Viewing a single comment thread. View all comments

Override9636 t1_iz4xiuz wrote

1

Traditional-Meat-549 t1_iz5icjk wrote

Balthasar, Gaspar and Melchior...likely Arabs/Egyptions/Africans - not "kings" but maybe necromancers or seers - in the Persian Zoroastrian faith or perhaps a nature-based religion.

6

314R8 t1_iz634es wrote

Magi was as term used to describe Persian Zoroastrian faith leaders who studied astrology.

3

herbw t1_iz6rkv4 wrote

Anotehr tie in to the pagans. Clearly, Zoroastrians worshipped the sun. Likely source for Easter and Xmas.

1

Traditional-Meat-549 t1_iz9f1v1 wrote

if you consider, literally every religion is a "tie to the pagans"...its where we begin as a species here. People with intellect want to make meaning out of their existence.

1

unusedusername3 t1_iz4yjzx wrote

The ones from the Christian bible that bring Jesus gifts.

5

PuckSR t1_iz5cbud wrote

Which, fun fact, there is some questionable evidence that we have classically misunderstood the story that they "followed a star". Rather, it seems to be a reference to astrology. There has been an argument that roughly around the time of Jesus, there were some astrological alignments that could have been interpreted as "a new Judean King has come", which would seem to justify this idea. Also, it never says "3 wise men", the number just got added at some point.

Finally, the entire story of Jesus' birth is a bit convoluted in the bible. The story says that they were attending the census of Quirinus(a Roman ruler of Judea), but then says that they had to flee the murderous zeal of King Herod. Unfortunately, King Herod was long gone when Quirinus was put in charge of the area. The Quirinus census was a real event known from other historical documents, but it occurred specifically because the area had transitioned from a vassal state(where Herod was allowed to be king) to a Roman governorship. The Romans would allow vassal states to simply pay them, but if the Romans were running the area they wanted good records and therefore required a census.

tl;dr: The authors of the biblical narrative of Jesus' birth seemed to have thrown in a lot of popular events in a haphazard order.

6

herbw t1_iz6t8ez wrote

Nothing ever fits very well at all. Nope censuses were not recorded in historical Roman records, or are not now existing records.

Herodian myth was yet another bit of "improving the tale" to make ti conform to a peculiar, not well accepted bit of OT mythologies.

However, Pontius Pilatus condemned Jeshua. And there is NO source at all, including for the above "census" which is likely a bad translation, too.

However in the last 20 yrs .an engraved in marble stone was round No. of Israel. Pontius Pilatus on it. Provenance and time good. So He did exist. perhaps a gov of something. Bit proof that some of the tale was true, however.

Many try to interpret myths in terms of other myths, and that's just Double Trouble, in critical thinking.

Jeshua was 2 when they fled. That had to be a warm time, too. Thus gutting the shepherd tale, again. doesn't sayu when he came back, but as he studied in Yeshive to be a rabbi, had to before age 12. yet again, HUGE miss.

−4

PuckSR t1_iz6u3m7 wrote

3

herbw t1_iz7l66j wrote

sorry for the times of ca. bc 10 to bout AD 10 there is NO list of
quirinius, nor Pontius pilate, that I can see.

1

PuckSR t1_iz7n5kc wrote

Did you see the picture of the big rock?

1

herbw t1_iz7qakg wrote

Only the shots in movie, Disneyland orlando. Was all CGI, too.

1

PuckSR t1_iz7trvi wrote

Oh, you're a troll. That explains a lot

1

herbw t1_iz7m1f6 wrote

Those, sadly are all estimates but not dates known.

Quirinius I see no dates for him either. Pontius pilatus nothing. do you have somethin less than an encyclopedic text which do NOT have the time for to go thru.

We do NOT have any dates from birth of Jeshua at all .Nor do we know Quirinius' because i refuse to go thru centuries of listings.

what is date of Quirinius, please? but far as I could tell, we have NO dates of the censuses, either, because we do NOT have maps for which places in Romans times those would be listed in. was it nazareth, or bethlehem? Those are not shown.

If you can cite specifics instead of encyclopediasl,then we can discuss it.

1

PuckSR t1_iz7n3mx wrote

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Census_of_Quirinius#/media/File%3AIscrizione_funeraria_di_Quinto_Emilio_Secondo%2C_seconda_met%C3%A0_del_I_sec._d.C..JPG

I didn't cite an encyclopedia chief. I linked to the encyclopedia because it literally has the tombstone of a soldier who served under Quirinius during the census

1

herbw t1_iz7qeyk wrote

what page and year was that? please.

0

PuckSR t1_iz7szpg wrote

What page on the stone tablet?

1

PuckSR t1_iz6uha3 wrote

And we know of Pilate through numerous Jewish historians. They hated him. Apparently he was a real tool

1