by jimwalton » Tue Jan 26, 2016 11:49 am
Agreed: "he could have written down his message to humanity if he wanted to, but he never did"
Agreed: "he didn't want to write down his message himself"
> I think it is reasonable to conclude that if you want your message transmitted as accurately as possible, you would be better off writing it down as opposed to writing nothing and hoping others record it accurately."
Not necessarily. If you want others to give different perspectives of your life, you let them do it. Autobiography is not always the most desired course.
> Therefore what he wanted to happen was not the most accurate preservation of his message.
Not the only conclusion. Perhaps he wanted various approaches. Let's say Gen. Douglas MacArthur writes an autobiography about his life. Good for him. Now we know what he thought. But then let's say William Manchester writes a biography of MacArthur emphasizing his tenacious strategy in war. We see a different side of MacArthur than the general wrote about himself. Then we read a biography by Geoff & Janet Benge emphasizing his heroism, something that probably didn't come out in MacArthur's autobiography. This is not a problem, but a strength.
Possibly what Jesus wanted to come out was not, as you prejudicially claim, "not the most accurate preservation of his message," but instead the varied perspectives of legitimate writers.
> But there is no legitimate reason to believe that any eye witness "journalists" recorded Jesus' message
The Gospel of John has more eyewitness accounts than the other three Gospels combined:
- Times of day (1.39; 4.6, etc.)
- A link with one of the feasts (2.13, 23, etc.)
- Place names are brought in naturally and for no apparent reason other than narrative events
- The call of the disciples (1.35-51)
- The episode of the foot-washing (13.1-20)
- Information about persons not mentioned elsewhere: Nicodemus, Malchus, Annas
- Claims to eyewitness testimony (1.14, 19.35)
...to name a few. It gives plenty of legitimate reason supporting the position that John the disciple was the author of the Gospel of John (a position, by the way, unanimously advocated in the early centuries. Unanimously—by people far closer to the events than we are.)
> If he was God then whatever happened must have been what he wanted to have happen, since he controls everything and has unlimited power and knowledge.
This is not a legitimate Christian theological position. God does not control everything in the sense of determinism where humans are mere robots in a unbreakable plan. It's just a stereotype, a caricature, and inaccurate.