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The dates are based on what we read in Acts as well as from Galatians wherein Paul states that his visits were 14 years apart. The marker is the death of Herod Agrippa. From there it's a simple matter of reading what is there.
1) This has nothing to do with Josephus. You also claim Josephus had a date for the death of john the baptist, and you have neatly been avoiding how this date may be obtained.
The dates are based on what we read in Acts as well as from Galatians wherein Paul states that his visits were 14 years apart. The marker is the death of Herod Agrippa. From there it's a simple matter of reading what is there.
Try to follow the thread.1) This has nothing to do with Josephus. You also claim Josephus had a date for the death of john the baptist, and you have neatly been avoiding how this date may be obtained.
2) Your dating is worthless because you make two different James' the same person.
3) Where does Acts say Paul was with James the son of zebedee when he was killed?
4) Paul and acts don't always quite add up (which is only natural given luke's imperfect knowledge of paul's career and a lack of familiarity with Paul's letters).
Yes, but for the sake of argument I was using Acts just to show what a ef up it is.The entire Pauline chronology is based on the Gallio inscription, not the death of Agrippa.
Try to follow the thread.
Yes, but for the sake of argument I was using Acts just to show what a ef up it is.
No doubt, but just the same, the killing of James and the death of Herod is bracketed by Paul's arrival and departure from Jerusalem, and we know what year Herod Agrippa died.Well, the mistake you're making is not choosing a fixed point in time that is precisely related to Paul. Instead, you chose a fixed point with no referent to Paul.
Acts, of course, has Paul before the judge Gallio, who only served for one year. And we know what year that was, and the chronology of Acts makes sense on its own terms relative to this fixed point.
No doubt, but just the same, the killing of James and the death of Herod is bracketed by Paul's arrival and departure from Jerusalem, and we know what year Herod Agrippa died.
No doubt, but just the same, the killing of James and the death of Herod is bracketed by Paul's arrival and departure from Jerusalem, and we know what year Herod Agrippa died.
I can understand an apologist rolling his eyes. It's extremely inconvenient to read (in Acts of the Apostles), of Paul and Barnabas being in Jerusalem while King Herod Agrippa I dies, because that places them in Jerusalem in 44CE. It's no wonder Gallio is a preferred marker, as if to pick and choose.
I can understand an apologist rolling his eyes. It's extremely inconvenient to read in Acts of Paul and Barnabas
I read this article a while back. It's rather credible, actually. Could be where he got his information from.
John The Baptist In the New Testament and Josephus
Reading Josephus, John the Baptist wasn't killed until 36CE.
Things aren't adding up.
Since when is Acts of the Apostles non-canonical? I edited my post in order to spell it out for you.It's not inconvenient at all for an apologist (or scholar), because nobody pays much attention (at least not for the issues dealt with here) to later 2nd century texts which are not canonical (and so an apologist doesn't have to worry about them) and of no real use for understanding the life of Paul or of Barnabas.
There has been a tremendous amount of secular so called evidence presented but all of it has been met with disappointment. Christianity is a hoax, with no shortage of apologists that will rarely ever admit to being duped.If someone discovers some tomb in Galilee with the bones of Jesus in along with his personal effects such as a crown of thorns and three rather large nails, then that it what I would call secular evidence of his existence. But it is no longer secular if you expect him to make a second coming and walk into an Olympic Stadium during the opening ceremony fully fleshed as some Christians are expecting him to do to a similar effect.
Since when is Acts of the Apostles non-canonical? I edited my post in order to spell it out for you.
BTW, That's rather humorous, that non-canonical works can be ignored, no doubt apologists are reading the true works of Christ.
Γελᾷ δ’ ὁ μῶρος, κἄν τι μὴ γελοῖον ᾖ/ gela d' ho moros, kan ti me geloion e
Irenaeus declared that the four [gospels] he espoused were the four "Pillars of the Church": "it is not possible that there can be either more or fewer than four" he stated, presenting as logic the analogy of the four corners of the earth and the four winds (3.11.8). His image, taken from Ezekiel 1, or Revelation 4:6-10, of God's throne borne by four creatures with four faces"the four had the face of a man, and the face of a lion, on the right side: and the four had the face of an ox on the left side; they four also had the face of an eagle"equivalent to the "four-formed" gospel, is the origin of the conventional symbols of the Evangelists: lion, bull, eagle, man. Irenaeus was ultimately successful in declaring that the four gospels collectively, and exclusively these four, contained the truth. By reading each gospel in light of the others, Irenaeus made of John a lens through which to read Matthew, Mark and Luke. wiki
:biglaugh:
At least it's entertaining. The truth, yagottaluvit.