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 Topic: Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)

 (Read 8082 times)
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  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     OP - February 12, 2010, 08:18 AM

    He opens the video with a lie. The old testament, wasn?t written 1000 years before the new. Genesis was written in the Hellenistic era. My proof? Well we'd have to dive into linguistics and a bunch of other stuff for that.

    As for inventing the idea of a single god? No, that idea was from africa and Akhenaton was the inventor of that.

    The bible the origin of Individualism?  Cheesy

    Make it stop, I got the hickups from laughing.

    As for the OT being monotheist, in the books written just before the Hasmonean. Most actually are sounding like Assyrian style monotheism, the kind the abrahamists so detest.

    I am 100% positive there was no Moses, the myth just seems to be a throw together of foreign lands. I think they were polytheists who in the post-occupation Maccabean and Hasmonean era wanted a new religion because they (those in power) wanted to ensure loyalty.

    Monotheism isn't the only idea they took on from africa, there was also circumcision. It ensured loyalty to the priesthood.


    Dude you are fucking awesome. Recommend any books? Documentaries? I find this subject endlessly fascinating.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #1 - February 19, 2010, 01:46 AM

    sorry for the late reply been busy lately:
    Dude you are fucking awesome. Recommend any books? Documentaries? I find this subject endlessly fascinating.

    I have to look up what books I read, I borrowed them from a library. In the meantime, I know some I learned about on my own by accident, through reading mythology:

    Adapa and the food of life:
    http://sacred-texts.com/ane/adapa.htm

    The obvious parallels between him and adam don't even begin with the story line nor the possible association with Adapa and the Adamu of Mari nor the seal of a snake, a man and a woman, the very fact that Ningishzida (the serpent god, whose name literally means "lord tree - zida") which refers to the assyrian tree of life (datepalm). I don't know what zida means though, I think zi- means life, but my sumerian is slow still.

    Then you have The flood:
    http://sacred-texts.com/ane/eog/eog13.htm
    Though after the retelling of the flood story, a serpent robs the plant of life from gilgamesh and his buddy in that part (sound again familiar? though that one isn't a parallel to the eden story)

    Then you have the creation of a person using another person, which is the case with the Atrahasis myth (which is another flood myth as well):
    http://books.google.com/books?id=6gVAFOSDhL4C&pg=PA33&dq=atrahasis&cd=2#v=onepage&q=atrahasis&f=false
    (haven't read the book, but it seems to have alot of Old Testament parallels in it)

    Then you have Moses (*coughs Sargon*)'s birth:
    http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/ancient/2300sargon1.html
    And his legend further:
    http://etcsl.orinst.ox.ac.uk/cgi-bin/etcsl.cgi?text=t.2.1.4&charenc=j#
    To think that Moses's (*coughs Sargon's*) story of birth, rise into the king's presence and becoming a king of sorts wasn't enough, then you have where he conquered to: (literally the border of Canaan)

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Akkadian_Empire_Map.gif
    (I usually ignore wiki, but its the same image that was in my history book).

    And unlike Moses, he actually went "south into canaan".

    Then you have Anpu and Bata, or was that Joseph?
    http://www.reshafim.org.il/ad/egypt/texts/anpu_and_bata.htm

    Where did the slaves and the plagues part of Moses come from if not from akkad? From egypt:
    http://www.reshafim.org.il/ad/egypt/texts/ipuwer.htm

    Then you got the law, complete with eye for an eye, and equally just to the Quran and the Bible:
    http://www.wsu.edu/~dee/MESO/CODE.HTM
    (though not truly a parallel, just has alot of similarities)

    I can go on and get more, but I posted alot. I am trying to find those books for you, but I hope this satisfies you for now. Sorry it took so long:)

    It is not the way you live your life that is important, it is how well you enjoy it that matters.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #2 - February 19, 2010, 04:43 AM

    @ ninurta

    I read your post quickly and I stumbled upon 3 familiar *simlarities* between myths and the Quran/Bible.

    First off, regarding the epic of Gilgamesh, Noah and his flood took place ages before the story of Gilgamesh was written... so one could easily argue that the flood mentioned in this epic was inspired by Noah's flood story. And if one is to believe the Quranic claim that God sent prophets to all nations, then one could easily speculate that such prophets might have mentioned Noah's flood to their people, just like Moses mentioned it to the Jews and Muhammed to Muslims. The same applies to the Adam/Eve story.

    Also I saw a DECEPTIVE video on youtube comparing the birth story of Moses to the birth story of Sargon. True, Sargon was born long before Moses, HOWEVER, this birth story involving a basket, a river, infanticide, being raised by royality, etc is a 7th century BC Neo-Assyrian account. Moses was born LONG before that (around 12th century BC). So, one could argue that Sargon's birth story (which was written in 7th century BC although Sargon was born in the 22nd century BC) was inspired by Moses' birth story... After all, the Assyrians were in contact with the Israelites... in fact, the Assyrians conquered the northern kingdom of Israel and exiled 10 Jewish tribes off to Assyria. But the maker of that video so cunningly tells us that Sargon was born way before Moses and deliberately hides the fact that Sargon's birth story was first told ~500 years after Moses' death. Nice try.

    A googolplex is *precisely* as far from infinity as is the number 1.--Carl Sagan
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #3 - February 19, 2010, 07:44 AM

    If Moses and Noah were born before then why is there no proof of Noah and Moses but there is of Sargon and Gilgamesh, or the myth of Gilgamesh?
     
    Is God messing with us? He proves Sargon and other civilizations but leaves no traces from the most important stories, the true ones from the Bible?
     
    Its on par with saying God put the fossils on the earth to test our faith.
     
    And the lack of evidence is not proof. Sure. But believing in a story that lacks evidence is called faith. I could believe the relics of Stonehenge and Pyramids are the remains of aliens.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #4 - February 19, 2010, 07:50 AM

    Its not a coincidence the closer we are to our history the more we know. This is not simply because its closer to our time. We all learn history from scratch.

    Its because there is more documentation. and all of it starts interestingly enough with language, with the proto languages and then the Sumerian tablets and the writing that evolved from that. and even then its interesting to see these myths are spread to these areas and not in china or meso america.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #5 - February 19, 2010, 02:53 PM

    @ BD

    I am NOT trying to prove anything beyond that what we were given so far as evidence for absence is no evidence at all.

    For example, when I first heard the Sargon birth story on youtube and that he lived in the 22 century BC, way before the time of Moses, I was extremely disturbed... I thought the maker of the video was lying... at first examination of his claims, a cold chill ran down my spine... "It's true!" I thought, "Sargon existed long before Moses supposedly did! Moses' birth story in the Quran is false!"... but I wouldn't swollow that so easily, after a slightly deeper research, I learned that the Sargon story was a Neo-Assyrian account written in the 7th century BC, ~500 years *after* the time of Moses. It was a dirty little trick by that video maker... he lied by hiding the inconvenient part of the truth thatn would shatter his attempts... he simply ignored to mention the date of Sargon's birth story while emphasizing the time periods in which both Sargon and Moses lived.

    A googolplex is *precisely* as far from infinity as is the number 1.--Carl Sagan
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #6 - February 19, 2010, 03:06 PM

    @ ninurta

    I read your post quickly and I stumbled upon 3 familiar *simlarities* between myths and the Quran/Bible.

    First off, regarding the epic of Gilgamesh, Noah and his flood took place ages before the story of Gilgamesh was written... so one could easily argue that the flood mentioned in this epic was inspired by Noah's flood story. And if one is to believe the Quranic claim that God sent prophets to all nations, then one could easily speculate that such prophets might have mentioned Noah's flood to their people, just like Moses mentioned it to the Jews and Muhammed to Muslims. The same applies to the Adam/Eve story.

    Well, the Bible says that the flood and Moses happened well after the babylonian flood and sargon did. Though not everyone takes a 3-2nd century BCE document as being older than Neo-Assyrian and older documents. Though it fits well into the same logic that makes people believe that those are accurate sources of history.

    Quote
    Also I saw a DECEPTIVE video on youtube comparing the birth story of Moses to the birth story of Sargon. True, Sargon was born long before Moses, HOWEVER, this birth story involving a basket, a river, infanticide, being raised by royality, etc is a 7th century BC Neo-Assyrian account. Moses was born LONG before that (around 12th century BC). So, one could argue that Sargon's birth story (which was written in 7th century BC although Sargon was born in the 22nd century BC) was inspired by Moses' birth story... After all, the Assyrians were in contact with the Israelites... in fact, the Assyrians conquered the northern kingdom of Israel and exiled 10 Jewish tribes off to Assyria. But the maker of that video so cunningly tells us that Sargon was born way before Moses and deliberately hides the fact that Sargon's birth story was first told ~500 years after Moses' death. Nice try.

    Them assyrians and their evil attempt to conceal the existance of Moses, right?  Cheesy

    I doubt they even cared about Moses, let alone try to hide whether or not his story was told first.

    The assyrians always told when they borrowed a story from somewhere else. that's how we found the story of the enuma elish where it is Marduk, not Asshur, who defeats Tiamat. I assume they would do the same if they borrowed from the hebrews, a people they probably had alot less animosity towards.

    How do you know it was told first 500 years after his death? and sargons not prior? Afterall, 500 years after the claimed time of Moses, the assyrians were already telling their sargon legends.There is no evidence for a flood or a moses.

    If Moses and Noah were born before then why is there no proof of Noah and Moses but there is of Sargon and Gilgamesh, or the myth of Gilgamesh?

    Gilgamesh may be just a myth, he himself wasn't discovered, but a contemporary king was. The kingslist is full of legendary figures. As for Moses and Noah, they probably exist in the same place as Deucalion and Romulus, remote memory, and legend.
    Possibly being the same as Sargon and Ziusudra, or possibly a prior figure lost to time, since there was nothing written down prior to the legends of good old Akkad and Sumeria anywhere. Just pictoglyphs and petroglyphs.

    Quote
    Is God messing with us? He proves Sargon and other civilizations but leaves no traces from the most important stories, the true ones from the Bible?
     
    Its on par with saying God put the fossils on the earth to test our faith.
     
    And the lack of evidence is not proof. Sure. But believing in a story that lacks evidence is called faith. I could believe the relics of Stonehenge and Pyramids are the remains of aliens.


    I know right? He does alot more to make us not believe than to believe. What's with that?  Cheesy

    @ BD

    I am NOT trying to prove anything beyond that what we were given so far as evidence for absence is no evidence at all.

    But unless you know something archaeologists don't about the original bible, that it was compiled from earlier, now lost, sources, then we can't just go on anything but the evidence the bible gives us, that it was compiled in the hellenistic era, or close to it, definitely after the persian occupation, and definitely paralleling prior myths. Especially those of their closest neighbors.

    Quote
    For example, when I first heard the Sargon birth story on youtube and that he lived in the 22 century BC, way before the time of Moses, I was extremely disturbed... I thought the maker of the video was lying... at first examination of his claims, a cold chill ran down my spine... "It's true!" I thought, "Sargon existed long before Moses supposedly did! Moses' birth story in the Quran is false!"... but I wouldn't swollow that so easily, after a slightly deeper research, I learned that the Sargon story was a Neo-Assyrian account written in the 7th century BC, ~500 years *after* the time of Moses. It was a dirty little trick by that video maker... he lied by hiding the inconvenient part of the truth thatn would shatter his attempts... he simply ignored to mention the date of Sargon's birth story while emphasizing the time periods in which both Sargon and Moses lived.

    I wouldn't be so quick to listen to youtubers. Especially when many claim that the Anunnaki are aliens and the story of Tammuz includes 12 deciples and being crucified (as one video put it, it was removed I think because I cant seem to find it for you).

    It is not the way you live your life that is important, it is how well you enjoy it that matters.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #7 - February 19, 2010, 04:42 PM

    @ ninurta

    Quote
    Well, the Bible says that the flood and Moses happened well after the babylonian flood and sargon did. Though not everyone takes a 3-2nd century BCE document as being older than Neo-Assyrian and older documents. Though it fits well into the same logic that makes people believe that those are accurate sources of history.


    Come again? The Bible says Noah's flood is not older than the Babylonian civilization?!! Noah and his people are, according to scripture, one of the earliest humans who walked the earth...  

    And the Bible says Moses existed much later than the establishment of Israel?

    What Bible are you reading, son?

    Quote
    Them assyrians and their evil attempt to conceal the existance of Moses, right? Cheesy  

     

    Oh, of course not, it's the evil Israelites who had to steal the story of Sragon's birth and claim it to Moses Cheesy.

    Quote
    I doubt they even cared about Moses, let alone try to hide whether or not his story was told first.


    No one is hiding anything... cultures are affected by each other's stories.. the point here is there is NO proof of who copied from whom. The only valid proof in your case, is if Sargon's birth story was written long before the time Moses supposedly existed, but the fact is it was written ~500 *after* the time Moses is believed to have existed.

    Quote
    The assyrians always told when they borrowed a story from somewhere else.

    that's how we found the story of the enuma elish where it is Marduk, not Asshur, who defeats Tiamat. I assume they would do the same if they borrowed from the hebrews, a people they probably had alot less animosity towards.

     

    Oh, is that so? So because they sometimes seemed to accredit the source of their stories, ALL their copied stories must have mentioned the source.

    Quote
    How do you know it was told first 500 years after his death? and sargons not prior? Afterall, 500 years after the claimed time of Moses, the assyrians were already telling their sargon legends.There is no evidence for a flood or a moses.

     

    I'm not sure what you're trying to say here.. are you saying that Sargon's birth story is NOT a 7th century BC Neo-Assiryan account? Yes/No?

    Quote
    Gilgamesh may be just a myth, he himself wasn't discovered, but a contemporary king was. The kingslist is full of legendary figures. As for Moses and Noah, they probably exist in the same place as Deucalion and Romulus, remote memory, and legend.
    Possibly being the same as Sargon and Ziusudra, or possibly a prior figure lost to time, since there was nothing written down prior to the legends of good old Akkad and Sumeria anywhere. Just pictoglyphs and petroglyphs.

     

    Then just because there is no archeological evidence to a Noah's flood story before the Babalyonian one, then this must conclusively mean that the flood story first appeared in the epic of Gilgamesh... yeah, right.

    Quote
    But unless you know something archaeologists don't about the original bible, that it was compiled from earlier, now lost, sources, then we can't just go on anything but the evidence the bible gives us, that it was compiled in the hellenistic era, or close to it, definitely after the persian occupation, and definitely paralleling prior myths. Especially those of their closest neighbors.


    The point you keep missing is that you cannot convince someone who believes God exists and God is telling these stories, you cannot convince them of the falsehood of these claims unless you DO establish that these stories were told much earlier than the believer thinks they were told for the first time.

    Let me explain with an example... Believers think Moses was born some time in the 12th century BC.. if you could date the Sargon's birth story to before 12th century BC, then you have a solid proof that would shatter to pieces the faith of the believer. Because in this case, the believer has no option but to believe that the Moses' birth story was copied from Sargon's birth story and not the other way around.

    Quote
    I wouldn't be so quick to listen to youtubers. Especially when many claim that the Anunnaki are aliens and the story of Tammuz includes 12 deciples and being crucified (as one video put it, it was removed I think because I cant seem to find it for you).


    Like I said, I didn't believe the video poster at first, but after I checked his story, all the facts matched his claims:

    1- Sargon's birth story and Moses' birth story are ineed very very similar.
    2- Jewish history does place Moses to have existed around 12th century BC
    3- Historical/archeological evidence does show that Sargon lived around 22nd century BC.

    Conclusion? Moses' birth story is fake... it was copied from the birth story of a king of another nation --> Muhammed copied a Jewish lie. --> Muhammed is not a prophet.

    Only after a little research, I learned that while Sargon did exist in 22nd century BC, his birth story was a 7th century BC Neo-Assyrian account.

    Conclusion? I was deceived... There is no proof that Moses birth story is fake.

    A googolplex is *precisely* as far from infinity as is the number 1.--Carl Sagan
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #8 - February 19, 2010, 07:28 PM

    True.

    We have strong evidence for the existence of Jesus and evidence for the existence of David but that is about it really. Abraham and Moses are almost certainly mythological.


    I'm pretty certain there isn't 'strong' evidence for the existence of Jesus, from what I know the stories of Jesus were taken from the myths of Horus and around the same time as his supposed existence there were quite a few messiahs walking the streets.

    Be yourself.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #9 - February 20, 2010, 11:34 AM

    Let me explain with an example... Believers think Moses was born some time in the 12th century BC.. if you could date the Sargon's birth story to before 12th century BC, then you have a solid proof that would shatter to pieces the faith of the believer. Because in this case, the believer has no option but to believe that the Moses' birth story was copied from Sargon's birth story and not the other way around.

    Like I said, I didn't believe the video poster at first, but after I checked his story, all the facts matched his claims:

    1- Sargon's birth story and Moses' birth story are ineed very very similar.
    2- Jewish history does place Moses to have existed around 12th century BC
    3- Historical/archeological evidence does show that Sargon lived around 22nd century BC.

    Conclusion? Moses' birth story is fake... it was copied from the birth story of a king of another nation --> Muhammed copied a Jewish lie. --> Muhammed is not a prophet.

    Only after a little research, I learned that while Sargon did exist in 22nd century BC, his birth story was a 7th century BC Neo-Assyrian account.

    Conclusion? I was deceived... There is no proof that Moses birth story is fake.


    The story was probably not composed in the 7th century, but was copied from much older tablets. As has been shown with many of the other stories, documents copied during the reign of Ashurbanipal. The Epic of Gilgamesh was also found in the library of Ashurbanipal. And the story of Gilgamesh and of Sargon are not the only similarity between the Mesopotamian myths and the Bible(/Qur'an).
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #10 - February 20, 2010, 05:51 PM

    Go on Soren, what other similarities are out there?
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #11 - February 20, 2010, 11:20 PM

    @ ninurta

    Come again? The Bible says Noah's flood is not older than the Babylonian civilization?!! 

     
    I never once said that, I don't care what the bible says, what I said was that the bible is from after the babylonian civilization had fallen.

    Quote
    Noah and his people are, according to scripture, one of the earliest humans who walked the earth...   


    According to scripture? The Vedas don't say that!!!!!! (I'm not hindu, but you get my point). If you don't get my point, I don't have scriptures, you talking about the Bible or the Quran? If the Bible, say the Bible. And the bible my friend, is wrong.

    Quote
    And the Bible says Moses existed much later than the establishment of Israel?

    Uh? No. The Bible existed after the establishment of Israel, but it does say that Abraham existed after the establishment of Israel. He lived in Ur of the Chaldees if that counts? So in a sense, since Moses came after Abraham, who lived in the chaldean Ur, yeah it says that.

    Quote
    What Bible are you reading, son?


    None. I used to read the KJV, the JPS and NIV
     
    Quote
    Oh, of course not, it's the evil Israelites who had to steal the story of Sragon's birth and claim it to Moses Cheesy.

    Or simply that good myths get passed around and stick around, I wouldn't call it stealing. Especially since most myths come from some place prior. For example, the Epic of Atrahasis, its a borrowing from a sumerian story, and an elaboration upon it. And maybe the sumerians got theirs from some place else, who knows? I wouldn't call it stealing, there was no copyright.

    Quote
    No one is hiding anything... cultures are affected by each other's stories.. the point here is there is NO proof of who copied from whom. The only valid proof in your case, is if Sargon's birth story was written long before the time Moses supposedly existed, but the fact is it was written ~500 *after* the time Moses is believed to have existed. 

    I don't care when Moses was believed to have existed, all I know, is that I doubt he ever did.  Though Sargon existed over a thousand years before Moses, so maybe the story dates back to his time? Who knows.

     
    Quote
    Oh, is that so? So because they sometimes seemed to accredit the source of their stories, ALL their copied stories must have mentioned the source.

    Not all of them, it depends on whether it was directly from another story in which they copied. Some stories they wrote down were from legends they borrowed, and had with them, and weren't just taken from other texts. But yeah, they did, want proof? I have one story in particular that comes to mind immediately that comes right out and says they fused a text from Babylon with one from Assyria, look up "The Harab Myth"

    Quote
    I'm not sure what you're trying to say here.. are you saying that Sargon's birth story is NOT a 7th century BC Neo-Assiryan account? Yes/No?

    Yeah, and the Torah is a 3rd/2nd century BCE account, is it not?
     
    Quote
    Then just because there is no archeological evidence to a Noah's flood story before the Babalyonian one, then this must conclusively mean that the flood story first appeared in the epic of Gilgamesh... yeah, right.

    You misunderstood me. As why would you look in archaeology? No, what I am saying is that Noah's flood has absolutely no possibility, it is impossible for it to have ever happened. Period. And there is absolutely no evidence it did (because it is impossible). Actually, I think there is as much evidence for Noah as there is for Atrahasis, Deucalion and even Etana's flight into space.

    As for the flood story first appearing in Gilgamesh? Umm.....besides the fact that the Gilgamesh epic was written and developed from over centuries of time, appearing in some of the earliest texts of myths, and the flood in the earliest did occur (mind you, it was only a devestating flood in lower mesopotamia), in which it developed from, I'd say yeah, it is older.

    Quote
    The point you keep missing is that you cannot convince someone who believes God exists and God is telling these stories, you cannot convince them of the falsehood of these claims unless you DO establish that these stories were told much earlier than the believer thinks they were told for the first time.

    I don't care, my point isn't to convince you, I'm merely responding to your posts. I don't honestly care what you believe.

    Quote
    Let me explain with an example... Believers think Moses was born some time in the 12th century BC.. if you could date the Sargon's birth story to before 12th century BC, then you have a solid proof that would shatter to pieces the faith of the believer. Because in this case, the believer has no option but to believe that the Moses' birth story was copied from Sargon's birth story and not the other way around.

    Sargon was born earlier than that, sometime in the 2000's BCE. Like Moses, his story was written long after his death. Does it really matter though? If you believe Moses's story is older (it may be, who knows?), and that its true, thats your perogative.

    Quote
    Like I said, I didn't believe the video poster at first, but after I checked his story, all the facts matched his claims:

    1- Sargon's birth story and Moses' birth story are ineed very very similar.
    2- Jewish history does place Moses to have existed around 12th century BC
    3- Historical/archeological evidence does show that Sargon lived around 22nd century BC.

    The story is similar to alot of Birth stories of legendary kings, my point is that it is similar. Maybe the assyrians did borrow from the hebrews, I don't know. but since there was no Torah in the 7th century BCE as far as we know, its a bit hard to say that it is. Especially since the oldest one we have is from the hellenistic era.

    Quote
    Conclusion? Moses' birth story is fake...

    Words like Real/Unreal/Fake/True just don't fit well with myths, they just miss the point. I don't see the story as fake, I just see it as a myth. Mythology wasn't meant to have such words put on them, and when they are, it just sounds silly to say they are true or real, and pointless to say unreal/fake. Are they fake/false? Who knows, maybe Moses did float down the river, and maybe Romulus and Remus really did go down the Tiber in a basket, and maybe Sargon went down the Euphrates as well. Maybe they are all true stories. I highly doubt it, but its possible, as wood does float.

    Quote
      it was copied from the birth story of a king of another nation --> Muhammed copied a Jewish lie. --> Muhammed is not a prophet.

    Muhammad copied alot of lies, one of which is called hell, but what do I care? Slow down, all I am saying is that cultures borrowed myths. are myths lies? Well maybe by a modern definition, but I seldom use the modern definition. A myth is just a story, whether its true or not is irrelevant.

    Quote
    Only after a little research, I learned that while Sargon did exist in 22nd century BC, his birth story was a 7th century BC Neo-Assyrian account.

    Conclusion? I was deceived... There is no proof that Moses birth story is fake.

    Or simply that stories pass around and around, and who knows how long the story was told until it was finally written down.

    As for proving Moses's birth story is fake, well thats impossible, as you can't prove a negative, especiallly when it has to do with a story of an exslave who really if true would be to insignificant to the time to know. Maybe it is true, I don't believe it is. I cant prove a negative, thats impossible. All I know is that its a myth, and usually myths are based on a grain of truth, so who knows. I just have no evidence nor a reason to believe.

    As for the exodus, I know it didn't happen, as there would be physical evidence, and there is not a grain of it for the biblical exodus.

    I'm pretty certain there isn't 'strong' evidence for the existence of Jesus, from what I know the stories of Jesus were taken from the myths of Horus and around the same time as his supposed existence there were quite a few messiahs walking the streets.

    Well possibly from the crucified savior that came just before Jesus, but maybe horus first.

    The story was probably not composed in the 7th century, but was copied from much older tablets. As has been shown with many of the other stories, documents copied during the reign of Ashurbanipal. The Epic of Gilgamesh was also found in the library of Ashurbanipal. And the story of Gilgamesh and of Sargon are not the only similarity between the Mesopotamian myths and the Bible(/Qur'an).

    Indeed. Also, stories would circulate for ages before they were written down. Who the tales were originally attributed to were usually lost to time. Some stories I think were directly borrowed, others such as the flood specifically, I don't think they knew it originated with someone else. It seems to be one of those stories that circulated so much it ended up everwhere from India to Rome and back.


    It is not the way you live your life that is important, it is how well you enjoy it that matters.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #12 - February 20, 2010, 11:21 PM

    Go on Soren, what other similarities are out there?

    Just between the Bible and the others? Or can I also throw in greco-roman ones?

    Can we split this into a seperate discussion so I don't derail this thread further? I do apologise for the epic derailment.

    It is not the way you live your life that is important, it is how well you enjoy it that matters.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #13 - February 20, 2010, 11:23 PM

    Sure. which point would you like it split from (it's Sunday morning here and I'm feeling kinda lazy Wink ).

    Devious, treacherous, murderous, neanderthal, sub-human of the West. bunny
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #14 - February 20, 2010, 11:26 PM

    The part where I had all those links to the biblical parallels to other myths. but if you could title it "parallel myths " seeing that I didn't intend for it to be bible specific

    It is not the way you live your life that is important, it is how well you enjoy it that matters.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #15 - February 20, 2010, 11:39 PM


    Well possibly from the crucified savior that came just before Jesus, but maybe horus first.



    Whoa who was this crucified savior?
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #16 - February 20, 2010, 11:42 PM

    @ ninruta

    I read your lengthy post... I seems we don't disagree at all..

    A googolplex is *precisely* as far from infinity as is the number 1.--Carl Sagan
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #17 - February 20, 2010, 11:56 PM

    Whoa who was this crucified savior?


    According to the Bible:

    1- Jesus was born of a virgin
    2- Jesus was a son of God.
    3- Jesus was cruicified to save the people.
    4- ....
    5-...
    etc

    many of the things about Biblical Jesus are ACTUALLY part of much earlier mythical accounts.

    Watch the documentry: "The God who wasn't there".

    A googolplex is *precisely* as far from infinity as is the number 1.--Carl Sagan
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #18 - February 20, 2010, 11:59 PM

    According to the Bible:

    1- Jesus was born of a virgin
    2- Jesus was a son of God.
    3- Jesus was cruicified to save the people.
    4- ....
    5-...
    etc

    many of the things about Biblical Jesus are ACTUALLY part of much earlier mythical accounts.

    Watch the documentry: "The God who wasn't there".


    I have seen it. Terrible movie. Not impressed at all, not very scholarly. And sure I have heard about the Houri myth and similar myth. In fact the story of Jesus resembles the Hero archetype. Read Joseph Cambell on that subject. But what I meant who did he mean right before Jesus. And you are a muslim, you probably don't think he was crucified at all. I think that disagrees with history to be honest.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #19 - February 21, 2010, 12:05 AM

    Whoa who was this crucified savior?

    I will have to find it, but it was written on a stone they found in Israel. I don't know everything about the story.

    @ ninruta

    I read your lengthy post... I seems we don't disagree at all..

    Then why are we disagreeing?  Smiley Simple misunderstanding? Understood. I've done it before myself.  Wink

    Watch the documentry: "The God who wasn't there".

    I may have, I just have to go refresh my memory.

    I have seen it. Terrible movie. Not impressed at all, not very scholarly. And sure I have heard about the Houri myth and similar myth. In fact the story of Jesus resembles the Hero archetype. Read Joseph Cambell on that subject. But what I meant who did he mean right before Jesus. And you are a muslim, you probably don't think he was crucified at all. I think that disagrees with history to be honest.

    I never heard the Horus myth people associate with Jesus, but I don't assume there isn't one. Where can I read on it? I am a mythology geek and I've never come acrossed it.

    It is not the way you live your life that is important, it is how well you enjoy it that matters.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #20 - February 21, 2010, 12:06 AM

    That's the thing I think its Internet Meme BS, because I first came across it in Zeitgeist. Which should end the story right there.
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #21 - February 21, 2010, 12:06 AM

    Quote
    And you are a muslim, you probably don't think he was crucified at all. I think that disagrees with history to be honest.

     

    I probably don't agree he was cruicified? I definitely don't!

    A googolplex is *precisely* as far from infinity as is the number 1.--Carl Sagan
  • Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #22 - February 21, 2010, 12:08 AM

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BNf-P_5u_Hw
  • Re: Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #23 - February 21, 2010, 12:10 AM

    Meh. Zeitgeist is full of bollocks.  Tongue

    Devious, treacherous, murderous, neanderthal, sub-human of the West. bunny
  • Re: Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #24 - February 21, 2010, 12:11 AM

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L-zTLK5uJGQ
  • Re: Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #25 - February 21, 2010, 12:11 AM

    http://www.thedevineevidence.com/jesus_similarities.html
  • Re: Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #26 - February 21, 2010, 12:12 AM

    Meh. Zeitgeist is full of bollocks.  Tongue


    Yupp but certain people will watch because it will tell them something they already "know".
  • Re: Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #27 - February 21, 2010, 12:15 AM

    That's the thing I think its Internet Meme BS, because I first came across it in Zeitgeist. Which should end the story right there.

    It figures. The same was done with Tammuz, supposedly he was crucified as well  Cheesy though I read all of Tammuz's myths ever recovered from Iraq (Not kidding either), and have yet to find it.

    Like the Tammuz having so many similarities to Horus and Jesus? And the Ishtar and Mary stuff? Figures.

    I probably don't agree he was cruicified? I definitely don't!

    You don't think Jesus was crucified? If he really pulled what he did in the temple, I would be suprised if he didn't. To the Romans, rebellion wasn't some small crime, they could be pretty brutal.


    It is not the way you live your life that is important, it is how well you enjoy it that matters.
  • Re: Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #28 - February 21, 2010, 12:18 AM

    @ ninutra

    Quote
    You don't think Jesus was crucified? If he really pulled what he did in the temple, I would be suprised if he didn't. To the Romans, rebellion wasn't some small crime, they could be pretty brutal.

     

    I thought we understood each other! I believe in what is to you a myth.. that being said, you yourself believe you can't prove a negative.. so I have no problem with that... it sounds reasonable to me.

    A googolplex is *precisely* as far from infinity as is the number 1.--Carl Sagan
  • Re: Parallel myths (split from Exodus thread)
     Reply #29 - February 21, 2010, 12:28 AM

    I thought we understood each other! I believe in what is to you a myth.. that being said, you yourself believe you can't prove a negative.. so I have no problem with that... it sounds reasonable to me.

    Yeah we understand eachother. It is indeed reasonable.

    Though to me, a myth is a story that can be true or not, but may or may not be mixed in with other details that expand upon the original.

    It's not that, I was just saying that if the story of the temple riots was true, he probably was crucified. Just because the Romans were known for their brutality.

    I also like to toy with ideas, such as the possibility of figures such as Jesus and Muhammad once existing. Though to be honest, I think that both did exist. Though Jesus was just another rebel trying to sucede from the roman empire, no different than Simon, Boudica, and others. Though the thing I love most about myths, is just the mere possibility that there is truth behind them.

    As for what you (black dog) said in the other thread, I have my doubts that he existed too. I don't think we can be sure that jesus existed. But my point was "if" he did.

    It is not the way you live your life that is important, it is how well you enjoy it that matters.
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