aReformedPatriot
Ron Paul for President!
FullerCrazy Liz said:Yes. I'm about 2/3 of the way through my MDiv at Fuller Theological Seminary.

I only hear good things about that place.
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FullerCrazy Liz said:Yes. I'm about 2/3 of the way through my MDiv at Fuller Theological Seminary.
IThank you. If you have any more, I'd appreciate it.lambslove said:Let me go look it up. They were Germanic theolgoians whose names I can't remember...
Johann Tauler in his letters to Andres Einst said that he had no doubt of the virgin birth but that it was impossible to think that Mary was a virgin her entire life because St James had been the brother of Christ. At one time, the theory was that by brother, James had meant that he was a half brother to Christ, but that the earilest eastern church fathers had rejected the notion because there is no reference in the scriptures of a first marriage for Joseph or for the presence of Joseph's first family which Mary would have been left to raise (and who would have been taken on the trip to Bethlehem since everyone had to travel for the census and not just the father of the household, yet they are not mentioned as being present), and because when the theory was first proposed, some of the siblings of Christ were still alive and did not refute their full relation to Christ. Also, Tauler said, if they were Joseph's children alone, and not Mary's too, they had no claim to being siblings of Christ at all because Christ was related to Mary but not Joseph and they were related to Joseph but not Mary. The closest relationship they could claim was step-sibling, a relationship that was not recognized in Jewish culture. The terminology for such a relationship would have been "father's wife's child," not brother. When James claimed to be the brother of Christ, he could have only meant that he was born of Mary, Tauler stated.
If you want to know more, just ask!The Lord's Envoy said:Fuller![]()
I only hear good things about that place.
Actually one is supposed to focus on the mysteries during the praying of the rosary.Man with Thorn said:Add these to the fact that the Catholic church has a 'Mary's equivalent' of the 'Our Father' prayer, namely the 'Hail Mary', the fact that she is referred to as 'Holy Mary, the Mother of God', and a fundamental Catholic prayer ritual, namely the Holy Rosary, is focussed on Mary and endlessly repeating the Hail Mary (remember what I said about ''brain-washing'' - how else do you get a body of believers to acccept and embrace a doctrine that is so blatantly unscriptural?), makes it seem very apparent to me that the Catholic Church was determined to establish a female 'godhead' who is at the very least on a par with Jesus, but actually, is 'God's queen' as it were, all without a shred of Scriptural validity.
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Well, no, Tauler was basing his position on scripture AND on the church fathers in Jerusalem's determination that James was a legitimate brother of Christ. They knew James personally and had determined that he was not lying or mistaken when he claimed to be Christ's brother. Tauler was merely discussing their determination with Einst, and how it corresponded with scripture and with Jewish culture. In his view, three things (scripture, evidence and the knowledge of Jewish culture) all pointed to the fact that Mary birthed other children after Christ. It was a common point of discussion in the late 1400's and early 1500's, the time when Tauler lived. Although it was the official verdict that she remained a virgin, Tauler was convinced that that was based on the abhorence the church had to the idea that Mary's womb ever contained other children, and not on the evidence of the people who were known to be Christ's siblings during and after his life. He thought it to be a tradition and not a fact.Crazy Liz said:IThank you. If you have any more, I'd appreciate it.
It sounds like Tauler based his position solely on his interpretation of scripture, and not on any historical evidence of early Christian beliefs.
I'll try to come back in a little while and discuss the logical flaws in Tauler's interpretation, but in the meantime, if you can find or remember any of the historical info from before 300 AD (even before 400 would be great!), I'd really appreciate the sources.
Thanks again!
Of course, if you consider Christ's father to be God and the incarnation to be unique, James couldn't have been any closer than a half brother.lambslove said:Johann Tauler in his letters to Andres Einst said that he had no doubt of the virgin birth but that it was impossible to think that Mary was a virgin her entire life because St James had been the brother of Christ. At one time, the theory was that by brother, James had meant that he was a half brother to Christ,
This is the part I've never heard before. I'd sure like to have a source for this.but that the earilest eastern church fathers had rejected the notion
There is no mention one way or the other in scripture. Scripture gives us very, very few facts about Joseph. We have his genealogy, and we are told he was a just man. We know he lived at least until Jesus was 12 years old. That's about it.because there is no reference in the scriptures of a first marriage for Joseph
It is possible (and accords with tradition) that Joseph's older children were already grown by then. Tradition says he was an old man, but he would not need to be all that old to have grown children. If we assume that most Jewish men in Palestine married for the first time in their late teens, and most women in their early teens, he could have a child who would be considered adult by his early 30s. He could have been in his 40s or 50s (not that old to me!or for the presence of Joseph's first family which Mary would have been left to raise (and who would have been taken on the trip to Bethlehem since everyone had to travel for the census and not just the father of the household, yet they are not mentioned as being present),
You do see that these two arguments are mutually exclusive, don't you? I don't think any of the brothers and sisters would have needed to "refute their full relation to Christ" if "full relation to Christ" means having the same father and mother biologically, do you? If it means having the same mother only, then they had no "full relation to Christ," but only half, no?and because when the theory was first proposed, some of the siblings of Christ were still alive and did not refute their full relation to Christ. Also, Tauler said, if they were Joseph's children alone, and not Mary's too, they had no claim to being siblings of Christ at all because Christ was related to Mary but not Joseph and they were related to Joseph but not Mary.
Exactly! They were not his father's wife's child, but his mother's husband's child. Half siblings who shared the same father were called brothers and sisters. Jewish culture had no other word for this relationship, as it had for those who shared the same mother, but not the same father.The closest relationship they could claim was step-sibling, a relationship that was not recognized in Jewish culture. The terminology for such a relationship would have been "father's wife's child," not brother.
Thanks for posting this. I don't think Tauler's argument holds up. I would not go so far as to say, as Tauler did, that my conclusion is the only plausible one. It is not conclusively proven either way, but I think the evidence preponderates in favor of the siblings being Joseph's children by a previous marriage.When James claimed to be the brother of Christ, he could have only meant that he was born of Mary, Tauler stated.
Thanks for the additional information!lambslove said:Well, no, Tauler was basing his position on scripture AND on the church fathers in Jerusalem's determination that James was a legitimate brother of Christ. They knew James personally and had determined that he was not lying or mistaken when he claimed to be Christ's brother. Tauler was merely discussing their determination with Einst, and how it corresponded with scripture and with Jewish culture. In his view, three things (scripture, evidence and the knowledge of Jewish culture) all pointed to the fact that Mary birthed other children after Christ. It was a common point of discussion in the late 1400's and early 1500's, the time when Tauler lived.
What evidence would that be? You mentioned tradition, you weren't refering to the Protovangelion of James I hope? That book is so full of holes it whistles when the wind blows. Really Liz, I am not in favor of tossing out all tradition, but there is no evidence to support a theory that Mary and Jospeh did not have other children. None. Just as there is no evidence Mary remained ever virgin, was a temple virgin, or was born without any sin. None.Crazy Liz said:It is not conclusively proven either way, but I think the evidence preponderates in favor of the siblings being Joseph's children by a previous marriage.
It must be very diffcult for you to learn anything in divinity school, since you seem to think you know everything and are perfectly logical in everything.Crazy Liz said:Thanks for the additional information!
His 3 reasons were (1) scripture, (2) Jewish culture, and (3) the Jerusalem church's determination. I think I discussed (1) and (2) in my post above.
The problem I see with (3) is that we have no evidence of any controversy in the Jerusalem church as to whether or not James was a legitimate brother of Jesus. I don't see any need of a "determination." ISTM more reasonable that they simply called him that because that is how he was known.
Why would a biological relationship be necessary for the Jerusalem church to accept him? I simply see no reason or evidence for any "determination" to have been made at all.
ISTM, Tauler's doubtful assumption of a need to determine a controversy seems to be a major part of his argument. As you mentioned, this seems to have been controversial in the 1400s and 1500s, but as far as I can see, it does not seem to have been controversial in the 30s and 40s.
I'm sure I've discussed several times before my view of the Protevangelion of James. I do not think it is historical.Uncle Bud said:What evidence would that be? You mentioned tradition, you weren't refering to the Protovangelion of James I hope? That book is so full of holes it whistles when the wind blows. Really Liz, I am not in favor of tossing out all tradition, but there is no evidence to support a theory that Mary and Jospeh did not have other children. None. Just as there is no evidence Mary remained ever virgin, was a temple virgin, or was born without any sin. None.
I couldn't tell you how many times my great, great grandfathers were married. I can't even tell you their names. What makes you think James's great grandchildren would even be aware of how many times Joseph was married, or even that they were related to Joseph?Crazy Liz said:However, the claim that Joseph was a widower who already had grown children is plausible, and if untrue, the great-grandchildren of James, or people who knew them, might still have been around to refute that part. These few facts are both plausible and likely to be historical.
No, but I consider Catholics my brothers and sisters and do not like seeing them ridiculed, or their beliefs discounted simply because "they" believe them.Terri said:Crazy Liz are you Catholic?
Crazy Liz said:No, but I consider Catholics my brothers and sisters and do not like seeing them ridiculed, or their beliefs discounted simply because "they" believe them.
I hope we're at least moving towards the ability to acknowledge the difference between Catholicism and Catholics.The Lord's Envoy said:I like my Roman Catholic Buddies, their system intrigues me, but I disagree with a lot of it. I think the Baptist Forum is slowly growing torward respectable discussion of RC Doctrine.
I apologize it is very hard to keep track of what and who believes what around. Please forgive me for asking it again if i have asked before.Crazy Liz said:I'm sure I've discussed several times before my view of the Protevangelion of James. I do not think it is historical.
I agree with the premise that reading a novel can give us all an idea of what in fact people believed in any time period, but this fictional work is believed by many to be true, when clearly it is not. It very well may be true that a few people believed this back then, but it in no ways means that they all did or that the claim was in fact based on any factual information.Knowing that era it might help to know that many if not 99% of the people that were Christians of that time did not have the capability to read, and did not know of the inspired words of the Bible except for in snipets, or in stories. So they did not have the abilty to compare teh word of God, to these stories, and therefore had to except was taught to them as truth.However, just as reading a novel written in a particular time and place can give insights into the ways people thought and what kinds of things they believed during the period in which it was written, I think the PoJ does provide clues about what Christians thought about Mary during the mid-second century. I look at it as a piece of "holy fiction," similar to a lot of the Christmas stories with which we are familiar. The innkeeper of Bethlehem and the little drummer boy are fictional characters in fictional stories, but people reading these stories 2000 years from now will get some ideas about how 20th century Christians thought and what they believed by reading them.
It is very possible what you say is true, I have done some digging and have found but a few who say otherwise. Let's just say for giggles sake that it was true, and that she did remain a virgin her entire life. Who cares? What could it possibly matter? What is it to me if Mary never had intercourse? What does that have to do with our walk with God? Nothing. But what if it were not true, and she did not remain a virgin and the story was developed to make sure people never had doubts that she was a virgin when she had Jesus?I think its widespread acceptance during the second century is good evidence that Mary's perpetual virginity was already a well-established belief.
When you add int he fact that it was supposedly written in the hand of James, and is told that way today, as inspired. It does not matter that good learned people have studied this book and have found it to be so baseless it borders on the laughable. I mentioned before that it seems to be a book that has taken all kinds of legends and heaps them together and calls it truth.I agree with you that there is no evidence anywhere else (at least that I can find, and I have looked) of virgins dedicated to the Jerusalem Temple. The PoJ was written nearly 100 years after the Jerusalem Temple was destroyed, although pagan temples were still common then. The descriptions of what may have happened there were probably fanciful, and not something Christians of the time would have been interested in refuting.
It is a plausable theory, I will give you that, but I would not stake my life on it, nor would I subscribe to it's belief, nor would I even say that it was historically accurate.However, the claim that Joseph was a widower who already had grown children is plausible, and if untrue, the great-grandchildren of James, or people who knew them, might still have been around to refute that part. It seems to me that the PoJ is a fictional story built around some facts that were accepted at the time. These few facts are both plausible and likely to be historical.
Uncle Bud said:I apologize it is very hard to keep track of what and who believes what around. Please forgive me for asking it again if i have asked before.
This is where the cognitive dissonance comes in for me. If it's plausible and makes no difference to you, why put so much energy into debunking it?It is very possible what you say is true, I have done some digging and have found but a few who say otherwise. Let's just say for giggles sake that it was true, and that she did remain a virgin her entire life. Who cares? What could it possibly matter? What is it to me if Mary never had intercourse? What does that have to do with our walk with God? Nothing. But what if it were not true, and she did not remain a virgin and the story was developed to make sure people never had doubts that she was a virgin when she had Jesus?
[snip]
It is a plausable theory, I will give you that, but I would not stake my life on it, nor would I subscribe to it's belief, nor would I even say that it was historically accurate.