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When it comes to mere physical history, it seems to me that there are several TECHNICALLY POSSIBLE views of the first and second century of Christianity, Gnosticism, and Judaism, some of which are assessed as MORE PLAUSIBLE, depending upon the ASSUMPTIONS made. Some assumptions are quite popular, though not beyond criticism or challenge.
I.e., it seems TECHNICALLY possible that Jesus was a story or combination of several characters (some real some imaginary), into a teaching story of some sage in Palestine, and that with the destruction of the Temple around 70 AD, and all the chaos, some newer converts in certain regions, thought they had the whole story, and emphasized the outer teachings that were given as allegories, missing the point, and when some years later they came in contact with other Christians of more Gnostic views, allegorical and philosophical views, such Christians who were emphasizing the outer teachings as the whole story, came into conflict and wondered where these 'heretics' came from. That is what I get from Freke and Gandy, Gerald Massey, and others. Apparently some of the European research is a bit better documented, a bit better thought out, than these English language sources, from what I was told. Still, is it PROBABLE? Is it LIKELY? What assumptions would make it improbable or probable?
And maybe a better question is, why should we rule out other alternatives?
It seems IMPOSSIBLE that there would be none, or only one person named Yeshua in Palestine at the time. It seems PROBABLE that one or more wandering healers/miracle workers/exorcists/teachers/reformers/whatevers in Palestine, would be named Yeshua, as the name itself refers to salvation. Yeshua is just Joshua, there was no 'J', 'J' was 'Y'.
So it seems POSSIBLE that there may have been more than one person in Palestine at the time, who could fit the bill of wandering healer/teacher/exorcist/reformer, etc., with the name Yeshua. I'd say it's likely, since it's just Joshua, I mean Joshua's the name of a book in the Hebrew Scriptures. For someone to name their kid Joshua, or for a reformer to take the name, sounds like a no-brainer. Lots of people wandering doing all kinds of things at the time, too.
Maybe several different people got confused. Maybe there were several different movements LITERALLY founded by different Yeshua's. Maybe at some future date after the chaos of the destruction of the Temple, two or more merged together.
Burton Mack, in Q: The Lost Gospel, argues that the statements of Jesus in the NT Gospels that are shared in more than one Gospel, portray a rather common figure of the time, the wandering cynic/sage. As in characters like Diogenes. They would challenge custom and worldly concerns, turn social conventions/expectations on their heads, making parables, etc. Maybe like a street-corner philosopher in the town square.
Hellenistic Judaism is interesting in and of itself, Platonic Judaism, Philo and all that. Some early Christians were of that flavor. There were Pagans traveling very near Galilee to Sephoris, it was a short walk from the one to the other. 3 Magi really could have visited a child in a cave in Bethlehem, such characters did wander around, there were major roads through the area.
It isn't just Ebionites and Essenes to consider. There's Hellenistic Jews and all kinds of 'alternative' takes on things you could relate to Hebrew Scripture and tradition, in the area, some of which I'm sure we are completely ignorant about. Some really bizaare forms of Judaism could have existed. A good bit of what was mainstream among Hebrews of the time, we might find extremely weird, today.
With Mystery religions we really aren't sure what went on, they were secret. Some Christian apologists like Justin Martyr, admitted that Christianity had the ancient teachings of the Pagans in it, some even said that the religion of Christianity always existed. Then they went on to claim it was the Pagans who were demonic for having the truth beforehand in imitation, as if the Pagans imitated the Christianity of the future, as a Satanic ruse!
It seems that some form of Gnostic teaching/thought/themes, existed before the first century.
I'm open to such speculations.
But the history is speculation. Some periods, some places, some subjects, the history is more speculative than others. In the case of the first and early second century, there are some really good questions and speculations that we have no clear answer...
As a Gnostic, myself, what is more important, is that I've sought spiritual insight, and prayed, meditated, contemplated, looked at Gnostic texts and teachigns in such a manner, and found it spiritually fruitful.
So the meaning of a text, and the fruit it bears spiritually in my path, is more important to me than whether or not it accurately reflects physical events or literal words spoken between two physical bodies in this place at that time.
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