oftheherd said:
Christianity adopting Mithraic rituals seems a big stretch. Of course I only have Wikpedia to rely on, and perhaps you have more. But Mithra does not seem to predate Christianity.
As part of the Zoroastrian pantheon, Mithra predates Christianity, by at least six centuries. The Mithraic cult of the Romans would have been contemporaneous with Christianity, from the first to the fifth century
oftheherd said:
Your statement that Christianity has adopted Mithraic rituals doesn't stand up to what Wikipedia states about Mithra. Mithra has no surviving religious writings, seemed to accept Sol (the sun) as another god, and apparently only survived from possibly the late 1st century to the 4th century.
Mithras was born from a virgin on December 25, a date later co-opted by Christians as Christ's birthday in 320 AD. A traveling teacher and master, Mithras also performed miracles. He had twelve companions as Jesus had twelve disciples. Mithras died for man’s sins and was resurrected on the following Sunday. The crucifix, water baptism and the breaking of bread and wine are also shared by both religions, and I won't even get into the cosmological similarities like belief in a soul, heaven and hell
oftheherd said:
That is painting with a very broad brush sir. Can you explain why you believe that?
Something
did happen. Someone
was involved. Christianity itself
is proof of that, as is the Bible. Whether or not the events depicted in the New Testament happened as they are depicted, and constittute "proof" of anything, is a matter of
faith, and not archaeological evidence at all.
So, I believe that because I'm a scientist.
oftheherd said:
I am curious why you used an emoticon showing what I took to be derision at the thought of Jesus of Nasareth
I used an emoticon because Bil saw fit to tell Canuck to stop using "Xtian" because it my be offensive, when writing "Christian" or telling him to might be just as offensive, that's all.
oftheherd said:
Jesus was raised there according to the Bible.
Strange, though, that we have ample archaeological evidence of other places mentioned in the Bible-evidence that is contemporaneous with Jesus-but none in Nazareth. There is,
in fact, in spite of what they say on the tours in Israel, evidence that at the time of Christ,the place that came to be called Nazareth had been a necropolis, and, consequently, not a place that would have had a large or principally Hebrew population, due to their strictures on purity. There is,
in fact, no extra-Biblical reference to the village of Nazareth until about the beginning of the third century. There is,
in fact, a preponderance of archaeological evidence that indicates the place simply didn't exist at the time of Jesus, and that the references in the Bible are mistranslations or redactions from the third century or later.
None of which has anything at all to do with "faith." People can
believe what they want to believe, and that makes it
the truth, which is completely different from
fact.
oftheherd said:
BTW, I am sure you must know that Jesus was not a Nasarene. Was that an intentional distortion or did you really not know?
And this is most curious of all-Jesus
is called "a Nazarene," or "the Nazarene[/i] several times in Greek. On simple linguistic grounds, he
was Nazaros or, in Hebrew,
Nazir: "one consecrated,or devoted" or , more properly, a
Nazirite-one consecrated to God from birth.The Greek term mistranslated as "Jesus of Nazareth" actually more properly reads "Jesus the Nazarene," making it far more likely that the term is associated with a spiritual vow or dedication Jesus made as a Hebrew, and one that concluded with his immersion in water at the hands of John the Baptist.In fact, Jesus is the only person in the New Testament referenced in this way-even other people who are supposed to be (again, probably from redactions) "from Nazareth."
Of course, there's just a little more
fact in all of that than there is factual evidence that Jesus actually existed, or that he was "of Nazareth," rather than a Nazirite.So, not an intentional distortion at all, merely what I choose to believe, based on a religious studies degree, and having read the Bible in Greek, Latin and Aramaic (and, later, Coptic-
very different book) You can, of course,
believe what you want, and it's not my intention to turn what's been an otherwise enjoyable and respectable thread into one of Biblical scholarship, or arguing the merits of the Bible itself.
It is, after all, about
faith-it says so, right there in the title, and I'd be the last person to tell anyone that what they
believe is wrong. :asian: