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View Poll Results: Jesus: Lord, liar, lunatic or other???
Lord 35 37.23%
Liar 1 1.06%
Lunatic 6 6.38%
None of the above: he was probably a cult leader about whom people invented stories after his death 39 41.49%
None of the above: he was a myth 12 12.77%
A combination of lunatic and liar 1 1.06%
Voters: 94. You may not vote on this poll

 
 
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Old 05-17-2005, 09:15 AM   #1 (permalink)
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Jesus: Lord,liar, lunatic or...??

We have all heard Jesus was lord, liar or lunatic. It is known as the Lewisian trilemma, or as I like to call it the Lewisian false trichotomy.

What do you think Jesus was?
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Old 05-17-2005, 09:23 AM   #2 (permalink)
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I think this belongs in Tilted Philosophy.

Oh, and I think this has been discussed before.
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Old 05-17-2005, 09:23 AM   #3 (permalink)
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He's a mechanic I know. He pronopunces his name HEY SOOSE.
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Old 05-17-2005, 09:34 AM   #4 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by clavus
He's a mechanic I know. He pronopunces his name HEY SOOSE.
I can corroborate this; Jesus Built my Hotrod.
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Old 05-17-2005, 09:42 AM   #5 (permalink)
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Old 05-17-2005, 09:43 AM   #6 (permalink)
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agreed.. I think this topic more belongs in philosophy.

In any event though, I voted for liar.

My views on this are rather simple. I'm not doubting the fact that, at some point in time, a man named Jesus Christ lived and walked the earth. I'm just doubting the fact that he walked on water and did all those miracle things.

Remember being a kid and playing Telephone with a bunch of people? You would start with the word "bike" and it would go around the circle until it came back to you as "psychosomatic stewardesses constructing carbon fiber pants"?

Same principle, just that the guy started the word 2000 years ago and now it's to us.
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Old 05-17-2005, 10:05 AM   #7 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by BigBen931
Oh, and I think this has been discussed before.
It has, once... briefly... more than 2 years ago.
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Old 05-17-2005, 10:16 AM   #8 (permalink)
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you might want to read some of the responses in this thread from 11/04 to 4/05
Who do you believe Jesus was?
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Old 05-17-2005, 11:29 AM   #9 (permalink)
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I don't see my choice up there. He was a man. Very probably a good man, but just a man.
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Old 05-17-2005, 11:35 AM   #10 (permalink)
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I voted for cult leader that had stories made up about him after his death. Although cult isn't the word I would have chosen.
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Old 05-17-2005, 11:50 AM   #11 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by TexanAvenger
I don't see my choice up there. He was a man. Very probably a good man, but just a man.
Probably a cult leader might be the best fit for you. That is what I chose. He was just a man. A man, who was probably a cult leader. And he was probably so beloved by his followers that the stories about him became more and more fantastic the farther it got from the actual events.
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Old 05-17-2005, 01:41 PM   #12 (permalink)
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The poll smacks a little of bias - liar or lunatic seem to be much the same thing - you could ask the same question about Pythagoras, Plato, Richard Dawkins Shakyamuni, L.Ron Hubbard, Alistair Crowley, David Koresh(sp?), Joseph Smith Jr. or one of a hundred different religious or philosophical founders. I don't think the question asks anything new about these things. I'd rather ask whether the ideas and views that these people had have any validity or more interestingly, what things are in common with all of these views.
 
Old 05-17-2005, 02:30 PM   #13 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by TexanAvenger
I don't see my choice up there. He was a man. Very probably a good man, but just a man.
I didn't vote because of this reason. I don't doubt he lived, I don't think he changed water into wine, but I also don't think his followers were a "cult" either.
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Old 05-17-2005, 02:38 PM   #14 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by zen_tom
The poll smacks a little of bias
Actually, I have removed the bias of CS Lewis' LLL argument by adding realistic alternatives.

Quote:
Originally Posted by zen_tom
- liar or lunatic seem to be much the same thing
They aren't even close

Quote:
Originally Posted by zen_tom
you could ask the same question about Pythagoras, Plato, Richard Dawkins Shakyamuni, L.Ron Hubbard, Alistair Crowley, David Koresh(sp?), Joseph Smith Jr. or one of a hundred different religious or philosophical founders.
If these religious leaders are regarded as a 'lord' in any sense, you are correct. When Lewis says "Lord, liar, or lunatic", he means "Lord" in a godly, universal sense.

Quote:
Originally Posted by zen_tom
I don't think the question asks anything new about these things.
Have you never heard of Lewisian apologetics? The question asks nothing new, yet it is asked daily by evangelists -- minus the realistic options that I added, of course.
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Old 05-17-2005, 03:26 PM   #15 (permalink)
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it may have been helpful to cut and paste some of Lewis' text to give shape to your poll questions. if i remember correctly, Lewis spends several chapters establishing his logical grounds for eliminating all but the LLL possibilities.

as i, and others, have said before... it isn't really fair to compare the early gospel formations to a game of telephone. it ignores both the true nature of the source material and the social context of it being passed on in a society heavily reliant on the preservation of an accurate oral tradition.
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Old 05-17-2005, 03:59 PM   #16 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by irateplatypus
it may have been helpful to cut and paste some of Lewis' text to give shape to your poll questions. if i remember correctly, Lewis spends several chapters establishing his logical grounds for eliminating all but the LLL possibilities.
No he doesn't. He barely touches on Jesus historicity at all. You may be thinking of McDowell, the hack-writer who co-opted the LLL argument from Lewis.
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Old 05-17-2005, 04:33 PM   #17 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by zen_tom
liar or lunatic seem to be much the same thing
I believe what is meant by this is:
Liar - Jesus preached all these things and knew perfectly well he was taking everyone for a ride. (power hungry)
Lunatic - Jesus honestly believed in what he preached, even if in reality these thing were not true. (delusional, but otherwise good natured)

I vote cult leader w\ accompanying increasingly elaborate stories.
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Old 05-17-2005, 06:31 PM   #18 (permalink)
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The only difference between a liar and a lunatic, is that a liar doesn't believe his own bullshit. I have absolutely no idea, nor any historical evidence to presume to know what what happening inside Jesus' head 2000 years ago. It just can't be done. I can't tell what someone across the room might be thinking, let alone a potential deity incarnate. If Jesus was Lord, then I guess it wasn't bullshit after all - again, I'm certainly in no position to say either way.

On the question of bias (not that it matters), they ask the same question i.e. Was Jesus a fake? That's two options for fake, a third suggests a cult leader (Also, what's the difference between a cult-leader and a lunatic or a liar?) which I'd suggest is also suggests fake, as does myth, and finally, a combination of lunatic or liar - i.e. another fake.

So, when you add it all up and the poll boils down to:
Was Jesus?
a) Not fake
b) fake
c) fake
d) fake
e) fake
or
f) fake

That's why it smells a little of bias - not a problem, we're not about to proove anything either way, here, just guage a range of opinions.

The option I would have liked would have been something to do with Jesus' words and deeds being altered and exaggerated in various aspects down through the ages - I certainly wouldn't suggest he was either liar, lord or lunatic - Rather, a particularly wise and gentle man with extraordinary compassion and understanding of his fellow men. But that's just my opinion.
 
Old 05-17-2005, 06:50 PM   #19 (permalink)
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it's a very false trilemma. i usually refuse to discuss it, on the grounds that it fundamentally mistates the nature of mental illness.
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Old 05-17-2005, 07:20 PM   #20 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by McDuffie
No he doesn't. He barely touches on Jesus historicity at all. You may be thinking of McDowell, the hack-writer who co-opted the LLL argument from Lewis.
i am most certainly not thinking of McDowell. /shudders

looking at my well-thumbed copy of the Case for Christrianity (reprinted from Mere Christianity), I see a clear progression of ideas from the start of the book culminating in the 3rd chapter of the second part.
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Old 05-17-2005, 07:47 PM   #21 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by zen_tom
That's why it smells a little of bias
This is not my argument. I have mitigated the bias of the original arguement by adding options 4-6.
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Old 05-17-2005, 08:04 PM   #22 (permalink)
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i believe that jesus is whatever u want him to be. since religion isnt concerned with fact, rather faith. Same goes for muhammed, joseph smith and anyone else claiming to be or know god(s) more personally than you.
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Old 05-18-2005, 06:05 AM   #23 (permalink)
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But that's simply not true, at least in Christianity's case. If Christianity isn't true, that is, if Christ was not God and did not die and rise again from the dead, then "we are to be pitied above all people". And it doesn't make any sense to say that Jesus is whoever you want him to be. He was a historical individual, and so, just like any other historical individual, one can make true and false claims about him.

The point of the Lewisian trilemma is that it means to exclude the option "Good man, not God". I'd quote, but my copy of Mere Christianity is in a box. Lewis's point is that someone who said the things Christ said could not be merely a good man. Whatever else we might think about people who claim to be God, we don't think that it would be a good idea to think about them as an example.
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Old 05-18-2005, 06:35 AM   #24 (permalink)
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I don't believe Christ ever alluded personally to being God - yes it's stated in the gospels, but I'd rather attribute the labels of liar or lunatic to the people (who by the way are unlikely to have actually been the disciples named) who wrote the history for the consumption of the Gentiles.

I do think people are often capable of determining the difference between good and crazy - and would be surprised if 2000 years of civilisation and culture can be ascribed to the ravings of either a lunatic or a scam-artist. At the same time, I'm not ready to accept the divine aspect of Jesus' life. I'm forced to lean towards the "Good Man, not God" whether it was meant to be excluded or not.
 
Old 05-18-2005, 07:11 AM   #25 (permalink)
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asaris...we are to be pited among all people if Christ did not rise from the dead, not if Jesus was not God.

You're quoting off 1 Cor 15, correct?

Zen Tom is right to note that there are sayings that make Jesus sound like he claims divinity. Most occur in John. For instance, i one is reading Mark alone, there is really no sign that Jesus claims to be God, rather that he claims to have a mandate from God. If the Gospels don't agree, then I think this is a point on which Christians can disagree in good faith.
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Old 05-18-2005, 04:57 PM   #26 (permalink)
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I simply don't think that's true, Martin Guerre. Look, either Jesus claimed to be God or he didn't. But all of those people who knew him best, his close friends and followers, all believe that he did. What you claim to be disagreement between the gospels, I claim is just a later gospel filling out what was left unsaid in an earlier gospel.
Yes, I'm quoting from I Cor 15 (or whereever that is), but as far as I call tell, Christ's rising from the dead is generally adduced in the epistles as evidence for his divinity.

For the record, I'm not claiming that C. S. Lewis was correct in saying that to say "Christ was merely a good man" is to be confused. I think he was, but I don't know how to argue well for that conclusion. I AM going to stick to my guns and say that anyone who does not believe in the divinity of Christ is not a Christian. Christians have believed in his divinity from the very beginning -- what makes you so much smarter than these people to say "No, sorry, we've been mistaken for 2000 years"?
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Old 05-18-2005, 05:46 PM   #27 (permalink)
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I have stayed out of this for obvious reasons.....but please....Lets not allow this to degrade further than it has. There is no reason to debase anyone elses belief, as everything in here is simply opinion.

And we All have at least one of those
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Old 05-18-2005, 06:53 PM   #28 (permalink)
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I voted Lord.

The thread reads as one with a broad base of thought and consideration - and has references about writings and logicicians which I know nothing about. So I'll just say my bit then.

I am pretty sure that there are a lot of Jesus type characteristics and stories that predate his birth by many thousands of years. He lived a life that attracted that ancient mantle, and did it in a transfiguring way due to the fact that he was a gifted polymath with off-the-scale social and human interests, and he was one of the rare true charismatics that bend history around themselves.

So he was a Lord because he is the Phoenix of the wisdom of our forbears, brought through him and his legacy and textured by philosophers and political figures over the last 2000 years to fit our 21st century intellectual endeavours.
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Old 05-18-2005, 07:33 PM   #29 (permalink)
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I don't think at this time he was lord...but I don't think he was a lunatic either. I think to an extent he is part myth and part enlightened. A great man whose legend was passed around so much that it grew into these huge stories.
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Old 05-18-2005, 07:54 PM   #30 (permalink)
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He was a black sheep, an extrovert.. more seriously perhaps he was the first most self-actualised human.

Then I have to ask, what if the word and message of God was not directly whispered in his ear, perhaps there was a spiritual connection so strong as to 'tap into' or hear the message about life. I am amazed at the advice given in the bible that is still relevant to this day in regards to 'healthy living and perspective'... how does something like that come to be?

Son of God - perhaps..
Liar or Lunatic - I don't think so..
Myth - I think not..
A Cult Leader - perhaps..

What if perhaps he was an enlightened individual, and with the help of a God like essence, the followers perceptions were directed to give an overall view and story to the time and life of Jesus?

Interesting, yet eternally unknowable...
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Old 05-18-2005, 08:06 PM   #31 (permalink)
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Originally Posted by Coppertop
I voted for cult leader that had stories made up about him after his death. Although cult isn't the word I would have chosen.
Yeah, pretty much what I think. But I just think that he was a myth. Just another character in the story.
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Old 05-18-2005, 09:06 PM   #32 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by asaris
Look, either Jesus claimed to be God or he didn't.
True enough...

Quote:
But all of those people who knew him best, his close friends and followers, all believe that he did.
Not true. I don't read that message in Mark or Paul...and i'm not alone in that reading, either. Luke and Matthew are debatable...i only see an outright claim to divnity in John. The other epistles are basically silent on the matter, AFAIK...

Quote:
What you claim to be disagreement between the gospels, I claim is just a later gospel filling out what was left unsaid in an earlier gospel.
Which is why reading John back on to Mark or Paul is problematic. Why prioritize John like that? Why not read John through the lens of Mark? What justifies your choice in making that call? John was nearly cut from the cannon on several occasions. What makes it *the* authority now?

Quote:
Yes, I'm quoting from I Cor 15 (or whereever that is), but as far as I call tell, Christ's rising from the dead is generally adduced in the epistles as evidence for his divinity.
Check the tenses on the verbs. Egeiro in Mark and Paul is usually indicating that he was raised. Passive voice hides the actor, and it indicates, IMO, that God is doing the raising, not Jesus.

Quote:
I AM going to stick to my guns and say that anyone who does not believe in the divinity of Christ is not a Christian. Christians have believed in his divinity from the very beginning -- what makes you so much smarter than these people to say "No, sorry, we've been mistaken for 2000 years"?
Well, i'm quite sorry to hear that from you. But, honestly...it was a big fight back then...The writings of the Patriarchs make it clear that divinity and the nature of Christ/Jesus was a major point of contention. You're mistaken to claim that this has been the uniform belief of all Christians through all time. The reason why there is a creed to state this is that not everyone was toeing the line in the first place. Boundaries like that indicate that there was *already* an outside.

I'm not smarter...and for what it's worth, i happen to be a trinitarian. but your argument does not reflect the bredth and tension with in the Christianities of history or the present.
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Old 05-18-2005, 09:26 PM   #33 (permalink)
 
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The tone of the discussion between perhaps the two most biblically erudite people on this thread is exactly what has turned me away from the church entirely. I cannot believe that a God of love would want us speaking to each other in this manner, and it saddens me to watch it play out on TFP.

And so, who was Christ? I used to call myself a Christian, a very strong one at that. Now, though, I suppose that I don't know whether or not Christ was/is divine, and because of that I cannot fit the evangelical mold. That's fine with me. I believe God, if he exists, would have me as I am, doubts and all. However, I don't think we can boil it down to a damned dichotomy... fake vs. non-fake. We are human. We have no clue. For all we know, Christ could be a manifestation of an incomprehensible (to us) being who spans time, fakeness and non-fakeness, existence and history... and blow us all away with how small we really are. And yes I read that Lewis book too, in my fervent Christian days... I practically worshiped Lewis. But he is just one voice. His perspective does not encompass all that Christ could possibly have been. Lewis was a human, just like the rest of us.

Personally, anyone who claims to know the answer to who Jesus was... I don't trust them. None of us has the authority to claim that "I" know (or at least, we can say that, but not to prove others wrong). And yet we start wars over this fact... in the real word, between whole nations, and even here on TFP.
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Old 05-19-2005, 05:06 AM   #34 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by asaris
But that's simply not true, at least in Christianity's case. If Christianity isn't true, that is, if Christ was not God and did not die and rise again from the dead, then "we are to be pitied above all people". And it doesn't make any sense to say that Jesus is whoever you want him to be. He was a historical individual, and so, just like any other historical individual, one can make true and false claims about him.
what historical evidence is there for a historical jesus?
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Old 05-19-2005, 09:38 AM   #35 (permalink)
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Well, I don't remember the case as well as I used to, but as I recall, there is enough evidence that, at the very least, there was an itinerant rabbi named Jesus during the first part of the first century CE that it's simply ludicrous to think that this isn't the case. Think about it -- there are several writings, with very good provenance, all written within 60 years of his death, and some written within 20-30 years of his death, that say, if nothing else, that there was a guy named Jesus wandering around. Why on earth would you think that, not only did the apostles make up Christ's claims to divinity, but that he even existed?

Martin_Guerre: I don't really want to argue the point with you, since, for one, you're obviously more familiar with the scholarship than I am, and for two, I've done it before here (that argument was inconclusive, btw). But I do think that, if the word "Christianity" is going to mean anything, it needs to refer to a core set of beliefs, otherwise it's going to go the way of 'gentleman'. I happen to think that a good core set of beliefs happens to be the Apostles' Creed, though you could very easily convince me that even a couple of those beliefs are not necessary to be a Christian. I don't equate being a Christian with being saved, however. I don't know who's going to be saved; God could save all of us, though given scripture, this is unlikely, or He could damn all of us, though given scripture, this is even more unlikely, and with neither option could any of us justly complain. So I don't know if someone who denies the divinity of Christ is going to be saved, but I want to reserve the right to think that they're not a Christian.
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Old 05-19-2005, 12:59 PM   #36 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by asaris
Well, I don't remember the case as well as I used to, but as I recall, there is enough evidence that, at the very least, there was an itinerant rabbi named Jesus during the first part of the first century CE that it's simply ludicrous to think that this isn't the case. Think about it -- there are several writings, with very good provenance, all written within 60 years of his death, and some written within 20-30 years of his death, that say, if nothing else, that there was a guy named Jesus wandering around. Why on earth would you think that, not only did the apostles make up Christ's claims to divinity, but that he even existed?
at the moment, to the best of my knowledge, the only written 'evidence' for jesus (not his real name by the way) having actually lived in the area that is modernday isreal during the first century AD is the new testament. of which none of it was written less than about 30 years after his death, and doubtfully written by anyone that actually knew him, by the people whom the gospels say they were written by. i think there's good reason to think that jesus never existed and is nothing more than a myth.
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Old 05-19-2005, 01:09 PM   #37 (permalink)
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by asaris
So I don't know if someone who denies the divinity of Christ is going to be saved, but I want to reserve the right to think that they're not a Christian.
I'm curious, what is actually the point of reserving the right to think someone is not a Christian? What good does that actually serve anyone?

I do not ask these questions polemically... I am genuinely interested in this, because I was quite fervent about categorizing people in my Christian days... mostly to determine whether or not I needed to "witness" to them or not. I couldn't see them as just being human, same as me. These days I care much more about a person's character overall now, not about what label they are under.
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Old 05-19-2005, 05:28 PM   #38 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hannukah harry
at the moment, to the best of my knowledge, the only written 'evidence' for jesus (not his real name by the way) having actually lived in the area that is modernday isreal during the first century AD is the new testament. of which none of it was written less than about 30 years after his death, and doubtfully written by anyone that actually knew him, by the people whom the gospels say they were written by. i think there's good reason to think that jesus never existed and is nothing more than a myth.
Well...not quite.

There is evidence outside of the NT. Josephus writes of Jesus in his work Antiquities.

Paul writes 1 Thessalonians in the late 40's, early 50's. That's about 20 years after Gogoltha. Granted, it's a hearsay account, but he does create a working record of there being a Christian community at that time for whom it is meaningful to talk of a man named Jesus.

We can argue over whether or not any of the Gospel writers knew Jesus directly. Mark is written shortly after the revolt in 70-2 AD. Frankly, i think its quite likely that the author knew Jesus directly...

Simply, i don't think that it's a very tenable position to deny that Jesus existed. beyond that, it's certainly more contested. but it seems to me to be a pretty thin argument to claim that he did not exist at all.
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Old 05-20-2005, 01:41 AM   #39 (permalink)
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Quote:
Originally Posted by martinguerre
Well...not quite.

There is evidence outside of the NT. Josephus writes of Jesus in his work Antiquities.

Paul writes 1 Thessalonians in the late 40's, early 50's. That's about 20 years after Gogoltha. Granted, it's a hearsay account, but he does create a working record of there being a Christian community at that time for whom it is meaningful to talk of a man named Jesus.

We can argue over whether or not any of the Gospel writers knew Jesus directly. Mark is written shortly after the revolt in 70-2 AD. Frankly, i think its quite likely that the author knew Jesus directly...

Simply, i don't think that it's a very tenable position to deny that Jesus existed. beyond that, it's certainly more contested. but it seems to me to be a pretty thin argument to claim that he did not exist at all.

josephus wasn't born until a few years after jesus's death. to my knowledge, there are <b>zero</b> contemporary references to jesus. during the time he supposidly lived there were others (with contemporary documentation of their lives) who claimed to be the messiah, rise from the dead, perform miracles, etc.

considering what the world was like back then, it doesn't surprise me that people would be able to be convinced that jesus was real and did what he did. i think to believe in him based on teh current references we have is a pretty thin argument. i see no reason to believe in him just as you see no reason to believe that hercules once lived on earth.

my current personal belief is that he may or may not have existed. if he did, he was a normal man, maybe preached a bit. but that what was written about him is about as true as the harry potter books are.
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Old 05-20-2005, 07:13 AM   #40 (permalink)
 
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Quote:
Originally Posted by hannukah harry
but that what was written about him is about as true as the harry potter books are.
Ahh, now this brings up something interesting... can Truth be communicated through fiction? A similar idea has been proposed regarding the Lord of the Rings books (before the craze from the movie made everything a bit cheesy). And especially Lewis' Chronicles of Narnia books.

For me, I see a great deal of Truth in story... even something like Harry Potter. And that is why for me, it is almost irrelevant whether there was a historical Jesus... (I am not a Christian in this sense), because a fictional narrative can have as much power as fact. Thoughts?
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