JAK wrote:Jersey Girl wrote:JAK,
Not meaning to discredit or ignore the entirety of your
lengthy post.
You wrote,
So in answer to your question, it is most unlikely that anyone had time or interest in any challenge. Life was hard, really hard. Survival was difficult, really difficult.
And yet, the Gospels
were written, historian's
did write their accounts of that time period. Keep in mind that the biblical and extra biblical accounts of Jesus do not represent him as an isolated or lone "character" in history. His accounts are
intertwined with the historical Pontius Pilate, Herod and such.
Do you deny that these historical figures existed?
Jersey Girl
Jersey Girl,
You make a point with which I agree.
You state: “…historian's did write their accounts of that time period.”
While there was (as I stated) a very limited percent of individuals sufficiently educated to read and write, there were some.
In many, if not most cases of written
history, there were few
peer reviews of what was written. In addition, it was all done by hand and that
hand copied material was
heard before it was written. There was no recording. So historians were not only limited in number, they were even more limited by lack of corroboration from
other historians. As a result, we have “history” which lacks essentials for accuracy in times
before the printing press (1400).
So as we consider the hard times, the unfriendly weather, the sheer stress and struggle to survive, we have much limitation. That is not suggest we have nothing. It does suggest that reliability for fact and reports of
thought-to-be-facts have reliability problems.
In cases where attempts were made to produce
unified view (what today might be called work of an editor, such unified views could be orchestrated at certain levels of power (emperors, kings, rulers).
Consider today how often newspapers get a story wrong, national television gets it wrong. Obituaries which are written carefully for the paper get published with
wrong data. And in this case and with news
many are looking. There is much opportunity to
correct the record when it goes wrong.
No such virtually unlimited capacity to check, to verify, to correct record existed prior to the printing press in which we had preserved language with specific characters (letters). So, history of ancient time, yet a time when there was language and there was hand written material, the propensity for error was enormous.
That error may or may not have been deliberate. We don’t know. Where one
historian got his material from
another historian, there was a greater chance for agreement. Where the authority of the kings, emperors, or other people of power were in a position to
control history, there was potential for
the making of history as in making a record fit with what the powers wanted the record to show.
It’s important to keep this in mind as we consider the reliability of ancient, hand scribbled notes on
paper nothing of the likes that we have today for
paper.So
readers of something written by someone else perhaps long before (and 10 years was long, hundreds of years was
eternity.
That is not to contend the
historians such as they were got it all wrong. Rather it is to recognize the problematic issues with which they were confronted.
As we know, our modern papers and magazines can and do get it wrong. If they do so on purpose, they are quickly subject to correction.
When J. F. Kennedy was assassinated, the first announcement of his
death was held up 18 minutes (I think), before it was put on the television network. The network did NOT want to get something like this wrong. It would have been unforgivable. It would have destroyed credibility for months or years. So, the network waited
to be sure they had it right.
And that event was covered by hundreds if not thousands of cameras and reporters and individuals with cameras of their own in Dallas.
And today, after all the studies and all the documentation endlessly reviewed, there are still those who
claim the studies and reports were false. Of course, they present no countervailing information. But for years after that event and the weeks following that event, challenge was made to the
historians conclusions.
No such
checks were so voluminous thousands of years ago.
Not only that, but other languages were developing in other places with
other histories about other events and other people.
+++
Jersey Girl observed:
And yet, the Gospels
were written, historian's
did write their accounts of that time period. Keep in mind that the biblical and extra biblical accounts of Jesus do not represent him as an isolated or lone "character" in history. His accounts are
intertwined with the historical Pontius Pilate, Herod and such.
===
Yes, of course that occurred. At the same time, content pertinent to
Christianity in particular was subject to control and manipulation from Constantine the Great forward through his descendents and kings who
used that religion to their own benefit. We have a long historical record demonstrating the implementation of religion and the
intertwining of it with the power of popes and kings.
There
were events surrounding people whom you mention.
+++
History. Consider the news just today regarding the 54th Governor of New York, Eliot Spitzer.
Look at this regarding Eliot Spitzer How is this relevant to our discussion?With all the news coverage of this man and all the things he did for the good of New York, we learned
more history about Eliot Spitzer just in the past couple of days which caused his resignation of the Governorship of New York.
I linked you to WikipediA because as of my post for you, this latest news about his involvement with prostitutes, that he paid out over $80,000 for
their services etc. was not in any news prior to the past few days.
With all the press and television surrounding this person in 2000+, still he was able to keep
secret for an extended period of time part of his
history which now learned by the public destroys his political career.
What’s my point?It is that what we may
think we know may be faulty. There may be more than
historians of ancient time could accurately reflect. There may also have been
less than what they wrote.
History is a point of view. It’s a perspective of someone or a group of individuals, or today millions of individuals watching television and reading news stories.
Does Eliot Spitzer exist? Of course. Did ancient rulers exist? Of course.
But what we know about them is only what we can see in the limited perspective of a very limited number of
historians.
If you are unaware of the revelations regarding Eliot Spitzer, you can see news and read news regarding the past several days.
It’s important to recognize that we are limited in what we can learn even when we try our best to learn with accuracy. There are errors in
history. That’s why someone said: “History is a point of view.” (I don’t know the author.)
Spitzer accomplished a great deal of good. But, the total of his
life wasn’t what nearly everyone saw. There were secrets. And that’s part of
history as well.
Every person who lived even a short life thousands of years ago had a history. If he/she survived being born and reached some age, he/she had a history. It may never have been recorded in any way, but there was a history. Of course that applies to people who lived merely centuries ago as well.
JAK