AgnosticBoy wrote: ↑Mon Jan 08, 2024 10:10 pm
TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 6:51 am
Which leads onto the account in Paul. I think Luke had read I Corinthians and knew that the resurrected Jesus appears first to Simon, so he wangles that claim into his gospel, having got the reader out of the way, following Cleopas to Emmaeus so Luke doesn't have to describe it. But he does have Jesus turning up in the evening, which of course Matthew doesn't have, never mind Mark.
This is another reason why the point about the original ending for Mark 16 doesn't invalidate the resurrection. Eventhough the details are not included in Mark, but they are included by Luke, John, and Matthew, Acts chapter 1, and by Paul.
POI keeps pointing out that Matthew, Luke, and John copied from Mark, as if they did so entirely, but the fact that the post-resurrection appearances weren't included in Mark during the first century (1) shows that Matthew, Luke, and John got that information elsewhere.
1. From the
Biblical Archaeological Society - "In A Textual Commentary on the Greek New Testament, Bruce Metzger writes: “Clement of Alexandria and Origen [early third century] show no knowledge of the existence of these verses; furthermore Eusebius and Jerome attest that the passage was absent from almost all Greek copies of Mark known to them.”1
TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Sun Jan 07, 2024 6:51 amSo (as some here may remember

) I see Paul equating those I Cor appearances - which differ pretty much entirely from the gospels - with his own last sighting of Jesus which is a vision in his head. Thus I argue that this resurrected Jesus was not on resurrection night but later on over a period of months or even years, first with Simon/Cephas getting an idea in his head that Jesus (his spirit, maybe) had gone to heaven and would no doubt return "Until my task is done" as the resurrected Gandalf says. Then (after that - so Simon was the first) to the twelve (or as Luke says, the eleven, or in John the ten as Thomas was absent) then 500 at once. This is clearly not resurrection night (though Luke tries to have Jesus giving a scriptural lecture in Acts, but really that isn't to 500. These are all belief -visions in the imagination with no more substance than bamboo in election - forms, and is NO support for the concocted Resurrection - tales.
Jesus's appearance to Paul could be considered a vision since he only saw a "light", but the details about Jesus's appearances to others involved seeing Jesus in bodily form. In my view, it doesn't even matter when it occurred, but what matters is that it occurred at all and that there were many witnesses to that event. If a dead man comes back to life years later, that's just as remarkable as coming back to life 3 days later. We shouldn't lose sight of that.
Jesus' appearance to Paul must be considered a vision or at most not on resurrection night be cause he says he saw it last of all, even after James (whom I thought was one of the 12, anyway). I reject the account in Acts. Paul does not mention a conversion on the way to Damascus (prob 36 AD) and Luke (surely author of Acts) in writing his biographical novelette, guesses it happened between Saul storming off to catch Christians and his arriving converted in Damascus. Luke knows this can't be resurrection night - and nor are the other appearances in I. Cor - but has light and a disembodied voice. Paul doesn't write that so Luke made it up as a guess or good story, anyway, and I say we should not quote it as evidence of anything other than Luke's inventive story - telling.
I deduce from the contradictions and omissions that there must have been an original, very basic, story, which included common Christian beliefs, which doesn't mean they had to be true, but at least they didn't contradict. There was a synoptic version which was Not Mark as it now is, as he has his own additions, and Mark and Matthew didn't even use that, but a version with the 2nd feeding of loaves and fishes and other Decapolis material not found in Luke. Luke used the synoptic original without that Mark/Matthew material, but of course he added the "Q" material, mainly sermon, which also Matthew used, but they use it in different, ways showing it to be material added in. They also added material of their own, shown by significant things that the other two leave out. Once has to accept that omitting significant matters like the declaration at Nazareth means that Luke invented it and the like additions.
John of course uses the basics which, it may be noted, has nothing of Galilee between the healing at a distance (In Capernaum in the synoptics but in Cana in John, and no honest and unbiased person will pull the old apologetic trick that Jesus did the same thing twice. No, the story could not originally have said where, so each put it in different places) and the feeding of t,000 in Bethsaida. This is because the Galilee material is invented Christian propaganda, put in Jesus' mouth, much of it damning the Jews and approving Gentiles, evidenced by no Jew, let alone a teacher of the Law, letting Jesus get away with David and the shewbread and no debate on healing on the Sabbath. This is Christian propaganda directed at Gentiles, emphasising loyalty to the club, beyond even family. It was never 'Original' in the story.
The only mention I have seen as as apologetic for this is a hint that Matthew,Mark and Luke did 'Galilee material' and John did 'Jerusalem' material, which is merely dismissing the problem and explains nothing. In short, friends, I explain these problems, where generally they are ignored or excused, and like the Big Lie of Christianity being 'Good' (ably exposed by Tracie Harriss in her mustwatch vid 'Religious family values) they have been allowed to get away with covering it up.
John diverged from the synoptics all through and cannot be based on a similar gospel but the original story an - to get to the Resurrection - only the empty tomb and the resurrection claim. That and no more. The claim is not evidence for the claim, so 'resurrection' is not common support for the claim, but the claim itself. The women finding the tomb open and empty is all the evidence that was needed and Mark (minus the angelic explanation which John doesn't have) is the women find the tomb open and empty and that is all there was in the original gospel.
That's the message of the omissions, additions and contradictions, and it explains most of the problems. Bible scholarship up to now has (for some reason) simply ignored them. Which is a bit of a reason I do not have an enthusiasm for Bible Experts. They may be able to read it and learn it by heart in Hebrew or Greek, but to me, they don't comprehend it and don't even try. At least I never hear such matters debated in apologetics.
Take one matter that has been debated (by amateurs so far as I have seen). The nativities with the contradictions noted and 'explained' by the believers, usually by fiddling the evidence and making stuff up. The final debunk of the '2nd census' excuse was done on my other board by finding that Josephus has Varus extending his term to plug the missing governorship,leaving Quirinus governor only after Herod had died and Archelaus deposed. Why couldn't the Experts have worked that out or even looked at the problem?
If that is a valid argument for the nativities being invented, the same applies to the resurrection -accounts, as the contradictions are as bad

I of course fully expect dismissal and denial, but I'm sure this works, and sooner or later will be taken on board or thought up by others. There are hints that the 'Barabbas' problem is being picked up, though they haven't put it together yet. But they will.