What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? - Christianity Etc (4) - Nairaland
Nairaland Forum › Nairaland General › Christianity Etc › What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? (5273 Views)
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by Nobody: 11:27pm On May 07, 2017 |
Richirich713:Again we are essentially saying the same things but for different reasons. Agreed, the appeal to the flow of the narrative is in itself a red-herring, however the Testimonium as provided in the writings of Eusebius undoubtedly contained an insertion, that insertion served only to mislead readers, I see no other reasonable explanation for it. Richirich713:A broad consensus is just that and nothing else. It won’t be the first or the last time for that matter that a bunch of so-called experts will get it spectacularly wrong. In that case, your argument supports the fact that secular sources mentioned Jesus, which supports the fact of his existence (especially if we take it into account the other evidence of Jesus existence). Unless of course one just assumes Josephus probably originally said Jesus never existed - at that point I can't really take the argument seriously.Of course Jesus existed, but the mere fact of a mention by a secular source does not in itself confirm the existence of Jesus. My point is that you cannot draw that conclusion from Josephus’ writings as it stands, there are two fatal flaws. In the first instance the accounts are anecdotal and not an eyewitness account and in the second instance the accounts themselves have been further corrupted by interpolations. I disagree, if christians wanted to counter his views they could have painted Jesus much better than the passage does and we also have to remember that the writing style is consistent with Josephus and it contains phrases and words that Christians would have most likely not have used.But evidently the christian copyists painted Jesus in a much better light than whatever was contained in Josephus' original writings. Consider that Josephus was nothing if not meticulous. If as suspected Josephus gave a contemporary historical account of Jesus from the Roman point of view wherein Jesus was considered a brigand, and a trouble-maker, that would explain the statement of Origen. In other words Josephus mentioned Jesus in the context as he was known on the day and not two hundred years later after having being deified by church leaders. The writing style counts for nothing. Christian copyists had two hundred years to write whatever caught their fancy |
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by Richirich713: 7:21am On May 08, 2017 |
Sarassin:A completely reasonable explanation is that certain words and phrases were inadvertently added based on marginal notes by a Christian scribe, something not uncommon in textual transmission. Sarassin:The onus is on u to demonstrate that a bunch of experts got it wrong. Sarassin:I'm not arguing that by itself proves Jesus existed, I would argue that Josephus plus other secular and biblical sources demonstrate quite easily that Jesus existence is a historical fact. Sarassin:Again I disagree, the Testamentum Flavianum definitely has interpolations, but the other mention of Jesus by Josephus has none. Sarassin:I don't necessary have a problem with your view, as I said it can be used to support Christ existence and death - which is what most people do when they used this passage. I just don't think it's correct. Sarassin:Completely disagree, the stylistic/linguistic features of a text is always taken into account when dealing with textual criticism. If the writing style is consistent with Josephus it makes perfect sense to accept that he wrote it than to assume that christians forged it so well. If they were such good forgers and they had ~ 200 years to write whatever caught their fancy, they surely would have remove all the obvious interpolations and would have made it agree with church father Origen regarding Josephus view on Jesus being the christ and make it corroborate with Josephus other passage on Jesus. |
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by Nobody: 4:20pm On May 08, 2017 |
Richirich713:I am familiar with Dr. Ehrman’s writings. Alterations and changes were always “inadvertently” made by copyists in transcribing the Christian scriptures. These “inadvertent” words and changes always seemed to corrupt the texts in favour of the copyists bias. And yes, it was not uncommon. I'm not arguing that by itself proves Jesus existed, I would argue that Josephus plus other secular and biblical sources demonstrate quite easily that Jesus existence is a historical fact.I don’t agree. There is not one secular historical source as a standalone that confirms the existence of Jesus as a historical fact. At most we can only draw debatable inferences. Again I disagree, the Testamentum Flavianum definitely has interpolations, but the other mention of Jesus by Josephus has none.Josephus' account of the death of James is to some degree corroborated by the historian Hegesippus and more reliable. The words employed "the one called Christ" is deemed an "inadvertent "interpolation. It is believed the original reference by Josephus was to James, a brother of Jesus, son of Damnaeus who was to become High Priest. Completely disagree, the stylistic/linguistic features of a text is always taken into account when dealing with textual criticism. If the writing style is consistent with Josephus it makes perfect sense to accept that he wrote it than to assume that christians forged it so wellUnlike some biblical texts which could be compared against earlier documents i.e the dead sea scrolls and Bodmer Papyri for accuracy, textual styles and comparisons, none of Josephus original writings exist therefore we cannot make a meaningful comparison of writing styles when we have only the christian copyists texts to examine. If they were such good forgers and they had ~ 200 years to write whatever caught their fancy, they surely would have remove all the obvious interpolations and would have made it agree with church father Origen regarding Josephus view on Jesus being the christ and make it corroborate with Josephus other passage on Jesus.That is exactly what they set out to do. One passage was set out to buttress the other. The argument is now about which accounts are authentic, in the meantime we lose sight of the fact that the copyists re-wrote the entire book! |
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by Richirich713: 4:46pm On May 08, 2017 |
@Sarassin Again we disagreeing about most things, but looking at the discussion I consider most of our disagreements irrelevant, since all I'm interested is if Josephus did mention Jesus. Since we agreed on that, I found it unnecessary to go back and forth regarding what the original text said exactly. |
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by 4kings: 5:54pm On May 08, 2017 |
Richirich713:This is a ridiculous rationalization based on choice-supportive bias. Now it's appendix and notes abi? Do you even understand what appendix and footnotes are for? Abeg i no get time for this one... |
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by Richirich713: 6:43pm On May 08, 2017 |
4kings:You the one who's bias here my friend, If i gave u several academical sources written by non-christians making this point yet u will still denial it. 4kings:Deal with the main point, I don't have time for word games since I've seen ur dishonestly in spinning stuff when u tried to force Josephus to say something he never did . Her main point was this was common in Josephus writings, it is also known to be common in the ancient world, another point made by several historians. |
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by 4kings: 1:05am On May 09, 2017 |
Richirich713:"several academic sources" really? So you were even copying and pasting, i thought it was just the last post, smh. Well i don't need a title, position or an authority to make my point for me, i make deductions from things i've read, so does your sources. Deal with the main point, I don't have time for word games since I've seen ur dishonestly in spinning stuff when u tried to force Josephus to say something he never didHow did i do this? All assertions i've made so far are from Josephus writing, so where is this coming from? Are you not the one trying interprete the words in another manner? ![]() Her main point was this was common in Josephus writings, it is also known to be common in the ancient world, another point made by several historians.In what ancient world? Is the bible not also an ancient writing, are there verses in chapters of scriptures that are out of context from what the subject of discussion is about? Talking about context, Antiquities 18, started by talking about all the misfortune that befell the Jews for the period of 32 years from Taxation by the Romans, arrival of Pilate, Pilate massacre action on jews then up until the "Jews messiah(Jesus) death"/Testimonium, then the fourth paragraph emphasizes how these were great misfortunes for the Jews. Each Paragraph had a story to tell, why must the Testimonium be the one that is supposed to be in an appendix. Mr. man? |
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by Richirich713: 2:07pm On May 09, 2017 |
4kings:Quoting, not copying and pasting. 4kings:That's probably becuz u don't got any one with credentials to back up ur claims. And who u kidding, u never read Josephus Antiquities of the Jews a day in ur life. Anyone familiar with this work wouldn't have made the error u made earlier when u said that he clearly claimed Jesus was the Christ. If u making such elementary errors when reading Josephus, there's no way in hell I or anyone should trust your deductions. 4kings:Below u replied to my claim that Josephus never claim Jesus was the Christ in the original Testimonium and that he only said he was called the christ. 4kings:Then when u realized u were completely wrong, instead of admitting u were wrong - u decided to try and put a spin on Josephus words to make him say something he never did. 4kings:So there u go. 4kings:Don't know, never consider that when reading the bible. But irrelevant since we specifically discussing Josephus, we know he did it and we know it was not uncommon in the ancient world - but that doesn't mean every writer in the ancient did so. 4kings:No one said it was an appendix, Mary Smallwood just gave a explanation on why our historiography don't have these digressions, namely becuz we have footnotes and appendices. Her explanation could be dead wrong for all I care but that wouldn't change the fact that Josephus writings has such digressions, points in his narrative where he wrote something that interrupted the flow of his narrative - something which u deny. |
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by 4kings: 5:54pm On May 09, 2017 |
Richirich713:I see... That's probably becuz u don't got any one with credentials to back up ur claims.From what i know my claim is also a consensus among most scholars. And you're yet to debunk them. And who u kidding, u never read Josephus Antiquities of the Jews a day in ur life.What sort of delusion is this? The reason i first quoted you is because you said Josephus never said Jesus was the Christ, and my response was clearly based on what i could remember from his works, I only posted one passage at first before we progressed to this level. You're are not the first person i'm discussing this case with. Even the person i had a debate with(here on nairaland) on this issue is way more knowledgeable than you about history(that's if you know much about history anyway). Though during my discussion with him i used Sarassin's point of view of Christian fathers not mentioning the Testimonium when they were propagating Christianity and during debates with guys like Celsus. Here was his response to the Josephus interpolation at the end of the day: I agree that the belief in Eusebius' possible interpolation is warranted and this is the major reason why scholars in the 19th century doubted the testimonium flavanium since Eusebius was the first to quote the text, but with other manuscripts such as the Arabic manuscript devoid of reference to Jesus as messaiah or other possible Christian interpolation, it is more reasonable to believe that an original core existed which was then interpolated, the original remained but additions were made to it to make it align with Christian beliefs. But you can hold on to your belief though if you so which, we agree to disagree.Here's the thread --> https://www.nairaland.com/3267097/athiest-view-arguement-against-christianity/1#48188935 Though your close-mindedness is not surprising, i just want to let you know that issue(or most other historical events) is not a fresh one to me. Don't know, never consider that when reading the bible. But irrelevant since we specifically discussing Josephus, we know he did it and we know it was not uncommon in the ancient world - but that doesn't mean every writer in the ancient did so.A simple answer to this is that you've never observed this. Observing it in another literature should come up strange and fishy, but again i'm not surprised at your close-mindedness. No one said it was an appendix, Mary Smallwood just gave a explanation on why our historiography don't have these digressions, namely becuz we have footnotes and appendices.Can you give me any other digression from any old literature that you can remember? Her explanation could be dead wrong for all I care but that wouldn't change the fact that Josephus writings has such digressions, points in his narrative where he wrote something that interrupted the flow of his narrative - something which u deny.@bolded, shows that you don't even understand the point you quoted(or care to understand) as long as it supports your belief, smh. I'm not surprised, honestly. But you made a strong statement here: "that wouldn't change the fact that Josephus writings has such digressions" Can you point out any other digression in Josephus work?, maybe i don't understand what this digression is all about. |
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by OLAADEGBU(op): 8:17am On May 13, 2017 |
OLAADEGBU:Check this link for possible answers: https://answersingenesis.org/bible-history/is-josephus-reliable/ |
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by cyrilamx(m): 1:48pm On May 13, 2017 |
I can see inbred hatred from u against the Catholic Church. You mentioned the council of carthage as If it were a pentecostal gathering. You failed to let the world know that it was a Catholic Church organised council by African Catholic Church under the chairmanship of St. Augustine and that the decrees of that great councils reached regarding the canonicity of the Bible was submitted to Pope Damasus for ratification. You lucky my phone is having issues. I wish I can encounter you one on one and let's discuss theology, not this copy and paste u doing. donnie: |
| Re: What Is The Value Of Josephus' Writings? by OLAADEGBU(op): 6:13pm On May 15, 2017 |
OLAADEGBU:Here are the answers to the questions of the OP. Click and be blessed. ![]() https://www.gotquestions.org/Flavius-Josephus.html |
The Story Of Josephus: The Man Who Helped Christians With Fake History • 26 Atheist Pictures That Will Make You Reconsider The Value Of Religion • Historian Josephus Mentions Jesus: How This Is A Genuine Source • 2 • 3 • 4
Does Loyalty Precede Morality? • What Is The Meaning Of IJN? • Does It Take Money To Spread The Gospel?
. Her main point was this was common in Josephus writings, it is also known to be common in the ancient world, another point made by several historians.
