No, Jesus WASN'T Special. (feat Dr James Tabor) (Jeremiah Johnston response)

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  • Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
  • Bible scholar Dr. James Tabor joins us to discuss the evidence for Jesus' resurrection, debating Christian apologist Dr. Jeremiah Johnston. Tabor argues that the Dead Sea Scrolls show similar "suffering servant" messianic motifs existed in Judaism before Jesus, undermining Johnston's claim that Jesus' death and resurrection was unique and unexpected. Tabor also argues the earliest Christian view was Jesus' resurrection was spiritual, not physical, based on Paul's letters, contradicting later Gospel accounts. Overall, Tabor uses scholarship on early Jewish messianism and analysis of New Testament texts to challenge common apologetic arguments about the uniqueness of Jesus' death and resurrection.
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Комментарии • 829

  • @JamesTaborVideos
    @JamesTaborVideos 11 месяцев назад +134

    I wanted to thank Kipp Davis for his useful comments below. I don’t think he and I disagree much on substance here, -and there could be some confusion in any edited video covering many issues in clips. In the future it would be great if he and I could go on together and talk about these fascinating issues, but I can't right now due to things I am involved with in Israel. I don't think this kind of exchange posted as comments on RUclips is the best forum for such, given the crazy way replies get piled upon replies and everything gets lost in the a cloud of "comment" dust. Here is my overall response to Kipp's input and I do not intend to post anything else in comments on these matters--though I am more than happy to explore in a proper forum:
    Re: 4Q285, I made it plain that there are other issues than the one letter-and that context would determine it. Also, the syntax issues were discussed in the BAR article…My whole point was that Johnson throwing it out there as proof that only a powerful “messiah" was to be found in “Judaism,” as some monolithic whole, should be questioned.
    I did not quote Marty as agreeing with the alternative reading of 4Q285 and I plainly said that most scholars interpret it, given the Isa 11 context, as a slaying not slain messiah. I even hold that view myself. The arguments about the Teacher’s suffering and parallels to the Suffering Servant motifs in 1QH have been proposed and discussed by Knohl and Wise-as well as Fishbane. They have nothing to do with 4Q285.
    My reference to Marty had to do with 4Q491-and it most likely referring to the teacher, and properly included with the the Thanksgiving Hymns-as it is in the latest critical edition.
    I also did not intend to say that the Psalm 22 reading was found at Qumran, but that it is an example of a copy of Psalms from the period that agrees with the LXX against the MT-showing textual variations of the period are not tied just to the Greek. It is included in the notes to the DSS Bible for that reason, by Abegg, Flint, and Ulrich…
    Further, the “piercing” and “wounding” motif-awaking the sword against the Shepherd-as found in CD B-based on Zechariah, appears to be discussed in the community, as well as the suffering motif overall-and that “oracle” has the lament over a slain Davidic figure…surely not Jesus. If we had a Pesher on Zechariah, similar to that of Habakkuk, I have little doubt it would have been somehow so applied. And they do make use of the "killing of the Righteous one" text, which the Jesus followers also pick up on.
    I agree that the Gabriel stone reading is disputed…Knohl has expressed different views, but I think the best evidence does not support forgery-and we well might differ. I also think the Shapira scroll is ancient not modern (with Dershowitz and others) and the James ossuary inscription…and yes, those arguments are ongoing.
    Again my overall point was that “Judaism” and its “messiahs” or redemptive figures are not a monolithic whole…if the Teacher figure suffers abuse and persecution, but believes he will be exalted to heaven-or his followers celebrated such, and are also thinking they will be included among the elect if they maintain faith and suffer also, then Johnson’s main point is incorrect. He throws out 4Q285 as if that “nails” things-pardon the pun. My main point overall was that when “messiahs” are killed-which they most often are in the texts we were talking about-one should not assume that none of their followers would think they had an apotheosis or heavenly vindication. The loss of a charismatic leader in terms of the social psychology of social groups, is often met with such hopes-rather than rejection of the person as some kind of failed messiah figure.
    So overall what I was trying to do was to make clear that throwing out this five line fragment-as if THAT proved a messianic figure is always conquering and triumphant, is very misleading and incorrect.

    • @DrKippDavis
      @DrKippDavis 11 месяцев назад +42

      Thank you very much, Dr. Tabor, for your reply.
      I should like to reiterate that I am in complete agreement on this point: Johnson's entire treatment of the Scrolls and their reflection of "early Judaism" is indeed just totally inadequate, misleading and incorrect. There is so very much that we still don't know, and are simultaneously surprising us as scholars in what the texts continue to reveal.

    • @JamesTaborVideos
      @JamesTaborVideos 11 месяцев назад +4

      Hey Kipp, I am sure we are helping Paul's views with our knocking these balls back and forth! I look forward to discussing. And I might add, even though our so-called "mythicists" might think there is some kind of Jewish/Messianic/Apocalyptic matrix out there in late 2nd Temple Judaism--I surely do not think such is the case. One does not need a pattern to find that real people who do exist, identify with texts, either get killed or anticipate getting killed, and their follower then think that somehow they have triumphed or live on--with their "Kingdom" either spiritualized as having come--or put off into the future. As we both know, there is never any problem in pushing any failed expectation down the road a bit @@DrKippDavis

    • @theultimatereductionist7592
      @theultimatereductionist7592 10 месяцев назад +1

      If you want to study unsolved mysteries, study aliens (UFOs, UAP, alien abductions, trace landing cases), Bigfoot, even poltergeist.

    • @DrKippDavis
      @DrKippDavis 10 месяцев назад +18

      @@theultimatereductionist7592 How about I just study what interests me?
      And, besides: aliens, bigfoot and poltergeist aren't actual mysteries, are they?

    • @JasperOFlanigan-fb5lv
      @JasperOFlanigan-fb5lv 10 месяцев назад +1

      Until Paulogia has the guts to take on Metatron’s undisputed proof Christ lived (he won’t he doesn’t have the guts) he’s a coward

  • @FooRocker
    @FooRocker 11 месяцев назад +125

    When Paulogia said,"That was 10 years ago." I felt that. To me, the 90s will always feel like they were 10 years ago

  • @MythVisionPodcast
    @MythVisionPodcast 11 месяцев назад +63

    This is epic Paul! These edits are amazing! Dr. Tabor's course is fantastic! Hail Skynet!

  • @curiousnerdkitteh
    @curiousnerdkitteh 11 месяцев назад +56

    Paulogia is devoted, using his one time-traveller's message from the dystopian future to fact-check his video instead of calling for help and telling us to NOT make the one decision we're about to make which causes a chain reaction to that Skynet-ruled dystopia. This is why I watch Paulogia, he is super dedicated to accuracy.

    • @budnrobots2968
      @budnrobots2968 7 дней назад +1

      Jokes on us, the ‘second coming’ ‘antichrist’ and ‘revalation’ were all ancient understandings of Skynet. Paulogia is just not spoiling the finale!!!

  • @Yourghostuncle
    @Yourghostuncle 11 месяцев назад +226

    It really bothers me how comfortable apologists are with disagreeing with scholarly consensus knowing their target audience will not fact check them. People trust them and the abuse of that trust is such a violation.

    • @CCCBeaumont
      @CCCBeaumont 11 месяцев назад +5

      Tabor is in no way representative of a “scholarly consensus.” Speaking for myself, as a ThD scholar and an Apologist, I am not the least bit interested in either amassing or fooling any followers, but I am convinced of the truth of Christianity.

    • @Yourghostuncle
      @Yourghostuncle 11 месяцев назад +35

      @@CCCBeaumont I really don't have a problem with you being convinced. If it's the case the hes not representative of it then I stand corrected, however it's still a thing apologists do and are comfortable doing frequently. WLC does it with his Kalam and the beginning of the universe for example.

    • @corvinredacted
      @corvinredacted 11 месяцев назад +36

      ​@CCCBeaumont I don't have a stance on this particular claim, since I have no point of reference on what the scholarly consensus is on this issue. However, I will agree that OP's general point is a valid one when it comes to apologetics in general. I am much more familar with scientific or philosphical arguments than textual ones, and I see the phenomenon in those fields on a regular basis. A shocking amount of apologetic content relies upon misrepresentation of scholarly consensus and the ideas being discussed.
      Science and philosophy regarding the "fine tuning" of the universal constants, the second law of thermodynamics, the Big Bang, abiogenesis, natural selection, genetic mutations, the cooling of planetary cores, teleology, the fossil record, the Problem of Evil, the scientific method, methodological naturalism, the mineral content of seawater, the carbon cycle, and radiometric dating are just a few examples of fields that I have seen repeatedly and egregiously misrepresented by apologists. Moreso by young earth creationists, but by the more respectable types as well, particularly those advocating for more abstract concepts like the cosmological or teleological arguments.
      Even when it comes to textual criticism, I regularly see misrepresentation of topics so well-accepted by scholars that even I, as a layperson, am aware. An especially pervasive (and subtle) misrepresentation is the willingness to obscure the fact that the gospels were almost certainly not written by the traditionally-assigned authors. The martyrdom of the apostles is another, very similar topic. For example, most members of my Evangelical church were under the impression that we knew Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John had written the gospels as personal eye-witness testimony and that we had good reason to believe most, if not all of the original 12 (minus Judas Iscariot) refused to denounce the risen Christ under threat of torture and death.
      When I spoke to the head pastor at the time about these things, he expressed his awareness that these things were not supported by scholarly evidence and that he did not personally believe either of those claims to be true. He explained that he never pointed out or corrected these misapprehensions because it would unecessarily complicate the issue and confuse people. He shared a number of other, similar beliefs that he was aware did not jibe with scholarly consensus, and that he therefore did not personally hold. He told me that he was still convinced in the overall truth of the Bibical narrative (through his personal experience of his life being changed by the Holy Spirit) and that it was therefore more important to help people reach the right conclusion than to bog them down with things that could cause unnecessary uncertainty. During our meeting, he asked me not to share what we had discussed with the congregation, because they wouldn't understand if they found out that he didn't believe the Bible to be as accurate as he made it out to sound.
      I see it as a very real and pervasive problem, even if that is not the case here. I struggled tremendously with science and philosophy at my Christian high-school because the topics were so heavily twisted to fit a certain narrative. For a long time I thought that most of secular academics had to be blatant, intentional lies perpetuated by bad actors, otherwise how could people believe such absurd claims? Eventually, I discovered that I had been horribly mislead by my "teachers", who so thoroughly misrepresented the topics as to make them entirely nonsensical. It wasn't easy to dig myself out of that educational pit.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas 11 месяцев назад

      @@CCCBeaumont You have the answer to begin with so everything is made to fit. 25 fan fiction stories which copy from aMoses imitation to miracles of Poseidon, Asklepios and Dionysos are the expression of foreign greeks making up their story and tzrn a dead preacher into a god like figure. Only four of the 25 fan flctiln get accepted into the mist common story collection. It seems like a talking cross seems to much to swallow for the believer in the fan fiction.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas 11 месяцев назад +22

      @@corvinredacted I meet the same peoole in a different country. A lot of the priests are aware of the false claims or outright lies. They either not inform the congregation or even repeat them. They often know better but they prefer rhe pay check and the easy way.

  • @jekanyika
    @jekanyika 10 месяцев назад +36

    The more I hear about this time period the more I realise The Life of Brian was pretty spot on. "Messiahs" were everywhere.

    • @CCCBeaumont
      @CCCBeaumont 7 месяцев назад

      Indeed the time was ripe for the arrival of the true Messiah, and He arrived.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 5 месяцев назад +7

      @@CCCBeaumont - Over and over and over again! ^_^

    • @TheCodeJunkie
      @TheCodeJunkie 4 месяца назад +1

      Kind of like they are now too.😀

  • @maddyjean
    @maddyjean 11 месяцев назад +35

    no one expected joseph smith to receive revelation on golden plates that he could read inside a hat. therefore true.

    • @Ulubai
      @Ulubai 8 месяцев назад +4

      No one expected that Douglas Adams would write a how-to guide on how to fly but here we are.

    • @jrojala
      @jrojala 8 месяцев назад +2

      No one expected a child’s wish for candy rain to start a cannibal apocalypse, “Sweet Story” by, Carlton Mellick III proved us wrong.

    • @SteveLaw-UK
      @SteveLaw-UK 6 месяцев назад

      No one expected this sentence to.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 5 месяцев назад

      @@SteveLaw-UK - To....do what?

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 5 месяцев назад

      @maddyjean - SUCH a pity that Maroni returned the golden plates to Golub or whatever heaven it was. Proof was THIS close!

  • @resurrectionnerd
    @resurrectionnerd 11 месяцев назад +74

    Luke 9:8
    _Now Herod the tetrarch heard about all that was going on. And he was perplexed because some were saying that John had been raised from the dead, others that Elijah had appeared, and still others that one of the prophets of long ago had arisen._
    This establishes the belief in a single dying and rising prophet figure existed prior to the death of Jesus and in the exact same socio-cultural context.

    • @resurrectionnerd
      @resurrectionnerd 11 месяцев назад +15

      @leoyohansen6811 Of course that's true if the author completely invented it. But apologists believe the gospels are reporting accurate history. If that's the case then they can no longer argue the resurrection of a single individual was "unique" per Lk. 9:8 cf. Mk. 6:14-16.

    • @trybunt
      @trybunt 11 месяцев назад +2

      @leoyohansen6811 we can say the same about any religious text, that it's only a reflection of what the author wrote, but if we are trying to work out some idea about what people believed, sometimes all we can really do is hope it's a half decent reflection of beliefs from the time.
      With so many cultures lost to time, it's still interesting to look back and wonder about what they thought. All the Maya people with their history destroyed all but a few books.. we'll never know exactly what most of them believed, but hopefully what remains is somewhat similar.
      Edit: just to be clear, I'm not saying it should be believed as true, only that it's interesting to read and consider the implications if they believed what is written, then go out and see if it can be falsified

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@trybuntWe have at least 25 gospels and many were refuted and lost in the struggle so we are stuck with 4 which were selected by some groups infighting with others. It tells us that they either did not care what haplened or they just made it up to fit their personal needs.

    • @trybunt
      @trybunt 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@TorianTammas I don't really follow your logic here. We have 25 gospels, many refuted or lost, now there is 4 selected by people who had disagreements amongst themselves..
      ..Therefore they didn't care about what happened or they made it up? 🤷 how does that follow?
      I'm not a Christian, I don't believe these are factual accounts, but I feel like I've missed a step in your explanation because people argue and disagree about what has happened all the time, that doesn't really tell me much.

    • @joschafinger126
      @joschafinger126 8 месяцев назад +1

      Anyone who has ever formed part of or studied any kind of a resistance movement of _any_ kind is thoroughly familiar with the themes of suffering before ultimate victory, betrayal by trusted people, predictions of splintering into a gazillion of mutually-opposed groups... _Any_ resistance group at that time, whether violent or nonviolent (and that's a major splitting factor), would have experienced the same.
      The Jesus movement _was_ special, but in only _one_ major point: it became huge.

  • @DrKippDavis
    @DrKippDavis 11 месяцев назад +26

    @19:29 - There is more to discuss here for sure, but if Dr. Tabor is eager to have such a discussion, perhaps Jeremiah J. Johnston won't be keen to respond (god knows, I can't get him to respond to me, but perhaps James will have better luck), but in any event these are things I am also happy about which to have friendly chats.
    I should say, I am just happy to see more people getting excited about the volumes of amazing information in the Dead Sea Scrolls.

  • @plattbagarn
    @plattbagarn 11 месяцев назад +181

    "Why would they lie?" Because they were trying to start a cult.

    • @c.guydubois8270
      @c.guydubois8270 11 месяцев назад +36

      And make a bit of money/support. Clever grifters, true believers or truly deceived?

    • @robertl4824
      @robertl4824 11 месяцев назад +14

      one of the world's first grift!

    • @robertl4824
      @robertl4824 11 месяцев назад +13

      actually not lying but stealing the concept of coming back from the dead. All hail Baal!

    • @illithidhunter6177
      @illithidhunter6177 11 месяцев назад +24

      Wrong, they were trying to keep the cult from disolving.

    • @CB66941
      @CB66941 11 месяцев назад +16

      Personally I always felt like a lie does not need to serve what the lie says but something very different entirely.
      If a lie is useful for championing a certain cause OTHER than the lie itself, you can bet that's what people will do.
      If the lie helped with group cohesion and identity in a time of Roman oppression, corrupt religious authorities and to a certain extent death and persecution anxiety, then you can start to see why some would lie.

  • @Hailfire08
    @Hailfire08 11 месяцев назад +32

    The thing I find striking about these apologetics is how clearly they're arguing to a conclusion, not arguing to the truth. When Jesus matches expectations, he's the Messiah because he's fulfilling prophecy. When he's breaking expectations, he's the Messiah because they couldn't have made it up. Heads I win, tails you lose.
    Hey apologists, how about this: if Jesus breaks expectations, he's breaking prophecy and so couldn't be the Messiah, and when he meets expectations, it's clearly being made up by people who wanted to claim prophecy fulfilled. Now what?

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas 11 месяцев назад

      prophets came to fix the oresebt they lived in. They never were their to make future claims. This is mainly a christian invention.

    • @davidmeehan4486
      @davidmeehan4486 8 месяцев назад +1

      Them's fightin' words!

    • @noonenoone1628
      @noonenoone1628 5 месяцев назад

      I don't know. Were you there

    • @CCCBeaumont
      @CCCBeaumont 5 месяцев назад

      @Hailfire08 All arguments are arguments "to a conclusion." Whatever the argument demonstrates it demonstrates. The question is the validity and soundness of the arguments. Whatever the motivation is immaterial (no pun intended) and demonstrates nothing. The best Apologists for Christianity (generally) have the winning arguments because we are arguing for something which is apparently true.

    • @lucyferos205
      @lucyferos205 5 месяцев назад

      ​@@CCCBeaumontArguing to a conclusion, in this context, refers to confirmation bias.

  • @jenna2431
    @jenna2431 11 месяцев назад +100

    You gotta love when a Christian runs with 7 "proofs" and then leads with a speculation propped up by a piece of scroll that's maybe the size of your palm.

    • @JudasMaccabeus1
      @JudasMaccabeus1 11 месяцев назад +21

      Confirmation bias is the main reason I decided, as a scholar, that I could not subscribe to Judaism as I was much inclined to do at one point.
      In order to be objective, in my opinion, one can’t begin with a ready made conclusion. Christians and Jews believe prima facie scripture is accurate and reliable in relation to their own religions ideology.
      This is a huge problem for a scholar, or anyone dedicated to objectivity.

    • @CCCBeaumont
      @CCCBeaumont 9 месяцев назад

      Is it the size of the piece of scroll that invalidates the hypothesis? If so, why?

    • @worshadar150
      @worshadar150 7 месяцев назад +4

      Same exact thing with that "Case for Christ" book, He immediately establishes that his "proof" is that he trusts the eye-witness reports. Nothing you say after that has any weight to a skeptic.

    • @CCCBeaumont
      @CCCBeaumont 7 месяцев назад

      @@worshadar150 Actually, the key is why those testimonies are so trustworthy. There are more than a few reasons to trust the story of Jesus as essentially, or substantially historical, and it is primarily non-historian, internet keyboard warriors who have no training or education who subscribe to Jesus mythicism.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 5 месяцев назад +2

      @@CCCBeaumont - We don't even know if the "EYEWITNESSES" existed! Perhaps it is the gullible who subscribe to the existence of Yeshu'.

  • @omnikevlar2338
    @omnikevlar2338 11 месяцев назад +37

    Seems like Dr. James Tabor is having the time of his life with teaching his new course. I am very happy for him!

  • @Jin420
    @Jin420 11 месяцев назад +44

    Granted I left Christianity/ presbyterian few years back.. but the history of it is still quite intriguing.
    I still want to read as much of the religious texts as I can... (not just Christianity)
    Trying to learn Hebrew so I can read the torah.
    Arabic so I can read Quran.
    Something I've been wanting to do for YEARS. 💯

    • @bigtombowski
      @bigtombowski 10 месяцев назад +3

      If you've got the free time, it's all here to learn on RUclips! It's amazing really.

    • @110j
      @110j 8 месяцев назад +1

      I’m a native Arabic speaker and have spoken Hebrew since 4th grade. I tried reading both and it was quite difficult even as a native speaker. Good luck.

    • @MossyMozart
      @MossyMozart 5 месяцев назад

      @Jin420 - From what I understand from a talk by Dr Ehrman, the tradition of strict copying existed in Islam so that the "Torah" should be MUCH closer today to the original than the "Bible" is. The "Bible has been scrambled all over the place.

  • @Paulogia
    @Paulogia  11 месяцев назад +13

    === SIGN UP FOR DR TABOR'S DEAD SEA SCROLL COURSE === www.tinyurl.com/TaborDSS

  • @DrKippDavis
    @DrKippDavis 11 месяцев назад +4

    Oh, dear. One more thing, and then I promise I will shut up ...
    @25:46 - the so-called "Ḥazon Garbiel Stone" is a non-provenanced artefact belonging to David Jeselsohn, and its authenticity is hotly disputed. Most of the text reads like a weird stream of consciousness, which appears to have been constructed on the basis of a string of Christianised Jewish messianic tropes. If it is authentic-which at present remains a very conjectural "IF"-it is also highly unclear what this text even is, or what it means. In situations like this scholars are usually better off to avoid depending upon disputed, non-provenanced possible forgeries in making what are already also conjectural claims for early Jewish religion.

  • @Zen_Traveler
    @Zen_Traveler 11 месяцев назад +24

    Thank you Paul & Dr Tabor! I painstakingly read Vermes & Wise translations over many years and highly recommend "The First Messiah, " to give a GREAT 1st Century perspective on life of these folks prior to 70 CE. I love scholarship has been renewed in this valuable material.

  • @johnquiett1085
    @johnquiett1085 11 месяцев назад +6

    Its really disheartening when i hear an apologist say things like 'the ancient jews had no reason to lie!' Like, sure they did. They wa ted to start their religion. Or maybe they didn’t lie but had wrong beliefs. Either way, didnt happen.

  • @dougrobinson6683
    @dougrobinson6683 11 месяцев назад +52

    It's interesting that Dr. Tabor freely admits the point that Richard Carrier makes about a dying messiah in the Scrolls that really sets Dr. Kipp Davis off. Dr. Davis told me the Dead Sea Scrolls don't provide a template for Jesus, that there are only interesting comparisons, but you couldn't invent Jesus from the Scrolls. It sounds here like you actually could.

    • @GameTimeWhy
      @GameTimeWhy 11 месяцев назад +9

      The interesting thing is that it's vague enough and we have so little concrete evidence that you can get different things out of the subject depending on what you are looking for or how you look for it. That's why it's super important to show your work.

    • @GameTimeWhy
      @GameTimeWhy 11 месяцев назад +1

      Actually i may have misunderstood you because they don't actually disagree on their being a person who died on the cross. Can you clarify what you meant?

    • @J_Z913
      @J_Z913 11 месяцев назад +7

      I think that Dr. Davis' point is that Carrier overstated his case and deliberately misinterpreted the Dead Sea Scrolls to make his point. If pressed, I imagine that Dr. Tabor would agree with Dr. Davis far more than he would with Carrier.

    • @BDnevernind
      @BDnevernind 11 месяцев назад +22

      Yes this is a result of Davis simply hating Carrier and then doing spurious, non-academic rants to show that Carrier is wrong. What people miss on this subject is that all Carrier has to do is demonstrate plausibility, not show that the intent of any writing was the suffering and dying messiah, only that it was a plausible interpretation at the time.

    • @BDnevernind
      @BDnevernind 11 месяцев назад +18

      ​@@J_Z913it doesn't really matter who he would agree more with across the board. The only thing that matters is validation of Carrier's point that it was a plausible pre-christian interpretation among messianic Jews. That's literally Carrier's whole point, and he cites scholars going way back who believe this was a plausible interpretation some Jews would have made. This is a argument that some pre-Christian Jews DID interpret it that way.

  • @corvinredacted
    @corvinredacted 11 месяцев назад +9

    It's interesting that Christian scholars argue both that Jesus' death was obviously prophesied by the texts and that no contemporary scholars would have interpreted it that way at the time.

  • @robertdullnig3625
    @robertdullnig3625 10 месяцев назад +3

    Seems like this is kind of a Catch-22. Either the prophecies were clear and the disciples had little reason to be confused, or they were not clear, and thus not very useful as prophecies.

  • @petergrant2561
    @petergrant2561 11 месяцев назад +50

    It's always seemed to me that the Jesus of Mark and the other Gospels is a combination of a real person Jesus, a number of other messianic figures from the period, and an extrapolation of 'biblical' texts. That is not to say that anyone is creating a fiction, but rather, that authors, many years after the actual events, are attempting to assemble their versions of the truth. Separating all of those components into actual historical bits is complicated.

    • @michaelchampion936
      @michaelchampion936 11 месяцев назад +13

      Or maybe it is all fiction, but that does not mean that the people writing it thought about that the same way we do these days. Fiction was not a bad thing, the forming of the Roman empire was written about a lot, all if it fiction, yet what they believed.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas 11 месяцев назад +9

      We have copied miracles - Poseidon (god of water) miracle (walk over water, calming the sea), Asklepios (god of healing) miracle, Dionysos (god of wine) turn water into wine. So the author imitated miracles well kniwn and performed by gods and not preaching peasant. Then we have the author who tzrned Jesus into a second Moses including return from Egypt and the murdering of babies. ( Just to mention the Moses nevef exksted and the story us from Sargon of Akkad) So Jesus is in gokd fan fiction company.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@michaelchampion936They thought exactly the same way we did about fiction.

    • @TheDanEdwards
      @TheDanEdwards 11 месяцев назад +9

      The gospel authors are doing synthesis, as you noted, from many stories and the events of the late 2nd Temple era. That's why the gospels are not biographies and are not chronicles. They are constructed from many streams of events and people.

    • @rainbowkrampus
      @rainbowkrampus 11 месяцев назад +12

      The point of the gospels is not to convey history but to convey the rhetorical goals of the cult leaders. Paul gives the game away. People know Jesus from scripture and visions. There are no historical bits evidenced anywhere.
      All of the historical bits that the authors of the gospels used were thrown in for verisimilitude by copying from historians. These authors were creating fiction with historical background flavor, not history with fictionalized elements.

  • @Fair-to-Middling
    @Fair-to-Middling 11 месяцев назад +18

    I'm embarrassed to say that I didn't know the Dead Sea Scrolls were only the Old Testament. Dang. The way they are talked about, I always thought they were the whole bible. Learn something new every day.

    • @maddyjean
      @maddyjean 11 месяцев назад +11

      chalk it up to another situation where apologists and pastors use vague language to imply lots of things to otherwise uninformed listeners

    • @DrKippDavis
      @DrKippDavis 11 месяцев назад +10

      But, importantly, they are not "only" the Old Testament. In fact, all the Scrolls stem from a time before there ever was such a thing as a "Bible." Only around ¼ or ⅓ of the entire collection is what we would consider "Bible." The majority of the mss are other pieces of literature from rules, to stories, to prophecies, to calendars, to songs and poems, to wisdom teachings and on and on.

    • @Zen_Traveler
      @Zen_Traveler 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@DrKippDavis Those were my thoughts! Btw, anyway of knowing if the Habakuk commentary, War Scroll, or the Damascus Document could possibly date to the mid 1st Century CE? I wasn't sure if these were Carbon Dated or not. Thanks.

    • @DrKippDavis
      @DrKippDavis 11 месяцев назад +3

      @@Zen_Traveler Neither the War Scroll nor the Habakkuk Pesher has been carbon dated, but two mss of CD were dated to between 168-50 B.C.E. The palaeographical dates for both 1QM and 1QpHab are set in the last half of the first century B.C.E., but importantly, there are also a handful of scrolls from Cave 4Q which contain text-and probably source material-for the War Scroll that all date to the mid first century B.C.E.

    • @Zen_Traveler
      @Zen_Traveler 11 месяцев назад +2

      @@DrKippDavis Thank you for your reply, especially concerning possible War Scroll ideology found in Cave 4!

  • @corvinredacted
    @corvinredacted 11 месяцев назад +5

    Someone who says that they can be _certain_ that _nobody_ believed the Messiah would die should not be trusted as a scholar just for using such unjustifiably strong language. That is an absurd claim on its face.

  • @longcastle4863
    @longcastle4863 11 месяцев назад +11

    Excellent interview and discussion. Thank you, both. 36:51 t/s

  • @AndrianTimeswift
    @AndrianTimeswift 11 месяцев назад +13

    I've been saying this for awhile now: We could find the bones of Jesus tomorrow and Christianity would probably go on just fine. The same was even more true in the first century. Believers would just reinterpret the resurrection to be a spiritual one instead of a physical one and nothing much else would change. Maybe some people would lose their faith, but enough would stay that the religion would live on. It's nice to hear a proper scholar validate this view.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas 10 месяцев назад

      It is even worse as it is most likely that a spiritual resurrection was the original belief. We have people wuth visiins in a story which where all male and the followers. The woman and tomb story is a latee invention.

    • @peterhook2258
      @peterhook2258 9 месяцев назад

      very true, there are no miracles required to have faith in the miracles of life, the coincidences of blessings, the challenges, a belief in eternity and God...none required.

    • @chihangbenjaminting647
      @chihangbenjaminting647 6 месяцев назад

      Not going to start a fight, but from a Christian perspective, aren't Atheists going to be just fine if the resurrected Jesus shows Himself to the world tomorrow? Don't you feel they would also give all sorts of reasons not to believe as well? Don't just give a "no, He won't" thoughtless response. What if He does? Would you? I am okay with people not believing in Jesus because religion is a personal matter and different people have different experiences, perspectives and opinions. But many people here seem upset because people don't believe as they do (atheism). I must admit we Christians sometimes make that mistake too. I guess the world is a better place if everyone let people believe what they believe and always be kind.

    • @peterhook2258
      @peterhook2258 6 месяцев назад +1

      Correct, there were pre Constantine christians that believed the "human" Jesus was an illusion and not an actual human body. so..yep

    • @peterhook2258
      @peterhook2258 6 месяцев назад

      whenever you see a puzzle or riddle, its usually due to context connotation and denotation. words can mean many things especially words like "believe". Context connotation and denotation indicate things like the "intent" of the heart and growth level. @@chihangbenjaminting647

  • @skywise001
    @skywise001 11 месяцев назад +10

    I love how you stand at a nexus between faith and those without and explain things. It helps me to not other the believers. Got to be more kind to them than they are to me right? :P

  • @hannuala-olla4302
    @hannuala-olla4302 11 месяцев назад +4

    No reason to invent resurrection story? If they didn't expect Jesus to die, when he died that was the end of story. They wanted to continue the story so they had to come up with something. That something is resurrection.

    • @rylands4289
      @rylands4289 4 месяца назад

      His disciples had to justify why their messiah had to die in such an embarassing way, thus the need for a ressurection story. And that narrative is powerful for the modern audience who wouldnt know better
      Lol sorry i just reworded what you said

  • @davidofoakland2363
    @davidofoakland2363 11 месяцев назад +5

    Future Paul: Good grief, man! Tell us when Judgement Day happens so we can get our behinds down to South America!

  • @jeffsaxton716
    @jeffsaxton716 9 месяцев назад +3

    Religious people are sincere for the most part, but they've been taught that faith is a valid epistemology. The idea that faith gets anyone closer to the truth is a con job.

    • @NA-vz9ko
      @NA-vz9ko 7 месяцев назад

      Very true. You can have faith in anything.

  • @5thPROJEKT
    @5thPROJEKT 8 месяцев назад +2

    The Pagan Christ by Tom Harpur investigates how Jesus was a composite character, not a living person. Great book, highly recommend it. It increases one’s spiritual understanding of the religion.

  • @kjmav10135
    @kjmav10135 11 месяцев назад +8

    I am twelve minutes into this, and I have a sudden, overpowering urge to watch “Life of Brian” again.

  • @TrisjensChronicles1203
    @TrisjensChronicles1203 11 месяцев назад +4

    I’m very thankful for Pauologia, De Tabor and the likes for being honest!!
    I really can’t stand apologists, they are very deceptive with what the actual information says. Talking their base from jumping off the Christian ledge. Knowing most in the camp won’t fact check if what they are saying is true. That is very deceptive on apologists part.

  • @GameTimeWhy
    @GameTimeWhy 11 месяцев назад +8

    I just enjoy seeing the apologists capitulate in the comments trying to explain why the expert is wromg and why their side is right while not using any actual evidence.

    • @rbaxter286
      @rbaxter286 4 месяца назад

      Rhetoric and Polemics are FAR easier to master than actual history or anthropology with the math required for the empirical techniques to pin down DATA, not bald assertions and opinions based on those bald assertions.

  • @grapeshot
    @grapeshot 11 месяцев назад +23

    Yes there's a lot of linguistics and mental gymnastics when it comes down to trying to shoehorn jebus into Old Testament history.

    • @vjara94
      @vjara94 11 месяцев назад +4

      Mental gymnastics and cherry picking is a sport for some Christians.

    • @CCCBeaumont
      @CCCBeaumont 7 месяцев назад

      What data leads you to that conclusion?

    • @grapeshot
      @grapeshot 7 месяцев назад

      @@CCCBeaumont the Wholly Fables aka the Bible.

    • @CCCBeaumont
      @CCCBeaumont 7 месяцев назад

      @@grapeshot Yet remarkably powerful in the lives of those who follow them. Excellent guides for archaeologists, historically reliable, especially when compared to other documents of antiquity, and they appear to provide the truest information about how one can relate to God.

    • @grapeshot
      @grapeshot 7 месяцев назад

      @CCCBeaumont nope and Archeology where you have a shovel in one hand and a Bible in the other has long been discredited.

  • @undecidedmiddleground5633
    @undecidedmiddleground5633 11 месяцев назад +7

    I loved your Paulogia from the future bit! All hail SkyNet!

  • @tersse
    @tersse 11 месяцев назад +3

    the only thing i know about religion is what i have personaly read and or experienced, as of now at 62, i dont think there is anything after death, there would be no point in the natural univers for there to be anything after death, billions of life forms every second die, were do they go, oh your special are you, why? make an explanation why you live for ever, and nothing else dose, and make it make sence, to every living thing. ok go.

  • @moodyrick8503
    @moodyrick8503 9 месяцев назад +2

    *The Highly Ambiguous Bible ;*
    _Might be, could be, maybe, ect, ect._
    (stand firmly on your bias/faith)

  • @christopher7725
    @christopher7725 11 месяцев назад +8

    Drinking Game: Take a drink every time Jeremiah name drops “Oxford”

    • @maninalift
      @maninalift 11 месяцев назад +3

      Oh, he's *that* guy

  • @meteor1237
    @meteor1237 11 месяцев назад +34

    Dr. Tabor's scholarship makes perfect, objective sense. Human beings are so afraid of death, we come up with anything to deal with that fact.

    • @slik00silk84
      @slik00silk84 11 месяцев назад +4

      That is entirely what religion is about . . . something to comfort us about the impending death we all fear to begin with.

    • @slik00silk84
      @slik00silk84 10 месяцев назад +2

      Some of us . . . only some of us!

    • @CCCBeaumont
      @CCCBeaumont 9 месяцев назад

      Although true, that fact has no bearing, whatsoever, on whether Christianity (or any religion) is true. At most it just indicates a fortuitous correlation. "How fortunate we are that our fear of death is unfounded," is not the same as claiming all of history was perverted, distorted, and rewritten to assuage those fears. That would be a conspiracy theory of such colossal proportions it would likely collapse within a few years, not last for two millennia. Such a theory does not deal honestly with the historical data, nor the consistently changed lives in the subsequent centuries, nor the strong philosophical case for God, as well as meticulously documented miracles, healings, and other interventions in the name of Jesus. It doesn't deal forthrightly with the changed lives of the Apostles, and hundreds of millions of changed lives in the ensuing years. Scholastically, it's a giant swing and a miss.

    • @sammie4166
      @sammie4166 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@CCCBeaumontdude what are you babbling about, keep it simple if you want to pull people to christianity, show proof, evidence and facts, and people will believe.

    • @CCCBeaumont
      @CCCBeaumont 7 месяцев назад

      @@sammie4166 It is a shame you appear unable to comprehend my writing. Have you considered it may be due to the Dunning Kruger effect?

  • @jordansean18
    @jordansean18 11 месяцев назад +5

    Future Paul won't go back! The borg is everywhere!

    • @owlcowl
      @owlcowl 11 месяцев назад

      You mean Marcus Borg?

  • @randolphphillips3104
    @randolphphillips3104 11 месяцев назад +4

    On an unrelated note: The new US Speaker of the House (3rd in line for POTUS) is a Ken Ham follower and a major contributor to AIG and the ARK Encounter. Have seen at least one interview with him where they also included Ken Ham.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas 11 месяцев назад

      The US turns more and more in some weird religious cultists home.

  • @davidbudge8359
    @davidbudge8359 11 месяцев назад +6

    A great teacher admits he maybe wrong and is always ready to learn; whereas a preacher is Omniscient and knows he's always right.

    • @CCCBeaumont
      @CCCBeaumont 9 месяцев назад

      Great preachers also admit they can be wrong. That's a broad generalization that is unbecoming scholastic honesty and fruitful discussion.

    • @davidbudge8359
      @davidbudge8359 9 месяцев назад

      @@CCCBeaumont it is a matter of your faith that Yahweh can never err therefore the prospect of a religious person admitting possible error is far lower.

    • @CCCBeaumont
      @CCCBeaumont 9 месяцев назад

      @@davidbudge8359 It is also a matter of our faith that men are inherently flawed, this capable of all manner of mistakes, both moral and mental.

  • @JudasMaccabeus1
    @JudasMaccabeus1 11 месяцев назад +1

    Of course they didn’t expect him to die. Scripturally, the messiah was supposed to usher in an age of peace and end war in Jerusalem.
    Jesus died and war and violence increased.
    The end

    • @midnightsan9917
      @midnightsan9917 10 месяцев назад

      He also wasn't related to david unless Mary and Joseph are siblings. Look it up they just reused Josephs genealogy on Mary who was the only biological parent out of the two. Joseph was the one who was distantly related to david and he straight up didn't even contribute genetically to Jesus.

  • @Kyeudo
    @Kyeudo 11 месяцев назад +5

    Love future Paulogia. Nice work with the digital static.

  • @OscarSommerbo
    @OscarSommerbo 11 месяцев назад +5

    Again I am struck by how much these early Christians sounds like cults.

    • @Kyeudo
      @Kyeudo 11 месяцев назад +2

      "Cult" is what the big religion calls the small religion.

    • @noracola5285
      @noracola5285 11 месяцев назад

      @@Kyeudo "Religion" is what the big cult calls the big cult.

    • @Kyeudo
      @Kyeudo 11 месяцев назад

      @@noracola5285
      Also true. We just tolerate them more because they score lower on the BITE model.

    • @DeruwynArchmage
      @DeruwynArchmage 6 месяцев назад

      @@Kyeudowhat’s the BITE model?

    • @Kyeudo
      @Kyeudo 6 месяцев назад

      @@DeruwynArchmage
      It's a model of controlling behaviors exhibited by cults. BITE is an acronym that stands for Behavior/Information/Thought/Emotion, four areas of control that are very common in cult behavior.

  • @ladyaj7784
    @ladyaj7784 11 месяцев назад +5

    "... hail Skynet."
    🤣

    • @natwil735
      @natwil735 10 месяцев назад

      Another damn person said the same thing for a 51 minutes video with no damn time stamp. Thanks for nothing!

  • @ghostreyn
    @ghostreyn 11 месяцев назад +1

    The whole "why would they lie." Argument is so weak. Why would anyone lie? They say there is no gain for them to lie, but what if they were not "lying" what if this Jesus figure is who deceived them all like many cult leaders through the years did to their members. It is the leader them selves who was lying. What if it was Mary who made up this to explain her son being born out of wedlock, what if it was this Jesus that lied to protect his mother. What if all of this was made up by Saul to make a name for himself? Who knows maybe in 1000 years people find preserved copies of the Lord of the Rings and people think there use to be Ents, Elves, and Wizards and start a religion around worshiping Gandalf or the Elves as gods and making Sauran their 'devil' or ruller of evil? Believing that we decended from Hobbits who were given a task by the elves to destroy the ring of power and believe the best people will go join the evles as Frodo did? Whether or not someone was lying has never been the argument as theologists try to make it out to be. It was about how can we know this is more then just another work of fiction.

  • @kingalexandersgodshapedhol7514
    @kingalexandersgodshapedhol7514 11 месяцев назад +3

    You've also got the story of Osiris as well, not necessarily a messiah of course, but a God who died and comes back.

  • @tankbuggeru
    @tankbuggeru 11 месяцев назад +4

    Dr. Jeremiah was much more interesting as the mayor of Flavortown!

  • @tersse
    @tersse 11 месяцев назад +3

    jesus story is reflected in fantasy like, king Arthur, Merlin, the black knight, Robbin hood, stood against some thing bad, prevailed but lost in the end, hail the legend.

  • @ericvulgate7091
    @ericvulgate7091 11 месяцев назад +5

    Great guest.
    I am happy to support this channel.

  • @tadwimmer6225
    @tadwimmer6225 7 месяцев назад +1

    Interesting that the Dead Sea Scrolls depict a teacher, a priestly messiah and a kingly messiah. To my mind, Mark depicts Jesus as a man, Luke as a Priest, and Matthew as a king. This seems to correlate with the scrolls thematically. Could the Q source have been involved here?

  • @teddrickmilsap5994
    @teddrickmilsap5994 11 месяцев назад +3

    You can make people believe anything especially when they already believe anything.

  • @theatlantaatheist
    @theatlantaatheist 11 месяцев назад +1

    Cameron Bertuzzi should read Francesca Stavrakopoulou's "God: An Anatomy". It's a much more interesting dive into what the ancients believed about the body of God/gods, and it's based in...facts!!

  • @patrickelliott2169
    @patrickelliott2169 11 месяцев назад +2

    Going to play the 'devils advocate' here and say maybe we should be, at best, cautious of the human tendency to believe in something and someone long after they have died. The dark reflection of religious teachings by people who are convinced that it is their religious mission to uplift and guide is the political missions of those who, whether they are religious or not, are convinced its their mission in life to somehow uplift society (and if sufficiently charismatic perhaps only convince others that this is their true goal, while it is purely self serving). How many still dream of the great revival of society that a a certain person from the 1942s claimed was the destiny of his people. How about Trump? How many if he died, especially to some violent act, would 100 years from now still see his professed vision of America as something to strive for? We grant respect and reverence to the sort who imagine some great reward in an after life and profess to seek the moral uplift of humanity, even when some of those moral ideals can be shown to be wildly variable, or even contradictory to our modern attempts to understand ourselves via psychology, anthropology, and medicine. Unless we are a true believer in some political movement though we learn to distrust such motives from others, to question their evidence, to even question their conclusions and goals. Why does it make sense to treat one different than the other? Both can, if the followers are pushed in the wrong directions, leas to war, death, destruction, and the negation of every opposing idea by those who believe their vision of the future and how to get there is right. Heck, I would argue that religion has the potential to be the worst of the two, since it exalts a future that has no consideration of the world we live in, beyond what ever they imagine will get then to the world after.

    • @WilliamSpoehr
      @WilliamSpoehr 10 месяцев назад

      That's already happened with JFK, which might be the reason there are so many wack conspiracy theories about his dearh.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas 10 месяцев назад

      Very good point, nearly everyone can become a god or a prophet as people have an interest to folliw ideas.

  • @brucee6524
    @brucee6524 11 месяцев назад +4

    31:12 love the Life of Brian visual during this bit…

  • @Truth-Be-Told-USA
    @Truth-Be-Told-USA 9 месяцев назад +1

    Why does no one ever question why no one absolutely no one has seen or heard from someone who supposedly rose from the dead for thousands of years. ridiculous. Wake up

  • @brianfileman
    @brianfileman 11 месяцев назад +1

    Eschatological resurrection? Not all Jews at that time believed in it. One group for certain did: The Pharisees.
    The conceit of A messianic figure arise during thd Hellenic period and was certainly eschatological, but there u it s no unambiguous expectation of such a figure in the Torah (or the rest of Tanach) at all, where the term anointed has nothing to do with Christian conceits at all. Kings were anointed, priests were anointed, Temple items were anointed.
    Reading Hebrew Scriptures or even the Dead Sea Scrolls through a Christian lens and trying to mould either to fit later events or beliefs, while interesting in terms of speculation, falls well short of rigorous academic study.

  • @Locust13
    @Locust13 11 месяцев назад +2

    "I'm not an atheist I don't accept labels like that I think the cosmos are too complex for..."
    Dude c'mon..

  • @Forest_Fifer
    @Forest_Fifer 10 месяцев назад +1

    Another actual scholar who has never heard of "the famous apologist". Its almost as if the apologists have no real standing in actual academia.....

  • @mocurio
    @mocurio 11 месяцев назад +3

    My thanks to Paulogia & James Tabor, for them revealing the truth!

  • @TheBarelyBearableAtheist
    @TheBarelyBearableAtheist 11 месяцев назад +1

    Johnston's argument seems exactly backwards to me. I can't imagine anyone who would be MORE psychologically motivated to deny their Messiah's actual, irrevocable death than someone who deeply and unshakably believed that God guaranteed their Messiah's victory. A resurrection story is just a denial that your Messiah is really and irrevocably gone.

  • @satanofficial3902
    @satanofficial3902 11 месяцев назад +1

    The heavens declare the glory of the Bomb, and the firmament showeth Its handiwork. Glory be to the Bomb, and to the Holy Fallout. As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be. World without end. May the Blessings of the Bomb Almighty, and the Fellowship of the Holy Fallout, descend upon us all. This day and forever more. Amen.

  • @LyleFrancisDelp
    @LyleFrancisDelp 11 месяцев назад +2

    Love the monolith scenes from 2001…but even better would have been the spoof scenes from Mel Brook’s “History of the World Part 1”

  • @moodyrick8503
    @moodyrick8503 11 месяцев назад +1

    *_I'll tell you what Jesus said_** ;* (It's all hearsay)
    As all we have are others telling us _"what Jesus said & did"_ the "faith" that Christians have,
    is in the words of men that _claim to speak for Jesus._

  • @kevinfancher3512
    @kevinfancher3512 11 месяцев назад +2

    As a person who could not care less about the bible, I am interested in Dr. Johnson's apparent lack of due diligence.

  • @broddr
    @broddr 11 месяцев назад +1

    So Dr Johnson’s first argument is that the resurrection must have been real because Jesus’s followers were ignorant of earlier resurrection myths in Judaism and other neighboring religions? Seems a very weak argument, especially because at the very least Paul, a Roman citizen and self proclaimed Pharisee, was well educated.

  • @tersse
    @tersse 11 месяцев назад +1

    If it's true, there is no need to make anything up, tell that to a christian today, when you talk about gun control, abortion, condoms, the pill, or being an atheist, not saying the pledge at school, not saying prayers at the start of a political cycle, lol, why are christians so persecuted, and we atheists can do what we want lol.

  • @magpiecity
    @magpiecity 9 месяцев назад +1

    Maybe Jesus was the Teacher of Righteousness?

  • @frozentspark2105
    @frozentspark2105 11 месяцев назад +4

    *grabs popcorn and sits intently* 🍿

  • @mauviestwand
    @mauviestwand 11 месяцев назад +1

    A lot of apologists in here who missed the point that Jesus is not unique, and want to nitpick the doctors statements to find a way to justify their belief.

  • @jiubboatman9352
    @jiubboatman9352 11 месяцев назад +1

    Really informative and interesting. But my thumbs up was for the hail Skynet.

  • @George-zj9rr
    @George-zj9rr 11 месяцев назад +1

    If I were God-Emperor of Mankind and could decree all AI art be outlawed, I'd do it. But Paulogia would still be allowed to use it. He should be able to benefit from these cheap and effective thumbnails. Is that special treatment? Goddamn right, because Paulogia is just that special. ❤

  • @jamescampbell8482
    @jamescampbell8482 11 месяцев назад +1

    The problem with “they pierced “in psalm 22. Even if you use the Dead Sea Scrolls or variants in the LXX is that the word Karu does not mean “to pierce” it means “to dig.” as in dig a hole.
    Homiletically you can get to the notion of animals piercing flesh from the verses, kind of like Rashi would, but it does not say pierced, even if you use the variant readings.
    Zachariah, 12 verse 10 is the clearest reference to a dying figure.

  • @OdinMagnus
    @OdinMagnus 11 месяцев назад +4

    How does he feel about Jesus being completely made up from an amalgam of people? As someone raised jewish and read the new testament, from interest and from watching The Bible Reloaded, I've noticed that the writers (as they get farther from the date) know less and less about jewish customs and try to interpret things as a christian not as a jew. For instance, the Nazarite, the writers assumed it was someone from Nazareth when instead it was someone of priestly origins (which means, Levi, Cohen or someone who became a rabbi)

    • @noracola5285
      @noracola5285 11 месяцев назад +2

      I'm not Jewish but married into it & was raised Christian. The idea that Jesus was entirely constructed out of older stories and legends has always seemed like the most likely scenario to me, since my deconversion. It seemed the most likely while I was believing too but I refused to face it, out of insecure pride - that most recognizable feature of Evangelicals.

  • @ceeemm1901
    @ceeemm1901 11 месяцев назад +1

    Jeremiah Johnston wrote a book? God, is there nothing Robert Redford can't do?

  • @PurpleRhymesWithOrange
    @PurpleRhymesWithOrange 11 месяцев назад +1

    Has anyone under 30 seen an actual matchbook to know what size they were?

  • @X1Y0Z0
    @X1Y0Z0 11 месяцев назад +3

    Love your content as alway!!!❤❤❤

  • @germanvisitor2
    @germanvisitor2 11 месяцев назад +1

    one question
    I was under the impression that at Jesus' time the Jews had no concept of a soul. That resurrection and death wasabout the body and the "breath of life". Dr. Tabor made it sound like the messiah of the Dead Sea Scrolls believed in turing into a spirit after his death (if I understood correctly). Was that already a belief in a soul that is basically freed from its mortal coil or should I see that as an ascension to something like a jinn?

  • @laurajarrell6187
    @laurajarrell6187 11 месяцев назад +10

    Paulogia , you're videos can be so varied, one of the bestest channels on these 'tube of you'! I'm still trying hard to get to where I can support! And I like how calmly Dr. Tabor shows his expertise!👍🎃💙🐈‍⬛💙🥰✌

    • @Paulogia
      @Paulogia  11 месяцев назад +8

      Wow, thank you!

    • @raya.p.l5919
      @raya.p.l5919 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@Paulogia❤ Jesus power Level 1 portion of youth longevity digestion an self beauty Jesus energy wash. Negative energy will creep out yr feet tell it's time.

  • @stephenbrain3620
    @stephenbrain3620 11 месяцев назад +1

    Leaving aside the question of whether the Messiah might have suffered versus triumphed in the pre-Christian Jewish conversation, neither interpretation eliminates the possibility that the disciples invented the resurrection. There is plenty of evidence that followers of cult leaders improvise and adapt when unexpected things happen - we see this in modern-day cults all the time. So perhaps: His followers thought he was bound for greatness, but instead he was arrested and executed. They improvised and adapted. They retrieved the body (it implies so in the book of Matthew) and then circulated stories claiming that he came back to life and will return to finish the job later. It's exactly what cults do. . .

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas 10 месяцев назад

      The cult members who left their job and families ruined their lives. After their cult leader was executed as a crimal that rebelled against Rome they had to run for their life. The Romans would have executed everyone for insurection against Rome rule. So either they went back home trued to get their old jobs and mend cut ties with family or they believed he wasn't dead. As we have Today people who see people after their death. This can be Elvis or Grandma but few make a religion out of it.

  • @KristenKras
    @KristenKras 11 месяцев назад +1

    Even I know there are much older resurrection myths, like from ancient Egypt, for example.

  • @HenryPolen4890
    @HenryPolen4890 10 месяцев назад +1

    it hurts but it's true i guess

  • @madamsloth
    @madamsloth 11 месяцев назад +3

    Great video and book recommendations. ✌️

  • @davidhoffman6980
    @davidhoffman6980 11 месяцев назад

    @12:40 "He also talks about his best friend betraying him and turning against him. Someone of his own council." Well that doesn't sound like Jesus at all. Judas wasn't Jesus' best friend. ;-)

  • @ZachariahWiedeman
    @ZachariahWiedeman 11 месяцев назад +1

    (44:22) "I don't take labels like that, I think the cosmos is much more complicated than anybody's label."
    This is exactly why I invented the term and refer to myself as an Ecumenical Deist - two words that have never (to my knowledge) been used together. It is both a label and not a label. The breadth of different beliefs - and respect of beliefs of others, that these two terms can encompass is compounded when placed together. It is my way of saying, "I respect the faiths of others without affirming them to be true. I acknowledge the value of your religion without excluding the value to be found in the beliefs or nonbelief of others. I reject the dogma of religion without discrediting the good that it has drawn out of people. And I am willing to seek shared meaning and 'truth' in the religious traditions and beliefs of all without forgetting that the cosmos is too vast for anyone to claim a monopoly on truth, and humanity is too diverse and complex for anyone to claim a monopoly on meaning."
    "Ecumenical Deism" is, in my opinion, the ultimate no-labels label. #ShamelessPlug

  • @shawnlincoln296
    @shawnlincoln296 12 дней назад

    This is excellent info for a response I'm putting together for an article by N.T. Wright on second-temple Judaism and their beliefs in slain and resurrected Messiahs. Thank you both!

  • @kosgoth
    @kosgoth 11 месяцев назад +1

    Cameron has about 3 neurons firing atm, Can I reject new content I don't understand, Can I talk about new content I don't understand, Can I make a Book on new content that I don't understand because I didn't bother to learn any philosophy.

  • @katew.9402
    @katew.9402 11 месяцев назад +2

    Excellent video, thank you!

  • @lambofwrath95
    @lambofwrath95 11 месяцев назад +1

    @18:05, no. Jesus was not a pacifist, he speaks of violence and desolation and for the laying waste to the sinners. It’s not a pacifistic belief set. Plus, did he not say “I did not come to bring peace but the sword?” Indicating violence.
    Yeah, he was more gentle than other apocalyptic preachers of the time and even today, but he wasn’t a pacifist by any means

    • @julianrozental525
      @julianrozental525 4 месяца назад +1

      He was violent bully! What did he do when entering the temple..put two fingers up and said "Peace to you, brothers"...???

  • @FGuilt
    @FGuilt 20 часов назад

    I can't imagine spending my life studying a work of fiction knowing that it's fiction.

  • @jericosha2842
    @jericosha2842 11 месяцев назад +2

    This was an incredible video. Thanks guys

  • @ahad2k11
    @ahad2k11 11 месяцев назад +1

    If Paul here has lost his faith, shouldn't he change his name back to Saul? (j/k)

  • @lakesideprojects7194
    @lakesideprojects7194 11 месяцев назад +1

    14:38 "So when their teacher died, they turned to these same texts that Christian Slater turned to.."
    What's he got to do with this?

  • @practice-righteousness
    @practice-righteousness 8 месяцев назад

    Just because someone lies about you and what you stand for, for example, it does NOT mean, that you are NOT real. And just because someone lies about Jesus and what Jesus stand for, it does NOT mean, that Jesus is NOT real.
    "Christianity" is an obvious man-made LIE, because the dogma of that "faith" clearly contradict both the Creator and Jesus, but I found out, that Jesus were actually telling us the truth about the Creator's truth, because I've sincerely tried to literally DO, what Jesus told the disciples - and everyone else - to do.
    - So none of you ex-"Christians" can claim, that "neither God nor Jesus is real", as long as you have NOT done, what I have done! So do it, and find out, that I'm actually telling you the truth, but if you don't do, as I did, then you will of course NOT find out.

  • @poseranddazstudiofunhouse6153
    @poseranddazstudiofunhouse6153 11 месяцев назад +1

    The terminator background to future Paul was hilarious. I just hope you have doomed humanity.

  • @raysalmon6566
    @raysalmon6566 11 месяцев назад +1

    John 10:27 My sheep listen to my voice; I know
    them, and they follow me. 28 | give them
    eternal life, and they shall never perish;
    no one will snatch them out of my hand.🤔

    • @Προμηθεύς-β1β
      @Προμηθεύς-β1β 11 месяцев назад +2

      Yet he says in the earlier text of Matthew, "You will all fall away because of me this night...strike down the shepard, and the sheep of the flock will be scattered." The writer of John didn't like that part. It's comedy gold. 😂

  • @bokchoiman
    @bokchoiman 8 дней назад

    One day someone will create "AI Jesus" and claim that he has arrived on Earth in digital form. So many Christians will be validated.

  • @LogicAndReason2025
    @LogicAndReason2025 9 месяцев назад

    I repeat: Even if we had HD video of Jeebus' magical mystery tour, the most likely explanation would be an anceint illusionist/ con-man. The entire absurd narrative is not something you would expect from an "all wise" being.