Azakel
Liebe ist für alle da
I think he was joking (at least, I hope so).
Even if the good Father was joking I think it brings up a good point on how it seem a good number of people seem to define what a Religion, Cult, and Mythology is.
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I think he was joking (at least, I hope so).
I disagree with how easily Jesus's existance is accepted as fact. Obviously this is a discussion for another debate, but not everyone (Religious or Atheist) believes he was real.
It hasn't been easily accepted. However, after centuries of scholarship in this area, the fact that he existed (although not much else) is accepted by all experts in the various fields of biblical/NT studies.
I've already gone over the debate about the historical Jesus in detail elsewhere (see threads 1, 2, and 3). Basically, ALL ancient history (from Herdotus to Pliny) contained mythic and ahistorical elements. ALL the work by ancient historians has to be critically read, as they NONE of them would be considered "history" the way we talk of historical works today. However, that doesn't mean they should all be rejected. The fact that the gospels contain mythic elements, that they differ from one another on various points, that some historical facts are recorded incorrectly (such as the census in Luke) makes the gospels no different from the works of any other ancient historian. Some ancient biographies were superior (compared to modern standards) to the gospels. Some were worse. Diogenes Laertius, for example, wrote biographies of people who lived centuries before his time (not decades, as with the gospels) and relied on rumor and myth for much of his work.That is hardly comprehensive lol.
I've already gone over the debate about the historical Jesus in detail elsewhere. Basically, ALL ancient history (from Herdotus to Pliny) contained mythic and ahistorical elements. ALL the work by ancient historians has to be critically read, as they NONE of them would be considered "history" the way we talk of historical works today. However, that doesn't mean they should all be rejected. The fact that the gospels contain mythic elements, that they differ from one another on various points, that some historical facts are recorded incorrectly (such as the census in Luke) makes the gospels no different from the works of any other ancient historian. Some ancient biographies were superior (compared to modern standards) to the gospels. Some were worse. Diogenes Laertius, for example, wrote biographies of people who lived centuries before his time (not decades, as with the gospels) and relied on rumor and myth for much of his work.
Again, this is true of a great deal of historical figures/events. For Jesus, we have a number of independent sources (Paul, Epistle to the Hebrews, Josephus, Q, M, and L are the earliest). Based on analysis of the reliability of the transmission of the Jesus tradition (again, peruse the links provided above) it is not only almost certain that Jesus lived, but it is very likely we can reconstruct his teachings with a fair degree of accuracy.I'm going by the fact that not a lot of sources exist that corroborate with the bible
Why is it the Greek mythology is considered a myth but Christianity is not? what makes a myth and what makes Christianity not a myth?
You probably only know the usual myth about Dionysus. There is same Dionysus, but with a different flavour, found in the Orphic mystery religion.Oberon said:And what version of the greek myth of Dionysus are you referring to?
oberon said:Not really. Osiris (in the versions of the myth were he dies) was chopped into little pieces and then put back together (except his penis).
varioustbags said:In a few thousand years (i'm not hopeful), Abrahamic religions will be considered 'myths' as well. The definition only comes from teh number of people who believe it. It is a myth because it is old and no one follows it anymore. Christianity is still alive in kicking.
Not true. Actually, even to say that their are "usual" myths isn't really correct. Myths differed, even with the same god, from place to place. Greek religion was composed primarily of localized cults, and the received myths were altered not only via cultural and geographical movement, but also within any particular cult.You probably only know the usual myth about Dionysus.
Each person is reincarnated twice, like Dionysus. After the 3rd death, we are judged by Persephone, and if we lived virtuous life in each lifetime, then she would award us places in Elysian Fields, our final life, which is eternal.
True, but he then became god of the afterlife.
Greek stories were not myth, they were relgion
I disagree with how easily Jesus's existance is accepted as fact. Obviously this is a discussion for another debate, but not everyone (Religious or Atheist) believes he was real.
Amen to this, the existence of the supposed Jesus is accepted as fact with absolutely NO hard evidence of it
This may get some peoples goat, but I tend to think a text isnt accurately describing events the moment those events violate what we know about the physical world.What methodologies do you employ when parsing ancient historical texts to determine just what is and isn't history?
This may get some peoples goat, but I tend to think a text isnt accurately describing events the moment those events violate what we know about the physical world.
This may get some peoples goat, but I tend to think a text isnt accurately describing events the moment those events violate what we know about the physical world.
Robert M. Price springs to mind, but the above doesnt really follow from what you said. The bible describes real places, and likely also real events in some cases. But given that Jesus, in and of himself, is practically a mythical character I dont see how you could conclude his existence because, to me, the most likely scenario seems his non-existence (to use your reasoning).All of this has been done with the gospels, and their is universal agreement among experts that Jesus lived, preached, and died in first century Jerusalem.
Robert M. Price springs to mind
Given the nature of Jesuss life as describe by those accounts I dont see why it is reasonable to claim the most likely scenario is existence. Applying this to other groups would seem to lead to the existence of whatever mythical figure those groups beliefs started with.3. Any explanation of Christainity has to explain its origins. The tradition itself clearly sees these origins as beginning with Jesus. Unlike with "mythic" cults, which locate the originator in a time long, long past, the members of the Jesus cult recognized their founder as dying only a few decades prior to our earliest sources (Q, Paul, and Mark).