by jimwalton » Sun Nov 04, 2018 5:27 pm
> Yes, the documents are claiming to be historical. But that is not their primary purpose - their purpose is to persuade.
Of course it is. Good scholarship is about convincing others to espouse our view instead of merely asking them to do so.
> However, we are aware that there are historical mistakes and inaccuracies present in the texts
We most certainly can't just throw this blanket onto the field and let it lie. That's neither responsible debate nor scholarship. Each situation must be discussed.
> the Census of Quirinius (6AD)?)
I hope you know this is hotly debated. I'll assume so. The terminology and grammar are important. We know Quirinius was a governor of Syria, but Luke uses the term hegemon, not governor. What position did he fill before he was governor of Syria? According to Tacitus, he was doing military expeditions in the eastern provinces of the Empire, with some evidence that he was a co-ruler (hegemon) with the then governor of Syria, Quintilius Varus. Is this the position to which Luke refers? Secondly, Luke specifies that this was the FIRST registration, which would indicate there were at least two. The exact idea of "first" (πρώτη) is not certain. Most probably Luke's idea is that there were more than one registration under Quirinius. It is the first of a series. Since we know about the one in AD 6, is this a previous one to which Luke refers? Third, the article doesn't occur with "This was (the first)" in v. 2. This form often pointing to something previous in time. It could possibly indicate the earliest or earlier of the possible references. And if πρώτη means "prior," Luke could even be indicating that this occurred *prior* to when Quirinius was governor of Syria. Fourth, you probably know the verb Luke uses is ἐγένετο, subject to a variety of possible meanings. Perhaps a straightforward alternative translation is warranted: "This census took place before Quirinius was governing Syria."
The text literally says αὕτη ἀπογραφὴ πρώτη ἐγένετο ἡγεμονεύοντος τῆς Συρίας Κυρηνίου· “This census *proete* Quirinius [was] hegemon of Syria.” That's as tight as we can accurately translate it. The text certainly can mean, "This census was the first while Quirinius was governing Syria," but one would normally expect an article before ἀπογραφὴ (census) and again before πρώτη (first; before) if that were Luke’s intention. It could also just as accurately be translated "This census was before [one] when Quirinius was governor." The census in AD 6 under Quirinius was particularly infamous because it provoked the railed rebellion by Judas the Galilean. So it would be natural for a biographer or historian to refer to an earlier census with reference to the later, much better remembered one.
In other words, we just can't cavalierly claim Luke has made a historical mistake.
> I would not credit the claim that the authors got their bias "from evidence." It came from their belief and their intention to spread that belief.
I can understand that this position is an opinion, but it carries no weight as such, especially since the Gospel writers, and particularly explicitly Luke, purports to write historiography. But as I said, it's no secret that their intention was to spread that belief. That agenda is no cause to assume inaccuracy. The women behind the #MeToo movement also wish to spread a belief, as do the eyewitnesses of Auschwitz. We cannot justifiably assume that the wish to spread a belief leads us to unreliable accounts.
> I think a good model of understanding the rise of Christianity is as a revitalization movement.
I couldn't disagree more. The outright dismissal of circumcision, the Sabbath, obedience to the Law, the priesthood, and the sacrifices takes us to a far different plain than "revitalization." The apostles were not revisionists, visionaries, or purveyors of a novel paradigm, but preachers of an entirely new (new of a different kind, not new of the same kind) message. One of the unique aspects of early Christianity was the startling message of a physical resurrection back to this life, a belief that has no roots in either Judaism or in the Greco-Roman worldview. There was no such theology of which to build off.
> As such yes, they were trying to discredit something - traditional views of Judaism and concepts about the Messiah.
The explicit words of Jesus, and also the agendas of the apostles, is notably NOT to discredit the traditional views of Judaism, but rather to show how Jesus "filled up" the prophecies and in his person and acts brought completion to Judaism. There was no attempt to discredit Judaism. There is not a single shred of evidence that Jesus at any time repudiated his obligation to the Law. Jesus observed the expected practices of Jewish piety (alms-giving, prayer, fasting). He presupposed the validity of the Temple, the sacrifices, and the Jewish sacred feasts and holy days. He read and quoted from the Torah and regarded it as authoritative. He never rejected the law or sought to discredit it. In addition, Jesus never relaxed the requirements of the law as such.
> Their agenda was not to "report history", it was to further their religious viewpoint.
Luke, in particular, would explicitly disagree with you. His stated agenda is "to draw up an orderly account" (Lk. 1.1, 4) accurately communicating what was "handed down to us by those who from the first were eyewitnesses" (Lk. 1.3) based on "careful investigation" (Lk. 1.3) so that "you may know the certainty of the things" (Lk. 1.4). The burden of proof lies with the prosecution (you) that Luke's "agenda was not to 'report history', [but] ... to further [his] religious viewpoint". Luke's historical accuracy in his Gospel is stellar (accepting that the Quirinius reference is hotly debated). Aside from Quirinius, what Luke mentions about political figures, cultural practices, religious attitudes, and geographic locations are flawless. Many are corroborated. From the external, hard evidence we have, Luke is a careful historian.
> As such, I would say an objective look at the documents (including the religious literature which did not make it into the canon) indicate that several different groups were experimenting with the pluripotent mytheme that is the figure of Jesus
Perhaps you can help point me to apocryphal religious literature from the 1st century, and therefore contemporaneous with the New Testament writings, that didn't make it into the canon, as you are mentioning. The pseudepigraphal writings are second century and later. The growth of this kind of mythical legendary writing is clearly not in the minds of the New Testament authors. The details of the Gospels are not in that same genre or era of legendary additions to the persona of Jesus.
> Therefore, by virtue of the fact that it is a possibility...
The weakness of this view is that it gives insignificant possibility weight over plausibility. An examination of the NT documents shows us the deep conviction the apostles had that Jesus had physically risen from the dead, and it's virtually incontrovertible that (1) Jesus’s disciples taught he was raised from the dead and appeared to individuals/groups, and (2) Jesus’s disciples intended for us to interpret the resurrection as an actual event. Also, given the rise of the Church in the capital city of Judaism, we are left with N.T. Wright's conclusion: "Neither the empty tomb by itself…nor the appearances by themselves could have generated the early Christian belief. The empty tomb alone would be a puzzle and a tragedy. Sightings of an apparently alive Jesus, by themselves, would have been classified as visions or hallucinations, which were well enough known in the ancient world. However, an empty tomb and appearances of a living Jesus, taken together, would have presented a powerful reason for the emergence of the belief.”
As far as "breaking the rules of reality," scientifically speaking, the odds of the resurrection occurring may be infinity to one, but theologically speaking they are x:x (unknown to unknown). Miracles are outside of the scope of probability calculations, and so to deprecate the odds of veracity on the basis of our understandings of reality is moot.
> The fervor of belief argument is also patently ridiculous. Consider the Heaven's Gate cult for example.
The depth that one believes something is not an indicator of its veracity, nor is the fervor of that belief. My point is different: They intend for us to believe in the historicity of the resurrection not on the basis of their fervency but rather on the basis of the reliability of their eyewitness testimony grounded in the evidence (Acts 2.32; 4.20; 5.32; 1 Jn. 1.1-3).
> You place far too much faith in the texts as accurate reportage.
It's not that I place faith in it, but instead that I find the evidence of authenticity compelling.