Hermes, Odin etc. could not be more irrelevant to what we're focused on in this thread. As I've made very clear, that's simply not at all the category that Jesus ever belonged to, whatever the deluded religious hysterics may say, day in and day out. He's not some ludicrous wizard with a wand! He's a social rebel.Brian Peacock wrote:The comment above was not addressed to you. I read you 'straighforward' assertions and was not inclined to comment. You have your theory, which is you're own, and to which you are entitled of course...Stein wrote:I attempted to respond as straightforwardly to your previous as seemed possible, to me anyway. --Brian Peacock wrote:A five-hour Halo binge!
...but it only suggested to me that societies are in a state of constant flux, which I knew already, and that 'enlightened' individuals generally hope that it gets better (fairer, less violent, more equal, more tolerant, better educated, etc etc), or at least no worse, as it progresses - even if sometimes we need reminding of the common benefits of a better society.Stein wrote:Is it too much to expect a reasonably succinct response in kind, instead of "A five-hour Halo binge!"?Stein wrote:As am I. In addition, the Eastern Orthodox tradition apparently does not accept the grisly atonement doctrine either. And that certainly is not in the earliest textual strata (courtesy of modern philological analysis) of both the apologetic and non-apologetic Yeshua data. In both, including Tacitus and Antiquities XX, Yeshua the rabbi is simply a human being who became an agitator for the marginalized and was executed. Period.Brian Peacock wrote:I notice two things.
i. Stone's literary style, such that it is, is very similar to Stein's.
ii. Whether Jesus was a historical figure or merely a composite myth token has no relevance to Stein's reply to my question, and no bearing on the issue whatsoever.
I also think that any Christian assertion that the acceptance of Jesus as a de facto historical figure is foundational to all contemporary thinking on human rights is completely undermined by the Christina doctrine of vicarious redemption - in as much as this pernicious doctrine is fundamentally and necessarily antithetical to both the principle and implementation of universal human rights. I'm with Hitchens on that one I think.
The extensive readout which I submitted (in a bit of exasperation, I admit, which I still think was partly warranted) is useful because it shows that, even though nothing happens in a vacuum, it still requires individuals to start ripples going anyway. While general adaptation processes may inevitably render some trends more enduring -- and inevitable -- than others, that inevitability, once any species is going to evolve and survive at all, doesn't subtract from the interest and importance inherent in those individuals who may (however inevitably) arise. Adaptational pressures may create conditions that are generally hospitable for individuals such as a Confucius or a Gotama or a Franklin, etc., who initiate new proposals for society that eventually stick (if not immediately). But that which makes those individuals _choose_ to be that inevitable catalyst in the first place, rather than their neighbor across the street or someone else, is not inevitable. Instead, that is completely individual and of lasting fascination for anyone who is a humanist. How come figure A and not figure B? What goes into the type of human being who "evolves" the social/cultural patterns versus the type of individual who "regresses" it instead (an Al-Baghdadi, say)? That is not an idle question. That question is central to knowing just how fragile and prone to ultimate extinction the human species may or may not be.
Finally, I keep thinking of Margaret Mead's remark: "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world; indeed, it's the only thing that ever has."
Cheers,
Stein
Stein
Still has nothing to do with whether Jesus was a real guy or just a cobbled together mythological token for an idolating death cult. For me a real Jesus Christ is no more necessary to a functioning society that a real Vishnu, Hermes, Odin, or that-one-with-the-head-of-a-bird-whatever-he's-called.
So the real question is whether or not a real Jesus is no more necessary to a functioning society than a Gandhi, a Franklin, a Pericles, a Confucius, a King, a Mandela, or a Gotama, etc. Those are all figures who center their activities on strengthening the moral claim that is on society to assuage unnecessary and gratuitous suffering. Without figures like these, the weak today would be even more at the mercy of the strong than they already are.
If we dispense with any kind of serious regular airing of the guiding principles of the Gandhis, the Jesuses, the Franklins, etc,, which is infinitely more important than anything in their boring biographies, the response from the powerful, while stepping into such a vacuum of growing ignorance on the history of consciousness raising, will quickly generate utter selfishness and callousness as even more the new "cool" than it is now with the abuses of the Tea Party goons. And once that happens, the 99% will be so much at the mercy of the 1% that it will make the financial meltdown of 2008 seem like a walk in the park.
Stein