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Pastimes : Ask God

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To: Jamey who wrote (26493)8/15/1999 7:06:00 PM
From: Sam Ferguson  Read Replies (3) of 39621
 
James Josephus is regarded by scholars as the most unreliabe historian of that era. He was related to Caesar and his works given preference. Josephus was a pen name.

This article is keyed to Whiston?s translation of Josephus (6-2-98) It appears that it cannot be stated enough that Josephus was most deliberate in his works and that he
makes statements all through his works that serve (at least in his own mind) to absolve or excuse himself for
misleading and making misleading statements and outright lies.

In other words, he makes a practice of placing what amount to ?disclaimers? throughout his works under the guise of making them when the subject matter is apparently dealing with some other subject or ?non-subject,? sometimes, even as if just ?off the cuff.? These things are just ?tacked
on? here and there so that he IS saying what he is doing (i.e. making the admission), but he places these deliberately ?out of context? to their true meaning so that he can just keep right on going full in the knowledge that whether or not the reader realizes it, he has in fact
stated just what he is doing - and therefore, to HIS mind, he is telling the ?TRUTH.?

One example is this statement; ?and where it must be reproachful to write lies, when they must be known by the reader to be such.? Notice that he says ?READER,? not the writer!!! (pg. 428) (Wars of the J., Preface, 5)

Also, ?Yet were there fictious stories added to what was really done...? (pg. 517) (Wars of the J., B. III, Ch. IX, 5)

Josephus deliberately tries to confuse by
(1) Writing about personages out of their chronological order. Example: Speaking of King Solomon, then Vespasian (pg. 173) (Ant. of the Jews, B. VIII, Ch. II, 5).
(2) Misspelling names. Example: He even spells his own
name in places ?Josepos? and to see this, you will
need to find the Loeb Classical Library editions of
Josephus which have the Greek words spelled as they
are in the earliest texts. He says; ?Josepos said thus...? (pg. 569) (Wars, B. VII, Ch. II, 1). Also, see page
574 (Wars of the Jews, B. V, Ch. XIII, 3). (3)
Deliberately misleads with ?half-truths?. Example: ?He
(King Herod) was by birth a Jew.? This is a half-truth and Josephus knew it. (Ref. pg. 422) (Ant. B. XX, Ch. VIII, 7).
(4) He deliberately perpetuates and invents superstitious notions, ideas and beliefs; (A) He speaks of the ?skill? of expelling demons. (pg. 125, 173) (Ant. B. VI, Ch. II, 1; Ant. B. VIII, Ch. II, 5) (B) He is the first to speak of a ?lazar root,? which in later mythology becomes the
?mandrake root.? (pg. 42, 595-596) (Ant. B. I, Ch. XIX, 8; Wars of Jews., Book. VII, Ch. VI, 3) (C) He perpetuates the idea of ?signs? and omens. See the omen of the ?owl?. (pg. 386) (Ant. B. XVIII, Ch. VI, 7) And also; (pg. 412) (Ant. B. XIX, Ch. VIII, 2) (D) The idea of ?Ghosts.? (pg. 112, 266) (Ant. B. V, Ch. II, 8; Ant. B. XII, Ch. XI, 2) (E) The idea of ?Angels.? (pg. 119) (Antiquities of the Jews, B. V, Ch. VIII, 3) (F) ?Evil Spirits and Demons.? (pg. 136) (Ant. B. VI, Ch. XI, 2) (G) Fortune Tellers and ?Mediums? (pg. 143) (Ant. B. VI, Ch. XIV, 2) (H) Prophets telling the future and showing ?signs?, wonders and miracles. (pg. 184, 429) (Ant. B. VIII, Ch. VIII, 5; Wars of the Jews, Preface, 11)
(I) The idea of ?Witches.? (pg. 202) (Ant. B. VIII, Ch. VI, 3) (J) He invented the saying of ?Grace.? (pg. 250) (Ant. B. XII, Ch. II, 12) (K) The idea of ?Royal Birthright,? which we no longer believe in today. (pg. 348) (Ant. B. XVI, Ch. VIII, 1) (L) An eclipse of the moon as a ?sign,? a ?sign? that could be predicted with accuracy by the astronomers
and High Priests of the day (pg. 365) (Ant. B. XVII, Ch.
VI, 4)(M) ?Some Supernatural Providence? (pg. 432) Providence (Supernatural), ordained, divine (pg. 466)
(W. of J, B. I, Ch. III, 6; W. B. II, Ch. XXXI, 3)
(N) Promoted the phrase ?God Forbid.? (pg. 528) (W. B. IV, Ch. III, 10)(O) Other ?signs,? such as a star resembling a sword and a comet that continued a whole year. Check on
this! We should be able to tell by what we know about astronomy today if this is really a true statement.
(pg. 582) Note that he speaks of these ?signs? as appearing before the destruction of Jerusalem. (Wars, B. VI, Ch. V, 3)
(P) He writes of religion as being (for those who can ?see? it) as the most profitable ?business,? saying, ?... to make the altar every day fat with sacrifices of great value.? (pg. 205) (Ant. B. IX, Ch. VIII, 2) And it was a very profitable business! (and still IS!) It was huge. The
tithes and sacrifices were ?divvied up? by percent to the High Priests who in turn sent the majority of it to the
King of the locale (in Judea,

King Herod, etc.), who in turn, sent tribute to the emperor of Rome. They knew by records just about how much to expect to come in to them in the form of tithes. They had this down to a ?science?. They asked for 10% in tithes, and also received revenue of like amount from all citizens from taxes. They were milking the populace of great wealth on a constant and ongoing basis. And when the ?zealots? (Pharisees) had disrupted this system, they (the rulers and
aristocrats) felt as if ?they? were being ?robbed? of the loot that ?they? had been robbing the citizens of!!!

And so, they called the sicarii or zealots ?robbers? to
make them appear to be the ?bad guys.? The royals and aristocrats were mad with greed. Even to the point of really pushing the idea of ?Daily Sacrifices.? (pg. 574) (Wars of the J., B. VI, Ch. II, 1)

The works of Josephus, step by step, shows us just how ?they? accomplished the ?grand facade? (?they? meaning Josephus and his fellow writers of the day, as well as the royals and aristocrats). There is usually only one or two examples of each little part of the items that they used to pull it all off with.
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