price refutes your silly notion that Christianity had no sociological variable of explanation...

http://www.robertmprice.mindvendor.com/rev_holding.htm


Islam?  I thought we were talking about ancient, before Christianity, myths that you claim Christianity copied.  And you bring up Islam now?

Robert Price?  Okay.  Now, let's see your explanation, deity killer.

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #232 on: November 25, 2008, 09:44:35 AM »
Islam?  I thought we were talking about ancient, before Christianity, myths that you claim Christianity copied.  And you bring up Islam now?

Robert Price?  Okay.  Now, let's see your explanation, deity killer.

I never said Christianity 'copied' myths. My position is slightly different from An Luke's. I maintain that all these ideas and myths were freely borrowed in the ancient world and it's impossible to tell who came up with them first, needless to say, they were in wide circulation and there is nothing remarkable about the NT in this respect.

The point I am makin as well as R.Price is that appealing to miracles as the only possible explanation for the success of Christianity would be laughed off the stage in any academic circle, for example, if you were to write a dissertation on the factors contributing to the success of Christianity in the 1st century and your conclusion was that the miracles of the saviour are the only plausible explanation, you would fail. You cannot say: there is no reasonable, sociological reason why Christianity succeeded, hence it had to have been a miracle. No rational, educated person accepts this as an explanation.

If the NT is a 'biography' of a real person, why do we have no physical description whatsoever of Jesus? Why no other biographical data such as the 20 some years he was hanging out (apparently somewhere else in the world)? Why does indeed Jesus' life conform to the hero archetype pattern?:

Quote
Author Alan Dundes has compared this archetype with events in the life of Jesus, as recorded in the Christian Scriptures. 2 He found that Jesus' life contained almost all of the twenty two elements. Element #3 is missing, and #12 is a weak match. But the remaining twenty events are relatively precise matches:

His mother is a royal virgin. The Gospels of Matthew and Luke state that Jesus' mother is a virgin. (e.g. Matthew 1:23). The genealogies in the two gospels indicate that Joseph is of royal descent; Mary would partake of royalty by being married to Joseph. (e.g. Matthew 1:1-16).

His father is a king. Jesus is regarded to be the Son of God, and God is often referred to as King of Kings.

His father and mother are related. There is no match here. Nothing is known about the genealogy of Mary, so this cannot be confirmed. If the early Christians believed that Joseph and Mary were related, then this information did not make it into the Gospels.

His conception was unusual. Both the Gospels of Luke and of Matthew state that Jesus was conceived by Mary "from the Holy Spirit" without having engaged in sexual intercourse with a man. (Matthew 1:20),

He was said to be the son of God. This is seen throughout the Christian Scriptures. Considering only the first chapter of the Gospel of John, there are seven references to Jesus as the Son of God: as "The Word" being with God.
 as the "only begotten of the Father." 
 as the "only begotten Son"
 as "the Lamb of God." (2 times)
 as the "Son of God." (2 times)

There was an attempt to kill the hero while he was a child. In Matthew 2:16, Herod ordered that "all the Children who were in Bethlehem" and its vicinity were to be murdered. (KJV) 3 The NIV says that the slaughter was to be restricted to only male infants.

He was spirited away. Matthew 2:13-14 relates how an angel appeared to Joseph in a dream and told him to flee to Egypt with his family.

He was reared by foster parents in a country far away. Matthew 2:15 states that Jesus was raised in Egypt until Herod died, and it was safe for the family to return to Nazareth. Most hero myths involve a foster family. In the case of Yeshua, Joseph was not Jesus' father; Joseph was a type of foster father.

Little or no information is known about his childhood. The Christian Scriptures give almost no details about the life of Jesus, from the time that he was circumcised at the age of eight days (Luke 2:21) until his baptism at about the age of 30. The only exception is Luke 2:46-49 where, at the age of 12, he was described as having been taken to Jerusalem at the time of Passover. He is described as debating theological matters with the priests. Presenting the hero as a child prodigy does not appear in the Mythic Hero Archetype being considered here. However, Robert Price states that "it is a frequent mytheme in other hero tales not considered by Raglan..." 1

He goes to a future kingdom. Jesus went to Jerusalem just before his last Passover, where he was declared king by the public. John 12:12-13 says that "a great multitude took branches of palm trees and went out to meet Him, and cried out: 'Hosanna! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord! The King of Israel!' " (NKJ)

He is victorious over the king. The passage in John 18:36-37 describes how Jesus demonstrated superior debating skill when interviewed by Pilate. More importantly, Jesus' resurrection which was mentioned in all four Gospels and many additional locations in the Christian Scriptures is the ultimate victory over the king who was responsible for ordering the crucifixion. Pilate ordered Jesus death and Jesus was triumphant. Pilate was not a king; he was a procurator -- a type of governor. But he still had enormous power.

He marries a princess. There is no match here -- only the suggestion of a tie-in. There is no record of Jesus having been married. However, some theologians have suggested that the miracle story in which he converts water into wine may have taken place at his own wedding. The Gospels talk extensively about women being in Jesus' retinue during his ministry. In the culture of Palestine during the 1st century CE, these female followers would have had to be married to Jesus and/or the disciples, or they were prostitutes. One assumes the former, because one would otherwise expect the Pharisees to repeatedly and viciously criticize Jesus for moral laxity if he was followed by a crowd of hookers. It has been argued that Jesus was probably married. Jewish society strongly pressured men to marry while young; if Jesus remained single, then one would have expected the Pharisees to criticize him for remaining a bachelor. Luke 8:3 indicates that one of the women who followed Jesus was at least close to King Herod.

He becomes king. John 18:36-37 describes how the people of Jerusalem proclaimed him the King of Israel. Pilate jokingly recognizes that the public considered Jesus as a king in Mark 15:12 and John 19:15. In Mark 15:18, the Roman soldiers jokingly referred to him as king of the Jews. A plaque was placed above his head during the execution. It called him "The King of the Jews."  (e.g. Mark 15:26).

He reigns uneventfully, for a while. He does not reign in the sense of having temporal power. However, Mark 12:27 to 13: describes how he holds court in the Jerusalem temple.
He prescribes laws. In Mark 12 and 13, "...He issues teachings, parables, and prophecies, which are taken with legal force by his followers." 1

He loses favor with the gods or his subjects. The Gospels record how the public turns against Jesus and demands that he be crucified. (e.g. John 19:15).

He is driven from the throne and city. In Luke 23:26-32, he is led out of the city by Roman soldiers.

He has a mysterious death. During Jesus' crucifixion, he died after an unexpectedly short time. (John 19:31-33). More mysterious than that were the events at the time of his death. Luke 23:44-45 describes how the sun stopped shining and the curtain in the temple was torn in two. Matthew 27:51-53 describes major earthquakes sufficiently strong to split rocks. Matthew also discusses the resurrection of many people from their graves, who subsequently entered the city and appeared to many people.

He dies at the top of a hill: He was executed on the hill of Golgotha, on top of Mount Calvary.

If he has any children, they do not succeed him. There is nothing in the Christian Scriptures to indicate that Jesus had children. It was Jesus brother, James, who succeeded him as leader of the disciples, and the head of the Jewish Christian group in Jerusalem. (Some faith groups regard James as Jesus' step-brother, cousin or friend).

His body was not buried: Rather that being buried in an earthen grave, his body was temporarily laid out in a rock cave. At some unknown time between late Friday afternoon, when he was laid in the tomb, and the following Sunday morning, the Gospels all say that Jesus was resurrected. Price comments that this "would seem to be within legitimate variant-distance of the ideal legend type." 1

One or more holy sepulchers are built: The Church of the Holy Sepulcher was built over the place where many Christians believe that Jesus was executed.


Jesus gets 18 or 19 points of 22 in total, which is exceptionally high.

Why do we have no detailed, written documentation outside of the Bible? We have plenty for Apollonius of Tyana and we even have letters written by him; many of the same miracles are attributed to him.

Why was the NT compiled some 40 years after the alleged death of the Christ?  Why are Luke and Matthew copies of Mark?

Why is the NT a muck of contradictions and countervailing observations?

Yup...only a miracle expplains it all. ::)
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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #233 on: November 25, 2008, 10:40:23 AM »
I never said Christianity 'copied' myths. My position is slightly different from An Luke's. I maintain that all these ideas and myths were freely borrowed in the ancient world and it's impossible to tell who came up with them first, needless to say, they were in wide circulation and there is nothing remarkable about the NT in this respect.

The point I am makin as well as R.Price is that appealing to miracles as the only possible explanation for the success of Christianity would be laughed off the stage in any academic circle, for example, if you were to write a dissertation on the factors contributing to the success of Christianity in the 1st century and your conclusion was that the miracles of the saviour are the only plausible explanation, you would fail. You cannot say: there is no reasonable, sociological reason why Christianity succeeded, hence it had to have been a miracle. No rational, educated person accepts this as an explanation.

Except for:

Dr. Bruce Metzger (deceased)
Dr. Gary Habermas
Dr. Sam Lamerson
Dr. Paul Meier
Dr. D. James Kennedy (deceased)
Dr. Edwin Yamauchi
Dr. D.A. Carson
........stop me anytime you like   ;D


If the NT is a 'biography' of a real person, why do we have no physical description whatsoever of Jesus? Why no other biographical data such as the 20 some years he was hanging out (apparently somewhere else in the world)? Why does indeed Jesus' life conform to the hero archetype pattern?:
 

Jesus gets 18 or 19 points of 22 in total, which is exceptionally high.

Why do we have no detailed, written documentation outside of the Bible? We have plenty for Apollonius of Tyana and we even have letters written by him; many of the same miracles are attributed to him.

Ummmmm.....Apolonius came from a prestigious family and taught at the finest schools. Jesus was a carpenter, by trade, tried and executed as a criminal. Exactly what royal scribe is going to undertake any major biography of someone with that profile?

Once again, you make the erroneous assumption that the celebrity (for lack of a better term), that Jesus would have hundreds of years later, He would have had during His lifetime.

Why was the NT compiled some 40 years after the alleged death of the Christ?  Why are Luke and Matthew copies of Mark?


Why is the NT a muck of contradictions and countervailing observations?

Yup...only a miracle expplains it all. ::)


Your claim of Luke and Matthew being copies of Mark is quite dubious, espeically given the information to the contrary by traditional scholars. As for the compliation thing, you'll excuse me if I missed the rule that dictates that information about a historical figure MUST be gathered immediately after His death. Or do you keep forgetting that most historical data, regarding ancient figures, come from sources and authors who lived after their lifetime.

As for the "muck of contradictions", that is little but skeptic fodder, most of which has been dismantled by Christian scholars hundreds of years ago (i.e. the alleged contradiction about the date of birth for Jesus Christ).

Author Alan Dundes has compared this archetype with events in the life of Jesus, as recorded in the Christian Scriptures. 2 He found that Jesus' life contained almost all of the twenty two elements. Element #3 is missing, and #12 is a weak match. But the remaining twenty events are relatively precise matches:

Precise matches……..Is that right?

His mother is a royal virgin. The Gospels of Matthew and Luke state that Jesus' mother is a virgin. (e.g. Matthew 1:23). The genealogies in the two gospels indicate that Joseph is of royal descent; Mary would partake of royalty by being married to Joseph. (e.g. Matthew 1:1-16).

Yep, royalty by becoming the wife of a CARPENTER. As for the virgin stuff, Mary’s virginity is mentioned ONLY in regards to her conception and giving birth to Jesus Christ. NOTHING is mentioned about her being a virgin afterwards.

His father is a king. Jesus is regarded to be the Son of God, and God is often referred to as King of Kings.

His father and mother are related. There is no match here. Nothing is known about the genealogy of Mary, so this cannot be confirmed. If the early Christians believed that Joseph and Mary were related, then this information did not make it into the Gospels.

His heavenly Father is such; His earthly father is NOT. And in the book of Mark, Jesus is referenced as the son of the carpenter.


His conception was unusual. Both the Gospels of Luke and of Matthew state that Jesus was conceived by Mary "from the Holy Spirit" without having engaged in sexual intercourse with a man. (Matthew 1:20),

He was said to be the son of God. This is seen throughout the Christian Scriptures. Considering only the first chapter of the Gospel of John, there are seven references to Jesus as the Son of God: as "The Word" being with God.
 as the "only begotten of the Father." 
 as the "only begotten Son"
 as "the Lamb of God." (2 times)
 as the "Son of God." (2 times)

Yep, Mary did conceive without sexual intercourse, a far cry from the other figures from which Jesus was supposedly crafted, nearly all of which is some male deity (i.e. Zeus) getting his freak on, either outright or on the sneak with some mortal woman, with or without her cognizance.


There was an attempt to kill the hero while he was a child. In Matthew 2:16, Herod ordered that "all the Children who were in Bethlehem" and its vicinity were to be murdered. (KJV) 3 The NIV says that the slaughter was to be restricted to only male infants.

He was spirited away. Matthew 2:13-14 relates how an angel appeared to Joseph in a dream and told him to flee to Egypt with his family.

He was reared by foster parents in a country far away. Matthew 2:15 states that Jesus was raised in Egypt until Herod died, and it was safe for the family to return to Nazareth. Most hero myths involve a foster family. In the case of Yeshua, Joseph was not Jesus' father; Joseph was a type of foster father.

Oh brother!!! Jesus was about two when this decree hit and Joseph took Him to Egypt. Nothing in the Gospels states that He was raised in Egypt. Since Herod died in 4 B.C., Jesus would have been all of 3 or 4 years old, when Herod croaks, Archaleus takes the throne, and Joseph returns to Nazareth.

Little or no information is known about his childhood. The Christian Scriptures give almost no details about the life of Jesus, from the time that he was circumcised at the age of eight days (Luke 2:21) until his baptism at about the age of 30. The only exception is Luke 2:46-49 where, at the age of 12, he was described as having been taken to Jerusalem at the time of Passover. He is described as debating theological matters with the priests. Presenting the hero as a child prodigy does not appear in the Mythic Hero Archetype being considered here. However, Robert Price states that "it is a frequent mytheme in other hero tales not considered by Raglan..." 1

I hope that, unlike so many others here, Price actually has some backup about his claims about a “child prodigy”. With that said, the Gospels record His doing that just once. His ministry doesn’t start until about two decades later. Exactly what riveting information does one need to know about a young carpenter boy?

He goes to a future kingdom. Jesus went to Jerusalem just before his last Passover, where he was declared king by the public. John 12:12-13 says that "a great multitude took branches of palm trees and went out to meet Him, and cried out: 'Hosanna! Blessed is He who comes in the name of the Lord! The King of Israel!' " (NKJ)

He is victorious over the king. The passage in John 18:36-37 describes how Jesus demonstrated superior debating skill when interviewed by Pilate. More importantly, Jesus' resurrection which was mentioned in all four Gospels and many additional locations in the Christian Scriptures is the ultimate victory over the king who was responsible for ordering the crucifixion. Pilate ordered Jesus death and Jesus was triumphant. Pilate was not a king; he was a procurator -- a type of governor. But he still had enormous power.

He marries a princess. There is no match here -- only the suggestion of a tie-in. There is no record of Jesus having been married. However, some theologians have suggested that the miracle story in which he converts water into wine may have taken place at his own wedding. The Gospels talk extensively about women being in Jesus' retinue during his ministry. In the culture of Palestine during the 1st century CE, these female followers would have had to be married to Jesus and/or the disciples, or they were prostitutes. One assumes the former, because one would otherwise expect the Pharisees to repeatedly and viciously criticize Jesus for moral laxity if he was followed by a crowd of hookers. It has been argued that Jesus was probably married. Jewish society strongly pressured men to marry while young; if Jesus remained single, then one would have expected the Pharisees to criticize him for remaining a bachelor. Luke 8:3 indicates that one of the women who followed Jesus was at least close to King Herod.

The Pharisees would have criticized Jesus, regardless of what He did. In fact, they kept trying to trip Him up, regarding matters of the Hebrew Law.


He becomes king. John 18:36-37 describes how the people of Jerusalem proclaimed him the King of Israel. Pilate jokingly recognizes that the public considered Jesus as a king in Mark 15:12 and John 19:15. In Mark 15:18, the Roman soldiers jokingly referred to him as king of the Jews. A plaque was placed above his head during the execution. It called him "The King of the Jews."  (e.g. Mark 15:26).

He reigns uneventfully, for a while. He does not reign in the sense of having temporal power. However, Mark 12:27 to 13: describes how he holds court in the Jerusalem temple.
He prescribes laws. In Mark 12 and 13, "...He issues teachings, parables, and prophecies, which are taken with legal force by his followers." 1

He loses favor with the gods or his subjects. The Gospels record how the public turns against Jesus and demands that he be crucified. (e.g. John 19:15).

We know the reason for that. Again, it’s because Jesus wasn’t the Roman-killing, restore-Israel-to-prominence Messiah they wanted.

He is driven from the throne and city. In Luke 23:26-32, he is led out of the city by Roman soldiers.

He has a mysterious death. During Jesus' crucifixion, he died after an unexpectedly short time. (John 19:31-33). More mysterious than that were the events at the time of his death. Luke 23:44-45 describes how the sun stopped shining and the curtain in the temple was torn in two. Matthew 27:51-53 describes major earthquakes sufficiently strong to split rocks. Matthew also discusses the resurrection of many people from their graves, who subsequently entered the city and appeared to many people.

And what’s so strange about crucifixion, especially during the Roman empire?

He dies at the top of a hill: He was executed on the hill of Golgotha, on top of Mount Calvary.


If he has any children, they do not succeed him. There is nothing in the Christian Scriptures to indicate that Jesus had children. It was Jesus brother, James, who succeeded him as leader of the disciples, and the head of the Jewish Christian group in Jerusalem. (Some faith groups regard James as Jesus' step-brother, cousin or friend).

James? I thought Peter became the leader of the disciples. As for James, that’s the listed name of one of Jesus’ four brothers, according to Mark 6.


His body was not buried: Rather that being buried in an earthen grave, his body was temporarily laid out in a rock cave. At some unknown time between late Friday afternoon, when he was laid in the tomb, and the following Sunday morning, the Gospels all say that Jesus was resurrected. Price comments that this "would seem to be within legitimate variant-distance of the ideal legend type."

That would be a tomb, specifically the tomb of one Joseph of Arimithea. I’d love to know what’s so unusual about a DEAD Man being buried in a tomb. Plus, as stated earlier, many of the so-called legends DO NOT resurrect from the dead.

It appears that Dundes doesn't have all his facts straight (am I the only one that's noticing this recurring pattern with these guys, claiming that Jesus was formed from some pagan "blueprint"?).

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #234 on: November 25, 2008, 12:03:06 PM »
See above for a prime example of hysterical blindness.



The Luke

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #235 on: November 25, 2008, 12:20:58 PM »
See above for a prime example of hysterical blindness.



The Luke

I repeat that: 'it was a miracle' is not an acceptacle explanation of anything. It fails in the natural sciences and in the social sciences and it certainly fails in history as well. The claim is quite laughable really; Christianity's success can only be explained by the miraculous. I can't even begin to bother addressing such a point.

With MCWAY, there is just no point, he claims there are no contradictions in the Bible, particularly the NT; even if Jesus had been a real person, the accounts of him are MUCKS of contradictions.
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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #236 on: November 25, 2008, 12:38:33 PM »
See above for a prime example of hysterical blindness.



The Luke

I see well enough to know that  you continue to punk out and NOT produce the sources from which you claim that Attis and the other gods from the so-called “mystery religions” died via crucifixion.

Maybe I should refer to that as “hysterical cowardice”. After all, here’s a poster (that would be you), who keeps running his mouth about “mystery religion”-this and “mystery religion”-that. But, when asked to bring forth the references, you clam up like an oyster.

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #237 on: November 25, 2008, 12:51:21 PM »
I see well enough to know that  you continue to punk out and NOT produce the sources from which you claim that Attis and the other gods from the so-called “mystery religions” died via crucifixion.

Maybe I should refer to that as “hysterical cowardice”. After all, here’s a poster (that would be you), who keeps running his mouth about “mystery religion”-this and “mystery religion”-that. But, when asked to bring forth the references, you clam up like an oyster.


I repeat: calling something a miracle explains nothing and is unacceptable in virtually all circles of discourse.
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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #238 on: November 25, 2008, 12:59:09 PM »
I repeat that: 'it was a miracle' is not an acceptacle explanation of anything. It fails in the natural sciences and in the social sciences and it certainly fails in history as well. The claim is quite laughable really; Christianity's success can only be explained by the miraculous. I can't even begin to bother addressing such a point.

With MCWAY, there is just no point, he claims there are no contradictions in the Bible, particularly the NT; even if Jesus had been a real person, the accounts of him are MUCKS of contradictions.

Not acceptable explanation to WHOM?

Not acceptable to whom?

Something happened to make the disciples go from being fearful, saying “Our Master has been crucified” to being ready to die for this Jesus. The question is what? The only thing that fits the criteria is the Resurrection- Dr. Sam Lamerson, Knox Theological Seminary (from "Who Is This Jesus? Is He Risen?)

"The interesting thing about the early Christians is not just that they went from being a dejected, frightened, and muddle group, to being a brave, dynamic, and lively and outgoing group--though that's true, too--is that they didn't get another Messiah they said that Jesus was the Messiah. And since everyone knew that a crucified Messiah was a failed Messiah, the only thing that explains why they said that Jesus was the Messiah is that they believed that He'd been bodily raised from the dead" - Dr. N.T. Wright, Westminster Abbey (also from "Who Is This Jesus? Is He Risen?")



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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #239 on: November 25, 2008, 01:01:49 PM »
I repeat: calling something a miracle explains nothing and is unacceptable in virtually all circles of discourse.

I repeat: Who is making up this rule about what is or isn’t acceptable?

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #240 on: November 25, 2008, 01:06:43 PM »
I repeat: Who is making up this rule about what is or isn’t acceptable?

Every major scholar/scientist in the world.
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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #241 on: November 25, 2008, 01:26:46 PM »
Every major scholar/scientist in the world.

That's funny!!!

The scholars I just mentioned (hardly an exhaustive list) don't quite see it that way......NEXT!!!!!

And, on another note, since you're so eager to post Robert Price's statements, regarding his take on the words of apologetic website owner, J.P. Holding, it's only fitting that we hear Mr. Holding's reaction in kind. Here's a sample; the rest can be found on the link (Price's words are in red; Holding's words are in green):

Feeling Cross?

Citing 1 Corinthians 1:18 (“For the preaching of the cross is to them that perish foolishness; but unto us which are saved it is the power of God.”), Holding asks rhetorically, “Who on earth would believe a religion centered on a crucified man?” He contends that crucifixion was so repulsive and degrading a punishment that no one could have taken a crucified man seriously as a religious founder. On top of that, no one could have envisioned the notion of a god stooping to undergo such treatment. “This being the case, we may fairly ask… why Christianity succeeded at all. The ignominy of a crucified savior was as much a deterrent to Christian belief as it is today - indeed, it was far, far more so! Why, then, were there any Christians at all? At best this should have been a movement that had only a few strange followers, then died out within decades as a footnote, if it was mentioned at all. The historical reality of the crucifixion could not of course be denied. To survive, Christianity should have either turned Gnostic (as indeed happened in some offshoots), or else not bothered with Jesus at all, and merely made him into the movement's first martyr for a higher moral ideal within Judaism. It would have been absurd to suggest, to either Jew or Gentile, that a crucified being was worthy of worship or died for our sins. There can be only one good explanation: Christianity succeeded because from the cross came victory, and after death came resurrection! The shame of the cross turns out to be one of Christianity's most incontrovertible proofs!”

One would wish to see Price interact as well with my material on honor and shame. But no, from here we have:

This is completely futile and does not begin to take into account the religious appetite (in many people) for the grotesque and the sanguine.

Please note that in essence, Price's reply is like Carrier's own "well, there must have been exceptions, people who liked crucified men" deal, for which he provides not a shred of evidence (against the data of Hengel, et al.); moreover, his comparisons below are entirely misplaced. None are related by Price to the honor-shame dichotomy (in fact, of all of his first examples come from modern, Western society, where the dichotomy has disappeared), and moreover:

Just look at the eagerly morbid piety of Roman Catholics and fundamentalist advocates of "the Blood" who wallow in every gruesome detail of the crucifixion, real or imagined. Consider the box office receipts of Mel Gibson’s pious gore-fest The Passion of the Christ.

...all come from "after the fact" of Christianity as a millennias-old religion. Jesus did not have the advantage of 2000 years of sanitizing of crucifixion as an acceptable form of death. Price moves though to a familiar ancient example:

In ancient times, think of the Attis cult which centered upon the suicide of its savior who castrated himself and bled to death. Street corner celebrations of such rites invariably attracted bystanders, even initially hostile ones, swept up in the music and chanting, to castrate themselves and join the sect on the spot!

And this we have already answered: As for Attis, good point -- do you see a church of Attis today? The Attis cults fit the Sabbatai model, although they also did have the advantage of being in a time when the body was considered by many to be base and evil. Under such considerations castration was arguably not absurd at all. In any event there isn't any parallel here to Christianity, which did not die off, and had much worse to defend itself on. Price would have done well, we may note, to have read all of my supplemental essays as well as the main one.


And even if one stops short of the Christ Myth theory, one must still reckon with the possibility, as advocated by Bultmann and others, that the crucifixion of Jesus would still have been readily embraceable as a means of salvation because of the familiarity of the dying and rising god mytheme.

This of course is one of Price's particular fancies; we have shown either that the candidates from DARGs are nothing like Jesus, or postdated Christianity. In addition, of all the DARGs none ever suffered a humiliating death (other than Inanna and perhaps Attis, who are irrelevant because the former was also restored, and the latter did not offer salvation). More cannot be said since Price does not name a particular DARG for discussion other than Attis above.


It was a familiar religious conception, and no less so because of Hellenistic Judaism's martyrdom doctrine as glimpsed in 2 and 4 Maccabees, where the hideous deaths (much more fulsomely dwelt upon than the crucifixion is in the gospels) are set forth as expiations for the sins of Israel. See Sam K. Williams, The Death of Jesus as Saving Event.


Carrier too attempted a comparison to the Maccabees, and our answer is the same: No one was called to worship them, and the Maccabbeans were heroes fighting in favor of a common cause of political and religious freedom, already popular with the people (which does NOT apply to Jesus and to new converts).


Finally, crucifixion was not a taboo subject, as witnessed by the frequent occurrence of crucifixion in dream interpretation manuals, where dreaming of being crucified was typically taken as a good omen of impending success.

Unfortunately Price fails to give a single example of this, or what date it comes from, or what source it derives from. What little I can find does not support his claim. A site on modern dream interpretation at http://www.experiencefestival.com/a/Meaning_of_Dreams/id/35696 says, If you chance to dream of the crucifixion, you will see your opportunities slip away, tearing your hopes from your grasp, and leaving you wailing over the frustration of desires. Price gives us nothing to show that this was a dream interpretation from an ancient or relevant source.

           

http://www.tektonics.org/lp/nowayjose_CC3.html

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #242 on: November 25, 2008, 02:25:08 PM »
i opened this thread to read it but i realized i dont care anymore, carry on.

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #243 on: November 25, 2008, 02:30:54 PM »
i opened this thread to read it but i realized i dont care anymore, carry on.

It is dragging on a bit now.

At the end of the day, miracles don't happen, God doesn't exist, you can't fit 2 of every animal on a boat, and when you die you're dead.  As in dead dead.

The only way to prove me wrong is for God to come down and turn every blade of grass in my garden into a £50 note.  (I wonder if David Copperfield could... maybe he's God?)   ;D ;D ;D

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #244 on: November 26, 2008, 04:56:10 AM »
It is dragging on a bit now.

The reason this thread has dragged onward is primarily because, for all of his bold claims, Luke has not produced what has been asked of him numerous times: The “mystery religion” accounts that verify that Attis, Osiris, Buddha, of any of these other deities died via crucifixion, as Jesus Christ did.

The crux of his “challenge” was that no one could produce aspects of the account and life of Jesus Christ that wasn’t supposedly lifted from pagan religions.

He then rattled off a bunch of similarities, claiming that these other gods lived and died in the same fashion as Jesus Christ. But, when it came time for him to back up his words, all we got was empty rhetoric (and a Zeitgeist video, filled with more of the same).

I pointed out the differences between those Jesus Christ and those other gods, posting not only, what Luke called the “folklore” accounts but the “mystery religion” aspects as well, giving references and using numerous sources.

What did Luke produce? Excuses, false accusations of misquoting his words (despite copying and pasting his very statements, word for word), and attempts to reinterpret the word, “crucifixion”, in order to bolster his hollow claims.

Not only were his statements about the information in the Gospels way off, but those about the accounts of the pagan gods were shown to be faulty as well. He can’t make up his mind. When you ask him to provide references, he ducks away and demands that you look it up for yourself. But, once you do that and find that the accounts don’t match his declarations, he starts whining about using “Google-Fu” and claiming that you’re not looking in the right places, etc.

His assertion about this "dying/resurrecting godman blueprint" is, to say the least, inaccurate. Why?

- At least three deities listed do not resurrect after dying (Osiris, Attis, Dionysus).

- At least one doesn't die at all. (Mithras)

- At least three deities listed were NOT "virgin-born"; many involve a male god, getting his swerve on with mortal women; one involved some necrophilia-bestality stuff.

- None of them, except perhaps Mithras, have been shown to be born Dec. 25, notwithstanding the fact that Jesus was not shown to be born on that date, anyway.

- None of them died via crucifixion, despite Luke's flimsy attempts to salvage a post-mortem crucifixion from vague "tree" references.


At the end of the day, miracles don't happen, God doesn't exist, you can't fit 2 of every animal on a boat, and when you die you're dead.  As in dead dead.

There are billions of people who disagree with your conclusion, for various reasons. But, that's another subject for another time. Of course, one would think that, if most atheists were as confident about that, they wouldn't spend so much energy getting bent out of shape about something they don't believe to exist.


The only way to prove me wrong is for God to come down and turn every blade of grass in my garden into a £50 note.  (I wonder if David Copperfield could... maybe he's God?)   ;D ;D ;D

The BUCS won a Super Bowl.............That's "miracle" enough for me!!!! ;D


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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #245 on: November 26, 2008, 08:24:12 AM »
The reason this thread has dragged onward is primarily because, for all of his bold claims, Luke has not produced what has been asked of him numerous times: The “mystery religion” accounts that verify that Attis, Osiris, Buddha, of any of these other deities died via crucifixion, as Jesus Christ did.

The crux of his “challenge” was that no one could produce aspects of the account and life of Jesus Christ that wasn’t supposedly lifted from pagan religions.

He then rattled off a bunch of similarities, claiming that these other gods lived and died in the same fashion as Jesus Christ. But, when it came time for him to back up his words, all we got was empty rhetoric (and a Zeitgeist video, filled with more of the same).

I pointed out the differences between those Jesus Christ and those other gods, posting not only, what Luke called the “folklore” accounts but the “mystery religion” aspects as well, giving references and using numerous sources.

What did Luke produce? Excuses, false accusations of misquoting his words (despite copying and pasting his very statements, word for word), and attempts to reinterpret the word, “crucifixion”, in order to bolster his hollow claims.

Not only were his statements about the information in the Gospels way off, but those about the accounts of the pagan gods were shown to be faulty as well. He can’t make up his mind. When you ask him to provide references, he ducks away and demands that you look it up for yourself. But, once you do that and find that the accounts don’t match his declarations, he starts whining about using “Google-Fu” and claiming that you’re not looking in the right places, etc.

His assertion about this "dying/resurrecting godman blueprint" is, to say the least, inaccurate. Why?

- At least three deities listed do not resurrect after dying (Osiris, Attis, Dionysus).

- At least one doesn't die at all. (Mithras)

- At least three deities listed were NOT "virgin-born"; many involve a male god, getting his swerve on with mortal women; one involved some necrophilia-bestality stuff.

- None of them, except perhaps Mithras, have been shown to be born Dec. 25, notwithstanding the fact that Jesus was not shown to be born on that date, anyway.

- None of them died via crucifixion, despite Luke's flimsy attempts to salvage a post-mortem crucifixion from vague "tree" references.

There are billions of people who disagree with your conclusion, for various reasons. But, that's another subject for another time. Of course, one would think that, if most atheists were as confident about that, they wouldn't spend so much energy getting bent out of shape about something they don't believe to exist.


The BUCS won a Super Bowl.............That's "miracle" enough for me!!!! ;D



MCWAY, you have owned yourself by claiming that 'miracle' is an acceptable explanation of phenomena. I am a graduate student in linguistics; if I produced a paper with the conclusion that a miracle is responsible for said phenomenon, I would fail. Rightly so. You have lost all credit here.
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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #246 on: November 26, 2008, 10:58:32 AM »
MCWAY, you have owned yourself by claiming that 'miracle' is an acceptable explanation of phenomena. I am a graduate student in linguistics; if I produced a paper with the conclusion that a miracle is responsible for said phenomenon, I would fail. Rightly so. You have lost all credit here.

Maybe, if you actually put a coherent thought together, instead of obsessing over who is “owning” whom, you’d actually make some sense.

You're a graduate student in linguistics....good for you. But, what you conveniently forget is that the conclusion that you swear would fail has been reached by many who have PH.Ds in the subject matter, such as the late Dr. Bruce Metzger, retired professor from Princeton Theological Seminary.

And, before you spout off about my owning myself, get your story straight. The issue you brought to the table, with your post from Price's works, was some attempt to explain the growth of the Christian church WITHOUT the Ressurection of Jesus Christ, as old tactic that atheists have been trying to use for nearly two centuries, that has failed miserably.

All of these stale arguments have been bulldozed to the ground, by the historical/archaeological data, regarding the early Christians.

To reiterate the words from Bible scholars on this issue of Christianity, itself (and the first one’s for you, Loco  ;D    ):


"If it (the Resurrection) had just been a spiritual resurrection, the enemies of the New Testament church would have taken the body of Jesus Christ, put it on a cart and walked it down the streets of Jerusalem, killing Christianity not just in the cradle but in the womb. There would have been no New Testament church, if they had the body" – Josh McDowell

”Where did Christianity first begin, in terms of the organized proclamation that Jesus rose from the dead? Only one place on Earth, Jerusalem. There, least of all, could Christianity have ever gotten started, if the moldering body of Jesus of Nazareth were available, anytime after Sunday morning.” – Dr. Paul Meier, Russell H. Seibert Professor of Ancient History, Western Michigan University.

Something happened to make the disciples go from being fearful, saying “Our Master has been crucified” to being ready to die for this Jesus. The question is what? The only thing that fits the criteria is the Resurrection- Dr. Sam Lamerson, Knox Theological Seminary (from "Who Is This Jesus? Is He Risen?)

"The interesting thing about the early Christians is not just that they went from being a dejected, frightened, and muddle group, to being a brave, dynamic, and lively and outgoing group--though that's true, too--is that they didn't get another Messiah they said that Jesus was the Messiah. And since everyone knew that a crucified Messiah was a failed Messiah, the only thing that explains why they said that Jesus was the Messiah is that they believed that He'd been bodily raised from the dead" - Dr. N.T. Wright, Westminster Abbey (also from "Who Is This Jesus? Is He Risen?")


Of course, my previous post wasn't even about this issue. It was a summation of Luke's pitiful challenge (or lack thereof) and how easy it was to flatten.

His take that the life of Jesus Christ was taken from other pagan figures, following some generic "dying/resurrecting godman blueprint" rings all to hollow. Not only is that not true of Jesus Christ, it isn't even true (in most cases) for the figures from which he claims Jesus was crafted.

Again, how does it fit this so-called “blueprint”, when you have:

-   gods that don’t die at all
-   gods that don’t die via crucifixion
-   gods that die but don’t’ rise from the dead
-   gods who aren’t virgin-born
-   gods who weren’t born Dec. 25
-   gods who don’t redeem mankind from anything for any reason?

Luke's inability to give reference to these other gods, meeting this "blueprint" (much less Jesus Christ Himself) exposes his takes for the weak and unsubstantiated drivel that it is.

And, the ease by which Price's attempts to account for something, other than the Resurrection, as being the foundation of Christianity, exposes YOUR takes for much the same thing.

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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #247 on: November 26, 2008, 11:00:45 AM »
Deicide,

This thread has stagnated because McWay is using obstructionist practices to run circles around the original challenge... it's the typical Creationist/Christian "You can't prove it doesn't!" tactic., albeit a little more subtly applied.


The original challenge was for anyone to find a single original detail in the Jesus story... no one has.


We have to be careful not to play into his game. When he insists upon turning the challenge around we must resist the temptation to assume we are having a logical debate with a rational person... we are not.

Notice how he has always steered the conversation towards imposing the onus of proving a negative upon his opponents... then claims victory.

Notice how he has couched his arguments... he sets the definition so as to immediately invalidate the opposing (rational) viewpoint:

-the virgin birth is original... because McWay deems the birth of Horus merely magical. The Egyptians obviously DID consider the birth of child via impregnation by a ghost to be a virgin birth as they named the mother version of Isis "Mary Isis, the Virgin". So why do we listen to McWay's opinion on this, aren't the ancient Egyptians more versed in ancient Egyptian belief?

-Jesus wasn't born on the 25th of December according to McWay... because no such date is explicitly given in the gospels. When I argue that such a date is hinted at by the collusion of astrological metaphors in the nativity story: the traveling magi, the bright star in the east etc etc... rather than argue the validity of these conspicuous astrological symbols, he places the onus on me to quote the Gospel verse that explicitly gives 25th of December as the date of Jesus' birth (ie: prove a negative), when I never made any such claim.
Rather than address this dishonest misquoting, he simply insists on MY quoting verses that don't exist in order to back up a claim I never made... then chides me for failing to do the impossible. Again, why do we listen to McWay on this point... the early Church Fathers came to the conclusion that the astrological symbolism encoded in the Nativity story did indeed indicate December 25th as Jesus' birth date (hence our celebration of Christmas). Did the early Church Fathers know more about this that McWay?  

-Attis wasn't crucified according to McWay... as he was merely nailed to a cross/tree after his death. While this may be a valid criticism, it relies upon a chronically narrow interpretation of the word "crucifixion". McWay has posted dictionary definitions... and if you purposely chose to selectively accept only the one particular dictionary definition of the word which McWay wishes to use as the basis of an intellectually dishonest exclusionary argument... then yes, maybe he might have a point.
But again we are playing his game... and we shouldn't. The real question as it pertains to this thread is whether the crucifixion of Jesus has any precursors in previous religions... obviously it does in Attis being nailed to a tree. Again, why do we listen to McWay on this point... is he the definer of terms? The arbiter of what does and does not meet the standard of plagiarism?


What we must note is what McWay is NOT arguing... for it is in what he merely dismisses that we find the purpose of his hair-splitting and minutiae nit-picking. He simply makes a fuss about something trivial hoping we don't notice what he ISN'T addressing.

He keeps chiding me to produce the gospel verse giving Jesus' birth date as 25th December, using such admonishments as "as you claimed it did"... I never made any such claim, and McWay knows it. I merely stated that the gospel stories hint at such a date ("indirectly") through the preponderance of Mystery Religion astrological metaphors used, which they do. But the purpose of such an argument is not merely to deliberately misquote me... it is to steer the conversation in such a way that he can continuously goad me for apparently failing to meet his supposed "challenge" all the while being able to state and restate for emphasis that such an explicit date is not found in the gospels.

This way it SEEMS as if he is winning the argument... while he never has to address the patently obvious plagiarism of pagan Mystery Religion blueprint in the Jesus story.


Similarly, McWay won't touch:
-the Kashmiri Issa, who story previsions Jesus' in almost every detail
-the patently astrological nature of some of the gospel stories (Bethlehem being the Hebrew name for the Zodiac constellation Virgo, for instance)
-the non-canonical gospels
-the role of Mary Magdalene as an astrological symbol


We should call him to task on these above issues whenever he resorts to quoting the "Jesus is magic" apologetics of those bible-thumping pseudo-academics HE esteems to be credible sources.

Or more aggressively, we should forcefully assert the form of this thread: a CHALLENGE for anyone to state a single solitary ORIGINAL detail of the Jesus myth.

This challenge has gone unanswered.



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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #248 on: November 26, 2008, 11:51:44 AM »
Deicide,

This thread has stagnated because McWay is using obstructionist practices to run circles around the original challenge... it's the typical Creationist/Christian "You can't prove it doesn't!" tactic., albeit a little more subtly applied.


The original challenge was for anyone to find a single original detail in the Jesus story... no one has.

This merely shows that, much like Osiris was, you are in "de-Nile". The details have been given clearly and plainly, for all to see, which is why you've had to resort to pitifuly trying to redefine crucifixion, to save your faulty claims about Attis and Osiris.

We have to be careful not to play into his game. When he insists upon turning the challenge around we must resist the temptation to assume we are having a logical debate with a rational person... we are not.

Notice how he has always steered the conversation towards imposing the onus of proving a negative upon his opponents... then claims victory.

No, I steer my conversation towards asking YOU to produce the specific references to back your lame claims, which you haven't done to this day.


Notice how he has couched his arguments... he sets the definition so as to immediately invalidate the opposing (rational) viewpoint:

-the virgin birth is original... because McWay deems the birth of Horus merely magical. The Egyptians obviously DID consider the birth of child via impregnation by a ghost to be a virgin birth as they named the mother version of Isis "Mary Isis, the Virgin". So why do we listen to McWay's opinion on this, aren't the ancient Egyptians more versed in ancient Egyptian belief?

The one problem with this flap is that the ancient Egyptians didn't refer to her as the "Mary Isis" (nice try!!!!) I believe I covered that earlier. But, just to refresh your memory (from the "All About Horus: An Egyptian Copy of Christ?" link):




"Zeitgeist" on Horus

"By this we know the spirit of truth and the spirit of error." (1 John 4:6, Douay-Rheims)

Now I will respond to the transcript section of "Zeitgeist" that talks about Horus and Jesus. I have removed the transcript's references, although I will talk about the film's sources at the end. My own documentation, information, and sources are contained above, with a short bibliography at bottom.

From the transcript of www.ZeitgeistMovie.com in red.

This is Horus. He is the Sun God of Egypt of around 3000 BC.

Horus is not (simply) the sun god, although that became one of his forms. Horus in ancient Egypt was the falcon god whose name means the high, far-off, or distant one. Re (or Ra) was the sun god who came to be identified with the mid-day (or noon) sun. Horus was also the sky god, whose good or sound eye was the sun, and injured eye the moon.

He is the sun, anthropomorphized, and his life is a series of allegorical myths involving the sun's movement in the sky.

He is not the sun, but came to be identified with the position of the rising sun (the sun rises in the east), in such Greek forms as Harakhti = "Horus of the horizon"; and Harmachis (-khis) = "Horus in the horizon." Later he was associated with the sun-god Re and known as Re-Harakhti. Atum was the god of the setting sun.

From the ancient hieroglyphics in Egypt, we know much about this solar messiah. For instance, Horus, being the sun, or the light, had an enemy known as Set and Set was the personification of the darkness or night.

It is hieroglyphs, not hieroglyphics. Hieroglyphic is an adjective (e.g. hieroglyphic writings). The term "messiah" comes from the Hebrew Moshiach for "Anointed One." It is a Judaeo-Christian concept; it does not go back to ancient Egypt. Set (or Seth) was Horus' brother, or in other versions, his uncle. In one tradition of the Egyptian myth, Seth was Horus' rival (and usurper of Egypt's throne), in others, his balance (a bipolar, balanced embodiment of kingship). As mentioned above: since the beginning of the 20th century in Egyptological research, much debate has ensued over whether the struggle between Horus and Seth was primarily historical/geo-political, or cosmic/symbolic. When the full Osiris complex became visible, Seth appears as the murderer of Osiris and would-be killer of the child Horus.
  Ra (Re) was the sun god and creator of the universe
 Osiris was the king of the underworld (the dead), wife of Isis, and father of Horus
 Isis was the sister and wife of Osiris, and mother of Horus
 Seth was brother and killer of Osiris
 Horus, represented by the Falcon symbol, was the son of Osiris and Isis
 Ra-Harakhti (Re-Harakhti) or simply Harakhti is "Horus of the two horizons"
See Jim Loy's Egyptian Gods page for the Hierglyphs and names of all the major gods of Egypt.   

And, metaphorically speaking, every morning Horus would win the battle against Set - while in the evening, Set would conquer Horus and send him into the underworld. It is important to note that "dark vs. light" or "good vs. evil" is one of the most ubiquitous mythological dualities ever known and is still expressed on many levels to this day.

Horus was never sent to the underworld. That was Osiris who was killed and became lord of the underworld (i.e. the dead), while Horus was king of the living. In one version of the myth, Horus battles with Seth over an 80 year period, the earth-god Geb in a judgment awards the whole inheritance of Egypt to Horus, and Horus then becomes ruler of Egypt. From then on, the dead Egyptian king becomes an "Osiris", and his successor the living king is a "Horus." That is the primary meaning of the Horus-Seth battle myth. In the Egyptian Coffin Texts (Spell 148, quoted above), Horus appears as a falcon who soars up into the sky beyond the flight of the original bird-soul, beyond the stars and all the divinities of olden time whose souls inhabit the constellations. In so doing he brings back light and the assurance of a new day, thus subduing Seth, who personifies the terrors of darkness and death.

Broadly speaking, the story of Horus is as follows: Horus was born on December 25th

Wrong. The Persian/Roman god Mithras came to be seen as born on that date, as did Jesus later in the early Church. The December 25th date is not found in the Gospels or the New Testament. It was a later adoption by the Catholic Church: "In the first half of the fourth century AD the worship of the Sol Invictus was the last great pagan cult the Church had to conquer, and it did so in part with the establishment of Christmas...At the head of the Deposition Martyrum of the so-called Roman Chronograph of 354 AD (the Philocalian Calendar) there is listed the natus Christus in Betleem Judaeae ('the birth of Christ in Bethlehem of Judea') as being celebrated on December 25. The Deposition was originally composed in 336 AD, so Christmas dates back at least that far." (See "Santa or Satan: Reply to a Funny Fundy")

The date of the birth of Horus according to some online sources is during the Egyptian month of Khoiak (which corresponds to our November month). The Egyptian calendar had three seasons, each four months and 30 days/month. The season of Akhet is months (in Greek) Thot, Phaophi, Athyr, Khoiak; the season of Peret (or Winter) is months (in Greek) Tybi, Mekhir, Phamenoth, Pharmouthi; the season of Chemou (or Summer) is months (in Greek) Pakhon, Payni, Epiph, Mesorê. See online sources: Egyptian Festival Calender ; Egyptian calendar months and seasons ; Grand Festivals ; Festival Rituals. We also know where Horus was supposedly born (at Khemmis or Chemmis in the Nile Delta of northern Upper Egypt).

of the virgin Isis-Meri.

Wrong again. Her name was simply Isis (in Greek). Her true Egyptian name is transliterated simply A-s-e-t or 3st (all woman names in Egyptian end with the "t"). Her name (Aset) means "seat" or "throne" (Oxford Encyclopedia, vol 2, "Isis" p. 188) and "the goddess's name is written in hieroglyphs with a sign that represents a throne, indicating the crucial role that she plays in the transmission of the kingship of Egypt" (Hart, Routledge Dictionary, "Isis" p. 80).



And she definitely was not a virgin when she conceived Horus with the revivified Osiris, if these words mean anything: "[Osiris was] revived enough to have an erection and impregnate his wife" (Lesko, p. 162); "After having sexual intercourse..." (Dunand / Zivie-Coche, p. 39); "revivified the sexual member of Osiris and became pregnant by him" (Richard Wilkinson, p. 146); "revive the sexual powers of Osiris" (Pinch, p. 80).

A virgin birth, or more properly, a virginal conception, is by definition non-sexual.

His birth was accompanied by a star in the east

No evidence any stars are mentioned in the birth of Horus.

which in turn, three kings followed to locate and adorn the new-born savior

There are no "three kings" in the birth of Horus, and there are no "three kings" in the Bible either. Read Matthew 2 for yourself:

"Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judaea in the days of Herod the king, behold, there came wise men from the east to Jerusalem, saying, 'Where is he that is born King of the Jews? For we have seen his star in the east, and are come to worship him.'" (Matthew 2:1-2 KJV)

They are not called "kings" but "wise men" -- and they are not three in number, we don't know how many there were. Three gifts are later mentioned (gold, frankincense, myrrh) in verse 11, and these were equated with the wise men. Perhaps we are thinking of the Christmas carol "We three kings of Orient are...." ? Nice tune and lyrics, but it's always best to cross-check with the biblical text.

 



-Jesus wasn't born on the 25th of December according to McWay... because no such date is explicitly given in the gospels. When I argue that such a date is hinted at by the collusion of astrological metaphors in the nativity story: the traveling magi, the bright star in the east etc etc... rather than argue the validity of these conspicuous astrological symbols, he places the onus on me to quote the Gospel verse that explicitly gives 25th of December as the date of Jesus' birth (ie: prove a negative), when I never made any such claim.

Ummm....genius! I know what you claimed, and that was that the Gospels "indirectly" pointed to a Dec. 25th date. I then asked you for the specifics, from which you started rambling about the "Dog Star", the "three kings", a "cave", etc.

All of which is supreme faulty. You kept harping about "three kings" corresponding to a certain cluster of stars, despite the fact that the Gospels mention ZIP about three kings. It mentions an undetermined number of wise men. Then, you started wailing about finding Jesus at His birth, another whiff, considering Jesus' approximate age of 2, upon His being found by the wise men. Next came the cave mess, deflated by the fact that Jesus is in a house, when the wise men found them.

Therefore, the validity of these "astrological symbols" is simple: There is none, just as there was no validity about your claim of Osiris being hacked into 72 pieces, corresponding to some other astrological stuff, relating to that number (Osiris got cut into 14 pieces; and, it appears you can't conjure up any star stuff to rant on about that).

Rather than address this dishonest misquoting, he simply insists on MY quoting verses that don't exist in order to back up a claim I never made... then chides me for failing to do the impossible. Again, why do we listen to McWay on this point... the early Church Fathers came to the conclusion that the astrological symbolism encoded in the Nativity story did indeed indicate December 25th as Jesus' birth date (hence our celebration of Christmas). Did the early Church Fathers know more about this that McWay?  

If these verses don't exist, why are you running your mouth about Attis being crucified (a claim that YOU DID, IN FACT, MAKE), Osiris being crucified (another claim that YOU, INDEED, MADE), only to try and save your rear end by claiming that they somehow got put on a tree after dying the well-known deaths ascribed to them?


-Attis wasn't crucified according to McWay... as he was merely nailed to a cross/tree after his death. While this may be a valid criticism, it relies upon a chronically narrow interpretation of the word "crucifixion". McWay has posted dictionary definitions... and if you purposely chose to selectively accept only the one particular dictionary definition of the word which McWay wishes to use as the basis of an intellectually dishonest exclusionary argument... then yes, maybe he might have a point.

And, if I'm not mistaken, I asked to show how cutting your own nuts (the way Attis actually died) off corresponds with crucifixion. As usual, you produced nothing. Instead,you continued trying to save your hide on your flimsy Attis' take by sheepishly attempting to assume that crucifixion means any vague reference to a tree, rather than a specific form of execution in which a cross/tree is involved .


But again we are playing his game... and we shouldn't. The real question as it pertains to this thread is whether the crucifixion of Jesus has any precursors in previous religions... obviously it does in Attis being nailed to a tree. Again, why do we listen to McWay on this point... is he the definer of terms? The arbiter of what does and does not meet the standard of plagiarism?

I'm not the definer of the term, crucifixion. In fact, boy genius, I showed you what the definitions were and from where those definitions came. On the contrary, you have YET to mention the reference that has Attis being nailed to a tree, despite being asked more times than the Detroit Lions have losses. Then, of course, you'd have to give your ridiculous justification as to how someone killed in a totally different manner equates to Jesus being crucified (i.e. that's how Jesus actually died, CRUCIFIXION, not self-castration).

What we must note is what McWay is NOT arguing... for it is in what he merely dismisses that we find the purpose of his hair-splitting and minutiae nit-picking. He simply makes a fuss about something trivial hoping we don't notice what he ISN'T addressing.

He keeps chiding me to produce the gospel verse giving Jesus' birth date as 25th December, using such admonishments as "as you claimed it did"... I never made any such claim, and McWay knows it. I merely stated that the gospel stories hint at such a date ("indirectly") through the preponderance of Mystery Religion astrological metaphors used, which they do. But the purpose of such an argument is not merely to deliberately misquote me... it is to steer the conversation in such a way that he can continuously goad me for apparently failing to meet his supposed "challenge" all the while being able to state and restate for emphasis that such an explicit date is not found in the gospels.

Yet, despite all this "preponderance", you can't produce the references, preferring instead to read into the Gospels stuff that just ain't there (such as your "three kings" crap).

And, as usual, you continue to whimper and whine about my supposeldy misquoting you, despite the FACT that your statements were showns, LINE BY LINE and WORD for WORD.

You were never asked to produce a specific date. You were asked to show where this "indirect" stuff is, within the Gospels. Again, what you gave was woefully inaccurate, because the specifics you mentioned, in your astrological metaphors, ARE NOT THERE in the Gospels:

- No "three kings"
- No "cave"
- No appearance of "three kings" at the "birth" of Jesus, etc.


This way it SEEMS as if he is winning the argument... while he never has to address the patently obvious plagiarism of pagan Mystery Religion blueprint in the Jesus story.

As I just told Deicide, you "blueprint" not only fails to match the account of Jesus Christ, it doesn't even fit many of the other figures, because there are, among those figures:

-   gods that don’t die at all
-   gods that don’t die via crucifixion
-   gods that die but don’t’ rise from the dead
-   gods who aren’t virgin-born
-   gods who weren’t born Dec. 25
-   gods who don’t redeem mankind from anything for any reason?

And, that's just a sample of the discrepancies.


Similarly, McWay won't touch:
-the Kashmiri Issa, who story previsions Jesus' in almost every detail
-the patently astrological nature of some of the gospel stories (Bethlehem being the Hebrew name for the Zodiac constellation Virgo, for instance)
-the non-canonical gospels
-the role of Mary Magdalene as an astrological symbol

Wrong again, boy genius!!!!! Unlike you, I actually produced references, addressing these subjects, something you are apparently too cowardly to do, when called to produce.



We should call him to task on these above issues whenever he resorts to quoting the "Jesus is magic" apologetics of those bible-thumping pseudo-academics HE esteems to be credible sources.

Go ahead!!! Give it your best shot. It can't possibly be any worse than the foolishness you continue to spout. Normally, skeptics fall all over themselves, when a scholar's credentials come from an Ivy League school. But, of course, that always goes by the board, when it don't fit their godless banter.


Or more aggressively, we should forcefully assert the form of this thread: a CHALLENGE for anyone to state a single solitary ORIGINAL detail of the Jesus myth.

This challenge has gone unanswered.

You can attempt to "forecfully assert" whatever you want. The simple fact is that, for all of your hot air, you have cowered and run from every request to actually back your statements with specific facts and references.

Blubbering and crying every time you get asked to back up your own words reeks of nothing but unadulterated COWARDICE. How many more excuses are you going to generate?






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Re: Is there anything original in the Jesus story?
« Reply #249 on: November 26, 2008, 12:02:51 PM »
were logic and reason end.religion begins.
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