MountainHumanist
Member
Here is a passage from good ole Wikipedia (it must be true right?):
Let's discuss this idea of Jesus as a Jewish Cynic Wanderer? Was he a Cynic or at least influenced by them? Many of his supposed instructions to his disciples matched those of cynics (simplicity, traveling light, communal meals, self-sufficiency, etc.)Many historians have noted the similarities between the life and teachings of Jesus and those of the Cynics. Some scholars have argued that the Q document, the hypothetical common source for the gospels of Matthew and Luke, has strong similarities with the teachings of the Cynics.[60][61] Scholars on the quest for the historical Jesus, such as Burton L. Mack and John Dominic Crossan of the Jesus Seminar, have argued that 1st century Galilee was a world in which Hellenistic ideas collided with Jewish thought and traditions. The city of Gadara, only a day's walk from Nazareth, was particularly notable as a center of Cynic philosophy,[62] and Mack has described Jesus as a "rather normal Cynic-type figure."[63] For Crossan, Jesus was more like a Cynic sage from an Hellenistic Jewish tradition than either a Christ who would die as a substitute for sinners or a Messiah who wanted to establish an independent Jewish state of Israel.[64] Other scholars doubt that Jesus was deeply influenced by the Cynics, and see the Jewish prophetic tradition as of much greater importance.[65]