I have not the time to go through all replies
I understand and appreciate time contraints.
HORUS
Only begotten son of the God Osiris.
Walked on water, cast out demons, healed the sick, restored sight to the blind. He “stilled the sea by his power.”
Was Crucified.
Descended into Hell; resurrected after three days.
Ummm, having looked into this some for another thread I spent a bit of time on (Rome in transition,
http://www.interfaith.org/forum/rome-in-transition-8875.html ) I came away with the understanding that the idea of resurrection is pretty unique to Christianity. There are Pagan variations on the theme, but as presented in the Christ Jesus story, there don't seem to be any direct comparatives.
I also want to point out that the general Pagan mythos regarding hero-gods, etc. aren't really confined to an Egyptian source. Starting with Hislop and continuing with Frazer and still others since, it can be shown that the various Pagan pantheons share pretty much the same characters and stories using different names (to be expected considering different languages). If there is a single source point beginning to the Pagan mythos, I would be inclined to believe it started with the Sumerians, which predate the Egyptians, as noted by both Hislop (The Two Babylons) and Frazer (The Golden Bough).
This is quoted a lot, particularly from one website which makes such claims - however, I can't recall ever seeing any references to these from Egyptian texts.
I don't recall making notes on these from reading the Egyptian Book of the Dead; I don't recall Egyptians using crucifixion either.
Yep.
Are you an expert in ancient Egypt? I cannot claim any academic qualifications, but I am well read in ancient history.
Well, like the old saw says, "a little knowledge is a dangerous thing." I am not formally trained in history, from my perspective history degrees are about as useful as tights on a boar. But I do have a long standing interest in history, particularly as it applies to anthropology and the development of social structures like religion and governments, and I think I can fairly say I am pretty well read too. The more I learn, the less I seem to know.
What I say about it is SO WHAT! You can argue about Jesus etc. until the cows come home. Nobody will win. Why? Because there is no hard evidence that would be accepted in a court of law. The bible as it is now cannot be proved to be a true and accurate account of the happenings at those times. Christians accept their beliefs on faith, not facts. I, with an education in Science work with proveable FACTS.
Well, if we look at it this way, then it is no wonder there are a host of competing "experts" quoting, misquoting, and quoting each other out of context...and all of them are correct?
I know that sometimes people think I try to complicate the issue, what they fail to consider is that it *is* a complex issue, and typically "experts" get carried away with their redaction and reduction and become unnecessarily myopic in their view of the matter. A person with a preference for Greek mythology will point out the similarities with the Greek pantheon and come to the conclusion that the Greek mythos is the source of it all, definitively, I should know-I'm an expert! Then the Roman guy comes along and says the same thing...and the Persian, and the Babylonian, and the Egyptian...all of whom fail to consider that the earliest and therefore source of all western civilization and the Pagan mythologies that follow is Sumeria. It is still questionable how the Eastern civilizations- Aryans, Hindis, Chinese animists, Ainu- fit into the equation, and how much influence and in which direction it went, but Sumeria is generally recognized as the source of western civilization, agriculture, walled cities, metallurgy, mathematics, astronomy, writing and all of the other advancements that began the age of history. Everything before being considered "pre-historic," which implies the lack of writing, which implies oral mythos, and which is exceptionally tough to quantify and qualify regarding the development of the Pagan pantheon.
The one connection that appears to have an extremely long and storied association with the Pagan mythos is the Green Man or Wild Man tradition exemplified by the Mummers Play and has echos in the legend of Percival and the Greene Knight as well as the modern tradition of Santa Claus. While the Wild Man in midieval (sp?) times became associated with the Christian interpretation of Satan and the Devil, other than that the only correlation with the Jesus mythos is the rebirth, or resurrection if you will, but that is a bit of a stretch.
THe Bible has been miscopied, mistranslated and edited to suit the ideas of the Church Founders at Nicea in 325 CE.
Well, again this is an overly simplistic view. This is not wholly untrue, but as it stands is misleading. For that matter, all sacred texts and literary treasures are subject to the problem of developing or morphing interpretations and understandings. We have a tendency to interpret old writings with modern definitions, which creates a litany of complications.
One standard test I like to present, because it befuddled me for the longest time, is the meaning of the word "divers" as found in the KJV Bible. This was before I found the value of the Strong's Concordance and other reference materials. Considering the aqualung was not invented until WWII, it didn't make any sense to me why this word would be included in a translation from 1600 AD, and it sure didn't make any sense in context. Do you happen to know what the word "divers" means in the Elizabethan English of the KJV? Historians with the best intensions often forget to look at these things in the context of the era in which they were written, rather than imposing their modern assumptions, creating a new but false set of problems.
At Nicea the canon was more or less solidified, I think Revelations and a couple other NT books were included a bit later. There certainly are a significant number of extra-Biblical texts that survive that were not included, and interestingly there are some that were included in the 1611 KJV that have since been dropped, called the Apocrypha. But there are other apocryphal books, and it can be confusing if one simply uses the term "Apocrypha" without specifying OT, inter-Testament, or NT. Another anomaly is the inclusion of Sirach in the Catholic Bible with a determined exclusion in the Protestant Bible. A couple of simple references:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Books_of_the_Bible
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biblical_canon
This is also a good place to note that Brian hosts a wonderful collection of extra-Biblical and apocryphal texts here at Interfaith.org. Another resource I have in my library is called "The Lost Books of the Bible and the Forgotten Books of Eden"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Lost_Books_of_the_Bible
I would note that earlier in the discussion it seems some labor under the impression that the Dead Sea Scrolls relate to Christianity and Jesus, and that is simply not so. The DSS are texts by the Essenes, who were a separatist sect of Judaism proper, and not Jesus nor any of the apostles or any other associates can be shown to be directly affliliated with the Essenes, although there are quite a few so-called scholars out there that do "matter-of-factly" give that impression. This and more is covered at length in the Rome in transition thread.
I would say that this discussion is at a stalemate.
You are correct that there is an academic stalemate...it is a complex issue that has multiple influences, as well as home-grown organic influences, and is usually aggravated exponentially by hyper-inflated egos and academic stubborness.