Then comes the pivot: Jesus changed the story.
You’re right again—he did. But the change wasn’t just narrative, it was epistemic. Christianity didn’t simply present another origin myth; it made a universal truth claim: that this one figure wasn’t just a teacher, or a prophet for a local people, but the incarnation of God himself, and that belief in him was required for salvation. That shift—from tribal mythology to universal metaphysics—is what demands a different level of scrutiny.
One of the most important lessons in science is to learn to ask the right question. First of all, is the epistemology in this instance a scientific epistemology, capable of being unravelled by science? If, as I am suggesting, it is a different kind of epistemology, what kind of truths are we looking at, and what kind of evidence do we need to support it?
I suggest that we are asking the wrong questions and looking for the wrong answers. But let us address those "scientific" questions first.
Did Jesus even exist? And are the accounts of him in the Bible largely correct? On the whole, the broad consensus is yes. Jesus was a real person and the accounts in the Bible were recorded truthfully as understood by the people involved at that time
The gospels were not recorded. There were written decades after the fact.
. In taking this view, there are a few caveats. The original authors of the Bible believed in miracles and may have interpreted natural events as miracles and perceived normal people as angels. Their view of reality is a different lens from ours. Their priorities are different from ours and their society had more irregularities than ours, e.g. their weighs are measures were different in different places and likely not as accurate as ours. We simply cannot view the historical evidence with the same expectations we have of other scientific arguments.
If the people who wrote the bible were making literal truth claims about the world, then we must view those claims with the same expectations of modern science and historiography. You are undercutting your own argument. You are saying they may have interpreted natural events as miracles and normal people as angels. Indeed, they did seem to view it that way, but to the extent that they did, they were wrong. Just because they did so interpret events and people obviously does not make it true.
And ancient Greeks viewed the sun and moon as gods. We get that. But they were wrong. Even back then, one of the ancients — his name escapes me at the moment — came along and said, “No, the moon is a rock. The sun is a hot rock.”
Did the resurrection happen? Well, the scientific view is that it cannot have happened so the apostles must have been mistaken. But, mistaken or not, there's little doubt that they were recording what they thought actually happened.
No, they recorded nothing. There is no surviving contemporaneous accounts of Jesus at all.
The Bible, as I have said before, were written by human beings. At no time was there any pretence that the Bible was written by God nor even dictated by God to the authors who recorded what they were told.
Correct. And human beings make mistakes all the time.
Interestingly, by the way, at no time in the Bible was it recorded that Jesus told anyone to put together the Bible so that everyone can reference it. But anyone reading the Bible will notice two things - the writers tried to be accurate and they didn't attempt to impose an external, more coherent narrative.
How do you know? Of course, the opposite is true — they did impose an ex post facto account of Jesus’s life because none of the people who wrote the gospels were around to witness what they wrote about.
They allowed the contradictions to remain. Yes, they picked and chose what they thought were more reliable, and perhaps what they thought were the best. But I don't see any evidence that they tampered with the evidence itself. Within their limitations, they tried to tell the truth as they see it.
What evidence? They had no evidence to tamper with.
In that sense, the Bible is a fairly reliable historical document in that the authors were trying to truthfully depict their reality.
It’s nor reliable at all. Just because they writers were trying to “truthfully depict their reality” — and it is not at all clear they were in fact trying to do that at all — does not mean they succeeded. And, as you yourself said, they interpreted natural events as miracles and people as angels. So even if they were trying to faithfully depict reality, they failed.
And, of course, many events described in the bible simply did not happen. The world was not made ins six days. There was no first man and woman — there was a first evolved population of humans. There was never a worldwide flood. And so on.
From that perspective, I think we can safely say that the resurrection was believed by the authors of the New Testament to be true.
Maybe, maybe not. Maybe they were writing fiction. Maybe they were producing something on the order of the ancient Greeks — what they acknowledged was the “noble lie” to make society cohere better. Indeed, there is plenty of evidence for Greco-Roman influences on the biblical texts and that the story of Jesus has parallels with that of Dionysus.
But even if they believed the resurrection to be true, that does not make it so!
We don't believe it because we don't believe that it could have happened. If it weren't so unbelievable, it would have been accepted as historical fact. For example, we don't doubt or question the Last Supper.
Well, actually, many do. Some even question whether a literal Jesus existed at all. But say the last supper did happen. So? People eat suppers, even last suppers, all the time. It is not an extraordinary claim.
Given the uncertainties around the Bible as well as the difference in fundamental worldview, we might be forgiven if we disregard the Bible altogether. Unfortunately, what Jesus claimed and did is far too important for us to do that.
Why?
The context of Jesus and his claims are interesting, particularly when considered from the human "logical" context. He claimed that he was the Messiah the Jews were waiting for, but everything he did and the whole circumstances surrounding his birth and ministry contradicted their expectations. They were expecting a king, someone like King David perhaps but much better. Instead they got a pauper who roamed the countryside. They probably expected him to round up an army and conquer the world through powerful battles filled with the supernatural acts of God. He couldn't be more disappointing.
Assuming all these things attributed to Jesus actually happened. But even if they did, the idea that there was an itinerant preacher saying this and that is not an extraordinary claim. We get such roaming the streets even today.
Instead of taking their side, he opposed their religious practices and many of his criticisms were towards their religious leaders. He didn't uphold their religious laws but showed compassion and love for the rejects of society. He turned their religion upside down. And this at a time when religion was the identity of a whole nation.
It’s not at all clear that he failed to uphold the core Jewish religious laws, but whether he did or not is irrelevant to the truth claim of the resurrection and the literal existence of God.
He claimed that he was here to bring people to God but he died a disgraceful death and at the time of his death, his followers were completely disillusioned and were in disarray. Even his most faithful follower, Peter, denied him three times.
His ministry only lasted 3 years. He didn't plan anything beyond that. After his resurrection, his appeared to his disciples and essentially told them to tell the world what happened. The key to his ministry is that he came, he died and he was resurrected.
Evidence absent. And yes, since this is a truth claim, we must examine by modern evidentiary standards, not by the standards of people who erroneously interpreted natural events as miracles and some people as angels.
He didn't tell them what to preach in the sense of a new code of behaviour and the rules that follow it. His message was, he came to set us free.
We have no idea what his message was because he left no writings behind and there are no contemporaneous records.
At the time of his death, he said that his work was done. He predicted everything that happened to him, including telling his followers that they would betray him and telling them he would rise again after the days.
Evidence absent that he rose again after three days. If he did not, he made a false prediction. And there is no evidence that it did happen, not even by ancient standards, since no eyewitness accounts survive.
They didn't believe him. And were genuinely shocked when he did.
Evidence absent that he rose after three days.
And excitedly spread the word of his resurrection as a result. They were not told to start a new religion. They were told to tell everyone about him, that he existed. To tell everyone the story of his life. The Bible is an attempt to do just that.
Except these accounts occur decades after his death.
C.S. Lewis said that if you were to read the Bible, and take Jesus Christ at face value, he is either a lunatic or the Son of God, exactly what he claimed to be.
Classic false dilemma which has been deconstructed many times.
He did not claim to be a great teacher in the sense of presenting us with the a new set of moral laws. He said he came to fulfil these laws. Most of his parables were interpretations of our innate moral code. He sets up a situation and presented a response that he claims to be the right response. It often contradicted the religious practices at the time, but it rang true.
Rang true in what sense? If you mean in the sense of a coherent moral code, a binding mythology around which people could gather and agree, sure. That is why we have churches even today. If you mean “rang true” is the sense about being
literally true, that he rose from the dead and there is a literal God, then no. I hear no bells ringing at all, and you’ve given us no evidence that they are ringing.
So, the question we need to ask is not around the validity of Jesus in terms of historical facts but whether his story as depicted in the Bible rings true for us today.
Not for anyone who is not a Christian already.
You seem at this point only to be responding to NHC, which is perfectly fine. However, in this post and others, I’ve made a number of cogent rebuttals to your posts that you have ignored, which suggests to me you are not really interested in having a true dialogue, except with NHC. Again, that his fine — he does a splendid job — but unless I get responses from you to my posts, I’ll withdraw from the thread.