RubySera_Martin
Well-Known Member
The following grew out of two distinct sources:
Matt. 27:50-53 says:
I will post a brief summary here as I posted it on that other board. Due to the level of education of the general membership, I had to use very simple and somewhat inaccurate language. You may want to read it for yourself to get a more accurate picture.
Peregrinus was a philosopher of a certain school and he sacrificed himself in a way his people believed was sacred. Lucian of Samosata is skeptical of the whole thing but tells the story of how it went in all its gory details. Here is what he says about how he tells it:
This raises the question for me: Can we extend this style of writing to apply to the biblical literature? If so, what are the implications for Christianity?
I do not for one moment believe that the biblical writers were intentionally deceiving anyone. I believe that if we don't have a scientific mindset then the line between fact and fantasy is so thin that it can be crossed without problem.
What are your thoughts?
- It's the summary of an insight I acquired a few years ago when researching a paper on the Greco-Roman Mystery Religions.
- I posted it on another board as an outgrowth of a conversation with a fundamentalist.
Matt. 27:50-53 says:
50 Then Jesus cried again with a loud voice and breathed his last.r 51 At that moment the curtain of the temple was torn in two, from top to bottom. The earth shook, and the rocks were split. 52 The tombs also were opened, and many bodies of the saints who had fallen asleep were raised. 53 After his resurrection they came out of the tombs and entered the holy city and appeared to many.
This fundamentalist Christian, who has a doctorate in biblical languages and literature, said this passage belongs to the genre of fantastic literature and is an embellishment that did not happen. However, she claims that the bodily resurrection of Jesus did happen. I think the bodily resurrection of Jesus also belongs to the genre of fantastic literature. We have other stories written about the same time that are very similar to it, one of which is The Passing of Peregrinus .
I will post a brief summary here as I posted it on that other board. Due to the level of education of the general membership, I had to use very simple and somewhat inaccurate language. You may want to read it for yourself to get a more accurate picture.
Peregrinus was a philosopher of a certain school and he sacrificed himself in a way his people believed was sacred. Lucian of Samosata is skeptical of the whole thing but tells the story of how it went in all its gory details. Here is what he says about how he tells it:
In that business I assure you, my friend, I had no end of trouble, telling the story to all while they asked questions and sought exact information. Whenever I noticed a man of taste, I would tell him the facts without embellishment, as I have to you, but for the benefit of the dullards, agog to listen, I would thicken the plot a bit on my own account, saying that when the pyre was kindled and Proteus flung himself bodily in, a great earthquake first took place, accompanied by a bellowing of the ground, and then a vulture, flying up out of the midst of the flames, went off to Heaven,34 saying, in human speech, with a loud voice:
“I am through with the earth; to Olympus I fare.”
I highlighted two parts. "Man of taste" would be someone who had education. To such people, he "would tell him the facts without embellishment"; in other words, he would tell the facts straight like a fact-event. ("Fact-event" is the term this educated miss used to refer to something that could have been recorded by a webcam.) "Dullards, agog to listen" would be gullible illiterate people. He says when speaking to such people he "would thicken the plot" and add fantastic details like an earthquake and an eagle speaking with a human voice. He also says that some people claimed to have seen the resurrected Peregrinus walking in white robes. Lucian tells us that according to the actual time-line, this could not possibly have been a fact-event. I use the term "fantastic" for the parts Lucian called "embellishment." “I am through with the earth; to Olympus I fare.”
This raises the question for me: Can we extend this style of writing to apply to the biblical literature? If so, what are the implications for Christianity?
I do not for one moment believe that the biblical writers were intentionally deceiving anyone. I believe that if we don't have a scientific mindset then the line between fact and fantasy is so thin that it can be crossed without problem.
What are your thoughts?