He died for what he knew to be a lie? How is Koresh even remotely comparable? There's a difference between dying (or getting killed) for a lie and dying knowing it's a lie. Which brings us back yet again to Pascal:Mulu wrote:You obviously know absolutely nothing about human nature.Vaelahr wrote:People do not die for what they know to be a lie.Mulu wrote:Because they believed their own lie, just like all other cultists.Vaelahr wrote:If they [the first Christians] had pulled off a hoax, why would they go to their graves proclaiming that it actually happened.
One word, Koresh.
"The apostles were either deceived or deceivers. Either supposition is difficult, for it is not possible to imagine that a man has risen from the dead [particularly the imaginations of first century Jews]. While Jesus was with them, he could sustain them; but afterwards, if he did not appear to them, who did make them act? The hypothesis that the Apostles were knaves is quite absurd. Follow it out to the end, and imagine these twelve men meeting after Jesus' death and conspiring to say that he has risen from the dead. This means attacking all the powers that be. The human heart is singularly susceptible to fickleness, to change, to promises, to bribery. One of them had only to deny his story under these inducements, or still more because of possible imprisonment, tortures and death, and they would all have been lost. Follow that out."
If the empty tomb and resurrection was a fabrication, why did not at least one of the many disciples break away from the rest and reveal the claim as a lie? The Temple authorities were willing to pay good money to anyone who would provide such information. Or if money was not alluring enough, what about the possibility of proving the resurrection a lie in order to draw disciples away to follow some enterprising would-be cult leader? History has shown that this role is a popular one, and this would have been a fine opportunity. Without the strong and persuasive evidence of the resurrection, the continued unity of the early Christian leaders is inexplicable in light of the human tendency to want to promote oneself. The assumption that they were all committed to the truth of their message is the only adequate explanation of their continued unity and the lack of any revelation of fraud. Those who lie for personal gain do not stick together very long, especially when hardship decreases the benefits. If the disciples had stolen the body to make it look like he had been resurrected, they would have known that they were believing a lie, and men do not become martyrs for what they know to be false.
We can be certain that (pre-Constantine) early Christianity, of which the New Testament reflects, had nothing to do with Mithraic "halos". Any post-Constantine iconography that mirrors Mithraic art is a product of Roman Catholicism.Mulu wrote:It doesn't have to be in the bible for it to be plagiarism. Are you going to pretend that there are no halos in Christianity? Halos come from Mithraism. They are a symbol of the sun, since Mithras was a sun god. Everytime you see a halo in Christian artwork, just remember that halo was once hovering over the head of a guy who sprang from a rock.Vaelahr wrote:I've yet to see evidence of any "obvious plagiarism" and "halos" aren't biblical.Mulu wrote:Well, they obviously did plagiarize concepts from older religions, and Mithraism had halosVaelahr wrote:Early Christianity didn't plagiarize, didn't borrow anything from Mithraism.
Josephus is an important and credible source for a great deal of historical scholarship.Mulu wrote:Josephus, as a Jew apologist, seems to be a Jesus apologist also. I don't see him as a credible source, given what I've read so far. Even so, he doesn't add much.
There are two mentions of Jesus in his works:
1) Josephus, Antiquities 20.9.1 (Greek version)
"Since Ananus was that kind of person, and because he perceived an opportunity with Festus having died and Albinus not yet arrived, he called a meeting of the Sanhedrin and brought James, the brother of Jesus who is called Messiah, along with some others. He accused them of transgressing the law, and handed them over for stoning."
2a) Josephus, Antiquities 18.63 (Arabic summary)
"At this time there was a wise man who was called Jesus. And his conduct was good, and he was known to be virtuous. And many people from among the Jews and the other nations became his disciples. Pilate condemned him to be crucified and to die. And those who had become his disciples did not abandon his discipleship. They reported that he had appeared to them after his crucifixion and that he was alive; accordingly, he was perhaps the Messiah concerning whom the prophets have recounted wonders."
Or,
2b) Josephus, Antiquities 18.63 (critical rework by Robert Eisler)
"Now about this time arose an occasion for new disturbances, a certain Jesus, a wizard of a man, if indeed he may be called a man, who was the most monstrous of men, whom his disciples call a son of God, as having done wonders such as no man has ever done.... He was in fact a teacher of astonishing tricks to such men as accept the abnormal with delight.... And he seduced many Jews and many also of the Greek nation, and was regarded by them as the Messiah.... And when, on the indictment of the principal men among us, Pilate had sentenced him to the cross, still those who before had admired him did not cease to rave. For it seemed to them that having been dead for three days, he had appeared to them alive again, as the divinely-inspired prophets had foretold -- these and ten thousand other wonderful things -- concerning him. And even now the race of those who are called 'Messianists' after him is not extinct."
Again, Jesus lived his public life in the land of Palestine under the Roman rule of Tiberius (ad 14-37). There are four possible Roman historical sources for his reign: Tacitus (55-117), Suetonius (70-160), Velleius Paterculus (a contemporary), and Dio Cassius (3rd century). There are two Jewish historical resources that describe events of this period: Josephus (37-100?), writing in Greek, and the Rabbinical Writings (written in Hebrew after 200). Of these writings, we would not expect Velleius to have a reference to Jesus (i.e. the events were just happening outside of Velleius' home area), and Dio Cassius is outside of our time window of pre-3rd century. Of the remaining Roman writers, Tacitus and Suetonius, we have apparent references to Jesus. This gives an important fact: all the relevant non-Jewish historical sources mention Jesus. Of the Jewish resources, Josephus and the Rabbinical writings (e.g. Talmud, Midrash), both make clear references to the existence of Jesus. So all the Jewish sources refer to him. This evidence tells us that Jesus of Nazareth was not trivial. For hostile historians to mention him is telling.
What Mithraic ideas are present in early Christianity (pre-Constantine)? What was "borrowed" or "plagiarised"?Mulu wrote:...as to Christians "borrowing" pagan ideas, it's beyond just Mithraism.
1. Alkmene (not a virgin)Mulu wrote:Virgin births and children of gods are particularly common.
1. Hercules, born to Alkmene by the god Zeus.
2. Dionysus was "the son of the virgin"
3. Perseus was a half-god.
4. In the Epic of Gilgamesh, one of the earliest recorded legends of humanity, Gilgamesh claimed to be of both human and divine descent.
2. Dionysus was not the son of a virgin. One version of the myth has Semele as the mother. Another has Persephone as the mother. Neither virgins. There's an obscure Asiatic version that has Dionysus self-born. At any rate, it's the usual fornication that Zeus and the other goddesses were prone to.
3. I don't see how Perseus (not born of a virgin) has anything to do with Christian belief.
4. Not born of a virgin. I don't think generic phrases like "half-god" or "son of a god" stand as evidence for early Christians plagiarising from mythology. It's as if one was to claim the sport of baseball borrowed ideas from tennis because a round object is used in play and the round object is struck with a hand-held thing.
Jesus of Nazareth is not his own father, be it an earthly one (Joseph) or spiritually. It's just not biblical. Nor is it consistent with later orthodox trinitarian doctrine.Mulu wrote:Also, the concept of a god being his own father (as Jesus is god, after all), was also not unique. From wiki:
Since Horus, as the son of Osiris, was only in existence after Osiris's death, and because Horus, in his earlier guise, was the husband of Isis, the difference between Horus and Osiris blurred, and so, after a few centuries, it came to be said that Horus was the resurrected form of Osiris. Likewise, as the form of Horus before his death and resurrection, Osiris, who had already become considered a form of creator when belief about Osiris assimilated that about Ptah-Seker, also became considered to be the only creator, since Horus had gained these aspects of Ra. Eventually, in the Hellenic period, Horus was, in some locations, identified completely as Osiris, and became his own Father, since this concept was not so disturbing to Greek philosophy as it had been to that of ancient Egypt. The combination of this, now rather esoteric mythology, with the philosophy of Plato, which was becoming popular on the Mediterranean shores, lead to the tale becoming the bases of a mystery religion. Many Greeks, and those of other nations, who encountered the faith, thought it so profound that they sought to create their own, modelled upon it, but using their own gods. This led to the creation of what was effectively one religion, which was, in many places, adjusted to superficially reflect the local mythology although it substantially adjusted them. The religion is known to modern scholars as that of Osiris-Dionysus.
That's inaccurate as I detailed in an earlier post:Mulu wrote:The basic elements of the resurrection myth are all there, resurrection obviously...
The most common and complex version of the Osiris myth comes from the Greek historian Plutarch (approx. c.34-125 A.D.) in his work Isis and Osiris;
"Osiris's evil brother Set plotted with others to kill Osiris. This was accomplished by tricking Osiris during a banquet to lie down in a chest that had been especially prepared for him. When Osiris was inside the chest, Set and his cohorts closed it immediately and took it to the Nile and put it into the river. When Isis, the sister-wife of Osiris heard what had happened, she set out to find the chest. The legend is detailed, but to make a long story short, Isis learned that the chest had drifted out to sea and landed on the coast of Byblos. She went there, found the chest, recovered the body, embraced it, and wailed inconsolably. She hid the body in a secret place, which Set discovered, after which he severed the body into 14 different pieces and scattered them throughout Egypt. The myth then continues as Isis searched Egypt, found the body parts, put them back together, and then hovered over Osiris and fanned the breath of life back into his body.”
Not every version of the myth has Osiris returning to life; in some he simply becomes the ruler of the Netherworld. A comparison between the resurrection of Jesus and the resuscitation of Osiris is misleading and is claiming more than the Egyptian myth allows.
Encyclopedia Britannica writes, "From about 2000 BC onward it was believed that every man, not just the deceased kings, became associated with Osiris at death. This identification with Osiris, however, did not imply resurrection, for even Osiris did not rise from the dead. Instead, it signified the renewal of life both in the next world and through one's descendants on Earth. In this universalized form Osiris' cult spread throughout Egypt, often joining with the cults of local fertility and underworld deities.”
This secular source understands that “Osiris did not rise from the dead.” Osiris was originally a vegetation god. The death of Osiris symbolized to the Egyptians the yearly drought and in his rebirth the periodical flooding of the Nile and the growth of grain. This of course, represents the pattern of cyclical recurrences of seasons. Such myths are the expression of ancient nature-symbolism; the spirit of vegetation dies every year and rises every year. This is far different from Christ's bodily resurrection and ascension.