07-12-2007, 04:42 AM | #251 | ||||||
Erotic Esquire
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But now I'll respond to a few of your points. Quote:
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We also have: Simon Peter (son of John), a Fisherman (Matthew 4:18-20, Mark 8:29-33, Luke 22:31-34, John 21:15-19, Acts 2:14-41) James (son of Zebedee), a Fisherman (Mark 3:17, Mark 10:35-40, Luke 9:52-56, Acts 12:1-2) John (son of Zebedee, brother of James), a Fisherman (the presumed author of the Gospel of John, the "One Who Jesus Loved") (Mark 1:19, Mark 10:35-40, Luke 9:52-56, "the one who Jesus loved" in all of John, Acts 12:1-2) Andrew (Simon Peter's brother), a Fisherman (Matthew 4:18-20, John 1:35-42, John 6:8-9, John 12:20-22.) Philip, a Fisherman (Matthew 10:3, John 1:43-46, John 6:2-7, John 12:20-22, John 14:8-11) Bartholomew, position unknown (often assumed by Biblical scholars to have been an impoverished older man) (Mark 3:18, John 1:45-51, John 21:1-13.) Matthew (called Levi,) a Tax Collector (Matthew 9:9-13, Mark 2:15-17, Luke 5:27-32.) Thomas (called the twin, though his twin is never apparently present.) (Matthew 10:3, John 14:5, John 20:24-29, John 21:1-13) James (son of Alphaeus), position unknown. He's the one who's least showcased in the Bible, but he's still mentioned by name in Matthew 10:3, Mark 3:18, and Luke 6:15. Strangely, he's not featured in any prominent moment in the Bible and his story's never quite told like the others, so he's your best bet for a "made up" apostle, I suppose, if you wanted to believe one was falsely manufactured. Thaddaeus (Judas son of James,) who is not Judas Iscariot, mentioned in Matthew 10:3, Mark 3:18, and given a line of speech in John 14:22. Simon the Zealot, originally a follower of John the Baptist, mentioned in Matthew 10:4 and Mark 3:18 and Luke 6:15. (He's the second weakest in terms of what we know about him.) Judas Iscariot, who is replaced by Matthias after he betrays Christ and commits suicide. That's eleven disciples who become the first 11 apostles, and Matthias, who joins in the party as a first-order-of-business in Acts 1. Of course later on we see a number of Christian missionaries referred to as apostles who weren't among the initial 12. Quote:
We also have 1 John, 2 John, and 3 John by the apostle John (that one who Jesus loved who also supposedly authors the Gospel of John.) That's two apostles right there who wrote down their stuff. (Including the gospels themselves there's also Mark/Levi who's suggested to have written the Gospel of Mark.) As for the others, well some may have simply been unable to write (Bartholomew in particular strikes me as a likely candidate for being illiterate.) And if you want to get into the gnostics, Thomas (of the doubting variety) supposedly wrote his own gospel that the Christian church rejected (claiming it was not in fact authentically the work of Thomas himself.) Quote:
So I'm pretty darned certain that a great many efforts were made by many people involved to document Christ. Not all of it survived. As the Gospel of Judas would seem to indicate we're still in the process of recovering some ancient texts regarding the life of Christ to this day. It's somewhat of an ongoing process. Quote:
There's also the additional problem that Jesus was trying to preach to a crowd that was mostly illiterate, and a majority of the people who were literate at that time wanted him dead. Beyond all that, I really can't say why he wouldn't still write a few details down for posterity's sake.
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07-12-2007, 09:33 AM | #252 | |
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07-12-2007, 11:26 AM | #253 | |
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?
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07-12-2007, 11:56 AM | #254 | ||
An Animal I Have Become
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We also have the book of James, which was potentially written by one of the Jameses (probably the one that wasn't killed by Herod). But yes, most of these guys were fishermen. Matthew was a tax collector and would have been literate, but very few of these guys could read or write.
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07-12-2007, 12:24 PM | #255 |
That Guy
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125 AD... That's... about a hundred years after Jesus died? When you copy by hand, and you take into account that those copyists were uprofessional, that's a lot of room for error, addition, subtraction, and change. Besides, as I stated, most/all English versions of the Bible (including the King James Bible) aren't based on the best manuscripts available. They're based on Erasmus' translation of a handful of later Greek manuscripts into Latin, which included one which was forged so he would include the Johannine Comma. That, BTW, is the only part in the Gospels that claims any sort of Trinity. As for why word choice is important? Because tons of people believe every word in the Bible (often times, King James' Version) were scribed by God and given to us somehow, and that therefore every phrase is not only wise, but Holy, and so justify some rather horrible things, like prolonging the war in the Middle East, or persecuting homosexuals, or preventing women from advancing in society, or killing non-believers, or a heck of a lot of other things. If we put things in perspective, we can change our kerygma* and prevent our religions from becoming obsolete, or worse, from causing our whole society to stagnate.
As far as those original Christians on death row in Rome... They were convinced first that the world was about to end, and later that leading their life and dying as martyrs would make them reach heaven faster. Roman generals actually complained of Christians begging to be killed, not because Jesus was son of God, but because he, too, had been a martyr. No one claimed he had been Son of God or the Word of God until some 200 years after Jesus died, and even afterwards, the concept of the Trinity wasn't made official until Arius and Athanasius, hundreds of years after the fact. That said, how recently was that papyrus discovered? Any chance its a forgery? After all, papyrus generally does NOT survive that long, and many forgeries have been made. Unless you're talking about this one tiny bit of papyrus that HAS been found and, except for your claim that it is intact, quite readily fills the descriptions you've made. (The one I'm aware of is a tiny scrap, hardly a couple of verses.) Lastly, for the record, I'm actually Jewish. I also have studied quite a bit of this stuff. Another very good book I'd recommend is A History of God, by Karen Armstrong. She's very articulate, and demonstrates a lot of knowledge on the subject. *Kerygma is a term somewhat related to dogma. It comprises the things a religion teaches at the time, whereas dogma comprises the basic tenets of a religion. For instance, dying in the Coliseums in the 200's, crusading in the 1300's, peace in more recent times may be examples of kerygma, while the teaching of the Eucharist would be dogma. In Western Christianity,the terms have become interchangeable, so in these religions changing certain elements of the kerygma could be considered as changing the dogma, at least at first.
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07-12-2007, 12:29 PM | #256 | |
for all seasons
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Fuck how do you know what He wants isn't for you to accept that uncertainty is a part of the world as He created it and that part of the Plan isn't for you to have to muddle along a bit and figure things out for yourself, and that you aren't fucking up the entire production by taking the easy answer? For whatever reason God chose to make people fallible and then His son chose to spread his message by way of those same fallible creatures which He created, and it seems to me that to claim otherwise is to deny God's own design for His creation. Hell if God were going to use His divine puissance to ensure that the Testament passes so flawlessly from hand to eye to scribbling hand - if he were going to intervene so directly in the doings of man to restrain us from the consequences of our own fallibility - then what would be the point of anything?
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07-12-2007, 01:15 PM | #257 | |
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In context, I'm saying God's a dick for making people that like to do certain things, then punishing them for doing those things. And I could talk about inevitability too, but that's not the point I'm trying to make here. Last edited by ZAKtheGeek; 07-12-2007 at 01:17 PM. |
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07-12-2007, 02:38 PM | #258 | ||
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Further I don't think it'd be to very hard for Jesus to write a gospel and then shove it in a cave somewhere until he was dead and resurrected and then tell one of his apostles were it was. Quote:
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07-12-2007, 03:06 PM | #259 | |
Data is Turned On
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Following general Christian theology, God not only created the human spirit/mind/soul and the human body, which then all have characteristics determined by the creator assuming the creator has itself free will; but it also created the world and the root of every opportunity for 'sin.' The creator has decided on how easily tempted humans are, and how strong and frequent temptations are. God also didn't take adequate precautions to properly inform its creatures of the home rules. If we're supposed to be following rules (no matter if it's avoiding sin or accepting some religious notion), freewill actually doesn't mean much when we don't actually know* we're supposed to follow these particular rules, and these rules often hinge in good part on divine edicts; not instinct, reason or our desires. On the contrary. While I'm at it, the definition of 'sin' is also within the control of a freewilled God. As is the judgment itself, its critera and possible sentences. The whole process is rigged. Bringing everything down to the freewill of a designed creature in a designed world subjected to unknown, arbitrary (from the perspective of the god) rules is senseless, not just unfair. Unless one doesn't hold that this God is at once omnipotent, omniscient and omnibenevolent. *Being told something isn't the same as knowing something.
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07-12-2007, 04:27 PM | #260 | |
Bob Dole
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