Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 2:01 pm
Harry Baird wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 6:30 amThe first question is, did the man Jesus of Nazareth live approximately 2,000 years ago, or is his existence a myth? I think the mythicist case fails, and I understand that so do you, so we agree that he is a real historical person.
In fact I think it is rather obviously both.
I expect that it wasn't at all deliberate but rather a casual misunderstanding, or at least that if it was deliberate it was for cheeky rhetorical effect, but you are misrepresenting my case: it is not possible for it to be both, because the two options (as I intended them) are mutually exclusive. By "his existence [being] a myth" I
meant "his never
actually having existed at all (but rather having been an entirely imaginary, made-up character)".
In any case, that's just a little niggle that I felt the need to express, because your point is otherwise well taken.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 2:01 pm
I think you have misunderstood my term 'confusion of ideas' and 'confusion of peoples'. The first centuries were times of tremendous mixing of peoples and mixing of ideas. Everyone who would encounter the idea of a divine avatar (though they would not have used the term avatar: a descent of God into the material, phenomenal world) would have had no choice but to receive the idea, to imagine the notion, within the existing structure of their 'worldview'. So a clear example can be cited when the Hebrew *world* encountered the Greek *world*. The philosophical Greeks had a very different location and let's say 'mental process' and orientation when compared to the Hebrews. But in the encounter the *idea* of a savior, or the fact of the arrival of a savior, had to be (necessarily) *translated* into terms of ideation that could be made sense of.
Perhaps to your annoyance, I think that this deserves a response again in terms of what you fairly noted at the beginning of your response as "fundamentals", which you allowed for as a useful exercise.
To reiterate (perhaps, again, annoyingly!): Christianity, is, to me,
fundamentally, that religion determined by the words, deeds, and life of Christ,
whatever they actually were. So, insofar as you talk about a "mixing of peoples and mixing of ideas", my
fundamental concern would be to what extent that "mixing of peoples and mixing of ideas"
adulterated the
true testimony regarding the words, deeds, and life of Christ.
I don't, however, expect that to be of much interest to you, since, perhaps fairly, you seem to think that the true testimony is beyond recovery anyway.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 2:01 pm
I learned that the locals understood that the reason why this happened was because up there on that mountain there lived somewhat malicious spirits that the locals, when they were told about the malicious Jews who thwarted Jesus's mission and put him to death, associated
the Jews with these devilish mountain spirits. See? They had to receive an idea, a notion, and an image, and translate it as best they could into terms that made sense to them in
their world.
Sure, I understand your point. Not only do ideas have
consequences, but they are also
interpreted and
extrapolated, especially in local contexts.
However, the New Testament has been fixed for
well over a thousand years, and thus there is - whether or not it is a
true reflection of the words, deeds, and life of Christ - a
baseline doctrinal Christianity to which to refer, which is unlikely (I expect) to ever change. That baseline might be varied in local contexts, but it will always (I expect) be there to limit the potential for local variability.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 2:01 pm
Yes yes yes, Harry. You will at the end of this win a substantial prize for your searing logic!
Oh boy oh boy, it's a bathroom renovation, isn't it?! You knew just what I needed!
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 2:01 pm
Not only does your point remain I may even carve it into a giant block of marble so that it can be immortalized for all time!
Excuse the bit of sarcastic humor . . .
Of course, of course, but I think you misunderstand. I was under no illusion that I was saying anything at all profound(ly logical)! I was simply explaining my understanding as clearly as I could. (The same is true of everything in this post. There's nothing at all profound in it, just a hopefully clear expression of a perspective).
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 2:01 pm
One of the most strange and really bizarre events is the entire Trump phenomenon and the radical divisions that have arisen which certainly seem to spread out from there to the rest of the world. The American Evangelical support for (whatever it is that they see when they contemplate) Donald Trump, and the backdrop of an utterly strange *Christian conception* that dovetails into vast conspiratorial, somewhat hallucinated, projections onto a *world* that many of them (it seems) do not know how to interpret, causes me not to care so much for strict doctrinal theology, but rather to observe and try to understand what people do with this.
The so-called "Christian" support for Trump is a travesty. The guy doesn't have a Christian bone in his body. It's a relationship of mutual convenience: two parties cynically using one another. Your concern over all of this is of course totally warranted.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 2:01 pm
And now you tell me that you will be walkin' on the darkened sides of the street meditatin' of black (greasy?) phallus with quirky Henry.
Dude. Where did that phallus reference come from?! Ain't nobody talkin' 'bout penis here.
And it's my old mate (and maybe hq?) with the predilection for African beauties. I don't have any particular such predilection.
Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Tue Aug 30, 2022 2:01 pm
What am I to think Harry?!?
You are to think the Hail Mary fifty times (don't forget the rosary beads) and then visit the confessional.