AmbiguousGuy
Well-Known Member
No, if I have escaped from this vortex I do not think I will create a new one.
There is no vortex like the AmbigGuy vortex, you must admit!
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No, if I have escaped from this vortex I do not think I will create a new one.
Now on that I can concur and I am unanimous in that.There is no vortex like the AmbigGuy vortex, you must admit!
All that is required is for everyone to read The Bible as if Jesus is historical to make their homogonized milk and white bread go down easy.Historiography? Historiography? They don't need no stinkin' historiography. :no:
Humans lust for certainty, and some of us are unable to resist it.
In this case, many Christians see the historical Jesus as the very foundation of their worldviews, so it's frightening to have him challenged. I believe they're wrong. Their grandchildren will still be Christians even if Jesus becomes as mythical as Adam.
Thanks for posting that. Apparently there were those who falsified the historial Jesus during John's time. People whose parents probably lived as adults in 30 CE Jerusalem. I didn't know that we had evidence of that. Interesting.
this question doesn't make sense, if jesus is mythic, then there was no actual crucifixion. Mythic characters and events have always been the centrepiece of religions
I'm agnostic. I'm not a historian. This is (again) a hobby, like so much of what I study. But ignorance and willful blindness bother me. It's a pet peeve, you might say. It's one thing for people to not know what they are talking about. We all have an infinite number of things we don't know about. But to make claims (or to claim one's questions are indicative of anything rather than ignorance, and to act as if they are somehow meaningful even when the same questions turned on their heads cannot be answered by those who ask these questions) from a position of ignorance, and to refuse to even look at the evidence or the weakness of one's position (and why it is so) is for me unforgivable.I'm sorry I've upset you, Legion. In my opinion, such an upset points to a serious insecurity about the issue itself.
For whatever that observation may be worth to you.
Ad hominems don't make your case for you, in fact, they only prove to expose your bias towards this Jesus.
I have. And as a result, I have a position. You have one without doing this. You barely know the works of Ehrman, whom you particularly disdain (while admitting you don't know what he's written). You clearly don't know the field. And that's no problem. The problem is your claim about my bias. I studied the issue and came up with my position. You haven't, but still seem to have no problem not only with your position, but also no problem with talking about the reasons for another's position and what is at play:So you've done the research
it gives you the green light to go ahead and read your bible as if Jesus is historical. Anyone that opposes you is ignorant, and branded a "mythicist" with disdain, we got that much. There's a real hatred for those that question the status quo, as if it makes some kind of difference as to how this Jesus character is to be understood.
What mythicists so frequently fail to realize is that anyone can poke holes in some historical reconstruction. But this is meaningless. To say something meaningful about history isn't to say "there are issues with historians who say X" but to say not only what these issues are, but what the actual assertions/propositions about the matter should be. And this is exactly where mythicists hit a brick wall.
That proposition is nearly universal. It is held by virtually every historian (Christian or no) there is. In fact, it's a rather central tenet to historiography and the philosophy of history: if someone writes a biography of another, it is assured to misrepresent. The question isn't "do the gospels present someone distinct from the Christ of Paul?" or even "does the Christ of the gospels represent anyone historical?" but "what (if any) historical core is behind the gospels, Paul, and other early Christian texts?". The answer is Jesus, a man who started the tradition recorded in the gospels and (to a lesser extent) in other texts we have such as the letters of Paul. The distinction between the Christ of Faith and the Jesus of History is not one of modern scholarship, but one of Faith. It is religious in nature, and necessarily so. But to disdain scholarship, and to render as biased all those who have studied the matter, is not logical or rational. It is likewise a matter of Faith. Those who belittle Erhman and others whom they have not read (or have read little of) find good company among religious layfolk, and have as support as little as they; faith-based affirmation of an understanding of ancient texts.Christ myth theory does make propositions, for one it proposes that Paul's Christ is distinct from the Galilean Jesus read of in the gospels.
I have a position I made after years of research, learning to read in several ancient languages and several modern languages, and reading volume after volume, paper after paper, in four different modern languages. In order to understand the mythicist position, I've gone back over a hundred years, and read books by those who make blatant errors (not to mention misquote and mislead). And I have certain conclusions. As you say:
I have. And as a result, I have a position. You have one without doing this. You barely know the works of Ehrman, whom you particularly disdain (while admitting you don't know what he's written). You clearly don't know the field. And that's no problem. The problem is your claim about my bias. I studied the issue and came up with my position. You haven't, but still seem to have no problem not only with your position, but also no problem with talking about the reasons for another's position and what is at play:
The bible is no more mine than is the Koran, or than are the Homeric epics. As for those who oppose me (i.e., those who aren't mythicists and believe that at the very least we can know Jesus existed), well...if this isn't ignorance, why is it almost solely expounded by those who cannot read the very texts they write about, and who rely on a carefully selected subset of modern and ancient texts (most of which they misquote or misrepresent)?
That proposition is nearly universal. It is held by virtually every historian (Christian or no) there is. In fact, it's a rather central tenet to historiography and the philosophy of history: if someone writes a biography of another, it is assured to misrepresent. The question isn't "do the gospels present someone distinct from the Christ of Paul?" or even "does the Christ of the gospels represent anyone historical?" but "what (if any) historical core is behind the gospels, Paul, and other early Christian texts?". The answer is Jesus, a man who started the tradition recorded in the gospels and (to a lesser extent) in other texts we have such as the letters of Paul. The distinction between the Christ of Faith and the Jesus of History is not one of modern scholarship, but one of Faith. It is religious in nature, and necessarily so. But to disdain scholarship, and to render as biased all those who have studied the matter, is not logical or rational. It is likewise a matter of Faith. Those who belittle Erhman and others whom they have not read (or have read little of) find good company among religious layfolk, and have as support as little as they; faith-based affirmation of an understanding of ancient texts.
You have me confused with someone that gives a crap either way what this Jesus was.
I'm least impressed by Ehrman for reading the gospels into Paul... And no, I am not that familiar with Ehrman, other than what I have come across online.
You have a lot invested in your Jesus, and just like many before you, you have spent a great deal of time amassing "knowledge" from people that wrote about a guy that they never met.
My research allows me to read the gospels. You can't. My research allows me to comment on the gospels, their place within ancient historiography and myth, and the approach of modern scholarship. You can't. But when I do comment, you don't feel as if your lack of research somehow makes your rejoinders unfounded. And somehow, this is not bias?Your research allows you to read the gospels as if Jesus was historical, and if you really want to know
You don't understand, Paul's Christ was not from his recent past, if he existed on earth at all.
Paul did not write of anyone having witnessed the crucifixion
According to whom?That is what Christ myth theory proposes
it can't be assumed that Pauls' Christ walked on earth.
You admit you aren't familiar even with the works he writes for the public (non-academic works) yet you have no problem saying what he "assumes"? And this isn't bias?Ehrman assumes
For someone who doesn't give a crap, you certainly have things to say about those who give their qualified opinion and whom you have not read:
Tell me- how does one become "least impressed" about the work of someone in a field they know not, nor care about, and whose work they have not read? You have written numerous posts defending or attacking a particular view, yet admitted that you don't have much experience or familiarity with the issue. That's not the manner of one who really doesn't care. Recently, the only other thread I've participated in other than this one (and perhaps one or two others) is one on physics. Like the issue of the historical Jesus, most of my study here is a hobby. None of those I worked with (and I happen to have worked in a fairly distinguished lab) possess my familiarity with modern physics. They don't need it, any more than I need a familiarity with historical Jesus studies. But I'm curious. So I study.
Why do you ask questions about this? Have you looked at the historical Socrates with the same attention? How about the historical King Arthur, or Pythagoras, or Apollonius of Tyana, or any number of others whom historians have asked about? And have studied? Why, if you care so little, have you devoted the time you have even just here to this issue?
I would guess because you do care. In fact, I need not guess. You have devoted time, without rewared or need, to this issue. And you haven't simply asked as one who is curious and who seeks answers, but as one with a particular (if relatively uninformed) opinion. Clearly, you are not some ambiguous guy, but one who has a certain bias of your own. You simply don't have the wherewithal to support your view.
I've done the same for a great many others. My final undergrad paper was on the historical Socrates. I never wrote one on the historical Jesus. I've devoted much time to many questions, including those about the historical Jesus. What's your excuse?
My research allows me to read the gospels. You can't. My research allows me to comment on the gospels, their place within ancient historiography and myth, and the approach of modern scholarship. You can't. But when I do comment, you don't feel as if your lack of research somehow makes your rejoinders unfounded. And somehow, this is not bias?
Now you have me confused with someone that has formed an opinion.
That is an opinion. So is making claims about the alleged biases of those who have studied this issue (and me least of all, as I am not a specialist on this subject). Yet you have done this.I haven't formed any opinion about this Jesus, at least not beyond that of a literary character.
If history is a scientific discipline at all (and many argue that it is; I for one find that much of the social sciences lay claim to "science" with at most as much behind this claim as historians), then "Jesus history" is science. If it is not, then history is not- period.I make no comment of Jesus' place in history. Jesus history is not science
it's a completely subjective exercise
But ignorance and willful blindness bother me.
But to make claims (or to claim one's questions are indicative of anything rather than ignorance, and to act as if they are somehow meaningful even when the same questions turned on their heads cannot be answered by those who ask these questions) from a position of ignorance, and to refuse to even look at the evidence or the weakness of one's position (and why it is so) is for me unforgivable.
What mythicists so frequently fail to realize is that anyone can poke holes in some historical reconstruction. But this is meaningless. To say something meaningful about history isn't to say "there are issues with historians who say X" but to say not only what these issues are, but what the actual assertions/propositions about the matter should be. And this is exactly where mythicists hit a brick wall.
Obviously the current consensus is the result of nothing more than intellectual apathy and appalling bias. Its good to have someone as schooled in historiography as you to expose this murky failure of scholarship.Historical method failed to produce an historical Jesus to any degree of satisfaction ...
Obviously the current consensus is the result of nothing more than intellectual apathy and appalling bias.
I disagree with you that bibilical scholars are intellectually apathetic, but of course their profound bias cannot be denied.
It's a shame that so few unbiased scholars feel the urge to enter the field. I often wonder what such secular scholars would make of the historical Jesus.