Sethbag wrote:I don't think it matters whether the Epic of Gilgamesh predates the Israelite version of the Flood with Noah and whatnot. It really doesn't matter, except as a matter of interesting cultural history. What matters, to me, is whether the Flood happened. That is, whether the entire world was ever flooded with water resulting in the deaths of every man, woman, child, dog, cat, chicken, and elephant that wasn't on the Ark. In other words, the question of whether the Flood happened or not is a question of objective physical reality, and not a question of whether Israelites believed in Noah prior to, or after others believed in Gilgamesh.
If it is myth to explain the human condition, than it matters little whether the objective physical reality of a flood happened or not, what matters is the myth says that the entire earth was guilty of sin and worthy of death, yet God chose to save some, in this case Noah and his family who believed God to be saved from their condition.
And, whether myth or not, this makes sense to me, as one who knows he isn't perfect and has "sinned" in the sense, if nothing more, than I have done things to hurt other people at times, to my chagrin. Fortunately, and yes, admittedly, I look for mercy for having done so, to some higher power, because for some reason I have been endowed with the blessing of what perhaps ought to be called conscience. Though I'm not sure it's conscience that has called me to look for mercy, I just happen to do so because I do want to love and do want to do well towards my fellow human beings, those who are like me.
As far as Jesus fitting the ancient messiah prophecies, the problem is that the two aren't independent. The Jesus cult of personality grew up in an environment where the ancient scriptures and Messiah prophecies were already in existence, and known. It stands to reason that those who created the theology of the Jesus cult would mould their theology to fit the existing scriptures and prophecies.
It would be pretty hard to mold Jesus to the prophecies of a suffering servant, though I suppose it is possible, given circumstances. The Old Testament spells out what was to happen to the Branch, to the Seed, from the very beginning, even.
In other words, rather than Jesus just being some local guru who was executed by the Romans for something he did, his death is moulded to fit the Messiah prophecies and suddenly he's being sacrificed as the Lamb of God. An evolution in this direction would be perfectly natural in a Jewish/Israelite religious milieu with its emphasis on animal sacrifice as propitiation for sins, the Messiah prophecies, etc. Are you able to see where I'm going with this? The entire theology of the Jesus cult evolved over time after Jesus' death, but did so in an environment where a pre-existing theology already existed, a theology into which the Jesus theology could be welded and combined.
Yeah, I can see where you are going with this. But what is the "something he did?"
And this isn't entirely without other examples. Just look at other cults of personality that exist nowadays. Ok, you have the L. Ron Hubbard cult where his theology was just his own pure fiction. But take others like the Rev. Moon, or David Koresh, or probably a few others. These guys' theology didn't just come out of thin air. They developed within a background of a pre-existing Biblical theology into which their own stories could be welded and combined. Thus the Rev. Moon is not the Xxactonic Space Emperor come to conquer and rule Earth, but rather a new Messiah in the Christian or Biblical sense. His theology came out of, and expanded upon, the Biblical theology.
I'm sorry, man, but reading the things reportedly said by Jesus in the Bible are so far removed from anything that L. Ron Hubbard and Jim Jones said are so completely removed that I don't really get this point.
I mean, I could get it, but what are recorded as the words of Jesus are so significant that I can't see the similarities to these other guys.
Though I will admit that I can see where people might think the same of Joseph Smith Jr and even David Koresh, I simply find their words to pale in comparison. And that isn't even from a "oh God I worship Jesus" perspective. They're just some remarkable things that he said. They aren't even spectacular - they just say things that I already know, like "it is the inside of the cup that matters." Those words speak to my heart, though I won't deny that others have other words that speak to their hearts.
And thus did the theology of the Jesus cult grow out of, and expand upon, the Old Testament theology. There is no mystery at all about how Jesus came to so thoroughly embody so much of the Old Testament prophecies - the scriptural accounts and history of Jesus were tailor-made, in the decades after his actual demise (assuming he really existed), to do so!
I'd have to have some examples of Jesus fulfilling these tailor-made prophecies to concur with this hypothesis.