Who else used the "Christ" word, in this period, other than Christians, Josephus, and Tacitus?
and Suetonius?
As the much-maligned G.A. Wells noted in
Did Jesus Exist?, "In Josephus's entire work the word 'Christ' occurs only in the two passages about Jesus and his brother James. This hardly strengthens the case for their authenticity."
Earl Doherty argues that both passages are phony. I've just ordered Richard Carrier's book, I imagine he will be taking a similar line.
It's also noteworthy that Philo and Justus, two other contemporary Jewish historians, never mentioned Jesus or his Merry Men either, despite the fact that they are supposed to have created a huge sensation in Israel.
Your choice of authorities is discredited by your mention of Earl Doherty which I clicked out of curiosity.
I came across this:
The Alexandrian philosopher Philo had mentioned his death under Pilate in speaking of the Roman governor’s reprehensible career in Judea.
Perhaps it is a mistake (an obvious confusion with Tacitus-Josephus), but such a gaff shows incompetency and no need to waste any more time reading him further. Doesn't someone read his pages and check for accuracy? This is inexcusable.
You need to come up with better gurus than this. . . .
Is this the kind of source you guys get your "facts" from?
It took me about 2 minutes to find your quote and about 30 seconds to see:
Contrasting Worlds
In an alternate universe to this one, scholars investigating Christianity’s origins are a happy lot. There, the man whom 2000 years of Christian tradition places at the genesis of the movement enjoys ample attestation....
But I can see how you might have missed that. It was a couple of paragraphs up the page. And yet...
In that alternate world, ...
When scholars in that alternate universe ...
Even in that contented place, however, ...
He starts every paragraph, including the one you quoted, reminding the reader that this is not the historical world we're living in, but an imaginary one.
Congratulations, Lumpy! You've QUOTE MINED someone!
Posted a quote taken out of context that, when understood, does NOT discredit an opponent's source, but instead makes you look either dishonest or like a pompous moron.
Oh, I'm so embarrassed. You caught me by the balls -- Shame on me! You're a real hero for showing me up for what I really am!
I have no defense. I plead guilty to all the above, and even more, to being the most gullible to "April Fool's" jokes. And lecturing me won't do any good -- I'll probably fall prey to such prank websites just as much in the future, as I always fall prey to any practical joke (like "What are you chewing under there?" and like a fool I answered "Under where?"). I should have known not to take the site seriously -- totally my fault. I should have known that its purpose is to serve as entertainment for Jesus-debunker crusaders and not as information about Josephus and his "Christ" quotes.
And you're right in saying:
You're dismissing him as incompetent because you didn't read for comprehension. So what does that make you?
Answer: Asshole -- I plead guilty to all of it. I was only looking for the point about the Josephus quotes being "phony" rather than reading for comprehension.
Instead of this tongue-in-cheek point,
Earl Doherty argues that both passages are phony.
pretending to seriously question whether the Josephus quotes are "phony," I should have paid more attention to fta's following:
As the much-maligned G.A. Wells noted in Did Jesus Exist?, "In Josephus's entire work the word 'Christ' occurs only in the two passages about Jesus and his brother James. This hardly strengthens the case for their authenticity."
This got me looking for something about the "Christ" word and its use around that time. Should we expect Josephus to have used the "Christ" word more than these two times (or this one time?)? Starting with Philo, as a possibility -- Did Philo ever use the "Christ" word?
According to this site
http://www.mountainman.com.au/essenes/chrestos christos.htm , Philo used the word "theo-chrestos" meaning "God-declared." I infer from this that Philo did NOT use the word "Christos" because this site would have said so if he had.
Who else used it, and how much? -- (not the Hebrew "Messiah" word) -- and I stumbled across the following (hopefully not another practical joke site intended only for Jesus-debunker devotees (of which who knows how many there are?)):
But the title Christos has its origins in Greek paganism and not Jewish Messianism. The classical Greek word, Cristos, predates both the New Testament and the Septuagint by centuries. It is thought to derive from a proto Indo-European root ‘ghrei’ which means ‘to rub’. For instance, Homer uses the word ‘Christos’ to refer to rubbing ones body with oil after bathing. However, the classical meaning of Christos has another dimension to it. There is a prophecy of the Erythrean Sybil which states, “IESOUS CHREISTOS THEOU HUIOS SOTER STAURUS”. This literally means “Iesus, Christos, God, Son, Saviour, Cross”. This is quite weird when you think that it was made by a Pagan oracle several hundred years before the birth of Jesus of Nazareth! It is thought to refer to the coming down to earth of the Spirit of Truth (the Christos) who will usher in a golden age in which God is revealed to humankind. However, this blessed condition is only reached through a process of crucifixion of the flesh, which probably refers to a process of asceticism in which the worldly matter of the flesh is subordinated to the spirit.
http://www.englishfolkchurch.com/Lorehoard/chrestos.htm
If the above is true, it virtually proves that the Christ scenario of about 30 AD actually derives from this earlier Greek mythic source. There are too many coincidences here for there not to be a connection. How the promulgators of this earlier cult managed to create this later new 1st century AD religion may be a mystery, but somehow they must have done it.
(It's not only those 6 key words, but also the explanation above about the Christos coming down to earth to usher something in that requires "crucifixion" and so on, which needs explaining. What is the original source for this? the text relating this cult belief?)
The same remarkable 6-word quote occurs in another site:
There is still another and far more weighty proof that the name Christos is pre-Christian. The evidence for it is found in the prophecy of the Erythrean Sybil. We read it in [IESOUS CHREISTOS THEOU HUIOS SOTER STAUROS]. Read esoterically, this string of meaningless detached nouns, which has no sense to the profane, contains a real prophecy -- only not referring to Jesus -- and a verse from the mystic catechism of the Initiate.
http://www.mountainman.com.au/essenes/chrestos christos.htm
The above site rehashes many uses of the word "Chrestos" or "Christos" going as far back as Homer. Referring to pagan Greek initiation rites. But there's no source given for the famous IESOUS CHREISTOS etc. quote. Where does it come from?
Here's another site which mentions it, also claiming that it's from centuries before Christ.
http://www.johnsanidopoulos.com/2010/12/erythraean-sibyl-and-her-prophetic.html However, the only real source it offers is from the early Christians, like St. Augustine. It's not even clear if the earlist quotes are Greek rather than Latin, though there's every pretense that there's an "original" Greek from way back somewhere.
So, my first reaction is that the above quote is bogus, and it is not true that there is any such inscription “IESOUS CHREISTOS THEOU HUIOS SOTER STAURUS” dating back to several centuries BC.
I.e., I hope there is none, because I'm hoping the Christ event of 30 AD is substantially true, not something invented and rooted in Greek mythic paganism. So, for now, I'm assuming there is something artificial, or something dishonest, or corrupted, or distorted, in this website quote, and that whatever the Greek words are, whatever the source, something is false in the above claim about this early Greek word.
If there is such an inscription, validated by mainline scholars, proved authentic, dated centuries before Christ, it greatly undermines Christ belief, or at least my understanding of it.
from Wikipedia:
Constantine, the Christian emperor, in his first address to the assembly, interpreted the whole of The Eclogues as a reference to the coming of Christ, and quoted a long passage of the Sibylline Oracles (Book 8) containing an acrostic in which the initials from a series of verses read: Jesus Christ Son of God Saviour Cross.[7]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cumaean_Sibyl
This sounds like the key words are really a derivation from something different, some pattern of letters, and are not what any original inscription contained. (Like "Ronald Wilson Reagan" = 666.)
If such an inscription is authenticated, to several centuries BC, it would mean that the "cross" is adopted from paganism -- therefore casting doubt on the crucifixion of Jesus as a literal historical event -- and was more likely invented to match the earlier "cross" symbol. This could mean that St. Paul was really speaking about some mystical pagan "crucifixion" symbol rather than a recent historic event.
Maybe this one clarifies it:
The Sibylline Oracles (Latin: Oracula Sibyllina; sometimes called the "pseudo-Sibylline Oracles") are a collection of oracular utterances written in Greek hexameters ascribed to the Sibyls, prophetesses who uttered divine revelations in a frenzied state. Fourteen books and eight fragments of Sibylline Oracles survive. These are a collection of utterances that were composed or edited under various circumstances, probably between the 2nd and 6th centuries AD,[1] and are not to be confused with the original Sibylline Books of ancient Roman religion which are now lost.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sibylline_Oracles
That's probably the explanation.
And yet the earlier website said so confidently: "There is a prophecy of the Erythrean Sybil which states, “IESOUS CHREISTOS THEOU HUIOS SOTER STAURUS”. This literally means “Iesus, Christos, God, Son, Saviour, Cross”. This is quite weird when you think that
it was made by a Pagan oracle several hundred years before the birth of Jesus of Nazareth!" Sensationalist claims like this are similar to those of Richard Carrier, who says there were other earlier reputed Christ-like miracle-workers, and yet never gives any text to show an example of any such cases. What drives them to make up these stories?
It casts doubt on the credibility of the gospel accounts if early Greek pagan rites are the source of Christian belief.
Like the debunking of the
Tacitus quote -- about Chrestos/Christos condemned by Pontius Pilate -- seems to cast doubt. At first sight they seem to have a good case that this famous quote might have come later than Tacitus -- Until one checks further and discovers that if you throw out that Tacitus quote, you also have to throw out about half, or at least a third, of all we have from Tacitus.
The same is true of the death-of-James quote. If you throw that out from Josephus, you also have to throw out most of what we have from Josephus. A premise that requires us to toss out so much of the historical record cannot be taken seriously. When the argument leads to this conclusion -- you have to throw out half of recorded history to be consistent -- we know we're dealing with dogmatic Jesus-debunker fanatics, and not objective truth-seekers.
Selectively throwing out quotes like these is based only the dogmatic premise that there can be no miracle event, thus no Jesus Christ as historical, and thus no legitimate historic references to him, and so all such apparent references have to be phony, one way or another, despite the evidence.
the "Christ" word in the 1st century: Why can't the two Josephus quotes, mentioning "Christ" (i.e., these two ONLY), be due to the fact that this word, used as a proper name, was applied to this one person only, at this time, and was not otherwise in current use as having this kind of meaning -- a "savior" or "messiah" figure from God. And Jews like
Philo did not use it (though he used the
logos word), nor should we expect to come across it from the 1st century onward (except from Christians), because it had virtually no other use at this time than as a name for this person from Galilee, and the best explanation as to how it became attached to him is the fact that he performed the miracle acts described in the gospel accounts. (OK, what's a better explanation?)
Can anyone find another person of the period to whom this word was attached as a proper name, or any other significant use of this term from this period onward?
If not, the reasonable conclusion is that it applied ONLY to Jesus of Galilee and to no one else, in the first century AD. If there's something wrong with it appearing ONLY TWICE in Josephus, and both times in connection to this one person, you have to show that this word or name appeared also at other times and applied to some other persons also.
But if it applied to this one person only, then there is nothing wrong with Josephus using it this way and there's no reason to brand the Josephus quotes as not "authentic" because he used it only in reference to this one person.
AND, if it applied to this one person only, what is the explanation for that?
(aside from paranoid delusions that the "Church" ran around everywhere raiding libraries and torching all the other rival-cult scrolls) -- why don't you save those conspiracy theories for your April-Fool Jesus-debunking sites, and post a warning: "For Jesus-debunker crusaders only!"