Thank you for the correction!roid wrote:You're off by 2 ages
But it still doesn't change anything. Bull, Ram, neither one was a significant "symbol" for the Jews of Judea around 30AD.
Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250
I'm not sure that qualifying God only as a hypothesis to be proved is an idea that believers would subscribe to Bet (or even holds water in the presence of God being 'An Idea' ...cause there's plenty of evidence of that to be found )Bet51987 wrote:Unless Christianity, or any other religion can support the God hypothesis then it is already false and without any proof, reliable observations, testable predictions that can be tested and observed, it cannot even be called a hypothesis.
Fair enough - as is your rightJohnG wrote: I won't physically stop anyone from believing in any of the uncountable gods that have been conjured up by the human mind.
However, I strongly recommend against it.
Nope. You can't rest your case.Gekko71 wrote: (shortened by Bee) .....Correct me if I'm wrong, but a hypothesis (whether divine or scientific) is not invalidated by the presence or absense of proof - either supporting or not. Speaking purely logically, a hypothesis (or 'hypothetical supposition' if you prefer) can be either true or false in the absense of absolute proof; and absolute proof can be considered as big a myth as you (seemingly) proport religion to be.
Q.E.D?
Hmm, your own unique definition of an hypothesis - fair enough ...although if you had stated that in the first place, it would have saved me having to write my first post.Bet51987 wrote:Nope. You can't rest your case.Gekko71 wrote: (shortened by Bee) .....Correct me if I'm wrong, but a hypothesis (whether divine or scientific) is not invalidated by the presence or absense of proof - either supporting or not. Speaking purely logically, a hypothesis (or 'hypothetical supposition' if you prefer) can be either true or false in the absense of absolute proof; and absolute proof can be considered as big a myth as you (seemingly) proport religion to be.
Q.E.D?
All of this reminds me of Schrödinger's cat. My dad always tells me that I don't have any "gray" areas... that I look at everything having just two states, black/white, yes/no, right/wrong, and says that a lot of times gray areas are the only way of getting something you want done accomplished. I know he's right, and I may not know if the cat is dead or alive, but I do know if the cat exists or not.
So to me, for something to be a hypothesis, it must have a direction toward truth. It must be allowed to be proven, or have some remote probability, to be proven true or false. If no experiments can do this, then it’s just a thought or a story like the flying spaghetti monster and when I look around at all that gray, all I can choose is false.
Bettina
It's not unique. Its much like the scientific explanation of being able to be tested.Gekko71 wrote:Hmm, your own unique definition of an hypothesis - fair enough ...although if you had stated that in the first place, it would have saved me having to write my first post.
I know he's right. He's always right. I know that government politics are very gray and often there is no best choice for anything so they choose the middle. I understand, but yet I don't. I found out in this forum during the abortion discussion where I tried to be gray but religion made it so black and white I was forced to change the way I would vote from now on... and I did in my local election last week. Narrow-mindedness seems to cut both ways.I find myself envying you and the certainty of your convictions (Sincerely! Certainty is a very under-valued thing )
...although, I fear that with time, you'll come to realise your father is absolutely right. In my experience, the black & white certainty you speak of does not survive long-term. Wrestling with moral complexity and ambiguity are the realities of living an intelligent and informed life. The only people I have met in my life that have persistently clung onto a black/white, right/wrong view of the world are the narrow minded, the inexperienced, the sheltered, the zenophobic, the immoral or the egocentric-hypocrite who would rather live an existence of self-serving denial than deeply investigate the realities of the human experience.
Thank you very much....and you really don't strike me as being ANY of the above Bet - not even a bit
I won't have time to read that book because my studies come first, and there is plenty of it, but I will keep it on my list.PS: "A direction towards truth??" ...you do know you just described a process of spiritual discovery, right?
Given your search for truth, there's a great book called "What is this thing called Science?" (I've forgotten the author) that I read a long time ago. I think you'd find it facinating Bet - I encourage you to give it a squiz.
P.P.S: Hey! I ended my previous 'it is impossible to prove ANYTHING' post, with the statement "QED".
...Does anyone else see the irony?
This point is significantly more plausible than the precession point. If it turned out to be true, it would kind of make sense -- if you knew one story, you'd be drawn into the other story. If you knew one story, parts of the other story would build on, argue against, or otherwise use your prior understanding. The match between Jesus and whoever clearly is not incidental; it's intentional hijacking of one symbol into another religion.The story of Dionysus is well documented, the story varies, but all variances are from before the time of Jesus.... Ixion.... Mithras.... Attis.... Ishtar
I think it's foolish to make assumptions about the birth story either way. It's not attached to old versions of the Sargon story, and we don't have old versions of the Moses story. The oldest copy of the birth story comes from a time when the Assyrians were busy conquering Israel. The story applied to Sargon could have been older, or it could have been an attempt to draw the Israelites from their old philosophy using familiar means. The evidence is inconclusive, so putting your money on either story is speculative.considering that the general folklore about Sargon is much older than the folklore about Moses, I know where I would put my money as the original story, including the birth story.
I used to teach a program called Constellations and Cultural Stories, where I taught about the Greek, Chinese, and Navajo constellations in a Starlab portable planetarium. I'm quite aware of the way the stars move in the night sky -- especially Orion's belt and Canis Major. The stars move across the sky, and the line they make sweeps out an arc across the horizon. Go back into skyview cafe, Alexandria Egypt (31d13'N, 29d55'E) Dec 25 50 AD 1800 UT+2. Switch to the horizon view using the right side menu, and drag the sky to center on ESE. Now look at where Sirius rises at 1749. It's pointing about 8 degrees east (left) of where the sunrise will be. As you increment the time, the views in the program are somewhat deceptive -- it appears those stars point more towards the south, but in the actual curved sky, they begin to point more east (further away from where the sun will rise) until they tip beyond horizontal, at which point they begin to point roughly west. You can witness this phenomenon simply by watching the night sky any night when Orion is visible. The line sweeps from about 289 degrees (where Sirius rises at 1749) out to the east (270 and less), becomes horizontal, and then sweeps from out west (>90) to about 85 degrees, where Orion sets at just after 0330 on Dec 26. The sunrise is at about 297 degrees -- 8 degrees away from the initial and closest point. The point the movie makes about the southern cross is even farther off. Overall, neither of these two astrological explanations of details of the birth story hold up -- the particular stars in question simply aren't that close to where the sun rises. They're not close enough to be thought of as \"pointing at\" or \"on\", particularly not in a society that charted the stars as carefully as the ancient societies in question. An 8 degree difference on the horizon is unacceptably far apart for an ancient astrologer.Alexandria, Egypt, Dec 25th, 50AD. There it is. There are the three stars of Orion’s belt lined up pointing to Sirius that has newly risen from the eastern horizon.
I believe Jesus was the Son of God, the chosen and promised Messiah who was sent to save people from their sins. I (try to) follow His ancient teachings (which requires deep and inquisitive study of the Bible, including study of the historical context and such), and I follow the guidance of the Spirit, who interacts with me directly. I believe the appropriate descriptor for someone who holds that belief is \"Christian\", though I would gladly claim a more accurate label that didn't carry the same cultural taint.I have to ask, at what point do you draw the line and say “I am not a Christian, I am someone who believes in treating people with respect and having a caring heart towards my fellow man/woman”
I think you misunderstand Lothar's position slightly, and the state of Christianity overall, slightly.That being said, I read a little of some of your blog to find out your perspective outside of this movie and I respect the fact that you have distanced yourself from the actions of past/present Christians who carry a sword/gun in one hand and a cross in the other.
Correct me if I am wrong, but I see that you have also taken some of the bibles’ more extremist attitudes with a grain of salt. Again, I respect you for that. But I have to ask, at what point do you draw the line and say “I am not a Christian, I am someone who believes in treating people with respect and having a caring heart towards my fellow man/woman”?
The point of my response is that, even if we consider different years and different cities, the explanation doesn't hold up. Again, check out skyview cafe. You can go forward or backward hundreds of years, and Sirius still rises in roughly the same place, just a few minutes earlier or later. You can jump 20 degrees east, west, north, or south on the earth's surface, and Sirius still rises in pretty much the same place -- about 8 degrees east of where the sunrise will be on Dec 25. The stars still move the same way, pointing further east and therefore further away from the sunrise after Sirius rises. It's about Feb 10 when Sirius actually rises at the same place as the sun. It doesn't matter what year or what ancient near east city we use; the "3 magi/eastern star pointing to Jesus = orion's belt/sirius pointing to the sunrise following the winter solstice" comparison fails on the astrological front, because the astrology itself doesn't work out. (I just realized, the 3 magi are said to follow the bright star; Orion's belt leads Sirius across the sky. Just another minor detail that doesn't work out.)JohnG wrote:the point of my original response was that we shouldn't use the date of Dec24th, 1 AD to make an assumption as to weather the "3 magi"/eastern star reference was accurate or not....
In a vacuum, it's reasonable to think the Jews could possibly have viewed changes of ages as significant. It is not, however, reasonable to think the text of the Bible references those changing ages in the particular ways the movie argued. Much like above, it's a problem of evidence -- we have specific details, and they don't match.is it unreasonable to think this event was implied as a change of time (age), that is, for the Jews?
I agree that the Catholic church lost foundational Christianity and adopted a number of pagan festivals and practices (as brought out in the MLK essay), but it wasn't a permanent loss. The Catholic bureaucracy didn't exist until about the mid-300's AD. We have access to manuscripts, quotes, letters sent between various Christians, and so on that predate the rise of any sort of central authority in Christianity. We also have manuscripts from areas that never fell under the sway of the Catholic church, and we have those groups' ideas as to what should have been canon. By examining the manuscripts, we can see the Catholic church didn't particularly muck with the text itself during that era. They mostly relied on the fact that people didn't read it, and made stuff up (much like modern churches.) It's actually fairly easy to recover foundational Christian teachings, even those that didn't make it into official canon like Shepherd of Hermas and Gospel of the Hebrews.I think foundational Christianity was forever and quickly lost in the Catholic bureaucracy, beginning with the gospels themselves.
Each of the four canonical Bibles focus on Jesus from a different perspective: chosen king, servant, perfect man, God (in that order), while touching on the other three. Trying to frame that as a "contradiction" demonstrates shallow reasoning.There is a difference (contradiction) between being the anointed one (chosen king) to his contemporaries, and being the logos, the divine one, to John.
I will again note that you have yet to present an actual quotation from an actual ancient document or translation that presents a similar birth story, particularly from Dionysus, Horus, etc. Where in the ancient documents are these virgin births with magi witnesses (actually after the fact in Matthew) that are such a \"common\" theme?
Why is that? You mean to say that being a king from the (very human) lineage of King David is the same as being the logos?Lothar wrote:Each of the four canonical Bibles focus on Jesus from a different perspective: chosen king, servant, perfect man, God (in that order), while touching on the other three. Trying to frame that as a "contradiction" demonstrates shallow reasoning.
I'm not asking for hard evidence AGAINST the Christian story. I'm asking for hard evidence FOR the position you've advocated -- that the Christian story parallels older stories. I'm asking for actual quotes from actual ancient manuscripts... actual star charts that show the astrological phenomena in question... actual evidence that shows a reasonable level of connection between the Christian story and astrology, ancient mythology, etc. You don't seem to have evidence, only speculation -- something you readily admit, and seem to be OK with.JohnG wrote:There is an oxymoron taking place in this conversation in the sense that you (and Lothar) are asking for hard evidence against a story in which there is no hard evidence.
It's all just conversational speculation anyway...
Right... we can look at ancient mythology and parallels. But we don't have to merely speculate based on weak similarities, as you seem content to do. We need to look at the following:When discussing mythology and the inspiration for it all we can do is look at ancient mythology and parallels.
There might be some. Can you at least get through step (1) above and tell me where I can read original sources for the stories?Do references not exist of virgin birth stories?
That's the theory by Hayyim ben Yehoshua that's been posted all over the interweb. It seems to be a bit short on actual source references (This guy's response is a far less charitable way of saying the same thing.) It's one thing to speculate based on evidence; it's another thing entirely to just make stuff up. Please, if you're going to speculate, at least set higher standards for the speculation you accept.Matthew.... based the book upon Mattai (150 CE), included the story.
If that's the only argument you can think of, you must not be trying very hard. The standard Christian perspective is that Jesus has both a "blood" lineage (through Mary) and a "legal" lineage (through Joseph). I don't see the problem.He quotes the old testament (Isaiah 7:14) written 700 years before Jesus claiming it as a prophecy of the Messiah’s birth. He talks of his lineage from King David. What’s going on there? Maybe the septuagint was mistranslated, “virgin” for “woman”. That’s the only argument I can think of that a christian perspective could use.
I mean to say all of the perspectives are compatible -- a king whose legal lineage (through his adoptive "father") and blood lineage (through his mother) comes through David, a servant, a perfect man, and the incarnation of God. Again, all four of these themes are in all four of the gospels; each one just chooses a different focus. All four of the themes are present in the Old Testament; they're all a part of the Jewish expectation. And in all four descriptions, the king/servant/perfect man/God is said to be incredibly powerful; it's not as though bigger miracles are described in the later gospels.You mean to say that being a king from the (very human) lineage of King David is the same as being the logos?
Why does his personna change into a more glorified and all powerfull (and non-jewish) character the further away the writers get from the time period of the original story?
I know quite a few Christians who agree with this. It's fairly trivial, however. Of course, they're quite left of center theologically. If the story is fictional its development is better explained by purely Jewish and Christian theological speculation than by any alleged Greek parallel.It makes no sense. Either the word was mistranslated or he took the idea from Roman/Greek myths – not surprising being a Syrian. Either way, it never happened.
....and because those people could not find an immediate explanation for lightning, volcanoes, earthquakes, the sun, moon and stars etc, coupled with fear of the unknown, that idea strengthened and evolved into complex religions, until we have the religions we have today.JohnG wrote:In those times it was natural for people to combine art, poetry, science, religion, history into one idea
I've been following this thread for a while. Let's take a look at this from a provability perspective.JohnG wrote:You have yet to show me any hard evidence to the contrary. All you have done is countered logical theory, and not provided anything other than christian rhetoric.
I agree with taking this topic out the framework of the movie - I think we all agree the movie was shoddily done, but the cultural influence aspect is worth discussing. I am only an amatuer historian, and not even a good debater for that matter, but I find this discussion interesting and I am learning a lot during the process.Foil wrote:I've been following this thread for a while. Let's take a look at this from a truly logical perspective.JohnG wrote:You have yet to show me any hard evidence to the contrary. All you have done is countered logical theory, and not provided anything other than christian rhetoric.
You made the following claim (paraphrased):
Claim: "The Judeo-Christian stories and ethics were largely derived from surrounding cultures."
You then backed up that claim by listing a number of examples, referencing stories and beliefs from surrounding cultures.
Here's the primary issue:
Because of the way you stated your claim, this is not a "battle of ideas". Your claim is provable/disprovable by nature because it references hard evidence (the corresponding stories). This means two things:
1. If you can back it up with evidence, it's a good claim.
2. It's subject to rational inquiry challenging your evidence.
Lothar was probably too harsh by "declaring victory", but I think his points stand. He challenged your evidence, and so far I have yet to see you produce anything to corroborate the provable portion of your claim.
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Let me say this another way:
If you had simply said "Judeo-Christianity was influenced by other cultures", that would have been a purely conceptual claim. No evidence required there.
However, you said "Judeo-Christianity was borrowed from stories X, Y, and Z", which is an evidential claim. You specifically referenced evidence X, Y, and Z; it's simply the scientific process for someone to ask you to produce them.
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Now, the other issue is your counter-challenge for Lothar to prove his own claim (although I'm not sure he made one).
You're basically saying "you can't prove anything, either".
I'm not sure about your background, but to those of us with scientific/logical backgrounds, that statement is essentially meaningless as a counter-argument.
You made a provable/disprovable claim, and it was challenged. Making statements about the provability of other claims is irrelevant when it comes to the validity of your own.
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What I would suggest is that we start a new thread, title it "cultural influences in Judeo-Christianity", and limit any evidence-related arguments to the ones we can actually provide links for.
It would be a good discussion, and I think you'd find that the people here (including the Christians!) will readily acknowledge and discuss the various influences we can see in scripture. I'd be interested in a thread like that.
Foil wrote:it's simply the scientific process for someone to ask you to produce them.
That's kind of like noting that Spain was a world power in 1400 AD and heavily influenced Mexico, the US and especially California are affected by Mexico, and Kwanzaa was founded in California. Each statement is true, but it doesn't mean Kwanzaa is a secret celebration of the Spanish Armada. The connections from step to step simply aren't strong enough that we can claim belief X was preserved along the whole chain. It's *possible*, but we need more direct evidence.JohnG wrote:Have I not provided evidence that Mesoptamian and Egyptian cultures are largley founded on astrological phenomena? Have I not provided evidence that the Jews were impacted by these cultures? Do I need to provide evidence that christianity was born out of judaism?
Of course not. You'll note I haven't been making claims about Christianity's present form being correct or historically valid; I think it's totally screwed up in a lot of ways. I'm a big fan of returning to source documents within Christianity, not just in debates on this board.we can’t assume Christianity was in its present form in the first century.
So did they understand this as a contradiction in persona, or as conceptually coherent?It would seem that the Nicene council understood well this contradiction in persona and addresses that very point.....
All this carried with it no contradiction to the mind of the Egyptians.
JohnG wrote:you also believe in a derivative nature of the bible.
Be careful with your terminology. Neither present the biblical picture of salvation (taking unworthy sinners and declaring them worthy through blood sacrifice, rather than through their own goodness); they both present the common religious motif of blessings being given to the righteous and the eventual downfall of the wicked, much like you'd find in various psalms. They're interesting, no doubt, but shouldn't be cast as relating to "salvation".here is a passage from the Avesta, which talks about salvation in a way very close to a biblical setting
Please don't misconstrue what I said. I haven't claimed victory on Jesus vs. all possible historical and mythological figures. I've only claimed victory on some specific bogus theories presented in this thread. I claimed victory against the claim that Orion's belt / Sirius provide an explanation of Jesus' birth story, and that other astrological references provide a good explanation for Jesus as a whole. It's not a victory based on lack of evidence for the "Christ event"; it's a victory based on a solid understanding of astronomy. If you have reason why I shouldn't claim victory on that front, please, present it.it's a challenge to gather real biblical documents.... so.... if you want to claim victory, it’s all yours on the grounds that there is no evidence whatsoever supporting the Christ event
That depends very much on what you make of the "otherworldly" consciousness and the "better place". Nothing in your argument is at odds with a creator/God, only with a specific god-concept -- one that I don't think matches with the Biblical description.I don’t care for the idea that mankind is a product of an “otherworldy” consciousness.... this planet is all we have and it’s not to be treated as a stepping stone to a “better place”.... we will continue to create divisions between us and take no responsibility for our environment.
It’s difficult to view many biblical concepts as “responses” when the very foundation of the material is also the very foundation earlier beliefs.Lothar wrote: “…how much of the Biblical material explicitly responds to common ideas of the time, and how often it's miscategorized as "copies" rather than "responses"
Sort of...but no. The Hebrew word for soul is nephesh, meaning " a breathing creature" (taking a breath). There really isn't a word in the Hebrew language that describes the soul in terms of what modern english describes. The Hebrew system of thought doesn't include any separation (or combination) of the body and "soul". Those ideas are definitley Greek and Latin in origin.Duper wrote:read the psalms. its in there too.