How to succeed at myth-making without really trying
Lumpenproletariat's entire line of reasoning boils down to nothing more than an appeal to popularity. "Why would so many believe if it were not so?"
That's close, but not quite correct. The question is: Why would so many believe if there were no evidence that it is so? It's because the evidence was so apparent that so many believed. They knew this had to be something more serious than any traditional religious cult figure or mythic hero.
It is not true that anyone can create an instant mythic hero. But the reports of the miracles of Jesus were so persuasive that people were convinced. You can't name any similar case where a fictional hero or deity or savior figure gained a following so quickly.
What makes an instant hero possible is that the real person actually exists, i.e., someone who really does perform something extraordinary, and this creates the original figure to which myths can then be added. Or, additional characteristics, fictional ones, may be added to the original unusual figure. But you have to start out with a real person who really did have some extremely unique features.
You can't just invent such a figure artificially, as a fictional entity, and get large numbers of people to believe in him in a short time period. There is no example of such a thing.
The only possible exceptions are someone who was famous before he died, such as a very powerful figure, or a sage who taught for 30 or 40 years or longer and was able to amass a reputation during that long period of teaching and impressing his disciples. Figures like this might become mythologized earlier, but they at least had to have a long public career.
So, except for these cases of famous public figures, you cannot create an instant hero myth such as the case of Jesus. But if your hero really did perform miracle acts, then he might emerge as an instant mythic hero. And only then the mythologizing begins.
One might as well ask why any number of obvious hoaxes were believed by large numbers of people. The answer almost invariably comes down to how the story is marketed. Usually it involves the charismatic prowess of an original messenger. Jim Jones, Marshall Applewhite, David Koresh, Sun Myung Moon and A. C. Bhaktivedanta Swami Prabhupada are but a few examples of many in the 20th century alone who by virtue of their charisma convinced many people to follow their teachings.
We're talking about miracle-working mythic heroes, not just any teacher. And these examples you give here were people who had long careers. They were not instant mythic heroes. People were won over to them partly because of their charisma, but also because they had time to amass a following, over decades of teaching. But Jesus had only 3 years at most, and that is not enough time for a charismatic teacher to amass a large following.
So any explanation as to how these persons were believed or won a following tells us nothing about how Jesus accomplished it, in such a shorter time period.
The proliferation of this sort of phenomenon cannot be denied.
No, "this sort of phenomenon" is not the same as the 1st-century Jesus phenomenon. You have to find a phenomenon that is similar to the Jesus phenomenon in order to make a comparison and explain how the Jesus figure became deified in such a short time.
In addition to happening in a short time period, there must be several sources which attest to the miracle acts he performed, not only one, and it cannot be a result of a long career of teaching and winning disciples.
Evidence lies squarely in favor of the premise that certain charismatic people can convince sizeable numbers of followers to believe nearly any set of doctrines or revisionist history no matter how preposterous it may sound.
But only over a long time period, at least a long career of teaching, and usually longer than the lifetime of the charismatic. Also, it's not about winning the followers over to a set of doctrines, but getting them to believe that the charismatic performed miracle acts. It's not true that people generally believe in miracle acts if there's no evidence for them or if there's no long tradition of miracle stories attached to the mythic hero.
All the examples of miracle heroes you can name are ones who had a long tradition of miracle stories attached to them, and usually long after the hero's actual lifetime, even centuries. You can't win hundreds of followers over to a miracle-worker for whom there is no evidence or long career, or who has no long tradition of miracle stories amassed over many generations.
So before I present this scenario let me say that it is merely one of many possible scenarios that accomplish the following:
- Is consistent with all available evidence
- Explains how the Jesus myth may have come to be popular
- Is considerably more plausible than believing that the miracles described in the story actually happened.
My scenario:
The myth of Jesus was appropriated by "Paul," the writer of the authentic Pauline epistles.
Why? Why did he appropriate this? What was there about this Jesus myth that he would pay any attention to it? And why would anyone listen to this Paul fanatic ranting and raving about some mythic hero that he invented, or that someone else invented, who did nothing and was a nobody, which he was if he performed no miracle acts?
Without explaining why Paul chose this mythic figure, your scenario doesn't answer the critical questions. Without an answer why he chose the Jesus myth, your scenario is not consistent with the evidence and fails to explain how the Jesus myth became popular, and it's less plausible than the explanation that Jesus must have performed miracle acts, because this explanation does answer these questions which your invented Jesus scenario does not answer.
You can't just say Paul's Jesus myth caught on and he won followers to it. That answers nothing. You yourself could invent a mythic hero right now and go out and market it, and there's just as much likelihood that you'd win a following for your new cult as there's any reason to believe Paul could win a following with his myth. You've said nothing about what made Paul's new cult successful. Or even what made Paul choose Jesus as his symbol to launch his cult.
Paul was a charismatic individual who got a taste of the power and influence (as well as financial gain) one could wield by being the leader of a cult.
Not by choosing a nobody for his mythic hero. A cult leader has to have a tradition or a set of heroes or gods that have some recognition. A cult leader cannot simply invent his own mythic hero and expect to gain any power or lead any cult. Where will he get followers for a cult that offers to the followers some new invented imaginary fictional character the followers never heard of or give any credibility to?
His "Jesus" was very simple at first - a hero god who sacrificed himself for the benefit of humanity.
But an imaginary figure that no one related to. No one recognized this hero for anything of value. How can Paul foist this imaginary figure onto anyone or gain any followers for him? People don't just willy-nilly join without asking any questions. It's not true that people just swallow any garbage a charismatic hands to them. You can't name one who succeeded by offering followers some imaginary figure he invented himself and claimed exclusive private revelations from.
None of the charismatics you listed above did this. All of them started with a traditional belief system centered on some god or gods that were already recognized, not on some fictional character they invented. The swami gave them Krishna -- and you can go down the list -- they all offered the followers a deity that already existed or was already recognized or had a tradition of beliefs as the starting point. Jesus was not such a recognized figure that Paul could start with. (Unless he had a reputation for performing miracles.)
This was a common theme, borrowed from many similar hero-god myths such as Promethus, who endured the ignomy of 1000 years of torture for giving fire to humans.
OK, but you need more than an attractive common theme. You must have a hero figure that is recognized, so there is some credibility to your sacrificial hero narrative. You can't win followers to a nobody mythic hero you invented yourself.
If such a cult was so easy to create and foist as a hoax, there should be many of these mythic heroes for whom we would have miracle reports, not only one. It makes no sense to say that only one such miracle mythic hero legend could emerge to meet the need. Anyone could invent their myth and launch such a cult, and there should be thousands of them if that were so.
Paul claimed that he did not receive any of the information he had about Jesus from anyone but Jesus himself, and that through direct revelation.
This is why your scenario is ludicrous. No one would fall for this. You can't name any other example from history of a hero myth getting started this way, i.e., where one charismatic figure claims to have private revelation about a mythic hero no one recognizes, who has no history, no recognized existence, no tradition -- nothing but the private claims of one weird fanatic with alleged visions that no one else has access to.
You're wrong -- people do NOT fall for such rubbish. Name one example where they did. Name a case in history where a new cult got started this way. People want a hero figure who they have some knowledge of, or that is verified by some existing sources and not just one person making it all up or imagining it by himself privately.
People are not as stupid as you're implying they are. Name an example where any number of people got conned this way.
Reverand Moon claimed to be Jesus Christ. He did NOT make up a new messiah figure of his own but fell back on traditional religious beliefs and then added his own new twist on it. But a new cult leader cannot just invent some new imaginary figure he claims to have a revelation from and expect to accumulate a following. There is no such thing. Your scenario is just as fictional as the mythic heroes that never existed.
Yes, over many generations or centuries you might get some followers for something new or for a new invented hero myth. But not in only 10 or 20 years, as Paul did.
Paul never wrote about the birth narrative, the calling of the apostles, the miracles, the conversation with Nicodemus, the woman at the well, etc. He never mentioned Mary or Joseph. He never mentions Herod's threat or Jesus's relationship to John the Baptist. He never quoted anything Jesus was supposed to have said during his lifetime. He never mentioned Pilate, the Sanhedrin trial or the jewish mob who called for his crucifixion. In fact there is nothing Paul wrote about that even required Jesus to exist as a human at all.
Little or nothing of the above is mentioned in the Book of Acts either. Yet the writer of Acts obviously knew of them. It is typical of the early Christian writers to ignore the biographical details of Jesus and focus only on the Risen Christ figure and on theology that is not in the gospel accounts. It was typical to ignore these biographical details even though they were aware of them.
Paul mentions the resurrection appearances and the "Lord's Supper" scene and the handing over of Jesus to the authorities. This shows knowledge of the manner of the arrest. It clearly shows that Paul knew that someone among the disciples handed Jesus over, so that it was not just a surprise arrest without the cooperation of at least one of the disciples. This is a detail that is not prominent, or is mentioned in passing, but it shows that Paul was aware of this event and probably much other detail that he didn't mention.
He mentions that Jesus and James were brothers, which is also noted in Josephus. Whether they were really brothers are not, this detail is mentioned in these two sources, and there is no point to it that serves any visionary purpose for Paul, so he must have intended it to mean that they really were genetic brothers, which is not possible unless Jesus was a real person. The Josephus reference also supports this. The mention makes no sense if Jesus was not an historical person.
The only way Paul's Jesus could be sold by him was if his audience already knew of the biographical details of Jesus. There is no basis for claiming that Paul sold his audience a "Jesus" who was his own invention that he was introducing for the first time based only on his private revelations. His avoidance of biographical detail was possible only because his audience already had that information, and he wanted to work from that as a basis or a starting point upon which to build his own christology, or his own explanation of the Jesus figure they already knew about.
Everything Paul wrote about Jesus could just as easily have happened in a spiritual realm, separate and apart from the physical world.
Almost everything. But not the above points: the last supper scene, the handing over of Jesus to the authorities, and Jesus and James being brothers. This theory of a non-physical Jesus is not tenable if there is even only one point in Paul that contradicts it. We can easily understand how Paul would avoid the biographical details of Jesus. He wanted his audience to believe he had private revelation. They would accept that, but only if he had a real historical figure or mythic hero they already recognized to serve as the object of his revelations.
The fact that Paul found a receptive audience proves that Jesus must have had a reputation for something very unusual or unique, so that his listeners would respond to Paul favorably. But if he had just invented his own myth based entirely on private revelation, as you're suggesting, they would have dismissed Paul as a wacko.
How could Paul speak of "the night when Jesus was handed over" or say Jesus had a brother James, a known historical person, if his Jesus existed only in a spiritual realm apart from the physical world? Without answering this, your scenario is not plausible.
It's plausible to take an already-existing recognized figure and then build upon it and invent new elements, or interpret the old ones in a new way, and even play down the earlier-recognized elements in order to add one's new symbols or interpretations. But it is not plausible to create a totally new mythic figure of one's own making and expect an audience to believe it.
The only thing Paul originally wrote about Jesus was the death and resurrection.
I.e., almost the only thing.
But the only reason Paul could sell his Jesus was that he wrote about an already-existing resurrected Jesus. He did not invent Jesus and the death and resurrection and offer this fiction to an audience who had never before heard of such a person. His readers and listeners already knew of the Jesus who did miracles and rose from the grave. It's only because they were already familiar with this figure that they were receptive to Paul's preaching and writings. Otherwise Paul would have been laughed off the stage.
But things change. Over the 40 or so years between when Paul started selling his "Jesus" product and the time the product became popular . . .
It was less than 40 years. The Q document is dated around 50 AD, and it contains two miracle narratives, and at least one clear non-narrative reference to the miracles of Jesus.
But aside from your false chronology, your scenario offers no explanation how his product would become popular. There was nothing to this product if your scenario is correct. It was all Paul's imagination, his own private revelation. Unless you assume all the people back then were idiots, you can give no reason why this product would become popular, why they would slurp down this snake-oil Paul was peddling. There was nothing attractive about it that anyone would buy it. There was never before, and has never been since, any such product as this that ever became popular. It takes generations and even centuries for a mythic hero to evolve, not only 20 or 30 years.
Even if it's possible for a charismatic figure to amass a following over many years and they start mythologizing him during his lifetime, there is no case of a charismatic getting followers to mythologize someone else he invented and having no previous status of any kind.
Name one that popped up in a short time and from nothing. No one builds a cult and recruits followers for a mythic hero he invented and that had no basis in earlier tradition. You can't start out from a nothing, which is what you're saying Paul did. He had nothing at the beginning of his enterprise except his mouth and some private revelations.
If it was this easy to start a new cult that would be widely received and become popular, then we should see many more messiah figures like Jesus, for which there are multiple sources near to the time the mythic figure was created.
At least some of the miracle stories of Jesus already existed in the 50s. How did Paul get people to believe in these miracles? Since he did not preach the miracles himself, who did? How did Paul get them to believe in a hero who would have miracle stories about him being circulated in the 50s and yet Paul did not teach such stories himself?
. . . enough that some anonymous people started writing it down, the details about his earthly life were added.
Details were being added long before the 40 years you imagine. The Q Document definitely puts Jesus in Galilee, in Capernaum, naming the cities of Chorazin and Bethsaida. It reports an encounter between Jesus and some disciples of John the Baptist when the latter was in prison. This clearly puts Jesus in Galilee, or somewhere near the area ruled by Herod Antipas, so he has a geographical location, which is possible only about a physical person, not an imaginary invention of Paul who gave him no biographical details. These details were current at about the same time that Paul was writing.
So don't say "over the 40 years or so" -- no, it was at about the same time Paul was writing his epistles that the new biographical details were being added.
Every hero-god worth his salt was born of a woman impregnated by either Ra, Zeus or Jupiter, so Jesus's myth gets that detail.
You'll have to find something beyond the Bethlehem and virgin birth stories to prop up your scenario. Just because some legends like these got added later does not change the fact that there had to be some real events to begin with that made Jesus an important figure to which mythological symbols could become attached.
Another historical figure who acquired a virgin birth origin was Alexander the Great. And you think this must make Alexander orignally a fictional non-historical figure? You can't just write off every famous person who is said to have been virgin-born. There's a long list of such real historical figures, including Pythagorus, and there are many others. It doesn't mean they started out as a myth someone concocted in order to sell their new cult.
Poseidon could walk on water so Jesus had to be able to as well. Bacchus could turn water into wine, so the Johnny-come-lately me-too cult incorporated that bit into their mythos. Asclepius could cure every disease known to man (including raising people from the dead) so Jesus had to be able to do the same things or suffer the ignomy of inferiority, which just would not do. The point of the matter is that every power Jesus demonstrates in the legends about him had been demonstrated by other god-myths before him.
All these legendary figures, if they were real people, lived many centuries or even 1000+ years prior to the stories about them emerged. So in their case we know the stories had centuries of time in which to evolve.
No miracle stories like these evolve in a short time out of a nobody who did nothing noteworthy. You cannot name any other example in history of this happening. Naming all these earlier mythologies that are so dissimilar to the Jesus example proves nothing. They are dissimilar because they required 1000+ years to evolve, while the Jesus legend arose within 30 years.
It is possible that some fictions could become attached to Jesus in a short time, but ONLY IF there is first a real historical person who had some recognized status due to something significant and real that he did. With something real as a starting point, something that makes him stand out uniquely from everyone else and brings recognition, it is then possible that a mythologizing process can begin. But not from a nobody who is a mythic invention of someone's private revelations and nothing more.
There would have been tremendous pressure on the part of the myth-marketers . . .
But you're hallucinating these myth-marketers. They did not exist. You cannot give any plausible explanation who they were and what profit they had to gain from creating this myth out of nothing.
If myths are this easy to invent and market successfully, then we should see dozens, or even hundreds of Jesus-like mythic heroes emerging in history, all who were non-existent and yet became popularized within 50 years or less in documents circulating from writers who joined the cults that created these mythic figures. Yet there's absolutely no other examples of such mythical hero figures evolving like this Jesus myth evolved, in a short time, and for whom we have multiple sources.
How did this one clique of myth-makers succeed in foisting this hoax onto the world and no others succeeded? Where are the others? You've not named any. All you can name are ancient god-myths that had been around for centuries or even thousands of years before any sources about them existed.
. . . to overcome any weakness in their product by enhancing it with the features competing products had.
But why are they promoting this inferior product in the first place? Why are you pretending someone else would do such a thing as this which you know you never would do and that no one else has ever done? How can you pretend there were idiots out there doing something insane like this, trying to sell a phony product that had no reality and that only an idiot would buy? You're making a singular case out of this one legendary figure, this Jesus figure, and creating a yarn to explain it, and yet there's no similar explanation for anything else that ever happened. Nothing like what you're imagining here has ever happened any other time in history. Name another example of it. There is none.
All mythological figures required generations or centuries to evolve, not only 20 or 30 years, and all mythologizing that anyone ever plotted as a marketing strategy was done on an already-existing recognized public figure or traditional hero figure already having some status, not on a new invented fictional figure. You cannot name one other example of such a phenomenon as you're hallucinating in this one singular case.
This is how legend-building works.
No it's not. None of the legends you named worked this way. All the mythologizing that happened was done to a recognized public figure or traditional hero figure that already had status. Not on some upstart sudden hero myth that someone invented out of nothing in order to launch a new cult. That's not how cults or legends or myths get started and build.
The product developed over decades of enhancement.
But you have to have a product to begin with. The "product" cannot develop without first existing and gaining its first followers, which this one could not have. Not an invention that exists only in the mind of a myth-maker. There are no other examples of a legend developing this way.
In a few cases a guru can develop a school of disciples after a career of teaching and impressing his listeners, and in some cases the mythologizing begins during the lifetime of the guru.
Where a mythic hero legend develops quickly, in only a few decades, then there has to be something truly noteworthy about the historical figure. I.e., he has to have accomplished something real, or be something truly important, not something imagined, like your hypothetical St. Paul invention.
The emperor Vespasian got credited with a couple miracle healing acts for which there is some questionable evidence. This could not have happened if he had not been a famous recognized public figure who could become mythologized due to his reputation.
Joseph Smith became recognized quickly, in less than 20 years, and there's a few miracle acts attributed to him, but he did not start out with his own private invented mythic hero, but with Jesus Christ as his god. He would not have succeeded at all if he had done what you're saying Paul did, i.e., invent a totally new mythic hero based only on his private revelations. Rather, he started with a recognized deity figure and then added his own modifications to it.
It didn't matter if there were critics. If the charismatic cult leader could furrow his brow with enough conviction and claim he knew the things to be true (even if he knew no such thing) he could keep selling the product.
No he could not and he did not and no one else ever did this, as you're imagining Paul did. The charismatic cult leader has to start out with a recognized mythic hero that people already relate to, not some invention that comes only out of personal revelations he has privately. No one ever sold a product this way. No one ever even TRIED to sell a product this way. They always took an existing hero figure or tradition and added their miracle stories to it, i.e., to something that people were already buying.
His flock already believed him and would be inclined to continue doing so.
No, no "flock" ever believed anyone the way you're imagining they believed Paul. They didn't already believe it nor continue doing so. Paul could never have won over any "flock" with the kind of hoax you're proposing, and neither did any charismatic in history win over any "flock" with this method. You can't name one other example of it.
Others who claimed to know differently could easily be dismissed as liars or deluded.
No, Paul is the one who would be dismissed as a lune if he tried to perpetrate such a hoax as you're hallucinating happened here. If you should be confronted by someone doing what you're saying Paul did, you would dismiss him as a wacko and so would everyone else.
If it were true that such a wacko could succeed in creating a successful cult and get it to spread, like the early Jesus cult spread, then there would be hundreds of these cults, or thousands, down through history, each with its miracle-worker for whom we would have multiple sources near to the time that the miracle-worker lived. We do not have such examples. You cannot name any.
As long as the product was viable it would keep selling, . . .
No, it was not and never would be viable nor would sell. It couldn't even get started in the first place. There has to be something at the beginning that is real. You can't start from a totally fictional entity. The fiction gets added to the early part that was real. You can't name an example of a mythic hero that was viable even though totally fictional, with the possible exception of a tradition that required several centuries to evolve, like Zeus and Apollo etc. And even these may have been real persons originally.
We can't be sure these mythic entities didn't exist as real persons, because all those legends about the gods, and about Romulus and Hercules and the Argonauts and others were arguably about real people who became mythologized later. There are plausible theories about all of them, including Asclepius, who might have been a real healer. Also Krishna, who might have been a real person. We can't be sure that any of these god-hero-legends was total fiction rather than a real person originally who then became mythologized.
We do know for sure that it required 1000 years or longer for them to evolve, if they were not real, not 20 or 30 or 40 years as in the case of Jesus.
As the years continued to obscure the difference between reality and fantasy the belief became less and less vulnerable to contradiction via physical evidence.
No, "as the years continued" the belief had long since disappeared, having been rejected from the start as nonsense. Your make-believe is not historical fact nor even a plausible hypothesis of anything that could ever happen. Don't speculate about how the belief would adapt "as the years continued" when the truth is that it would not survive even a few days but would be totally rejected and would fall flat from the very beginning.
Once you have a core group of believers and an economy there is a lot of incentive to milk it for all it's worth.
But what you're hypothesizing could never have gained any "core group of believers" that could be milked. You can't milk something that doesn't exist and never could exist. And the "for all it's worth" is meaningless because the "it" is totally worthless and non-existent and has no "economy" or anything for there to be any "incentive" about. There has to be something of substance to begin with, not some wacko's empty-headed private revelations.
It is obvious that the followers were expected to give of their means to a collection, which meant that purveyors of these myths stood to make a tidy bundle selling snake oil.
No, there were no "purveyors" here and nothing that anyone would buy and no one idiotic enough to buy it or pay into the collection. You can't propose a scenario in which every character in it is a fool and a wacko. They had to be real people.
Why not continue enhancing the product and making it more appealing?
What "product"? and more appealing than what? How can a nothing that has no appeal be made "more appealing"? It has to have some appeal to begin with, and yet this "product" would have had no appeal at all.
Marketing, marketing, marketing. Held true then, still holds true today.
It never held true, today or then, without some product that has some recognizable substance to it that someone sees value in. You can't market market market non-existent nothingness.
Once again I emphasize, this may not have been the way it happened, but it is one way it could have happened.
No it could not have happened. Unless you assume that in the 1st century there was an unprecedented explosion of idiots who were all born in a short time space and were all somehow dumped into St. Paul's lap and whose brains were pre-programmed to immediately believe the first charlatan who would come along, and this is the only time in history that any such group of idiots ever existed, before or since. You can't name any other time in history where any such thing as this happened.
It is not plausible to hypothesize that only this one time in history an extremely large number of idiots appeared, perhaps out of a mad scientist's lab, who were programmed to believe the first charlatan who would appear (like the girl in Midsummernight's Dream who fell in love with the first creature she saw) and Paul just happened to pop up where they were deposited and captured all these idiots for his new cult. No, it could not have happened that way -- it's not plausible.
Every single piece of evidence available to us today is completely consistent with this scenario, . . .
No, all the evidence disproves this brain-dead scenario. The total absence of any such thing ever in history is abundant evidence that contradicts the possibility of such a scenario. If such a thing were possible we would see some other examples of it.
In modern times, with the advanced media and Internet, there are millions of upstart cults or scams or hoaxes. But even today, with all the communication capability, there is no hoax claiming a hero who lived in recent history who did miracles and for whom we have multiple sources attesting to his miracle powers and yet was not a traditional myth but the exclusive invention of one person's private revelations.
All we've had are faith-healers or gurus who have long careers and who based their preaching on ancient traditions going back centuries. None of them promote mythic deities who are invented new and imagined by a non-recognized charismatic who sells them based on his private revelations. Any such crank of this description gets no following today, nor in the 1st century, or at any other time in history, and no writers publish accounts or "gospels" about such a mythic deity.
. . . and it has the advantages of not requiring one to believe in mind-reading or levitation.
It has the much greater DISadvantage of requiring one to believe that there was only one set of idiots that ever lived, all about 30 AD to 100 AD, and they believed in one hoax only, even though anyone could have hoaxed them, and yet only this one hoax was able to win them. This is a one-of-a-kind event in history, never duplicated anywhere else. This is less credible than believing that Jesus had the power to do the miracle acts described in the gospels.
So kindly stop insisting that these things are impossible to explain other than by swallowing them hook, line and sinker.
But you're insisting that a unique group of 1st-century idiots swallowed Paul's nonsense hook, line and sinker, which is nuttier than the far more plausible explanation that Jesus actually had power to do the miracle acts. If there is another explanation, then give us a plausible one, not this hallucination you've just described. No one can foist a new hoax such as you are describing. You cannot seriously claim that these 1st-century people were so retarded as to believe in this new fabricated mythic hero that only this unknown wacko St. Paul could reveal to them in his private revelations.
Nothing could be further from the truth. They are much easier to explain by jettisoning the miraculous elements, looking calmly at what is left and considering the evidence of thousands of years of similar cult development.
There is no other example of similar cult development. None of the cults invent a new mythic hero that exists only in the private revelations of a nobody charismatic who is believed by a herd of mindless cattle such as these people would have to have been. There is no evidence of any cult development doing anything similar to this that you can identify in history.
You are basically assuming that people who believe any religious cult are total mindless idiots who will just believe anything at all for no reason whatever. They are not the brain-dead zombies you're pretending. They look for longstanding symbols and mythic heroes that have tradition behind them, or they are impressed with a guru's performance over decades of teaching. They do show some critical judgment and do not just suddenly convert impulsively and buy whatever suddenly pops up out of nowhere at a lucky moment or place.
The very people who saw the miracles according to the storyline were not impressed with them enough to believe. The crowds of 5,000 and 7,000 who were fed by the multiplying food miracle dissipated quickly.
This seems to say that if the miracles really happened as described, then the response of the crowd or the disciples would have been more emphatic or not so casual.
But there's no indication of what the response was to most of the miracles. When there is a response, it's very emphatic. E.g., the calming of the storm: "They were filled with great awe and said to one another, 'Who then is this whom even wind and sea obey?'" (Mk 4:41). Or the healing of Jairus's daughter: "At that they were utterly astounded." (Mk 5:42). Or the curing of a deaf mute: "All the crowd was astounded, and said, 'Could this perhaps be the Son of David?'" (Mt 12:23).
You might say that the "faith" of these onlookers was shallow, or not deep-rooted, or superficial in a way that it might dissipate quickly. This might be implied in some of the gospel description of the followers. But this in no way distracts from the truth of the actual miracle act performed. Maybe you could demand that Jesus do something different that would leave a deeper impact or express a message on a higher plane.
But even so, the acts described do in fact bring the kind of response from the onlookers that we should expect. These reported miracle acts are not undermined somehow by a perceived superficiality about them and about the gawky response from the crowd. You can criticize them as to the superficiality, but not as to the authenticity of the described response from the onlookers. This described response has the ring of truth about it, even if one perceives a superficiality to it or a shallow-mindedness of the observers.
I'm not sure there's anything wrong about this form of communicating with a large number of ordinary people. Sometimes a little simplicity or superficiality might be the correct way to communicate. Maybe there's an important point to it. It might be more effective than preaching sermons out of Isaiah or expounding upon the Neo-Platonists or on Epicureanism vs. atomism or determinism etc. Showing the crowd miracles might get across to them better.
Those who saw Jesus raise Lazarus from the dead, walk on water, calm storms, cure blindness, heal deformities and "cast demons" out of people still didn't believe in his power enough to stand with him when the soldiers showed up to arrest Jesus. Instead they all "forsook him and fled."
At this point it might have been several days or weeks since his last miracle act. Maybe the initial impact on the disciples had become dulled over that time lapse. This also has the ring of truth to it. Jesus probably did no miracles in Jerusalem, because there are none reported in the synoptic gospels (other than the resurrection).
The very towns in which most of his works were done were the very places where unbelief reigned supreme, . . .
Not if you mean unbelief was stronger in these towns. Nothing suggests that.
Where he denounces Chorazin and Bethsaida and Capernaum, it says these towns had not repented, but that's not a comparison to other towns he had visited less or not at all. This condemning of the towns is better explained as words coming from his disciples years later who remembered his miracles there and were angry at those townspeople whose memories were so short. The condemnation makes more sense if it came years later, long after he was gone from the scene. The words, "For if the mighty deeds done in your midst had been done in Tyre and Sidon, they long ago would have repented . . . ," fit much better if spoken many years after those deeds, after Jesus was gone, rather than by Jesus referring to deeds he did only a few days earlier.
These words are from the Q document, and so reflect a relatively early tradition. Don't they sound like words his direct disciples would say to unresponsive people of these towns where Jesus had performed many miracle acts years earlier?
If on the other hand they are the words of Jesus himself who had just recently performed miracles in these towns, and no one believed him and just scorned him, then it's a legitimate question why they didn't believe and respond favorably following such convincing proofs of his power. But the words do not seem to be from the time of the "mighty deeds" referred to, but to a more distant time in the future from those deeds.
Perhaps they could be words Jesus himself spoke several months later after the deeds he performed. In that case the time lapse could explain the falling away of those people and their decreasing faith, even if the "mighty deeds" were very impressive and had had a strong impact at the time they happened. So this condemning of the towns for nonbelief or nonrepentance does not indicate that the "mighty deeds" never really happened, but that there was a significant time lapse since they happened and those people had a "short memory" for which they are criticized.
Even this passage, from the Q document, implies that Jesus was a miracle-worker, and this is of early origin. So the notion that the miracles are much later additions is contradicted here.
Even Jesus himself was reported to have said that an "Evil and adulterous generation seeks a sign," an escape clause written into the text for the benefit of those marketing this hooey because they could not actually produce such signs themselves and had to rely on their ability to sell folks on the gimmick (lie) that the signs had already been given.
Yes, this could be such an "escape clause" for later evangelists who could not perform the same miracle acts. If so, it in no way contradicts the miracle accounts about Jesus, but only shows that his later followers could not produce such miracles. This is no indication of any "hooey" or "gimmick (lie)," but only that the disciples or evangelists later were unable to produce any miracles, even though people were demanding this from them. So the evangelists attributed to Jesus the retort that they are not entitled to such signs.
It would have been more honest to tell them that the signs had already been provided by Jesus, and that this evidence ought to be sufficient.
The parable of the Rich Man and Lazarus belittles the effect of the miraculous, asserting that if folks won't believe Moses and the prophets they won't believe even if someone raises from the dead.
You may be right that this passage belittles the miraculous. It shows that there was a general disdain for miracles, or some forms of miracles. This would be very consistent with the reality that Jesus actually did perform miracle acts but that his later followers could not. And thus later Christian evangelists played down the miraculous. It would also explain why St. Paul would disdain the miraculous, other than the resurrection of Jesus, and would make no mention of other miracles or suggest anything that would cause some to demand a "sign" from him.
So this pattern to belittle the miraculous in no way casts doubt on the miracles of Jesus as actual historical events, but even supports these miracle accounts, explaining why people were demanding miracles but had to be told it was "evil" to demand a sign. It was because of the reports of the earlier Jesus miracles that they were making these demands.
If you want an argument against this interpretation -- why they demanded a "sign" -- you should look for them making such demands BEFORE Jesus, or there being a hunger for such miracles and lots of such stories circulating in the region in the period prior -- from 100 BC up to about 30 or 40 AD. You won't find much there.
The fascination with miracle stories and the demand for them explodes in the period AFTER Jesus, from 50 or 100 AD and afterward. This is where a rash of new miracle stories comes on the scene. Prior to this, all you have is Zeus and Apollo and Asclepius and Osiris etc. and Moses and Elijah. It's really not true that there was some fertile ground for miracle stories leading into the Jesus miracle stories. There was no such groundwork being laid. Rather, the Jesus miracle stories pop up from nowhere, and then there is an explosion of new miracle stories afterward going on for 2 or 3 centuries.
All this is best explained by the fact that the miracle acts of Jesus are real events, and then this set off the new explosion of miracle stories we see subsequently.
Jesus ostensibly told Thomas, "Blessed you are because you have seen and believed. Even more blessed are those who haven't seen yet believed." This clever bit of marketing pats the back of the believer who simply accepts the incredible story with absolutely no evidence.
But they DID have evidence. They just didn't see Jesus directly, so had to believe in his power based on the reports rather than direct observation. Isn't it appropriate to believe if there is good evidence, even if you don't see directly what it is you believe? There are abundant examples of such believing based on evidence.
Lots of clever marketing, nothing of substance.
There's plenty of substance. The reports of his miracles are substance, just like what we believe happened in history comes from substance in the form of reports of it rather than from direct observation. Where would we be if we could only believe that which we directly observe ourselves? Why can't we have knowledge, or reasonable belief, true belief, based on probability from evidence? Isn't it good to seek the truth even if we can't get to it directly and have the absolute certainty of direct contact?
Lots of escape clauses to explain why god behaves today exactly like he would if he didn't exist.
The phrase "god behaves today exactly like he would if he didn't exist" is self-contradictory. But rather than picking it apart and trying to salvage something from it, it's better to look at the term "escape clause," because this seems to mean just any argument someone gives in reply to an objection from the other side.
So, e.g., an environmentalist answers a global warming denier who argues that some place he knows of is actually colder today than it used to be, and so global warming must be a hoax; and the environmentalist's counterargument is that the global warming theory itself provides that there would be some places where it would get colder rather than warmer, because of the climate conditions, so that the overall temperature rises even though in certain places it would get colder. And the denier then charges that this is an "escape clause" resorted to by the environmentalist in order to wiggle out of this obvious refutation of his belief in global warming.
And so any argument a believer in something makes to save his theory is condemned as an "escape clause" contrived in desperation to save the belief. Every belief in anything, even the heliocentric theory, could be refuted by just saying all its arguments are only "escape clauses" to try to prop up the theory in the face of some contrary evidence.
You can plainly see that the earth is flat by just walking a mile or 2 and seeing that it stays level overall, with the ups and downs offsetting each other, and the sphericalist who tries to explain the truth is ridiculed for using "escape clauses" to deny the reality that should be apparent to anyone who just looks with their own eyes.
So no matter how scientific or logical you are in your reasoning, and no matter what your belief is -- that the earth is round, that humans evolved, that the moon landing really happened and was not staged -- all your reasons can be dismissed as "escape clauses" you are fabricating in order to save your belief which is obviously contrary to the plain truth anyone can see.
So the "escape clause" argument is a convenient universal refutation of any belief you dislike. And presumably whichever side uses this "escape clause" argument first is the winner of the debate. So you can win any debate in your opening statement by saying everything the other side says are just "escape clauses," and so the other side is immediately refuted and you win. All you have to do is win the coin toss to determine which side speaks first.
Plenty of good reason to keep marketing it today though, as it has virtually no cost of goods, turns high profit margins and gives the purveyor considerable power over huge demographics.
Christ-bashing and Bible-bashing are also big business that rake in the profits. There are people who make a living at it.
So then, the fact that someone today makes a profit proves that Jesus Christ did not do any miracle acts 2000 years ago? These profiteers today must have planted the evidence in the gospel documents telling of those events? Oh those bastards'll stop at nothing! -- even reach back over the centuries to plant false evidence in order to mislead us and maintain their grip on power today.