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Post by unkleE on Aug 9, 2009 2:50:46 GMT
I wonder if any historians can point me in the right direction please?
I am discussing Jesus and history with an atheist (I know, I deserve all the grief I get!), and he has questioned whether we can know historically that Jesus was executed by the Romans, saying: "he wasn't an ordinary guy, he was an enemy of the state. States ALWAYS brag about vanquishing their foes. This means either the Romans didn't kill him, or he didn't exist."
A quick check (Wikipedia, etc) indicates the Romans crucified many Jews (e.g. Josephus mentions hundreds). My recollection is that Roman historians didn't commonly record such mundane matters, and I haven't heard of Roman records being kept of individual crucifixions.
Does anyone have any references that would help me here please? His statement seems hopelessly definite, and ignores the historical value of the gospels plus Tacitus and Josephus, but I'd be interested to know if my suspicion is correct that we don't have information about any or many crucified individuals.
Thanks.
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Post by knowingthomas on Aug 9, 2009 4:38:53 GMT
I remember hearing an exchange between a youtube apologist and one of the more low-level atheists. If I remember, the skeptic was bringing up that there were no reports by Pontius Pilate of Jesus' crucifixion. The apologist made it known that we have NO reports from Pilate or something along those lines.
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Post by unkleE on Aug 9, 2009 6:01:31 GMT
Yes, a couple of references I found said something similar. The Jews under Roman Rule By E. Mary Smallwood says: "no complementary accounts written from the Roman angle survive to balance that of Josephus .... In Roman eyes Judea was an unimportant province and most events there were too insignificant to merit a place in the record of the empire as a whole until a major war developed"Here a christian site says: "In a brilliant essay titled, “Surviving Literature from the First Century,” Professor Blaiklock has demonstrated that there are almost no primary documents that survey the period that embraces the life of Christ." The article goes on to say of Pontius Pilate that: "there is not a solitary Roman archival document that so much as mentions his name!". The redoubtable and reliable Earl Docherty is quoted on this forum as saying: "the Romans hardly kept records of the countless crucifixions around the empire going back almost a century. We have no evidence of such extensive record-keeping". I wouldn't normally trust such a biased non-scholar, but in this case he is arguing against the common atheist view, and so may possibly be correct. At least it is a quote that can be used against Jesus-mythers. But I don't know how well accepted the first two sources are, and it would be nice to know I had the best sources available. Thanks for your input.
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Post by eckadimmock on Aug 9, 2009 6:29:23 GMT
Not Roman, but apparently there is a reference in the Babylonian Talmud. I don't know how much you would expect, however, because of the general patchiness of records from that time and because Jesus was hardly ever a major threat. Pilate probably saw himself as stringing up some religious fruitcake to pacify a bunch of yokels: hardly the kind of thing you'd set the bards to sing about.
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Post by bjorn on Aug 9, 2009 10:00:06 GMT
For a record like that to have survived, it must have been made in stone. And the Romans definitely wouldn't bother to spend money on something like that - not to mention that the whole countryside would have been dotted by such stones.
And that for a population where few could read even their own language...
The Romans didn't need to boast about killing their enemies in Palestine in the 30's. Everyone knew they did, like all occupiers (Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks etc) - and word spread quickly (a high context society).
Rome was a no nonsense power, one to deal swiftly with offenders, threats and inconveniences. Jesus fitted at least one of these.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 9, 2009 11:28:41 GMT
Romans didn't keep records of their crucifixions. At least, we can't find them. If they did, they put them in the trash bin. Even Crossan says that Jesus' crucifixion is sure as a historical event can be.
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Post by bjorn on Aug 9, 2009 12:00:42 GMT
Then, dear Regent Master, if you haven't already you can mention the criterium of embarassment - which is what Crossan uses.
In that kind of honor-shame society you don't invent a hero that lost and was executed in the most shamefull way possible. At least if you want any followers.
However, I guess the one you are arguing with is a functional creationists. A species which rarely is confused by facts and peer reviewed research.
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Post by unkleE on Aug 9, 2009 12:48:13 GMT
However, I guess the one you are arguing with is a functional creationists. A species which rarely is confused by facts and peer reviewed research. The guy I'm discussing with is quite friendly. But when I presented my first bunch of evidence (the quotes I presented before plus another one), he just shrugged of his previous claims as follows: I was a little gobsmacked. I infer he knew he was on shaky ground, but went ahead with the argument anyway, perhaps hoping I would get to evidence. I just replied "I hope you don't use that argument again".
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Post by Deleted on Aug 9, 2009 12:56:22 GMT
In that kind of honor-shame society you don't invent a hero that lost and was executed in the most shamefull way possible. At least if you want any followers. If you want any followers, you better actually resurrect to vindicate yourself from such an execution.
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Post by bjorn on Aug 9, 2009 12:56:50 GMT
My retort would have been something like "I might not quite qualify as a scholar, still I can stand polluting my brain with research " Included the icon.
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Post by bjorn on Aug 9, 2009 13:01:13 GMT
In that kind of honor-shame society you don't invent a hero that lost and was executed in the most shamefull way possible. At least if you want any followers. If you want any followers, you better actually resurrect to vindicate yourself from such an execution. Indeed. Though even that didn't help those days, if the listeners didn't have any reason to believe it really happened. In mythology and drama heroes tend to be tragic or heroic - often both - never shamefull, not even for a while.
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Post by noons on Aug 9, 2009 15:37:40 GMT
To reply to the first point, even without any primary Roman documents, one could point out that the Jews saw him as much more of an enemy than the Romans. If we are to believe the New Testament, then Pilate was reluctant to send Jesus to his death because he could not find any crime for which he was guilty, at least one that warranted a death sentence. It was only at the demands of the crowd that Pilate sentenced him to crucifixion.
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Post by Deleted on Aug 9, 2009 18:53:11 GMT
If you want any followers, you better actually resurrect to vindicate yourself from such an execution. Indeed. Though even that didn't help those days, if the listeners didn't have any reason to believe it really happened. They did have. Christianity is here because it's true.
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Post by unkleE on Aug 9, 2009 22:52:45 GMT
I reported previously on a discussion about Jesus and history I was having with an atheist on the "Rational Response Squad" forum. He had suggested Jesus wasn't really crucified because we had no Roman records of the fact. I quoted some historians to demonstrate that we had very few records of that period in Palestine, and none of Pilate, so his argument proved nothing. He admitted he had done no research, so I replied: "I hope you don't use that argument again."
I thought it worth recording for posterity his amazing, and disgusting, response in full:
I told him what I thought of this and terminated the discussion. I don't suppose he is typical (he is more honest about his lack of integrity) but I don't suppose he is alone either. And to think I bothered asking you guys for some good references!
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Post by merkavah12 on Aug 10, 2009 2:59:59 GMT
Unklee,
Good show!
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