Berserk
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JESUS' EARTHLY EXISTENCE AND LEGITIMACY:
This thread is just the first salvo of my response to Shirley's request for more information on the New Testament and early Christian celebration of soul retrievals. So please leave Acharya out of this thread and instead invoke her, if you, nust in the other Jesus threads. On this thread, I want to connect Jesus' biblical role in retrievals with His apparent role in the astral explorations of Robert Monroe and Bruce Moen.
Paul was a hitman for the Pharisees. He zealously persecuted, jailed, and murdered Jerusalem Christians with a clear conscience. Then he had his blinding light encounter with Christ on the Dasmacus road. Paul’s travel companion, Luke, described this in Acts 9 and Paul hmself refers to his encounter with the Risen Christ (e. g. 1 Corinthians 9:1; 15:8-9; Galatians 1:15-16). Paul reports a series of resurrection appearances to Jesus’ disciples in 1 Corinthians 15:3-8. In his first trip Paul spends 14 days with Peter and Jesus’ brother James (Galatians 1:18-19), during which he could confirm the private appearance of the Risen Jesus to each of them that he reports in his Corinthian series of appearances. .14 years later, Paul returns to Jerusalem to meet with the apostles (Galatians 2:1-10). Jesus’ brother James, Peter, and John the son of Zebedee endorse Paul’s Gentile mission at this second visit. Paul is familiar with the missionary travels of Jesus brothers and their wives (! Corinthians 9:5). Thus, Paul provides credible evidence for Jesus’ resurrection as well as proof of His prior earthly existence.
Many issues arise from Paul’s reports of resurrection appearances. I will summarize just one that confirms their genuineness. For most of Jesus’ public ministry, He was opposed by His own family members who rarely traveled with Him and thus did not witness His miracles. On one occasion, family members try to physically restrain Hiim for failing to give his audience a lunch hreak!. Mark tells us that His own family thought “He had lost His senses (Mark 3:20-21; cp. 3:31-35).” When Jesus returns to his hometown, Nazareth, He encounters sitff opposition from the locals who dismiss His birth as illegitimate and prompt Him to lament, “A prophet is not without honor, except in his hometown AND AMONG HIS OWN RELATIVES AND IN HIS OWN HOUSEHOLD (Mark 6:3-4).” Then John 7:6 sums up Jesus’ alienation from His family during much of His public ministry: “For not even His own borthers wre believing in Him.” It seems unlikely that the disciples would just vmake His embarrassing family problems up.
His brothers’ skepticism quickly vanishes after His resurrection. Thus, we find Mary and His brothers devoutly at prayer with His disciples in anticipation of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the Day of Pentecost (Acts 1:14; cp. 2:1ff.). What converted them? The risen Jesus’ private appearance to His brother James must have been a major factor in changing their minds. Only this appearance to James can adequately explain why James eventually replaces Peter as the supreme leader of the Jerusalem church, despite the fact that James had been a skeptic for much of Jesus’ public ministry.
The Gospel of Mark can also be connected with eyewitness testimony. The dates for the life of Papias, bishop of Hierapolis, are hard to determine with precision. He wrote early in the 2nd century but his lifespan extended back far enough in the first century to allow him to have contacts with Jesus’ surviving disciples and with direct followers of those disciples. Papias stresses his preference for living contacts with the eyewitnesses over written documents. In his words,
“If anyone chanced to come who had actually been a follower of the elders [= the disciples], I would inquire as to the discourses of the elders, what Andrew, or what Peter said, or what Philip, or what Thomas or James, or what John or Matthew or any other of the Lord’s disciples said; and the things which ARISTION AND JOHN THE ELDER, DISCIPLES OF THE LORD, ARE [CURRENTLY] SAYING (Papias’ lost book quoted in Eusebius, HE 3:39).”
The early Jerusalem church met in the home of Mark’s mother (Acts 12:12) and Mark later became Peter’s travelling missionary companion (1 Peter 5:13). Papias makes it clear that the Gospel of Mark consists essentially of Peter’s teaching materials:
“Mark was Peter’s interpreter and wrote accurately, but not in the correct order of sequence, all that Peter recalled of what was said and done by the Lord. For he neither heard the Lord nor was he a follower of His, but at a later date, of Peter. Peter used to adapt his instructions to the needs [of the moment], but not with a view to putting Jesus’ sayings in an orderly fashion.”
From the outset, Mark’s Gospel has clearly been criticized for putting stories and sayings of Jesus in the wrong historical sequence. This criticism suggests monitoring from living disciples who are in a position to know the correct historical sequence. Papias does not suggest that some other Gospel like Matthew was thought to preserve the correct sequence. Indeed, Papias cites Mark’s Gospel first perhaps because of its prestigious connection with Peter. So when you are reading Mark, you are basically reading Peter’s eyewitness recollections. Thus, Mark provides good evidence for Jesus’ existence and indeed for the genuiness of his miracle stories.
Papias proceeds to share this information about Matthew’s role: “Matthew compiled Jesus’sayings (Greek “logia”) in the Hebrew language; and everyone translated them as he was able.” What Matthew composed was a sayings collection, not necessarily a Gospel. The Greek allusion to “Hebrew”: really means “Aramaic,” the Hebrew dialect spoken by Jesus. Modern scholarship has identified a large sayings collection used by Matthew and Luke, but not by Mark. This originally Aramaic compilation of sayings of Jesus has been labelled Q from the German “Quelle” which means “source” and was likely composed by the apostle Matthew. Q is likely the sayings collection cited by Papias and his sources. But did the apostle Matthew actually compose the whole Gospel that bears his name? The scholarly consensus would say “no” on the grounds that Matthew's Gospel uses Mark as one of its sources and an eyewtiness of Jesus is unlikely to rely on someone (Mark) who is not an eyewitness. But this is faulty logic. Peter was one of the “inner circle” who witnessed more miracles and other dramatic events in Jesus’ life than Matthew. So Matthean reliance of Petrine traditions would be understandable.
Luke becomes Paul’s missionary travel companion and uses “we” to report on missionary adventures he shared with Paul (e. g. Acts 16:10; 20:5). Luke describes their trip together to Jerusalem where Luke meets Jesus’ brother James and the other disciples (Acts 21:16-18). This trip gives Luke the chance to collect eyewitness materials for his future Gospel. In his prologue Luke identifies his Gospel sources as eyewitness testimony (Luke 1:2).
The Gospel of John is traditionally traced to Ephesus and credited to the apostle John the son of Zebedee.. But scholarly support for both claims has been steadily eroding over the past decades. I have devoted the past several years to a book I am writing on these issues. I have discovered that the Gospel was in fact written at Pella, about 15 miles south of the Sea of Galilee and 2 miles east of the Jordan River. Pella is particularly important because around 66 AD the Jerusalem church received a prophetic oracle to flee the advancing Roman legions and relocate in Pella. So Pella is the community of the eyewtinesses, the community of the Jerusalem church in exile. The flight to Pella is reported by the Pellan document, “The Ascents of James,” and by Eusebius source for HE 3.5.3, usually identified as Aristo of Pella.
The anonymous source of the Fourth Gospel is routinely described as “the disciple whom Jesus loved.” I have discovered that this phrase is a technical epithet for Jesus’ brother James, the leader of the Jerusalem church who was stoned to death by the high priest Annas in 62 AD. In many different ways, the context of each allusion to this unnamed disciple contains several hints of his identity, all satisfied by James and no one else. But that is too complicated issue to explain here. You’ll have to wait for my book.
In my view, certain embarrassing elements of Gospel tradition attest its basic reliability. For example, Mark tells us that Jesus "could do no miracles" in his hometown because of the negative energy there (Mark 6:6). The "except" clause is a later gloss from a scribe to soften this admission. The implication is that Jesus tried and failed to heal in Nazareth.
Mark also tells us that Jesus needed two prayer sessions to heal the blind man of Bethsaida (8:22-26). Why couldn't Jesus' do the job right the first time? This embarrassing initial failure vouches for the truth of the story. Who cares as long as Jesus ultimately heals the guy? Mark's willingness to tell us that Jesus "bombed" in his hometown is unlikely to be invented and lends credibility to his other accounts of Jesus' miracles.
Don
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