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Leucius Charinus wrote:dejuror wrote:Leucius Charinus wrote:
According to one of the apocryphal acts Jesus said he was going to be crucified a second time.
Peter who had escaped his jailers in Rome met Jesus at the gates of the city."When he wished to go out the city gate, however, he saw Christ coming to meet him.
Worshipping him, he said:
"Lord, where are you going?" (QUO VADIS)
Christ answered him: "I am coming to Rome to be crucified again." [p. 8]
And Peter said to him: "Lord, will you be crucified again?"
And the Lord said to him: "Certainly, I will be crucified again."
But Peter said: "Lord, I will return and follow you."
And after these things were spoken, the Lord ascended into the heavens.
--- The Acts of Pseudo-Linus
This Christian writing implies their Jesus was still on earth [in the city of Rome] in the time of Nero c 54-68 CE.
The Monty Python movie "Life of Brian" is set in Jerusalem in the time of Jesus and is widely regarded as a satire. It was not written by Christians.
Likewise I regard this writing - Pseudo-Linus - to be a lampoon or a satire on the NT Jesus story. I do not assume it was written by the (canonical) Christians rather, in all likelihood, a pagan satirist. It was designed to make the audience laugh IMHO.
dejuror wrote:Leucius Charinus wrote:dejuror wrote:Leucius Charinus wrote:
According to one of the apocryphal acts Jesus said he was going to be crucified a second time.
Peter who had escaped his jailers in Rome met Jesus at the gates of the city."When he wished to go out the city gate, however, he saw Christ coming to meet him.
Worshipping him, he said:
"Lord, where are you going?" (QUO VADIS)
Christ answered him: "I am coming to Rome to be crucified again." [p. 8]
And Peter said to him: "Lord, will you be crucified again?"
And the Lord said to him: "Certainly, I will be crucified again."
But Peter said: "Lord, I will return and follow you."
And after these things were spoken, the Lord ascended into the heavens.
--- The Acts of Pseudo-Linus
This Christian writing implies their Jesus was still on earth [in the city of Rome] in the time of Nero c 54-68 CE.
The Monty Python movie "Life of Brian" is set in Jerusalem in the time of Jesus and is widely regarded as a satire. It was not written by Christians.
Likewise I regard this writing - Pseudo-Linus - to be a lampoon or a satire on the NT Jesus story. I do not assume it was written by the (canonical) Christians rather, in all likelihood, a pagan satirist. It was designed to make the audience laugh IMHO.
I am referring to the Acts of Peter. It is a Christian writing which claims Peter met Jesus in the city of Rome during the reign of Nero c 54-68 CE.
I took time out last night to follow up a comment left on Vridar and listen to Derek Lambert’s MythVision interview with Tim O’Neill, author of the blog History for Atheists. If one sets aside the revealing psychological portrait that emerges from the incidental comments O’Neill lets drop about himself throughout the interview and focuses on his message one finds an unfortunate mix of contradictions, logical fallacies and factual errors presented with a confidence that evidently many readers find persuasive. I will attempt to deal with just one or two points per post to illustrate why readers and viewers need to put on their critical hats and examine carefully some of O’Neill’s claims...
https://vridar.org/2020/11/13/bad-histo ... s-existed/
Leucius Charinus wrote:Tim O'Neill thinks that the Dark Ages never happened and that Christian monks saved civilization by preserving the classics.
Based on the thesis that no one in early Christianity was interested in a historical account of the beginnings of Christianity, Vincent arrives at fundamental insights that question centuries-old ideas about the early days of Christianity.
The oldest witnesses who are called upon to convey to us the beginnings of Christianity are neither the Gospels or the Acts of the Apostles, nor the epistles of Paul. They are often apocryphal testimonies, alleged epistles from Jesus or Paul, lives of apostles, or Jewish scriptures.
The great theologians of the 2nd and 3rd centuries, from Irenaeus to Tertullian to Origen, refer to apostolic traditions (which are difficult to determine), the rule of faith, and to holy scriptures, yet not as an appeal to the "historical", but to use them as a 'norm' as anti-heretical weapons. They were never concerned with historically ascertaining the person of Jesus of Nazareth or the beginnings of Christianity.
Both were constructed under completely different historical auspices—with an anti-heretic objective—only in the 4th century via Eusebius of Caesarea, and with lasting success. To this day, this also shapes the current depictions of the history of early Christianity—supplemented with all the testimonies that the early church left behind as apologetic, homiletic and didactic—but not as actual historical records.
RealityRules wrote:Offener Anfang: Die Entstehung des Christentums im 2. Jahrhundert
aka 'Open Beginnings: The emergence of Christianity in the 2nd century'
https://www.herder.de/theologie-pastoral-shop/offener-anfang-ebook-(pdf)/c-37/p-17423/
The summary translated into English:Based on the thesis that no one in early Christianity was interested in a historical account of the beginnings of Christianity, Vincent arrives at fundamental insights that question centuries-old ideas about the early days of Christianity.
The oldest witnesses who are called upon to convey to us the beginnings of Christianity are neither the Gospels or the Acts of the Apostles, nor the epistles of Paul. They are often apocryphal testimonies, alleged epistles from Jesus or Paul, lives of apostles, or Jewish scriptures.
The great theologians of the 2nd and 3rd centuries, from Irenaeus to Tertullian to Origen, refer to apostolic traditions (which are difficult to determine), the rule of faith, and to holy scriptures, yet not as an appeal to the "historical", but to use them as a 'norm' as anti-heretical weapons. They were never concerned with historically ascertaining the person of Jesus of Nazareth or the beginnings of Christianity.
Both were constructed under completely different historical auspices—with an anti-heretic objective—only in the 4th century via Eusebius of Caesarea, and with lasting success. To this day, this also shapes the current depictions of the history of early Christianity—supplemented with all the testimonies that the early church left behind as apologetic, homiletic and didactic—but not as actual historical records.
Hermit wrote:The author, Markus Vinzent, is professor of theological history at the Department for Theology and Religious Studies. King's College, London
Hermit wrote:
Fixed your link, by the way.
proudfootz wrote:Well, the news isn't all bad!![]()
Looks like a healthy number of people know Jesus is merely a literary character.
https://vridar.org/2022/01/18/bearing-f ... for-jesus/
There is a particular type of person who accepts Jesus Mythicism...
Mythicism has the appeal of an all-encompassing explanation for how Christianity started...
Let me stress at the outset that I don’t endorse the following argument. I present it, not because I’m convinced it is cogent, but because I believe it has some prima facie plausibility, and because it is an argument any historian who believes the available evidence places Jesus’ existence beyond reasonable doubt needs to refute
1. (P1) Where a claim’s justification derives solely from evidence, extraordinary claims (e.g. concerning supernatural miracles) require extraordinary evidence. In the absence of extraordinary evidence there is good reason to be sceptical about those claims.
2. There is no extraordinary evidence for any of the extraordinary claims concerning supernatural miracles made in the New Testament documents.
3. Therefore (from 1 and 2), there's good reason to be sceptical about those extraordinary claims.
4. (P2) Where testimony/documents weave together a narrative that combines mundane claims with a significant proportion of extraordinary claims, and there is good reason to be sceptical about those extraordinary claims, then there is good reason to be sceptical about the mundane claims, at least until we possess good independent evidence of their truth.
5. The New Testament documents weave together a narrative about Jesus that combines mundane claims with a significant proportion of extraordinary claims.
6. There is no good independent evidence for even the mundane claims about Jesus (such as that he existed)
7. Therefore (from 3, 4, 5, and 6), there's good reason to be sceptical about whether Jesus existed.
...the three criteria of multiple attestation, embarrassment and discontinuity, criteria widely used to justify the claim that the New Testament documents alone suffice to establish firmly the truth of various Biblical claims, such as that Jesus existed. On closer examination, these three criteria do not appear (either singly or jointly), to establish, by themselves, a core of material within the New Testament testimony that we can justifiably consider “assured” (Perrin), an “unassailable nucleus” (C. Leslie Milton) or “unlikely to be inventions of early evangelists” (Grant).
proudfootz wrote:
The author opens with this salvo:There is a particular type of person who accepts Jesus Mythicism...
Lest we forget this is personal.
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