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originally posted by: StalkerSolent
originally posted by: Tangerine
Clearly, you want to believe that Jesus lived. Why? How would it change your life if you knew for certain (an impossibility, of course) that Jesus did not live?
Um, well, that's impossible, so it's hard to conceive. But it would probably graduate me from a sort-of existentialist/nihilist to a full blown one
I suspect you want to believe for religious reasons and the historicity of it is immaterial to your motivations.
I suspect the same about you
My overall agenda regarding this topic is to get Christians to distinguish between belief and fact. I think it is truly dangerous to be unable to distinguish between those two things.
And yet, you have faith, definitely unprovable, possibly unfounded, that facts, as you think of them, exist. Interesting, no?
originally posted by: StalkerSolent
originally posted by: Tangerine
Clearly, you want to believe that Jesus lived. Why? How would it change your life if you knew for certain (an impossibility, of course) that Jesus did not live?
Um, well, that's impossible, so it's hard to conceive. But it would probably graduate me from a sort-of existentialist/nihilist to a full blown one
In my opinion, the debate and dogma surrounding an actual Jesus Christ living on earth, as well as his supposed return and the so called "End of Time" doctrine, is superfluous and it distracts and debases the beauty and truth that Christianity actually embraces.
originally posted by: TzarChasm
a reply to: StalkerSolent
the historical existence of jesus is not in question nearly so much as the claims made about him. as isaac asimov said, the more ridiculous and wild the claim, the more concrete and convincing the evidence ought to be. not the other way around.
originally posted by: Tangerine
I take your point. But what else are we debating if not "facts"? On a metaphysical level, I'm not certain about much but I didn't think this was a metaphysical discussion, however much more interesting that might be. I'm used to most Christians being literalists and tend to default to that level of discussion.
originally posted by: windword
Hmm. Are you a Christian? I can't tell from your posts.
I was raised in a fundamental Christian household, but I've come to understand Christianity and it's true meaning only after abandoning it. In my opinion, the debate and dogma surrounding an actual Jesus Christ living on earth, as well as his supposed return and the so called "End of Time" doctrine, is superfluous and it distracts and debases the beauty and truth that Christianity actually embraces.
originally posted by: TzarChasm
a reply to: StalkerSolent
the historical existence of jesus is not in question nearly so much as the claims made about him.
as isaac asimov said, the more ridiculous and wild the claim, the more concrete and convincing the evidence ought to be. not the other way around.
That's interesting. Christianity seems a little superfluous to me without Christ...
Philo of Alexandria[edit]
Philo (20 BC – 50 AD), a Hellenized Jew, used the term Logos to mean an intermediary divine being, or demiurge. Philo followed the Platonic distinction between imperfect matter and perfect Form, and therefore intermediary beings were necessary to bridge the enormous gap between God and the material world. The Logos was the highest of these intermediary beings, and was called by Philo "the first-born of God." Philo also wrote that "the Logos of the living God is the bond of everything, holding all things together and binding all the parts, and prevents them from being dissolved and separated."
Plato's Theory of Forms was located within the Logos, but the Logos also acted on behalf of God in the physical world.In particular, the Angel of the Lord in the Hebrew Bible (Old Testament) was identified with the Logos by Philo, who also said that the Logos was God's instrument in the creation of the universe.
Christianity
Christ the Logos
Main article: Logos (Christianity)
In principio erat verbum, Latin for In the beginning was the Word, from the Clementine Vulgate, Gospel of John, 1:1–18.
The Christian concept of the Logos is derived from the first chapter of the Gospel of John, where the Logos (often translated as “Word”) is described in terms that resemble, but likely surpass, the ideas of Philo:
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was with God in the beginning. Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made. In him was life, and that life was the light of men. The light shines in the darkness, but the darkness has not overcome it.
John also explicitly identifies the Logos with Jesus:
The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth. John testifies concerning him. He cries out, saying, "This was he of whom I said, 'He who comes after me has surpassed me because he was before me.'"
originally posted by: windword
John 1 completely plagiarizes Philo's theme of the LOGOS, and then goes one further by claiming the LOGOS incarnated into ONE human body, lived and died for our sins, etc, etc, etc...
originally posted by: StalkerSolent
originally posted by: windword
John 1 completely plagiarizes Philo's theme of the LOGOS, and then goes one further by claiming the LOGOS incarnated into ONE human body, lived and died for our sins, etc, etc, etc...
Well, considering that this Philo chaps is a *Jewish* philosopher, and that Christianity was (less so now) advertising itself as "Judaism fulfilled," it makes a lot of sense that Christianity would take ideas from Judaism.
(The Wiki says some scholars believe John and Philo had similar source material and reached the same conclusions, others believe Philo influenced John. *shrug*)
originally posted by: windword
Sure! Exactly! Nuts and bolts.
This goes to the argument for mysticism. Why didn't Philo know that he had the incarnation of the "Angel of the Lord", "The LOGOS" in his midst? The timing is impeccable!
Actually, Paul's Christianity, and all Christians from his writings forward, worship a celestial Jesus Christ, not a human being. It's the human part that's superfluous and a distraction from the true expression of Christianity, in my opinion.
Also, Christianity borrowed the ritual of baptism from the Essene and the Eleusian Mystery cults. Was John the Baptist an Essene or a Pagan?
originally posted by: StalkerSolent
originally posted by: windword
Sure! Exactly! Nuts and bolts.
I wouldn't call this plagiarism, since the Christians appropriated basically the entire Old Testament and brought in a bunch of Jewish traditions and ideas, but I think we agree on the idea
This goes to the argument for mysticism. Why didn't Philo know that he had the incarnation of the "Angel of the Lord", "The LOGOS" in his midst? The timing is impeccable!
You lost me
Actually, Paul's Christianity, and all Christians from his writings forward, worship a celestial Jesus Christ, not a human being. It's the human part that's superfluous and a distraction from the true expression of Christianity, in my opinion.
Erm...why do we get verses like "Christ, and Him crucified," then? *scratches head.* Doesn't sound mystical to me.
Also, Christianity borrowed the ritual of baptism from the Essene and the Eleusian Mystery cults. Was John the Baptist an Essene or a Pagan?
The Essenes were a Jewish sect who probably got their ideas on baptism from mainstream Judaism (at least, it seems likely to me...)
Hmm. While I think there's some truth to that, calling a claim "wild" or "ridiculous" seems pretty subjective.
originally posted by: windword
Plagiarism is a little harsh and really only applies IF Christianity was deliberately engineered from Old Testament texts, as well as ancient and popular cults, that were advantageous to TPTB, after the fall of Jerusalem and the terrific destruction of Pompeii.
Philo would have been a contemporary to Jesus of Nazareth and his Apostles.
Could be. Why do so many Christians violently reject the idea of Jesus (The Nazarite) having been an Essene? (It gets complicated, very complicated)
Jesus uses it as a requisite to enter his religion for salvation.
Funny that.
originally posted by: TzarChasm
calling someone the progeny of a deity and the savior of 7 billion people strikes me as pretty wild. especially if you yourself are not willing to stand up on a stage with a microphone and say the same thing in front of 10,000 people.
originally posted by: StalkerSolent
originally posted by: TzarChasm
calling someone the progeny of a deity and the savior of 7 billion people strikes me as pretty wild. especially if you yourself are not willing to stand up on a stage with a microphone and say the same thing in front of 10,000 people.
I'm also not willing to stand on stage and say I'm the queen of England, but that doesn't mean it isn't true of the Queen of England.
See, I distinctly remember the Christians being a pain in TPTB's side during the Roman time. Unless you were thinking of a different TPTB...