by jimwalton » Mon May 21, 2018 1:14 pm
> Something like a newspaper, or contemporary analogue thereof, or other written account of events like this.
Yeah, I guess that would be nice, but they didn't have anything like newspapers because the printing press hadn't been invented. The only way they had to mass produce a document was to make multiple copies by hand—not exactly the daily news kind of process. We do have four different accounts of Jesus's life including his miracles. They were later gathered into the book we call the Bible. On that grounds people reject them, but I can't imagine why. They were accounts of Jesus, written to be historical, and just because we've assembled them into the Bible, they're "no longer objective." I don't know what more we'd expect from people interviewing the eye-witnesses (Lk. 1.1-4), from people who were eyewitnesses (the Gospel of John), and from the other two writers trying to tell the story to show a particular perspective. Some say, "Oh, they were biased." Well, I'd have a bias too if I saw those things. I'd be convinced and I'd write it that way. Besides, bias doesn't mean you're wrong. If it were, then we can't believe any Jewish historian who writes on the Holocaust, or any African-American writing about antebellum slavery. Too many elements of the gospels don’t come across as having been invented for the sake of bias (the disciples' lack of faith, the testimony of women on resurrection, Jesus’ claiming his father had forsaken him, etc.). But elements in the gospels also show they are trying to report accurate history. Richard Dawkins has an objective, an agenda. Gerd Ludemann has an agenda. We don’t reject writings because the authors have an agenda, but because the arguments are insufficient. Even we as readers are biased.
> For example, with the Exodus, are there written accounts from the Egyptians' point of view?
The Egyptians didn't record events that humiliated the Pharaoh or the Egyptian people. Neither did the Babylonians, Assyrians, Persians, or any other ancient group (except the Israelites).
> surely an traumatic event like that would have been recorded by multiple government officials at the time,
Not "surely" at all. They only recorded the great achievements of their king and culture.
> not to mention recorded by the thousands of people who woke up in the morning to find pieces of their children and babies scattered hither and thither.
Uh, no one was hacked to pieces. The account says they simply died, not that they were dismembered.
> did the Pharoah's wizard not make some sort of account of his wizarding failures?
The very few books that have survived show what works, not what doesn't. We don't have their wizardry books. We have copies of their mythographies and we have the Egyptian Book of the Dead. None of their books of spells survived.
> what with him being the best wizard in all of Egypt to have reached the position of Pharoah's chief wizard.
????? Who are you saying was Pharaoh's chief wizard? I lost ya.
> The fortune teller's bowl is an interesting one. Is it actually a reference to an individual, or a generic title (i.e. "messiah") do you think?
It is debated, as is just about everything. The word in question is "chrstou", and the important vowel is missing. If the word is "chrestou," it can mean "good person" or even be the genitive form of the way Suetonius referred to Jesus ("Chrestus"). It could also just mean that a nice guy gave the bowl as a gift. If the word is "christou", it probably refers to Jesus, though there were many messianic claimants in the 1st century. Its combination with magician could indicate a magician who was a good man who did good things, or it could mean that a 1st-c. magician was invoking the name of Jesus for power. As one article says, "According to French marine archaeologist Franck Goddio, co-founder of the Oxford Center of Maritime Archaeology, and Egyptologist David Fabre, the phrase could very well be a reference to Jesus Christ, since he was one known as a primary exponent of white magic."
So, the debate rages on. Though it could be an era-biblical reference to Jesus as a miracle worker, that identification can't be made with a a whole lot of confidence. It is possible, however.
The exorcist's manual is 2 centuries later, but it still shows that Jesus was known as a miracle worker, just as the Gospels portray him.