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Thank you, that leaves much to consider. Your closing line is interesting. It appears that everyone is interpreting text however they want and that it is unreliable. I'm just pointing out a little irony in that statement that you closed with. Any other of the points to consider?
Yes, loosening the standards must go hand in hand with the knowledge that we can only become less certain of what we claim to know, not more certain as some are known to offer.All scholars agree that they have to loosen there standards on the ancient text or they would have nothing at all to work with.
Loose standards combined with a biased viewpont = missinformation, fiction
is not every one of those scholars PRO christian????? sure looks like it
is not every one of those scholars PRO christian????? sure looks like it
No doubt, that may all be very well and true, but what shall we say of the wondrous characters of Hamlet, of Romeo, and Othello?I was thinking about the interpretation of other texts that have a mixture of fact and fiction, or social commentary.
The works of Shakespeare, for instance, contain many lines that can only be understood or interpreted in light of historical context. He also may show reliable and insightful interpretations of real historical characters which really existed - Henry V and Julius Cesar come to mind - and the language itself is "Shakespearean." While it's not history, and it's not entirely fiction, it contains some allegory, metaphor, and the whole pallet of rhetorical devices - it can contain some truth, fact, and commentary.
No doubt, that may all be very well and true, but what shall we say of the wondrous characters of Hamlet, of Romeo, and Othello?
Really? What of the scholars that are so certain of an historical Jesus, how many are non Jews & Christians? Are they 1%ers?Absolutely not. I don't know why non-Chrisitans get into biblical studies, but there are thousands of them.
What does being a believing Jews have to do with whether believes Jesus was not simply myth?They're mostly believing Jews and Christians, they come with the territory.
Really?
What does being a believing Jews have to do with whether believes Jesus was not simply myth?
And does this mean you can't address their arguments? Or that you aren't familiar with them? Have you read any academic works devoted to studying gospel genre?
I'm not sure I understand the question. Are you actually arguing that if depictions of a person in various texts differ, and we can't be certain exactly what there character was, they weren't historical? If that's your view, than no one from history ever existed, even those for whom there is photographic evidence. I can't point to Abraham Lincoln and provide what you ask. Depictions differ. Going back further in time it gets even harder.Please point to a specific man in history that was the Jesus of the NT, and show solid proof of such.
Then we may believe you.
What of the scholars that are so certain of an historical Jesus, how many are non Jews & Christians? Are they 1%ers?Yep. It's strange, but true. I'm a member of two scholarly organizations that focus on biblical studies and both of them have a good number of atheists, agnostics, and folks of other religions.
This is particularly true of folks who are religious studies experts and have a specialization in Christianity. They consider themselves historians and not biblical scholars.
You really don't get it, do you? The atheists and agnostics involved in biblical research are almost always less likely to find the gospels as reliable as conservative christian scholars, and they may think we can't know much about Jesus, but the idea that Jesus wasn't historical is just so unsupportable it doesn't really exist in academia at all, regardless of religious background.What of the scholars that are so certain of an historical Jesus, how many are non Jews & Christians? Are they 1%ers?
What of the scholars that are so certain of an historical Jesus, how many are non Jews & Christians? Are they 1%ers?
It is an extremely minority view. And I mean maybe there are 5
Now there are many Christians who may think that the historical Jesus isn't needed for the faith, but that's different from saying that he never existed. In other words, to a lot of people the question of the historical Jesus doesn't matter (Jews, Christians, and atheists, etc alike), but don't proclaim that he didn't exist.
I also sometimes think that views in which we can't access the historical Jesus beyond the barest of facts serve to protect Jesus from historical inquiry, and allow him to remain an item of faith alone.
Is that not what ive been saying and having you argue with me?
I'm not sure I understand the question. Are you actually arguing that if depictions of a person in various texts differ, and we can't be certain exactly what there character was, they weren't historical? If that's your view, than no one from history ever existed, even those for whom there is photographic evidence. I can't point to Abraham Lincoln and provide what you ask. Depictions differ. Going back further in time it gets even harder.