• Starting today August 7th, 2024, in order to post in the Married Couples, Courting Couples, or Singles forums, you will not be allowed to post if you have your Marital status designated as private. Announcements will be made in the respective forums as well but please note that if yours is currently listed as Private, you will need to submit a ticket in the Support Area to have yours changed.

Are there credible witnesses to the resurrection?

doubtingmerle

I'll think about it.
Site Supporter
Jan 28, 2003
9,969
2,521
Pennsylvania
Visit site
✟533,773.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Humanist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Democrat
I concentrated on the verse I saw to be your strongest case, where Paul says our bodies will be transformed like his body. The rest of the verses to me seemed easily compatible with a spiritual resurrection, so I didn't bother commenting on them.

Well, if you think that nobody survives death, then it seems to me that this whole discussion is almost superfluous.
But there are others here that think that people survive death, and that one particular body came out of the grave after death. I am here to talk with those who believe it.

OK, your God and your Jesus are not made of atoms, they are made of some spiritual essence of which you don't wish to speculate, which somehow got transformed into the fetus of Jesus. In that case Mary was not the mother but the surrogate mother of Jesus, and really rather superfluous. The spiritual substance could have just transformed into a baby or immediately into a man. And if no DNA, no sperm, and no egg came from a human, than it is hardly right to call the resulting being human. What we would then have is God stuff that somehow transformed to atoms in the shape of a human.

At any rate this space substance that had transformed itself died, and decided to transform back into space substance. What about the atoms of that body that had been lost as fingernails, hair, sweat, or urine that left the body? Did the divine being no longer need those atoms? And if the divine being didn't need all the atoms that left the body before death, why did it need to bother with all the atoms that were still there after death? Why not just transform a few of those atoms back into spiritual stuff, and then head off into the vast beyond?

Sorry, I digress, but I don't see how any of this makes sense. If Jesus was really God, and he was done with the body on earth, why should he have any need to transform the stinking pile of atoms that was his corpse any more than he needed to transform the last stinking pile of goo that was his last bowel movement into spiritual stuff. It seems to me that all of that would be in the past at that point.

As for Paul, I see that he was a dualist, believing in body and spirit, and he seems to just be concerned about the spirit after death.
 
Upvote 0

doubtingmerle

I'll think about it.
Site Supporter
Jan 28, 2003
9,969
2,521
Pennsylvania
Visit site
✟533,773.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Humanist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Democrat
Funny, though, in this article of Price's from 1995, he seems to give some lip-service to the possibility of Q, unlike that other scholar you cited earlier ... But, Price says ... "all scholars now admit..."

LOL. I saw that. I don't know if he was saying all scholars believe Matthew used both Q and Mark, or just that all scholars believe Matthew used something like Q or Mark. But yes, he does overstate his case here, especially if he thinks all scholars believe Matthew used Q. Mark Goodacre is a scholar who doesn't think Matthew necessarily used a Q source.
 
Upvote 0

2PhiloVoid

Critically Copernican
Site Supporter
Oct 28, 2006
24,757
11,568
Space Mountain!
✟1,366,226.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others
I concentrated on the verse I saw to be your strongest case, where Paul says our bodies will be transformed like his body. The rest of the verses to me seemed easily compatible with a spiritual resurrection, so I didn't bother commenting on them.
Ok, I understand that you think these verses seem "easily compatible" with your view point. Likewise, I think they are compatible with my viewpoint, as well. But, when I read in Philippians 3:10-11 that Paul recognizes some "phenomenon" as a "power" of God (i.e. the resurrection of Jesus), one that is presented in literary parallel with the historical motifs of Jesus' "sufferings" and "death," then I am hard pressed to understand what Paul means in saying that he wishes to attain to the resurrection from the dead (v. 11), if all he means by it is some New Age fluff. I don't see that Paul would, logically, think about all of this resurrection stuff merely in some phantasmagorical, Buddhist type joining of his spirit to the great beyond.

No, I rather see that Paul has a more substantive view of the resurrection; I think he sees Jesus as having had literally risen from the dead, in a substantive manner parallel to that of the crucifixion. Paul also indicates that he wants to participate in this Transformation, this cosmic morphing, if you will, of his dead body by taking on another manifestation of real physical existence at some time time in the future at the Final Judgment. In between his death and the resurrection, I think Paul thought he'd be a disembodied spirit, existing in the presence of the Lord until the Resurrection.

But there are others here that think that people survive death, and that one particular body came out of the grave after death. I am here to talk with those who believe it.
Alright, then. I guess I'll continue to chat ...

OK, your God and your Jesus are not made of atoms, they are made of some spiritual essence of which you don't wish to speculate, which somehow got transformed into the fetus of Jesus.
Not merely transformed ... but also implanted into an organic relationship with Mary; he floated in her amniotic fluids, and He was fed by her placenta while in her womb.

In that case Mary was not the mother but the surrogate mother of Jesus, and really rather superfluous.
While we could interpret Mary as a surrogate of sorts, it wouldn't be superfluous if God planned for Jesus' entry in the world through Mary to conform to a pattern of previously establish prophetic intent, thus 'fulfilling' that prophetic intent, even if in a seemingly indirect manner.

The spiritual substance could have just transformed into a baby or immediately into a man.
That the Logos of God Could have, Should have, or Would have transformed more immediately isn't up for debate. What we are trying to make sense of isn't what God could have done, but what it is reported in the New Testament that He did.

And if no DNA, no sperm, and no egg came from a human, than it is hardly right to call the resulting being human. What we would then have is God stuff that somehow transformed to atoms in the shape of a human.
I don't know about that; if God had the power to turn Himself into a duck, then if the resulting organism... walks like a duck, talks like a duck, flies like a duck, dies like a duck, then for all intensive purposes, it's a duck.

I'm under the impression that the term "Transformation," which Paul uses to expound his points in 1 Corinthians 15, means that--all of Jesus' fingernails, hair, sweat, urine, and whatever, was taken along for the ride in the Transformational process; yet, Jesus was much, much more than a "Spiritual Butterfly."

He doesn't have to have a "need" to take along the refuse of dead materiality; if He takes it along, He takes it to demonstrate His power over matter.

As for Paul, I see that he was a dualist, believing in body and spirit, and he seems to just be concerned about the spirit after death.
You think Paul was a dualist? Nah! I doubt that he was very much infected by Platonism, as some have supposed he was ...

Peace,
2PhiloVoid
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0

2PhiloVoid

Critically Copernican
Site Supporter
Oct 28, 2006
24,757
11,568
Space Mountain!
✟1,366,226.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others

I read the Price article, and I wasn't overly persuaded by it. What do you find convincing about it, Merle? ...
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0

Ed1wolf

Well-Known Member
Dec 26, 2002
2,928
178
South Carolina
✟132,765.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Presbyterian
Marital Status
Single

Yes, I agree but most American schools don't do that and there are some things that cant be taught that way such as physics. You cannot have every kid operate a Particle Accelerator to learn quantum mechanics. So also every kid cannot learn greek and Hebrew and ancient texts. There are still many things that have to be taught from authority.


Huh? Even if I was referring to a tiny minority of scholars that would not be a logical fallacy, because many times throughout the history of science the minority has been correct. This has also been true in biblical scholarship. At one time it was thought by the liberals that the Hittites never existed, but archaeology eventually confirmed that they did just as the bible reported. I don't always have time to go into all the evidence against your view regarding the creed/hymn, but I will try to go into more detail about why you are wrong on some of the other issues. I think I have pretty much refuted your view of the rest of Chapter 15 because you never responded to my comments on the later verses in the chapter.


Well I am glad to hear that we agree on something.

It always depends on what the purpose of the creed/hymn is.
 
Upvote 0

doubtingmerle

I'll think about it.
Site Supporter
Jan 28, 2003
9,969
2,521
Pennsylvania
Visit site
✟533,773.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Humanist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Democrat
there are some things that cant be taught that way such as physics. You cannot have every kid operate a Particle Accelerator to learn quantum mechanics.
I don't think anybody suggested that every kid should have a particle accelerator.

Not everybody can do every experiment. That is why scientists publish their results, so we can all learn from what others have done.

But every student should learn about the scientific method, and understand that the things that are written in his science books are there because the authors understood that the consensus of science has reached these conclusions based on experimental evidence. They should not say that, for instance, that we know the protons are in the nucleus of atoms because the authorities say so. Rather, they should know that experiments were done, and after much discussion, the consensus was reached that protons are in the nucleus. That is the minimum they should know. If they have an interest in that branch of science, they should also know about what experiments were done and the reasoning that led to this conclusion.
So also every kid cannot learn greek and Hebrew and ancient texts. There are still many things that have to be taught from authority.
But what if the authority is wrong? Is it not right to ask what reasoning the authority used?

All this discussion about authority came about when you said something was true because you had a scholar who said so, and when I asked what reasons the scholar gave, you threw this fit demanding that we just trust your scholar's authority. That is the issue. I want to know your scholar's reasoning, and have a right to ask that.

Huh? Even if I was referring to a tiny minority of scholars that would not be a logical fallacy, because many times throughout the history of science the minority has been correct.
Huh? Of course the minority is sometimes right. But if the minority wants to challenge an accepted view, then that minority needs to give their reasoning, rather than throw a fit that we need to accept their authority.
I don't always have time to go into all the evidence against your view regarding the creed/hymn, but I will try to go into more detail about why you are wrong on some of the other issues.
OK, I think I have made the case several times that the list of names beyond Peter and the 12 would not have been an ancient creed from the apostles that Paul copied. Feel free to make your counter-case if you would like to.
I think I have pretty much refuted your view of the rest of Chapter 15 because you never responded to my comments on the later verses in the chapter.
Ah, you are going to play the childish game that, since you got the last word in, you finally win? I think we have been over this many times. I have presented my case that I Cor 15 is referring to a spiritual resurrection, you have presented your case for a bodily resurrection. Anybody viewing this thread can read both and make up their mind for themselves. But for us to endlessly repeat the same arguments in an effort to get in the last word seems pointless. I have no need to do that. I have made my case.
 
Upvote 0

doubtingmerle

I'll think about it.
Site Supporter
Jan 28, 2003
9,969
2,521
Pennsylvania
Visit site
✟533,773.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Humanist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Democrat
No, I rather see that Paul has a more substantive view of the resurrection; I think he sees Jesus as having had literally risen from the dead, in a substantive manner parallel to that of the crucifixion.
That Paul thought that the resurrected Jesus was some sort of spirit stuff we agree. The question is, if he indeed thought Jesus had a body here on earth, did he think that body physically transformed into spirit stuff, with the body found missing? Could he just have believed that Jesus resurrected as spirit stuff, with the body left behind?

Paul makes no mention of an empty grave, a missing body, or disciples interacting with a Jesus made of spirit stuff. Rather, he says that Jesus was seen by him and others, and he infers that the seeing that Paul did was the same quality as the other disciples. But Paul's experience was visionary. If you believe what it is claimed in Acts that he said about this, all he saw was a light, accompanied by a voice. If you look only in his epistles, you don't find much of a description of his seeing other than his story of going to heaven in a vision. That is perhaps, impressive, but certainly not the same thing as sitting down to a meal with a bodily resurrected person. And Paul implies that his visionary experience was in no way inferior to the apostles. (See also I Cor 9: 1-5). So could it be that the only seeing of the resurrected Jesus that was done by anybody was visionary?

So no, I am seeing no sign in Paul that the body was missing and the disciples interacted with the body of the person that had transformed into living spirit stuff.
 
Upvote 0

2PhiloVoid

Critically Copernican
Site Supporter
Oct 28, 2006
24,757
11,568
Space Mountain!
✟1,366,226.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Christian
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Others

Then, when we try to understand where Paul says, and affirms quite emphatically, in 1 Corinthians 15:35-58 that the mortal body is "changed" into a celestial one, I guess he's really just "Whistling Dixie." And if this is the case, we can just forget that he was a Pharisee, who likely entertained, at the least, the idea of a revivification of the body at some point after death for the faithful, unlike the idea of final death held by the Sadducees.

http://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/jewish-resurrection-of-the-dead/2/

Peace,
2PhiloVoid
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0

Ed1wolf

Well-Known Member
Dec 26, 2002
2,928
178
South Carolina
✟132,765.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Presbyterian
Marital Status
Single

No, you took my quote out of context, above I was referring to Papias. He was from the early first Century. But Clement of Alex had contact with the successors of the apostles and Ireneaus and he said that they all agreed that the Mark that knew Peter wrote the gospel from Peters memoirs. And this matches what Papias said, so these are two independent sources from a chronological unbroken chain of sources.


Yes, there were some struggles with those groups and while some got fairly large for a time, they never were as large as the orthodox group and it was obvious from their teachings that they did not have any connection to what the apostles and Christ taught. They incorporated greek/gnostic beliefs which were very different from the orthodox Judaic influenced Christianity. They did not have that unbroken chronological chain to the apostles that I mention above.

There was no real prestige and power until the 4th century. See the unbroken chain back to the apostles I mention above.
 
Upvote 0

doubtingmerle

I'll think about it.
Site Supporter
Jan 28, 2003
9,969
2,521
Pennsylvania
Visit site
✟533,773.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Humanist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Democrat
I was referring to Papias. He was from the early first Century.
Of course. As I have told you many times, Papias wrote around 130 AD, about 100 years after Jesus would have spoken on earth. Papias worte a book about the sayings of Jesus that was popular with later Christians. Papias specifically tells us that he preferred second hand information about what the apostles said compared to anything that might be in written gospels. We have no quote of Papias from a gospel. In fact, Papias appears to have never seen a gospel, for all he can tell us is what he imagines to be in them, and he tells us he imagines the written gospels would not be as valuable to him as his second hand information.

Did you forget my illustration of the man whose source on DL Moody was a grandfather who talked to somebody who had heard Moody? That is exactly the type of source Papias says he relies on: People who came by and said they had known people who had heard Jesus 100 years earlier. And Papias says he trusts this more than the written gospels.

OK, you think Papias may have actually talked to the apostle John, but that would still constitute a 100 year old memory. The disciples must surely have been adults when they walked with Jesus (otherwise they would not have been trusted by the Jews) so that puts the birth of John at 5 AD or earlier. Let's say John lived past 90 AD, and suppose Papias was born in 70 AD. Then yes, in 90 AD the 85 year old John could have talked to the 20 year old Papias, who remembered what he said and wrote it down 40 years later. Although this is possible, it is unlikely, and that would still be an unreliable chain to what Jesus said. And Papias emphasizes that he was not asking "John The Elder" what "John The Elder" heard Jesus say, but what "John the Elder" heard the other disciples say about Jesus. That is second hand information, hearsay.

So even if we go by your view on the source for Papias, it is still a long way from Jesus. But Papias trusts this source more than a written gospel. That is hardly a stinging endorsement for the authority of the gospels that you claim.

It is true that Papias describes a book by Matthew and Mark, but the book he attributes to a Matthew he says is a book of sayings written in aramaic. That doesn't describe the book we call Matthew, which is mainly narrative, and was written in Greek. And he describes a book in which a Mark wrote down his memories of what Peter preached, but not in order. This does not describe the book of Mark, which is an orderly narrative. Papias seems to be describing something more like the Gospel of Thomas. Whatever Papias was referring to, it is not clear at all that he is referring to the books we now call Matthew and Mark.
Actually Irenaeus quotes from Papias, so he is not exactly independent of Papias. He may have picked the names Matthew and Mark from what he read in Papias. But Irenaeus may be referring to different books than Papias was.

Yes, Irenaeus and others after 175 AD attribute what is probably the 4 gospels we now have to what has become the four traditional authors. But they have given no evidence that this claim comes from earlier sources.
Neither did Irenaeus have an unbroken chain to the apostles.

The few quotes we have from the gospels before Iranaeus differ markedly from the gospels we now have. Apparently somebody was editing these gospels as time passed, until they emerged as saying what that one group wanted them to say. But we don't know if the original gospels said the same thing as the documents that emerged in the third and fourth century said.
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0

Ed1wolf

Well-Known Member
Dec 26, 2002
2,928
178
South Carolina
✟132,765.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Presbyterian
Marital Status
Single
If the names in I Cor 15 were a commonly memorized creed, one would think that the gospel writers would have memorized that creed too, and wrote consistent with it. As it is, they don't seem to even be aware of it.

It was a commonly memorized creed for the laity and new converts, not the leaders and certainly not the apostles and gospel writers. They didn't need to memorize it and they wanted to cover more biographical everyday details in the gospels so they just left out the 500.

He appeared to the new twelve not necessarily all at the same time. Read Acts 1:22. One of the requirements of the replacement for Judas is that they had to have witnessed the resurrected Christ.

dm: Also the gospels adds the women, and the 2 on the road to Emmaus before the visits to the 12. But I Cor says Peter and the 12 were first.

The unnamed person on the road to Emmaus very well may have been Peter. The creed/hymn was referring to appearances to the leadership, women were not part of the leadership.


See above why it was probably not mentioned.

Again see above why it was not mentioned.
 
Upvote 0

Ed1wolf

Well-Known Member
Dec 26, 2002
2,928
178
South Carolina
✟132,765.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Presbyterian
Marital Status
Single

But the problem with atheist scholars is that they automatically throw out the possibility for the supernatural. This is a much stronger bias than theistic scholars who are more open minded to the possibility of the supernatural, especially given the strong evidence for the existence of the supernatural. Such an anti-supernatural bias greatly affects their understanding of the biblical texts.

I agree but most of those authorities especially if they are good scholars are basing their opinion ON evidence.



No, I never said that it proves that he spoke with John the Evangelist, but he is usually identified with and that is one piece of evidence that points in that direction.

dm: Again, Papias says he asked The Elder what Peter and John and the others said. If Papias was asking John in person, why ask John what "James, or John, or Matthew" said? That seems like an odd wording.

There may be some copying errors incorporated into it. But given that there is evidence that John the Evangelist probably lived into his 90's he may also be identified with John the Elder.
 
Upvote 0

doubtingmerle

I'll think about it.
Site Supporter
Jan 28, 2003
9,969
2,521
Pennsylvania
Visit site
✟533,773.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Humanist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Democrat
I am asking you for your evidence. So far you have given me nothing sufficient to believe that a man rose bodily from the dead.

Suppose I would tell you that a man named Joe rose from the dead in Virginia in 1782, give the same level of evidence that you gave here. Would you believe that Joe rose from the dead?
I agree but most of those authorities especially if they are good scholars are basing their opinion ON evidence.
Except when I ask you for their evidence, you refuse to tell me, and just tell me that there are some scholars that agree with you. What is their evidence?
 
Upvote 0

doubtingmerle

I'll think about it.
Site Supporter
Jan 28, 2003
9,969
2,521
Pennsylvania
Visit site
✟533,773.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Humanist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Democrat
Ed1Wolf, I think you would do well to understand the principle that William of Occam found long ago, that those explanations that required multiple ad hoc entities to explain them were more likely to be wrong compared with simple explanations.

And so it is with you assertion that the list of names in I Corinthians 15 is a creed well known from the apostles, and yet you repeatedly need to add ad hoc explanations to it.
It was a commonly memorized creed for the laity and new converts, not the leaders and certainly not the apostles and gospel writers.
Where does I Corinthians say it was only the laity, not leaders? This is simply ad hoc to explain the gospel writers seeming to know nothing about this creed you claim.

They didn't need to memorize it and they wanted to cover more biographical everyday details in the gospels so they just left out the 500.
Again ad hoc. The gospel writers were anxious to share the feeding of 5000 or raising of Lazarus. But 500 people seeing a dead person at the same time? Nah, they were more interested in gossipy tidbits? Ad hoc.

He appeared to the new twelve not necessarily all at the same time. Read Acts 1:22. One of the requirements of the replacement for Judas is that they had to have witnessed the resurrected Christ.
An ad hoc explanation. An early creed would have hardly said he then appeared to the 12 if he appeared to the 11, and Mathias was one of many others who saw at another time.
The unnamed person on the road to Emmaus very well may have been Peter.
Ad Hoc.
The creed/hymn was referring to appearances to the leadership, women were not part of the leadership.
Ad Hoc. Nowhere does the creed say it was only referring to leadership and not women.
See above why it was probably not mentioned.
Again, Ad Hoc. If they all knew a creed saying he appeared to many others including James, one would expect the gospels to say something about it.

So again, for many reasons, it appears you are doing a major stretch to call this list of early eyewitnesses a creed. If the gospel writers knew everybody went by this creed, they would have surely written differently. Creeds don't give lists of evidences. Creeds wouldn't have mentioned that many of the 500 are dead. Paul wouldn't have said he was not taught his gospel from men, and then, when presenting his gospel, presented a memorized creed he was taught by men. And your ad hoc explanations to explain this all away don't work.
 
Upvote 0

Ed1wolf

Well-Known Member
Dec 26, 2002
2,928
178
South Carolina
✟132,765.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Presbyterian
Marital Status
Single

I agree but all this information comes from authorities, which is my point.


Of course, all you have to do is read the scholars writings that I have referenced.


dm: Huh? Of course the minority is sometimes right. But if the minority wants to challenge an accepted view, then that minority needs to give their reasoning, rather than throw a fit that we need to accept their authority.

Who threw a fit? I just said read their writings.

dm: OK, I think I have made the case several times that the list of names beyond Peter and the 12 would not have been an ancient creed from the apostles that Paul copied. Feel free to make your counter-case if you would like to.

I disagree as do many scholars including non Christian ones, such as Gerd Ludemann and John Dominic Crossan.

[qutoe]dm; Ah, you are going to play the childish game that, since you got the last word in, you finally win? I think we have been over this many times. I have presented my case that I Cor 15 is referring to a spiritual resurrection, you have presented your case for a bodily resurrection. Anybody viewing this thread can read both and make up their mind for themselves. But for us to endlessly repeat the same arguments in an effort to get in the last word seems pointless. I have no need to do that. I have made my case.[/QUOTE]
No, I am not claiming the last word, only that you never even responded to some of my strongest arguments. Such as Pauls writing how Christian preachers would be ridiculed if Christ was not raised. This only makes sense of a physical resurrection because almost all common folklore of the time believed that people were often changed into spirits after death. If that was all he was preaching then there was nothing to ridicule him about.
 
Upvote 0

Ed1wolf

Well-Known Member
Dec 26, 2002
2,928
178
South Carolina
✟132,765.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Presbyterian
Marital Status
Single

I agree but all this information comes from authorities, which is my point.


Of course, all you have to do is read the scholars writings that I have referenced.


dm: Huh? Of course the minority is sometimes right. But if the minority wants to challenge an accepted view, then that minority needs to give their reasoning, rather than throw a fit that we need to accept their authority.

Who threw a fit? I just said read their writings.

dm: OK, I think I have made the case several times that the list of names beyond Peter and the 12 would not have been an ancient creed from the apostles that Paul copied. Feel free to make your counter-case if you would like to.

I disagree as do many scholars including non Christian ones, such as Gerd Ludemann and John Dominic Crossan.

[qutoe]dm; Ah, you are going to play the childish game that, since you got the last word in, you finally win? I think we have been over this many times. I have presented my case that I Cor 15 is referring to a spiritual resurrection, you have presented your case for a bodily resurrection. Anybody viewing this thread can read both and make up their mind for themselves. But for us to endlessly repeat the same arguments in an effort to get in the last word seems pointless. I have no need to do that. I have made my case.[/QUOTE]
No, I am not claiming the last word, only that you never even responded to some of my strongest arguments. Such as Pauls writing how Christian preachers would be ridiculed if Christ was not raised. This only makes sense of a physical resurrection because almost all common folklore of the time believed that people were often changed into spirits after death. If that was all he was preaching then there was nothing to ridicule him about.
 
Upvote 0

Ed1wolf

Well-Known Member
Dec 26, 2002
2,928
178
South Carolina
✟132,765.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Presbyterian
Marital Status
Single

I agree but all this information comes from authorities, which is my point.


Of course, all you have to do is read the scholars writings that I have referenced.


dm: Huh? Of course the minority is sometimes right. But if the minority wants to challenge an accepted view, then that minority needs to give their reasoning, rather than throw a fit that we need to accept their authority.

Who threw a fit? I just said read their writings.

dm: OK, I think I have made the case several times that the list of names beyond Peter and the 12 would not have been an ancient creed from the apostles that Paul copied. Feel free to make your counter-case if you would like to.

I disagree as do many scholars including non Christian ones, such as Gerd Ludemann and John Dominic Crossan.

[qutoe]dm; Ah, you are going to play the childish game that, since you got the last word in, you finally win? I think we have been over this many times. I have presented my case that I Cor 15 is referring to a spiritual resurrection, you have presented your case for a bodily resurrection. Anybody viewing this thread can read both and make up their mind for themselves. But for us to endlessly repeat the same arguments in an effort to get in the last word seems pointless. I have no need to do that. I have made my case.[/QUOTE]
No, I am not claiming the last word, only that you never even responded to some of my strongest arguments. Such as Pauls writing how Christian preachers would be ridiculed if Christ was not raised. This only makes sense of a physical resurrection because almost all common folklore of the time believed that people were often changed into spirits after death. If that was all he was preaching then there was nothing to ridicule him about.
 
Upvote 0

Ed1wolf

Well-Known Member
Dec 26, 2002
2,928
178
South Carolina
✟132,765.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Presbyterian
Marital Status
Single

I agree but all this information comes from authorities, which is my point.


Of course, all you have to do is read the scholars writings that I have referenced.


dm: Huh? Of course the minority is sometimes right. But if the minority wants to challenge an accepted view, then that minority needs to give their reasoning, rather than throw a fit that we need to accept their authority.

Who threw a fit? I just said read their writings.

dm: OK, I think I have made the case several times that the list of names beyond Peter and the 12 would not have been an ancient creed from the apostles that Paul copied. Feel free to make your counter-case if you would like to.

I disagree as do many scholars including non Christian ones, such as Gerd Ludemann and John Dominic Crossan.


No, I am not claiming the last word, only that you never even responded to some of my strongest arguments. Such as Pauls writing how Christian preachers would be ridiculed if Christ was not raised. This only makes sense of a physical resurrection because almost all common folklore of the time believed that people were often changed into spirits after death. If that was all he was preaching then there was nothing to ridicule him about.
 
Upvote 0

doubtingmerle

I'll think about it.
Site Supporter
Jan 28, 2003
9,969
2,521
Pennsylvania
Visit site
✟533,773.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Humanist
Marital Status
Married
Politics
US-Democrat
I agree but all this information comes from authorities, which is my point.
And authorities are sometimes wrong. That is my point.

I too have authorities. And I think my authorities could beat up your authorities. Just saying.

Got me there. Paul would have made sure Jesus really rose, else why would he go around preaching that the grave was empty, that the disciples had interacted with Jesus bodily on earth after the resurrection, that Jesus had appeared bodily to many, and that his resurrected body was flesh and blood. Imagine his embarassment if he went around teaching these things, and they were not true! Wait, what? Come to think of it, Paul never taught these things. He speaks only of his visionary experience of Jesus, of a Jesus who appears to be like a spirit, whose only body he references is the church, and of the view that death is like the seed that is planted, but a different kind of "body" springs up out of the ground. He says that flesh and blood does not inherit eternal life, making it clear to me that he is not talking about flesh and blood resurrecting. Etc. Maybe Paul never spoke of an empty grave, because he would be embarrassed to preach it. Maybe he never mentioned an empty grave, because he did not believe in a missing body.

And wait, you say that belief in a spirit resurrection was so common nobody would be impressed. LOL! Others here have argued that belief in a spirit resurrection was considered so far out there that no self respecting Jew would ever believe it. So who is giving me the straight scoop here? Should I believe the Christians who tell me Jews so commonly believed in spirit resurrection that nobody would be impressed with such a claim, or should I believe those who say it was so far out there, no Jew would even consider believing it? Or is the actual truth my position, in the middle, that some Jews( e.g. the early Christians) might believe it?
 
Last edited:
Upvote 0

Ed1wolf

Well-Known Member
Dec 26, 2002
2,928
178
South Carolina
✟132,765.00
Country
United States
Gender
Male
Faith
Presbyterian
Marital Status
Single

No matter what Papias prefers (and this could be due to a misinterpretation of what he actually said) he does claim that John the apostle talked to him about how Mark compiled his gospel. And his description of how Mark is arranged not in strict chronological or he could be referring to rhetorical/artistic order. Either one fits pretty well.


No, he is claiming he spoke to John, the beloved disciple, probably Jesus' closest friend.

dm: OK, you think Papias may have actually talked to the apostle John, but that would still constitute a 100 year old memory.
No, it would only be a 57 year old memory. 90AD-33AD=57 years.



No, he claims that he heard from John and Ariston first hand.

dm: So even if we go by your view on the source for Papias, it is still a long way from Jesus. But Papias trusts this source more than a written gospel. That is hardly a stinging endorsement for the authority of the gospels that you claim.

No, I think that may be a misinterpretation of his words by Eusebius. But see above about direct talk with John.


It is order up to a point but not strictly chronological other than the ending. And some scholars believe he may have been referring to artistic order. The Gospel of John is a much more higher quality of Greek, Mark is written much more simple form of greek, less artistic.

dm: Actually Irenaeus quotes from Papias, so he is not exactly independent of Papias. He may have picked the names Matthew and Mark from what he read in Papias. But Irenaeus may be referring to different books than Papias was.

There is no other Mark or Matthew that the early Christians would have known about. And it is not just Ireneus, the story was also known by Clement of Alexandria, Origen, and Tertullian.


Yes, they did see the connection to John the apostle as I have shown above.

dm: The few quotes we have from the gospels before Iranaeus differ markedly from the gospels we now have.

Evidence?


While there has been some very minor editing, there is no evidence of any significant editing affecting any doctrine.
 
Upvote 0