11-24-2007, 05:38 PM | #801 |
Data is Turned On
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I'm not going to say anything about the historicity of Jesus, except that I'm pretty sure that there was academic controversy on the existence of an historical Jesus, so I don't think it's all that obvious.
As for citing the Glorious Life Church website to "back up" anything, I don't think that's very prudent at all. Historically, there's no consensus that the Bible (and by that I mean the Old Testament) should be assumed to be accurate, even in parts that aren't blatantly mythological or miraculous narratives, and this website seems overenthusiastic over minor things (a figurine of a calf from antiquity? wow!) as well as outright inflating others. All in all, I was under the impression that the accuracy of the Bible, as a source, wasn't held by most historians as particularly faultless. I get the curious impression from the GLC website that the authors are imagining a conflict between "the historical narrative of the Bible is made out of whole cloth" and "the bible is the absolute truth, hurray!", which isn't a very balanced way of looking at this. Lets not forget Homer was confirmed at least once by archeology.
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11-24-2007, 09:13 PM | #802 |
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I've also heard things to the effect that there were a bunch of "messianic" figures around that time period. Anybody know about this? Any truth to it? In particular I ask because a lot of these historic references refer to Christ rather than Jesus; a title rather than a name.
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11-24-2007, 10:20 PM | #803 |
Her hands were cold and small.
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Yes there were a bunch of people claiming to be Christs at that time, due to the book of Daniel giving a general time-frame on when the Christ was supposed to be expected. I'm not big on prophecy, but it could have referred to anytime in the hundred to two hundred or so years on either side of Jesus' birth, depending upon how you interpret the term "a week" in the prophecies. It's most commonly interpreted as 7 years, when they're referring to far-future events such as this, but there are other possible meanings, giving it a bit of leeway. Anyway, there were at least two other people claiming to be Christs that had large followings, but they didn't fulfill all the prophecy to enough people's acceptance. One in particular was fairly close, but it was a hundred years previous, I think. He's mentioned in the Gnostic texts, if I'm not mistaken.
But most of the people, aside from those three or four, who were claiming to be the Christ were just in it for fame or fortune. However, I've recently heard claims by a guy who is supposedly of the "bloodline" who secretly control everything by spreading knowledge discretely throughout the populations of earth that the three wise men were part of their order, and were almost always near Jesus' side. Supposedly, that's why Jesus succeeded and the rest failed. He was furthering their "cause" whatever the hell that means. Personally, some of the guy's claims are far out there, but some are pretty close to what I have come to believe (the religious parts, not the "we control knowledge of the divine" part). http://www.scribd.com/doc/403303/The...y-Insider-2005 I was searching for various texts on magic, because I tend to look at those and laugh when I'm bored, and this transcription intrigued me.
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11-24-2007, 10:37 PM | #804 |
Archer and Armstrong vs. the World
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_Messiah_claimants this is an article that talks about Jewish Messiah claimants; I'd ignore the Alexander the Great thing there at the beginning (that wasn't even there the last time I saw this page), and probably focus on the first three or four after that as far as the ones around that time.
# Judas son of Hezekiah (Ezekias) (c. 4 BCE) # Simon (c. 4 BCE) # Athronges (c. 4-2? BCE) # Honi HaM'agel # Jesus These people were all claimants to Messiah-ship at that time. The next one in the timeline here was "Theudas (44-46) in the Roman province of Judea" which was a few years after Jesus death (if you took it as exactly happening in 32 AD or what have you, since no one really knows exactly when Jesus was born/died).
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11-25-2007, 01:56 PM | #805 | |
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11-26-2007, 01:13 AM | #806 | ||
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11-26-2007, 01:19 PM | #807 | |
for all seasons
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11-26-2007, 03:10 PM | #808 | ||
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11-26-2007, 06:52 PM | #809 | |
Argus Agony
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11-27-2007, 12:42 AM | #810 | |
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The LORD said, "If as one people speaking the same language they have begun to do this, then nothing they plan to do will be impossible for them. Come, let us go down and confuse their language so they will not understand each other." - Genesis 11:6-7 |
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