EarlyActs
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D F Strauss was a Lutheran theologian in the early 1800s who wrote a study of Jesus. The position taken was that while there was a 'Jesus,' the gospel narratives were mostly addition of myth by the writers to depict a Messiah-sized figure. The book was 800 pages. It also has a wide cultural impact in that it was translated by Mary Evans (writing as George Eliot), the very capable novelist who was a renegade from her evangelical roots. This affected huge swaths of London society. This partly resulted in neo-orthodoxy, in which the historical truth about Jesus does not matter, but the 'meaning' is valuable for us today.
In short, Strauss concluded that the writers employed violence against history to establish Messiahship.
As there is no index, and this thread is a work in progress, I have not found his comments on the late Jn 2 passage about raising the temple in 3 days. It is not just that there is such a statement there about his resurrection, but that there is a conscious explanation of who understood what and when about such sayings; the disciples heard this, but did not understand it until after the resurrection.
Such a passage would be key to unlocking the latency or time-bound 'discoveries' of the apostles. Or why Jesus warned against people getting too excited about his being known as Messiah.
There are some balanced passages (Strauss even used that term about the spiritual orientation of Jesus' Messianic kingdom--as opposed to that which the people/zealots sought). Somehow Ms. Evans missed this and became a proponent of a modern return to the land of Israel in her time, sometimes siding her with evangelicals otherwise completely opposed to her. This is found in her novel DANIEL DERONDA. Or maybe she decided the faith definition of his kingdom was a Christian addition, and decided to go for the 'real' one.
Strauss believes the Messiah status is "late" in the gospels. Again, without his dealing with the end of Jn 2, or similar, it becomes difficult to know if he knows whether there might be a 'personal growth' element to the narratives; that the disciples--but not Jesus--grew into the proper understanding, climaxing in the 40 days of teaching after the resurrection, and then their missions. Statements about what the disciples believed along the way are not the solidified Christian doctrine of early Acts and Paul. And they do not mean that Jesus was stumbling along himself.
Another interest of mine is especially about early Mark where there are so many references to the surge of crowds following Jesus making him change plans, hide, escape, and still being found. This dimension is extra to the text and is a form of proof other than the simple say-so of the writer. If it did not occur, we would have huge doubts about the say-so. In addition is the 'at-will' miracle of Jesus in ch 2, about a paralyzed man. "Which is easier--to say 'be forgiven' or 'rise and walk away'?" Both features (the crowds and this miracle) are meant to gain the readers' understanding that they are dealing with ordinary actual events, not those 'treated violently' by later writers as though Jesus were unhistorical.
In short, Strauss concluded that the writers employed violence against history to establish Messiahship.
As there is no index, and this thread is a work in progress, I have not found his comments on the late Jn 2 passage about raising the temple in 3 days. It is not just that there is such a statement there about his resurrection, but that there is a conscious explanation of who understood what and when about such sayings; the disciples heard this, but did not understand it until after the resurrection.
Such a passage would be key to unlocking the latency or time-bound 'discoveries' of the apostles. Or why Jesus warned against people getting too excited about his being known as Messiah.
There are some balanced passages (Strauss even used that term about the spiritual orientation of Jesus' Messianic kingdom--as opposed to that which the people/zealots sought). Somehow Ms. Evans missed this and became a proponent of a modern return to the land of Israel in her time, sometimes siding her with evangelicals otherwise completely opposed to her. This is found in her novel DANIEL DERONDA. Or maybe she decided the faith definition of his kingdom was a Christian addition, and decided to go for the 'real' one.
Strauss believes the Messiah status is "late" in the gospels. Again, without his dealing with the end of Jn 2, or similar, it becomes difficult to know if he knows whether there might be a 'personal growth' element to the narratives; that the disciples--but not Jesus--grew into the proper understanding, climaxing in the 40 days of teaching after the resurrection, and then their missions. Statements about what the disciples believed along the way are not the solidified Christian doctrine of early Acts and Paul. And they do not mean that Jesus was stumbling along himself.
Another interest of mine is especially about early Mark where there are so many references to the surge of crowds following Jesus making him change plans, hide, escape, and still being found. This dimension is extra to the text and is a form of proof other than the simple say-so of the writer. If it did not occur, we would have huge doubts about the say-so. In addition is the 'at-will' miracle of Jesus in ch 2, about a paralyzed man. "Which is easier--to say 'be forgiven' or 'rise and walk away'?" Both features (the crowds and this miracle) are meant to gain the readers' understanding that they are dealing with ordinary actual events, not those 'treated violently' by later writers as though Jesus were unhistorical.