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The Case for Christianity

The core teachings attributed to Christ, and his mystical insights if we accept them as such, were appropriated by later writers who transferred the values of the teaching to the selfish hope for an afterlife, eternal no less — and this was later appropriated by Constantine and the evolving Church into yet another power structure to control people’s thoughts and actions. It worked wonderfully well, I must say.
 
In a way, yes. I'm saying that the claim of Jesus’s resurrection is not just about scientific or historical proof. And part of the fundamental problem with historical proof is its uncertainty. The further back we go, the less certain we are. Our discourse belongs to a different domain of inquiry, one that includes philosophical and existential considerations.

Rather than fixating solely on historical verifiability, I suggest we can more profitably compare the moral and philosophical weight of different traditions—Christianity alongside Buddhism, Confucianism, or Socratic thought, for example. We may even include modern philosophical ideologies, like Existentialism itself. Or modern psychology. Many of the earlier traditions emerged in antiquity, where historical documentation is sparse. Yet we do not and should not dismiss their validity on that basis.

I appreciate this redirection, and I think you’re highlighting something important—namely, that traditions like Christianity, Buddhism, or Confucianism can be compared in terms of their moral, philosophical, and existential contributions. Absolutely. That’s a productive discussion, and one I’m happy to have.

But let’s be clear: this is a different conversation than the one about the resurrection. You began with a historical claim: that Jesus rose from the dead, and that this event was so important that it changed the entire religious and epistemological landscape. That is not a philosophical metaphor. It is a truth claim about something that either happened in real space and time—or it didn’t.

You’re now suggesting we pivot from whether the resurrection is true in the historical or scientific sense to whether Christianity is valuable as a moral or existential framework. That’s fine—but they’re not interchangeable questions. I might agree that Christianity, like Buddhism or Stoicism, offers profound insights into forgiveness, suffering, and meaning. But that doesn’t make it true that someone rose from the dead, nor that belief in that resurrection determines our eternal fate.

Historical uncertainty, as you mention, is always a challenge. But the resurrection is unique because it makes a singular, supernatural claim with enormous consequences—and asks us to believe it not metaphorically, but literally. We’re not being asked to meditate on death and rebirth in a Buddhist sense. We’re being asked to believe that a dead man walked again, physically, in history. And for that, existential resonance isn’t enough. The question is not, “Does this tradition help us make meaning?” The question is, “Did this actually happen?”

If Christianity were offered purely as a philosophy—like Stoicism or Confucianism—then we could assess it purely on moral and existential grounds. But that’s not what it claims. It claims to be founded on a historical miracle—and then builds an entire salvation framework on top of that miracle. That’s why historical scrutiny matters.

So yes, let’s compare traditions. Let’s talk about love, suffering, identity, and the human condition. But let’s not pretend that Christianity is just another moral philosophy when at its core it asks us to accept a physical resurrection as the linchpin of salvation. If we’re going to treat it that way, then it has to meet the standards that all such claims must face: evidence, coherence, and testability. Otherwise, we’ve abandoned truth and settled for comfort. And that’s not what philosophy—ancient or modern—should ever ask us to do.
You mention the problem of circular testimony. That’s fair, but it's also worth noting that the New Testament includes figures like doubting Thomas who initially doubted, suggesting that skepticism was present from the beginning. Moreover, if someone truly witnessed the resurrection, wouldn’t that experience almost inevitably convert them? In that sense, any evidence of the resurrection would be by necessity internal to the movement.

But the heart of my argument is this: even if we could prove beyond all doubt that Jesus rose from the dead, would that compel our allegiance? Suppose the risen Christ asked us to do something we know to be wrong, like kill someone — would we comply simply because of the established miracle? Surely our concern here is not just on the event but on the character and teachings of the one who is risen.

You raise an important point—and a thoughtful one. The idea that even a verified resurrection wouldn’t automatically justify allegiance, especially if the risen figure commanded something immoral, is a serious and welcome challenge. You’re absolutely right: miracle does not equal moral authority. A resurrection might prove power, but not virtue. And you’re right to say that the moral content of Jesus’ teachings must be part of the assessment, not just the fact of the resurrection.

But that moral question presupposes we’ve established the event—and that’s precisely the sticking point.

The problem is not that witnesses of a resurrection would believe in it. That’s expected. The problem is that we have no way of independently verifying that they were truly witnesses in the first place. The Gospel authors do not write as disinterested third-party chroniclers. They write as believers, decades after the fact, based on oral traditions, theological agendas, and the needs of early Christian communities. Even the story of “doubting Thomas” is not an independent attestation of skepticism; it’s a literary device to address future readers’ doubts—and ends with Jesus saying, “Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.” In other words, it invites faith without evidence.

Now, as for the deeper philosophical question you raise—if Jesus rose from the dead and asked us to commit evil, should we obey?—I completely agree: no. A miracle doesn’t override moral reasoning. In fact, if a deity demanded something we find immoral, we should question whether that deity is good—not redefine goodness to suit the deity. This is precisely why many reject divine command theory, which tries to root morality in God’s will rather than in principles we can rationally evaluate.

So yes, belief in resurrection—even if true—does not demand submission. But that just further illustrates why the moral beauty of Jesus’ teachings must be assessed independently of any supernatural claim. And here’s the irony: if the moral value of the message stands on its own, then the resurrection becomes unnecessary to validate it. And if the morality doesn’t hold up under scrutiny, then no amount of miracle could redeem it.

So in either case, the miracle isn’t the foundation—it’s the claim that demands the most scrutiny. And as of now, the only evidence for that miracle is internal testimony written decades later by committed believers. That’s not enough to ground belief in a supernatural event—especially when the consequences of belief are framed as eternal and exclusive.

So your shift in focus—from event to ethics—is a valuable one. But we can’t let it bypass the threshold issue: whether the event happened at all. And if it didn’t, then we’re not talking about divine authority—we’re just talking about stories. And stories, however moving, are not facts.
You suggest that if Christianity is merely a resonant story, then it belongs in the category of myth. But I would distinguish between stories that originate as myths (like Odysseus or Ramayana) and historical lives that acquire mythic resonance over time. I believe Jesus was a historical figure—like Buddha or Socrates—and that his mythologization happened later.

That’s a helpful clarification—and I agree with the distinction you’re drawing. There’s a real difference between stories that originate as outright myth (like Odysseus or Rama, who were never assumed to be fully historical figures) and historical individuals like Jesus, Socrates, or the Buddha whose lives became mythologized after the fact.

I also agree that Jesus was very likely a historical figure. That’s the consensus view among historians: that there was a Jewish preacher named Yeshua who was crucified under Roman authority and who inspired a movement. The real question isn’t whether Jesus existed—it’s what can reliably be known about him, and whether the mythic claims that developed afterward are grounded in anything more than belief.

In that sense, your distinction—between mythic origins and mythic elevation—is exactly the reason scrutiny is so important. Because if the resurrection, the miracles, the divine titles, and the cosmic mission of Jesus are later theological constructions layered onto a historical figure, then Christianity isn’t just “a resonant story”—it becomes a belief system built on mythologized claims presented as literal truth. And that distinction matters, especially when those claims are used to justify exclusive truth, moral authority, or eternal consequences.

Socrates was also mythologized—just look at how Plato depicts him. But we don’t build systems of salvation around whether he actually spoke to his daimonion or stood still in the snow. The Buddha’s story was shaped over centuries, but most Buddhists treat the supernatural aspects symbolically, not dogmatically. With Christianity, however, the resurrection isn’t presented as a later embellishment or a metaphor for inner awakening—it’s positioned as the core event upon which all meaning, authority, and salvation rest.

So if you’re saying Jesus was a historical person whose story gained mythic resonance, I’m with you. But once the mythic layers are treated as literal truth—especially the resurrection, divine sonship, and eternal consequence—they move out of the literary or philosophical domain and into the realm of historical and metaphysical claims. And it’s there that faith must meet evidence.

We can—and should—appreciate the moral and symbolic power of Jesus’ story. But when belief in its literal truth becomes a condition for eternal significance, we have to ask: which parts are history, and which parts are theology? Because if we can’t separate the man from the myth, then we can’t honestly say where meaning ends and dogma begins.
When I speak of something “ringing true,” I do not mean that emotional resonance substitutes for evidence. I mean that truth must also be discerned existentially—through the coherence, depth, and moral clarity of the teaching. That, too, is a kind of truth, perhaps even, a more important truth.

Thanks for clarifying—it’s an important distinction, and I appreciate that you’re not suggesting emotional resonance alone should settle the question. You’re pointing to something deeper: the idea that truth can be discerned not just through empirical data, but through existential coherence—through what speaks to our moral intuitions, lived experience, and inner sense of what is right and meaningful.

And I agree—there is such a thing as existential or moral truth. It’s how we evaluate the richness of a philosophy, the integrity of a worldview, the inner logic of a way of life. That kind of truth matters deeply. It helps us decide what kind of people we want to be, what values we uphold, and what kind of meaning we find in the world. So yes, when a teaching “rings true” in that sense, it’s not trivial—it’s powerful.

But here’s where we have to be careful: existential coherence is not the same as factual truth. A story can be morally profound and psychologically insightful, and still be fictional. The Bhagavad Gita, the Tao Te Ching, or even Dostoevsky’s “The Brothers Karamazov” might ring deeply true in their moral and existential weight—but that doesn’t make them records of literal, historical events.

So when Christianity teaches compassion, forgiveness, or nonviolence, we can evaluate those teachings on moral and philosophical grounds. But when it claims a man rose from the dead, defeated death, and offers eternal salvation contingent on belief—that is not a moral truth. It’s a factual one. And factual truth, by its very nature, requires a different standard: evidence, logic, and historical reliability.

You can say, “I find the life and teachings of Jesus profoundly meaningful.” That’s a personal truth, and I won’t dispute it. But when someone says, “He rose from the dead, and therefore you must believe—or you are lost,” that moves beyond moral insight into metaphysical demand. And that claim must face the same scrutiny we apply to any truth about the external world.

So yes, existential truth is real and vital. But when it’s used to underpin literal claims about the structure of reality and the fate of the soul, it can no longer stand on resonance alone. At that point, it has to do more than “ring true.” It has to be true. And that’s a standard we should never lower, no matter how comforting the story.
I agree that emotional appeal alone cannot ground belief. But neither can factual proof, if our concern is with meaning and moral discernment. The real question, in my view, is not merely whether Jesus rose, but whether his life and teaching still speaks to us as something true.

I appreciate the refinement here—and I agree, in part. If the conversation were solely about moral discernment and meaning, then yes, factual proof wouldn’t be enough. A verified event doesn’t automatically carry moral weight. The atomic bomb was a factual achievement, but not a moral one. Meaning and ethics require more than verification; they require reflection, context, and judgment.

But here’s the rub: Christianity doesn’t just offer Jesus as a wise moral teacher whose ideas “speak to us.” It claims that he was crucified, buried, and literally rose from the dead—and that this event is not only central to the faith, but also necessary to affirm in order to be saved. That’s not a metaphor. That’s not optional. That is a concrete, historical, theological claim about something that either happened or didn’t. And if it didn’t happen, Paul himself says, “then your faith is in vain.”

So when you say the real question is whether Jesus’ life and teachings “still speak to us as something true,” I hear that as a valuable philosophical inquiry—but not one that can resolve the truth claims on which Christianity actually hinges. Because even if we decide his teachings are noble, compassionate, or inspiring, that alone doesn’t validate the central Christian claim that he defeated death and offers eternal life to those who believe in him.

That’s the distinction that must be maintained. If you want to treat Jesus like Socrates or the Buddha—someone whose insights enrich our moral imagination—then the question of the resurrection can fade into symbolic territory. But that’s not how the Christian faith presents it. It insists that the resurrection happened, that it mattered, and that belief in it is essential. If that claim is false, then however meaningful the teachings may be, the theological structure collapses.

So yes, ask whether Jesus’ message speaks to the human condition. But if the faith itself claims that a literal, world-altering miracle lies at its heart, then that is the claim that must be tested first. Otherwise, we’re not embracing Christianity—we’re redefining it as something it never claimed to be.

NHC
 
The ex-post facto mythologizing of him as the son of god who rose from the dead is, I would suggest, a way of wowing the masses into accepting yet another ism, another authority figure. And it worked.
You're so much nicer about this than I tend to be.

I think a bunch of religious cultists had to invent increasingly ridiculous legends to keep the grift going. Once it became obvious that the eye witnesses to Jesus weren't buying the crap, evangelists like Saul of Tarsus started paganizing the cult to appeal to a wider audience. The results are Christianity.
Tom
 
The rise of the Church moved the core issue away from the value of Jesus’s reputed teachings, to something utterly different that in effect devalued them — that no matter how good a person you are on this earth, you must believe that Christ was resurrected and a literal God exists, or you are cast into hellfire. Pascal’s Wager unintentionally illustrates how the existential goal posts were moved. Moreover, you can be bad your whole life but if your repent on your deathbed, you’re saved.
 
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The core teachings attributed to Christ, and his mystical insights if we accept them as such, were appropriated by later writers who transferred the values of the teaching to the selfish hope for an afterlife, eternal no less — and this was later appropriated by Constantine and the evolving Church into yet another power structure to control people’s thoughts and actions. It worked wonderfully well, I must say.
The Nicaea Creed was a loyalty oath to the new theology which affirmed a diine Jesus.

The RCC form the get go

1. You must believe in Jesus who rose from the dead and god.
2. Yo8 have to go trough the church to get to Jesus and god.
 
And yet Jesus said pray in private. Wonder what he’d think of the Vatican.
 
Since this thread is now all over the place, like a churchy kudzu, I'll add that one of the weirdest things about becoming a Christian must be the belief that God knows all your thoughts and is inside your head all the time (Hebrews 4, et al.) I simply can't imagine what that experience is like. Not only is the omniscient God the ultimate Big Brother, but, if you really think that's what happening, wouldn't you be at a pitch of self-consciousness all day? And wouldn't God have to be so oceanic (wrong word, our oceans are like a raindrop in the scale of the known universe) as to be impersonal and unrelatable? More like a data base with a Kim Jung Un affect. He -- since they think he's a dude -- would have more backup files than Google + Facebook + iCloud. And this dude would have to be impervious to boredom, or he would long since have blown up the world. Would you want to know the full load of minutia + bullshit + whimsy that a single person's mind is full of? Look at the next middle school student you spot walking past you. (They travel in packs, so make this a couple of 'em.) Would you want to spend even five minutes inside their heads? Now try processing every goddamn idea, perception, gossip item, resentment, attempt to impress their peers, sex thought, obsession with power struggle with parents, all the junk that's in their heads in a day of teen life. Come to think of it, it would bore me to tears to review the thoughts I've had just today, since 7a.m. This omniscience fantasy is off the charts bizarre.
 
Jesus rising is the keystone to Christianity. It is the only thing that matters.
If that’s true, it relegates Christianity to the status of any other cult founded on impossible fables.
So, what in particular vaulted it to the World’s Largest (other than by aggregating the numbers of incompatible sub-sects)? Mere riches? The opulence, pomp and ceremony of The Vatican?
It mystifies me.

Authoritarianism is the one-word answer.

Once Christianity became the official religion of an empire—specifically, the Roman Empire under Constantine in the 4th century—it spread through imperial mechanisms. This expansion didn’t rely solely on the spiritual appeal of the message but was backed by power structures. Christianity was then transmitted to successor states and colonial powers that continued the pattern of spread through conquest, colonization, and forced conversion. In this way, imperialism became a vehicle of authoritarian expansion.

A notable example is the Spanish colonization of the Americas, where Catholicism was used as both a spiritual and political tool to subjugate indigenous populations. Another example is Charlemagne's forced conversions of the Saxons in the 8th and 9th centuries, where refusal to convert to Christianity was punishable by death. And of course, the Inquisition—a series of institutions within the Catholic Church—exemplifies how internal control was maintained through coercion, persecution, and suppression of dissent.

But even before Christianity became the religion of an empire, a key shift had already occurred: it moved beyond the bounds of tribal or ethnic religions. Unlike Judaism, which was closely tied to a specific people and cultural identity, Christianity opened itself up to anyone willing to convert. This universality gave it a structural advantage—greater scalability, if you will—in terms of membership.

Going back further, in the earliest stages of the faith, there was a spectrum of belief about who Jesus was. Some early Christian groups saw him as a human teacher or prophet, while others promoted his divine nature. Texts like the Gospel of Thomas present a very different picture of Jesus, one that emphasizes divine immanence—God within all people—rather than exclusive divinity in a single figure. These alternate views existed before being officially declared heretical, such as in the Council of Nicaea in 325 CE, which formalized the doctrine of Jesus’ divinity and laid the groundwork for what would become Christian orthodoxy.

It’s likely that, assuming Jesus did exist, his death by crucifixion created a crisis of belief for his followers. The cognitive dissonance between a miracle-working messiah and a humiliating public execution demanded explanation. As often happens in movements with charismatic leaders, the narrative adapted: instead of a failure, the crucifixion became part of a divine plan. Resurrection became a central tenet, and dissenting views were increasingly sidelined.

Over time, theological diversity was systematically narrowed. Councils, creeds, and ecclesiastical hierarchies selected certain texts as canonical and rejected others. The resulting Bible and the doctrines that grew from it were the products of deliberation and exclusion. These decisions were often made not purely for spiritual reasons, but also for the sake of cohesion, control, and institutional continuity.

So yes, the divinity of Christ became central, not purely because it was the most compelling spiritual idea, but because it was the one that survived and was enforced within a power structure. What we now call “Christianity” is the result of those historical, political, and authoritarian processes, not merely a spontaneous worldwide embrace of an original message.
Excellent explanation. I just think … it SHOULD be be a harder sell. Decades ago I witnessed the piety of poor Mexican villagers barely living at subsistence, bringing foodstuffs - chickens, grain - to their church, the inside of which though small, was as gaudy as could be.
I’m still mystified.
 
Fear of a god who knows everything you do.

Control by fear of the illiterate and superstitious.
 


For over twenty years I've been promoting Christian atheism on this site. My very first post here was about the work of Constantin Brunner, who argues in his book, Our Christ: The Revolt of the Mystical Genius, that Jesus was an atheist. For a synopsis, see "Jesus as the atheistic mystic."

If we take seriously Brunner’s characterization of Jesus as an atheistic mystic, perhaps a modern heir would be the late Krishnamurti, groomed by the Theosophical Society to be the World Teacher. He famously repudiated all of it, declaring “truth is a pathless land,” and abjured all religion, politics, cultural influences, all isms, and the very idea of conditioning itself.

Out of all of the "guru-like" figures, Krishnamurti is one I have a lot of respect for.
 
Holy Cow, we are really getting somewhere, huh? :ROFLMAO::LOL::ROFLMAO::LOL::ROFLMAO: I really do appreciate and enjoy our conversation here. Let's recap what I've presented and see if I have made any subversive moves.

Scientific Approach
I began by saying that I am going to present a case for Christianity that is scientific: by which I mean the approach advocated by @bilby - observe, hypothesize, test, repeat. By this I mean that I will reference fairly objective "facts" and propose a hypothesis (of sorts), test it by argument, and repeat. I hope I have been reasonably consistent here and have not presented fiction as fact nor fact as fiction.

Language
One of my stipulations is that Christianity is not as complicated as we make it out to be and for that reason, I am presenting my case in fairly layman terms. At the end of the day, we do teach our children about Jesus at a very early age and it needs to make sense to their minds. I also suggested that ancient minds share this quality. They look at life from an existential perspective and have no qualms about presenting history as mythology, and vice versa. The fact that mythology does not fully align with reality does not bother them, just as children are not really bothered when they discover that Santa Claus is really daddy in disguise. But I did not propose that we do so and I have not done so either. Scientific factuality may not matter to them but it matters to us.

Spirit
I began by defining Spirit as referring to anything that's alive. I did that because I want to steer us away from spirituality as a nebulous supernatural concept and locate our conversation around our everyday experienced (or existential) reality. I have problems with the word, existential, since it is usually related to Existentialism, which is a whole different discussion.

Existential reality vs Scientific reality
I then pointed us towards this existential reality which, I suggest, is shared with ancient minds and which will help us understand where they are coming from. I made the point that from this existential point of view, even fairy tales and myths are important because they speak to a part of our reality that lies outside what we normally associate with science. But I did not suggest that we have to conflate myth with history and confuse fiction with fact.

I appreciate this redirection, and I think you’re highlighting something important—namely, that traditions like Christianity, Buddhism, or Confucianism can be compared in terms of their moral, philosophical, and existential contributions. Absolutely. That’s a productive discussion, and one I’m happy to have.
I want to point out that this is not a redirection from my point of view. It is the perspective I wanted to take from the start. I'm not looking at the "moral, philosophical, and existential contribution" in isolation but side by side with the historical facts that are presented to us. We need, at some point, to start delving into the Bible and I don't want to do that without a clear framework and shared understanding.

But let’s be clear: this is a different conversation than the one about the resurrection. You began with a historical claim: that Jesus rose from the dead, and that this event was so important that it changed the entire religious and epistemological landscape. That is not a philosophical metaphor. It is a truth claim about something that either happened in real space and time—or it didn’t.
It is not a different conversation. As you have pointed out, and I have also presented as such to you, Jesus comes to us as a historical person, perhaps mythologized. We need to be able to separate what is reasonably true from what is possibly mythology. He didn't just present to us a new moral framework, he asked his disciples to share his story. Tell the world about him. Did he know that he will be mythologized? I wouldn't know. But he didn't mean to present a new moral philosophy. He came to save the world and he presented himself as the Son of God.

You’re now suggesting we pivot from whether the resurrection is true in the historical or scientific sense to whether Christianity is valuable as a moral or existential framework. That’s fine—but they’re not interchangeable questions. I might agree that Christianity, like Buddhism or Stoicism, offers profound insights into forgiveness, suffering, and meaning. But that doesn’t make it true that someone rose from the dead, nor that belief in that resurrection determines our eternal fate.
I am suggesting no such pivot. I am saying we need to hold both in mind. As an aside, children have no problem doing that. I suggest that the ancient mind, as well, has no problem with that. Even in everyday conversation today, we exaggerate to make a point and attribute supernatural capabilities to our heroes. Like I said, super heroes are making a killing at the box office and Marvel Studio have even created a Marvel Universe around their superheroes to further encourage the sense of reality around what is obviously fiction. I am saying that such fiction are also important in our existential reality. Art matters. So does poetry. And dance. And all the other activities we engage in that are not scientific in nature. Including golf and football.

As we hold both in mind, we need to be clear when we are moving away from fiction and when we are dealing with facts. But I am also suggesting that they are not separate arguments. They both contribute to our existential reality.

Historical uncertainty, as you mention, is always a challenge. But the resurrection is unique because it makes a singular, supernatural claim with enormous consequences—and asks us to believe it not metaphorically, but literally. We’re not being asked to meditate on death and rebirth in a Buddhist sense. We’re being asked to believe that a dead man walked again, physically, in history. And for that, existential resonance isn’t enough. The question is not, “Does this tradition help us make meaning?” The question is, “Did this actually happen?”
Absolutely. But we can't really know at this point. I may suggest that if it were possible to establish the resurrection without doubt, it would have removed from many the fundamental possibility of choice. Who amongst us would defy God? There are some historical evidence around it, and Christian "historians" argue that this is enough but secular historians argue that it is not. We have examples of atheists looking into the evidence and becoming convinced and converted and Christian historians who also looked into the evidence and denounced Christianity as a result. Again, it is not an argument that I can engage in. Nor do I want to. I just want to include in this discussion the historical factuality of Jesus because it relates directly with what he is claiming.

What I am saying though, is that even if it were true, is it enough to establish Jesus's claims? Or conversely, if it were not true, do we then jettison everything he said?

If Christianity were offered purely as a philosophy—like Stoicism or Confucianism—then we could assess it purely on moral and existential grounds. But that’s not what it claims. It claims to be founded on a historical miracle—and then builds an entire salvation framework on top of that miracle. That’s why historical scrutiny matters.
And I totally agree. But it needs to be taken forward as a whole, not just on the paucity of one event.

So if you’re saying Jesus was a historical person whose story gained mythic resonance, I’m with you. But once the mythic layers are treated as literal truth—especially the resurrection, divine sonship, and eternal consequence—they move out of the literary or philosophical domain and into the realm of historical and metaphysical claims. And it’s there that faith must meet evidence.

We can—and should—appreciate the moral and symbolic power of Jesus’ story. But when belief in its literal truth becomes a condition for eternal significance, we have to ask: which parts are history, and which parts are theology? Because if we can’t separate the man from the myth, then we can’t honestly say where meaning ends and dogma begins.
And this is exactly what we need to do. The stakes are very high. If we take the Bible too literally, we may go down the path of evangelism and start to condemn anyone who is not a baptized Christian. If we ignore it, we may be ignoring something that speaks to our very existential identity. Of who we are and why we are here. If we see Jesus just as a moral prophet, we will miss his entire message.

The facts before us
Unfortunately, much of what we have about Jesus comes from the Bible. His claims are extraordinary - he is the Son of God and he has come not only to save us but to set us free. He didn't come to give us a new moral code. He came to fulfil existing moral codes. If we want to get the most out of the Bible, to see Jesus as clearly as we can, to understand what he came here to do and what he meant to teach us, we need to move carefully and read the Bible with great care. We need to understand what truth means in this context and what Jesus meant when he spoke about God. We need to decipher how ancient minds see him and how we might see him to make sense of who he is. And perhaps have a more accurate portrait of him from our viewpoint. We need to ask the right questions and consider the right data and the explanations offered around the data. Thus, while absolute certainty may elude us, the weight of historical evidence, personal experience, and existential meaning can together form a basis for reasonable faith.
 
@Brunswick1954, a lot of words that say pretty much nothing.

Scientific approach

There is no science here at all. You cannot scientifically test a claim that a man rose from the dead 2,000 years ago, when there is no evidence, no witnesses, no data, except for some writings that came well after the fact. What you can do is remember that scientifically, a man rising from the dead and flying up into a mythical fairyland in the sky contradicts all known scientific facts, and thus the claim can safely be dismissed.

Language

First, I hope you realize that not everyone teaches their children about Jesus.

You can talk about mythology and facts all you want, but mythology is mythology and facts are facts. Children are not bothered when they discover that Santa is daddy in disguise. Similarly, you not be bothered to learn that God is Santa for adults.

Spirit

You points are vapid.

Existential reality vs. scientific reality

You absolutely are saying we should confuse myth with history and facts with fiction. You’ve been doing that the whole time.

I have read the bible. I have no further need to delve into it.

It’s not reasonably true that Jesus rose from the dead.

Super heroes are fiction. Nobody here suggested that dance, poetry, art, etc., are unimportant, so please dispense with that silly strawman. Fiction is very important — until is presented as fact. Jesus rising from the dead is fiction.

Both fact and fiction contribute to our existential experience of the world — until they are confused.

Golf is utterly void of importance. 🏌️‍♂️

We do really know at this point that no one rises from the dead and flies up into heaven.

“The stakes are very high …” Pascal’s Water in 3, 2, 1 …:rolleyes: Hey, who saw that coming?

The facts before us

There is zero evidence that anyone ever rose from the dead and a mountain of evidence that this cannot happen. That is a fact.
 
The facts before us
Unfortunately, much of what we have about Jesus comes from the Bible. His claims are extraordinary - he is the Son of God and he has come not only to save us but to set us free. He didn't come to give us a new moral code. He came to fulfil existing moral codes. If we want to get the most out of the Bible, to see Jesus as clearly as we can, to understand what he came here to do and what he meant to teach us, we need to move carefully and read the Bible with great care. We need to understand what truth means in this context and what Jesus meant when he spoke about God. We need to decipher how ancient minds see him and how we might see him to make sense of who he is. And perhaps have a more accurate portrait of him from our viewpoint. We need to ask the right questions and consider the right data and the explanations offered around the data. Thus, while absolute certainty may elude us, the weight of historical evidence, personal experience, and existential meaning can together form a basis for reasonable faith.
Just about all references about Jesus are from the New Testament, leaving almost no references outside it, not simply "not much". And what is "outside" the New Testament, is at best very very vague. The claims about his claims are varied and even the Gospels evolve over time regarding Jesus and his relationship to/as god. Most remarkably, Jesus was Jewish, he didn't stop being Jewish (just allegedly was against Big Church)... yet his followers aren't Jewish and they defy the Commandment regarding the Sabbath.

The New Testament opens with a desperate plea of authority for the general populace to stop looking at them as a cult. That Matthew 1 opens as it does implies the "historical evidence" is non-existent as it wasn't historical back then, but rather contemporary. The people back then weren't buying it, Matthew 1 tells us this. There is zero historical evidence and we are only left with literary evidence of this person's existence. He is said to have fulfilled prophecies that he didn't actually fulfill from a plain face reading of the Tanakh. Authors of the New Testament twisted new elements into the stories in the Tanakh, like the Narrative of The Fall in order to help create a literary case for their messiah.

If one looks at the evidence, it doesn't support the Jesus cult.
 
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Pascal’s Pager

When you’re read to bet correctly and avoid the Lake of Fire, just page Jesus in heaven. He’ll unlock the heavenly gates for you after you kick the bucket, and give you the passcode to heaven’s bathrooms (strictly segregated by gender). Remember, the stakes are high!
 
My question to most theists-would-be is why does their God, and the God of most religions, hate women so much? Isn't God 50-50 to be be female as male, or asexual? Or batshit crazy, like Lovecraft's Azothoth? Oh, wait, maybe he is.
 
Spirituality
It has often been suggested that science has proven that God does not exist.

Two problems with that. Maybe three. First science doesn't prove things. So, even if they had "proved" God they either wouldn't be science or they don't understand what a god or science is. Which is the second problem. They don't know what a god is, or if they do they wouldn't need to prove it. Those first two problems are pretty much the same. The third problem is that it doesn't matter what is "suggested." It means nothing to suggest something.

The main thrust of this argument is that Science does not presume the existence of God and therefore we don't need the concept of God in order to explain the universe and therefore there's no God.

Really?! That's the argument?

Besides, look at the suffering and evil in this world. If God exists, why would He allow evil?

Because mankind chose it and continue to choose it. God or evil, which will it be was put before man and man decided evil, so we have evil. There isn't any evidence that God wouldn't "allow" evil.

We have moved far from the world that our ancient forefathers inhabited.

No we haven't. We still use writing, the wheel, swords and gods just as we did then. Just because we have cell phones and the internet doesn't mean we have moved away from anything. The sentiment is exaggerated arrogance and, ironically, ignorance.

Back then, believing in the supernatural was self-evident.

No, it wasn't. The "presumption" is that primitive people were ignorant and supernatural belief is ignorance because there is so much presumption and ignorance about what supernatural is. There's also a lot of fraud in that area but the same could be said of anything. Money, love, for example.

We need to see our world through their lens if we were to discuss the existence of God.

Well, we've failed miserably at that, but I don't see why that would be necessary. I think it can be important to understand their world in order to understand their perspective on the subject, but not to understand our own which isn't necessarily the same but could be in some respects that aren't necessarily necessary. You know it?

The nature that science investigates is not the Nature we experience.

Well, I . . . . what?

Nature, to us, is alive - the plants and animals in it. Although science can tell us how milk, for example, is derived from grass, or bones from calcium, we are not yet able to replicate any of these natural processes. We cannot, for example, make milk from grass nor bones from milk. In repairing our teeth, the dentist does not have a paste that they can apply to the tooth to fill the hole that will dry into enamel.

This is odd, don't you think? We can uncover the beginning of the universe, discover black holes, even create artificial intelligence but we have not penetrated even the simplest form of life.

Penetrated?

It seems to me that science, despite its powerful discoveries and penetrative investigative tools, has only scratched the laws of nature that it set out to do. The bridge between the nature that science has been able to discover and explain and the Nature we experience is life. We live in a world of living things whilst science has only been able to study the world of the dead.

You started out okay, then you kind of raged of the rails in a crazy train. If I understand you right. The dead? Corpses?

The origin of the word "spirit" is spirare, which simply means to breathe. In other words, every thing that is alive is spirit. To rationally discuss this Nature, we cannot turn to science but to psychology, philosophy and religion.

The primitive words translated spirit mean blow. That is why they come to mean breath. Actually they are things that we can't see but can see the results of. Could be breath, wind, compelled mental inclination (i.e. mean spirited), culture, tradition, germs, etc.
 
The facts before us
Unfortunately, much of what we have about Jesus comes from the Bible. His claims are extraordinary - he is the Son of God and he has come not only to save us but to set us free. He didn't come to give us a new moral code. He came to fulfil existing moral codes. If we want to get the most out of the Bible, to see Jesus as clearly as we can, to understand what he came here to do and what he meant to teach us, we need to move carefully and read the Bible with great care. We need to understand what truth means in this context and what Jesus meant when he spoke about God. We need to decipher how ancient minds see him and how we might see him to make sense of who he is. And perhaps have a more accurate portrait of him from our viewpoint. We need to ask the right questions and consider the right data and the explanations offered around the data. Thus, while absolute certainty may elude us, the weight of historical evidence, personal experience, and existential meaning can together form a basis for reasonable faith.
Just about all references about Jesus are from the New Testament, leaving almost no references outside it, not simply "not much". And what is "outside" the New Testament, is at best very very vague. The claims about his claims are varied and even the Gospels evolve over time regarding Jesus and his relationship to/as god. Most remarkably, Jesus was Jewish, he didn't stop being Jewish (just allegedly was against Big Church)... yet his followers aren't Jewish and they defy the Commandment regarding the Sabbath.

The New Testament opens with a desperate plea of authority for the general populace to stop looking at them as a cult. That Matthew 1 opens as it does implies the "historical evidence" is non-existent as it wasn't historical back then, but rather contemporary. The people back then weren't buying it, Matthew 1 tells us this. There is zero historical evidence and we are only left with literary evidence of this person's existence. He is said to have fulfilled prophecies that he didn't actually fulfill from a plain face reading of the Tanakh. Authors of the New Testament twisted new elements into the stories in the Tanakh, like the Narrative of The Fall in order to help create a literary case for their messiah.

If one looks at the evidence, it doesn't support the Jesus cult.
The NT is bad sales copy. If you line up the four gospels, you will get a multiplicity of answers to basic questions. There is no definitive genealogy for Jesus; there is a 10-year differential on his birth year between Matthew and Luke; there are two different stories of where Joseph took the family after the birth of Jesus. Did Jesus want Mosaic law upheld? Yes at MT 5:18, but no at MK 7:19. Was the Temple cleansing event early in his ministry, or late? That would be the synoptics v. John.
Get to the central event of the story, the Passion and Resurrection, where you might expect a cohesive narrative, and there's a muddle. The date of Jesus' execution, and the hour? Two different versions. The two thieves, did they revile Jesus, or did one repent? Two different versions. Jesus' last words on the cross: three different versions. Empty tomb on Sunday morning: who went, what happened to the stone, whom did they encounter, did Jesus appear and talk to anyone? Contradictory accounts.
Jesus' teaching style? Complete disconnect between the synoptics and John. Three books where his teaching is marked by terseness and the construction of tight parables. John, where the parables are gone, to be replaced by extended poetic metaphor and elaborate "I am" statements.
Add to all this the spurious manner in which the gospel writers seize on random OT passages which they claim are Jesus prophecies, and the air of imminence that hangs over the NT. The end times are here, so you shouldn't amass possessions or even marry. For some reason, though, twenty centuries have gone by and we still have Christians claiming he's coming soon.
Sorry, it syncs too closely with story cycles in mythology that have gods cohabiting with humans and heroes returning from the dead. But somehow we're supposed to look at "the facts before us" (surely those would include irreconcilable contradictions) and assess things with "the weight of historical evidence" (again, try to tell one story from the NT narratives), "personal experience" (which can sway any adherent to any supernatural faith, so it is irrelevant), and "existential meaning" (I think that phrase was thrown in to make the case file seem thicker.)
It doesn't begin to form a compelling case.
 
Tells us about Alexander the Great who ticks those boxes.

How Would We Know Jesus Existed?


Alexander the Great​

  • We have abundant contemporary coins, inscriptions, tablets, and other physical objects from and about him (we even have his de facto death certificate, printed in clay, from the archives of Persia).
  • We have many contemporary and eyewitness sources discussing him (including contemporary texts inscribed in those same clay archives that date from his actual lifetime).
  • And we have numerous credible, detailed historical accounts, referencing contemporary and eyewitness sources.
  • Even Arrian wrote some five hundred years later, but used only three eyewitness historical accounts, described them and why they are good sources, and explained his method of using them.
  • We have none of these things for Jesus.
Oh dear. what and who is it that I'm quoting above?

Jesus has more than these things. I mean for instance...we have no written dialogue of Alexander the Great, but perhaps very few 'supposed' quotes that is attributed to him. Ironically, to point to the 'overlooked, and what should be most obvious' Jesus preached, and taught, i.e. his followers wrote them down - especially what was commanded from him for his followers to do.

.
 
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Deposing Alexander as justification for a belief in an HJ is an act of desperation.

There are historical figures whose existence is well established, others not so much.

The origins of Buddha are largely anecdotal like Jesus. The first structured organized writings on Buddha came over a century after he is said to have lived.

We are pretty sure Confucius existed, but his origins are not exactly known and all writings attributed to Concussions may not be his.

The origins and who Aesop was is mostly anecdotal. Over time many writings by others were called Aesop['s Fables. IO like he words attributed to Jesus in the gospels.

In high school Latin class we read Cesar's Gallic Wars in Latin. There are busts and numerous contemporaneous accounts of Cesar across the Roman empire.

There are no contemporaneous accounts of the gospel Jesus.

If an HJ really existed he did not rise to the level of being reocdred by the Romans.
 
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