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120 Reasons to Reject Christianity

Lumpenproletariat seems to be under this unwarranted idea that it was physically impossible for someone writing something down 1000 years ago to record a lie. The logic behind this escapes me. It doesn't matter if it was unusual or abnormal, the fact is that it was (and remains) highly possible. In the days when pen and paper were more precious commodities it was never necessary for something to be true to warrant being penned. It was only ever necessary that the writer had incentive to write whatever was written down. That has not changed since the earliest forms of communication were established.

He further seems to be completely ignorant of the discipline that goes into actual historical analysis of ancient texts. I've already quoted an actual doctorate in ancient history in-thread who directly contradicts Lumpenproletariat's entire basis of argument. For convenience, here is the quote again:

I am not aware of any ancient work that is regarded as completely reliable. A reason always exists to doubt any historical claim. Historians begin with suspicion no matter what text they are consulting, and adjust that initial degree of doubt according to several factors, including genre, the established laurels of the author, evidence of honest and reliable methodology, bias, the nature of the claim (whether it is a usual or unusual event or detail, etc.), and so on. See for example my discussion of the Rubicon-Resurrection contrast in Geivett's Exercise in Hyperbole (Part 4b of my Review of In Defense of Miracles). Historians have so much experience in finding texts false, and in knowing all the ways they can be false, they know it would be folly to trust anything handed to them without being able to make a positive case for that trust. This is why few major historical arguments stand on a single source or piece of evidence: the implicit distrust of texts entails that belief in any nontrivial historical claim must be based on a whole array of evidence and argument. So it is no coincidence that this is what you get in serious historical scholarship.

ETA: Emphasis mine.

Lumpenproletariat: Show us evidence that actual historians behave the way you keep claiming they behave. I hereby call you out on this misrepresentation of truth you continue to assert.
 
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Lumpy’s reasoning isn’t really what he is presenting. It isn’t the gospels that convince him that Jesus’ miracles are true. It is more the fact that he unquestionably accepts the divinity of Jesus that makes him accept the gospels as true. Or more accurately, a self sustaining circular belief that the divinity of Jesus makes the gospels true and the gospels prove the divinity of Jesus.

All the special pleading in his walls of text are just desperate attempts to justify his emotional belief to those who disagree, not logical reasoning that led him to his belief.
 
I don't think it's all that circular.
Pretty linear. Just backwards.

He wants to go to Heaven when he dies.
That means Heaven needs to exist, and someone needs to tell him what to do to get there.
Jesus offered pretty straightforward rules. He doesn't have to be born of a certain caste or observe a terribly restrictive diet, or journey to The Temple regularly.
So Jesus has to be credible. His offer of how to get into the Afterlife needs support.
So the miracles are evidence of divine power. One who can raise the dead surely is using God's power to do so. So he must be on speaking terms with the Afterlife gatekeeper.
Therefore, stories of the divine evidence events must be credible.
They must be on par with other historical records, the whole basis of our understanding of what History includes.
So he challenges anyone, if you're going to throw out anonymous tales of impossible deeds for Jesus, because they're nothing like eyewitness testimony, and only one source, you are simply forced to throw out far-better-documented references to anyone and any place and any battle in History. So if you're going to keep Marathon or Troy or George Washington or Xerxes in the textbooks, Lumpy gets to keep Jesus' miracles.

Perfectly linear.

Just backwards from how anyone with, or who wants credibility would do it.
 
I don't think it's all that circular.
Pretty linear. Just backwards.

He wants to go to Heaven when he dies.
That means Heaven needs to exist, and someone needs to tell him what to do to get there.
Jesus offered pretty straightforward rules. He doesn't have to be born of a certain caste or observe a terribly restrictive diet, or journey to The Temple regularly.
So Jesus has to be credible. His offer of how to get into the Afterlife needs support.
So the miracles are evidence of divine power. One who can raise the dead surely is using God's power to do so. So he must be on speaking terms with the Afterlife gatekeeper.
Therefore, stories of the divine evidence events must be credible.
They must be on par with other historical records, the whole basis of our understanding of what History includes.
So he challenges anyone, if you're going to throw out anonymous tales of impossible deeds for Jesus, because they're nothing like eyewitness testimony, and only one source, you are simply forced to throw out far-better-documented references to anyone and any place and any battle in History. So if you're going to keep Marathon or Troy or George Washington or Xerxes in the textbooks, Lumpy gets to keep Jesus' miracles.

Perfectly linear.

Just backwards from how anyone with, or who wants credibility would do it.

Here I am lying in my bed the past twenty years experiencing nothing and I find it works pretty well for me.
 
The Jesus miracle stories cannot be explained as analogous to other miracle legends, pagan deities, etc.

The single most plausible explanation of the existence of the "Jesus" myth is that the character evolved from a variety of sources with extraordinary details (miracles) added as the story grew over decades of retelling.

Then why aren't there several of these Jesus myths? Why aren't there other characters, other names, in other places, where the same story unfolds and we would have several of them instead of only this one?

There are.

You know there is no evidence for them. If there is one who is comparable to the case of Jesus, then just name one.

I've named several already but will name some again:

Horus, Osirus, Perseus, Prometheus, Mithras, Hercules, Bacchus.

Each of these epic hero-god myths was around for centuries before their stories were reheated with your favorite hero-god's name inserted in place of their names.

But these are not historical persons, or alleged historical persons, who reportedly did miracle acts. My claim is that the accounts we have of Jesus performing these acts is evidence (not proof) that he did these acts, which indicates that he had super-human power. And there are no other cases of such miracle-workers in history, i.e., actual historical persons, for whom we have evidence.

So there is no evidence that Horus, Osirus, etc. were historical persons who performed miracle acts. But there is evidence that Jesus had such power because of these reported acts that he did. That's how he differs from the gods you're citing. They are not analogous to him.

That some mythic symbols also became attached to Jesus is irrelevant. Why did they choose only Jesus to attach these symbols to? Where are the other reputed historical figures who became mythologized like he did? They could find only one figure to whom they could attach these symbols?

Why did they choose only Jesus to attach these symbols to?

The only identification of Jesus is that he's the figure these symbols got attached to.

No, the identification of Jesus is dependent on the written documents, the gospel accounts, and "these symbols" (a phrase I put in perhaps a bit carelessly, somewhat ambiguous) are something incidental that may have got added to the Jesus figure we see in those accounts, an historical figure who attracted some attention, and the problem is to identify what it was that drew this attention, or why he was thought important enough to become worshiped as a god and have documents written about him. Maybe some pagan symbols got attached to him, but these are not what identifies Jesus, and it may not be clear how to distinguish the real facts about him from some possible "symbols" that might have got added.

For the moment, let's assume some "symbols" got attached to him, but these are incidental, not fundamental to identifying him.


It's not a miraculous coincidence of symbols being attached to exactly the right figure, it's a case of attaching these symbols to a figure.

No, the question is: Why did someone attach "these symbols" to this figure who is written about in the gospel accounts, and, more importantly, why is there ONLY ONE such figure, i.e., historical figure, who became mythologized into a miracle worker and about whom documents were written, i.e., multiple documents, near to the time that he reputedly lived? I.e., why are there no other such figures who have been similarly mythologized and about whom there is a written record, and to whom such symbols became attached?

If the time was ripe for such a miracle "messiah" figure of some kind, why is it that we have ONLY ONE who appears, or rather, only one about whom there is a written record?

So, over the centuries, from 2000 or 1000 BC to 1000 AD, over 2 or 3 thousand years, we should see several other "messiah" figures or "savior" figures, i.e., mythic miracle heroes, reputedly historical persons at a particular time and location, for whom there are documents attesting to their miracles.

The pagan gods like Mithras or Hercules or Perseus etc. do not fit this description, because there are no documents about them near to the time when these persons lived (if they were real persons).

What we should be seeing are many other deity figures, i.e., historical persons who were mythologized into miracle heroes, with written accounts, near to the time of the alleged miracle events.

The question is: why do we see ONLY ONE such historical figure (or reputed historical figure), instead of several? If he's someone's mythic figure invention, such myth inventors were not a single monolithic clique who got together and created only one historical person, or converged on one figure only. There were easily hundreds of myth-makers, probably thousands over many centuries, seeking to create mythic heroes and promoting their cult project and incorporating to it some pagan symbols. There was no logical reason for all these hundreds or thousands of myth-makers to converge on this one historical figure only.

So, Why only this one? is the question we're seeking an answer to.


If they were attached instead to an Eleazar son of Shumi, you'd be yapping here about how amazing it is that out of all people they were attached to Eleazar and not to, say, Joshua son of Joshua.

No, I'd be yapping about WHY ONLY ELEAZAR and not several others also? And yes, in that case I'd be yapping that this Eleazar must have been someone special, maybe a superhuman. Like I'm thinking this Jesus of Galilee figure must have been some special superhuman. So far, no one can explain why it is that we have this one figure only for whom there are written reports of his miracle acts, near to the time of the alleged miracle events.

So, why aren't you yapping some explanation for this? Is there some other historical figure you want to name, for whom we have similar evidence, which I should be yapping about instead of this Jesus figure? I'm still patiently waiting for someone to yap an answer to this.


These sources are all dated to within 100 years after his life, and some less than 50 years.

Get into your head already that you haven't demonstrated yet that he even had a life from which something could be 100 or 50 years away.

But this has been well demonstrated. We have written evidence, documents from the period, which are more than ample evidence that he did live, or "had a life" etc., and at about 30 AD. Just because there are difficulties in determining some of the details doesn't mean he did not exist. We have more evidence for his life than we have for many historical figures which we just take for granted.

Of course you can say there is doubt, and that it's not 100% certain. But this is normal for a vast number of historical figures about whom there is doubt. We can say that Julius Caesar is 99.9999999% proved to be a real historical figure, whereas some others, perhaps Jesus, is only 99.5% or 99% certain. It's impossible to calculate the exact percent probability. But we have this uncertainty problem with many normal historical figures.


You are assuming your conclusion, and not just in one way.

Your claim boils down to a) Jesus' story is unique for many reasons . . .

No, mainly one overall reason -- it's difficult to explain how the miracle stories could have evolved, such as through normal mythologizing, which does explain how they occurred in all the other cases of miracle mythic heroes. Not just that he is unique -- everything is "unique" in some way -- That's not the point. Rather, he is uniquely unexplainable as to how the miracle events of him were produced as fiction rather than as real events. Whereas we can explain this for other miracle myth figures, like Buddha, the pagan gods, Apollonius of Tyana, and all the others. Considering that he was not famous, and there are multiple accounts near to the time of the reputed events -- This is greatly contrary to the norm. A non-famous non-celebrity who did nothing noteworthy does not get published like this (or at least not 2000 years ago).


. . . and b) those unique aspects make it more likely that it happened.

But not simply the uniqueness. Rather, the fact that we cannot explain how these miracle accounts came about, so that normal mythologizing cannot explain it. The proximity of the accounts timewise to the alleged date of the reputed events, the extra sources, the very short career of Jesus, and so on. All these make it impossible that the stories, as fiction, could have been caused by normal mythologizing.

In all the other cases, there's reason to doubt the miracle stories, because we can easily explain how they came about as fiction stories, because of the way mythologizing normally happens. But in the Jesus case this cannot explain the miracle stories.


As to a), just consider how many ways there are to make up a story; an infinity of ways, that's how many. Every story will be unique and different from the others; that's what designates it as another story.

But those unique elements do not make it difficult to explain how the mythic hero came to be mythologized. It's this difficulty of explaining how the mythologizing took place that makes the case of Jesus more credible than the others. Not just any uniqueness, but rather, that in this case we cannot explain how the mythologizing took place, because it requires a long distinguished career and/or many generations for the legends to evolve.


As for b), every single bit of your reasoning presupposes that the stories are true, . . .

No it does not. Let's assume the stories are false. The question is: How did they come to be written down within 40-70 years later, in 4 sources, or a 5th source in 20-30 years later?

It's not true that people just believe any miracle stories and publish them in documents, that long ago, before printing was invented. There are no other cases of this.

What causes a hero figure to become deified and mythologized is that he was popular over many years, having a long career, and did something noteworthy that made him famous. Only then is the mythologizing possible. His celebrity status is what causes the mythologizing to begin, usually even generations after his life; but in the few cases where it happens before his death, he must at least have been a famous celebrity with a wide reputation. This explains how the mythologizing begins. It doesn't just happen to an obscure figure who did nothing of note.

. . . from where you draw the surprising conclusion that the stories are true.

Only because this best explains how the stories came to be recorded in 4 (5) documents near to the time of the reputed events. There's no other case where such stories were believed so quickly and were published in multiple documents.

The reason such stories are usually not published is that they're not credible. Those who are educated enough to write generally just dismiss such stories. (In modern times it's different, with widespread publishing.)


My claim is that the accounts we have of Jesus performing these acts is evidence (not proof) that he did these acts, which indicates that he had super-human power.

I think that's exactly the other way around. We know there aren't such things as superhuman powers because the only 'evidence' for them are fairy tales from a stupid and superstitious age.

No, the period in question was NOT such an age. There's virtually no indication of such a thing leading up to the time of these writings. The period of 100 BC to 50 AD was NOT a more "stupid and superstitious age" than other ages, but actually less.

Rather, the period AFTER this, from about 100 AD onward, was vastly more "superstitious" than the previous period, up to 50 AD, in terms of producing miracle stories.

There was nothing extra superstitious about the age leading up to the Christ miracle stories.


Such things don't happen today.

Of course such things don't generally happen. That's the point. If they happened regularly, then it would not be something special or noteworthy. But just because it's very rare is not proof that it can never happen.

Rather, what we need is extra evidence, more than only one source. The extra sources attesting to the event add credibility.


This is why I told you you'd have to prove the existence of anything supernatural before claiming the gospels can be taken seriously.

Maybe someone somewhere has proved it, to those who saw the proof (depending on what you mean by "supernatural"). There are many claims by people who witnessed something weird -- we don't know that all these claims have been disproved. It's reasonable to doubt them, but not claim to know with certainty that they must all be false.

There's good evidence (not "proof") that the mad monk Rasputin had the ability to heal a child from a blood disease, about 100 years ago in Russia. The evidence is that he apparently did something to cause the child to recover, when the doctors had all failed.

But this doesn't "prove" the "supernatural" -- it just indicates that there might be some power to heal, without medical science -- it's evidence that such a power exists. For those who witnessed this directly, it might be "proof" of it for them, but probably not to those later. Rather, for us it is just a possibility for which there is some evidence.


And there are no other cases of such miracle-workers in history, i.e., actual historical persons, for whom we have evidence.

We have better evidence for the emperor Flavius Vespasianus.

No, not "better" evidence. We have two accounts, about 50-60 years after the alleged event, which is unusually close, so that it has to be taken more seriously than stories about the pagan gods. But the problem is that we can easily explain how this story got started, perhaps even soon, during his life, and got circulated and passed on.

And the explanation is that he was a famous and popular celebrity figure of great power, and with a wide reputation, so that he easily could have become an object of gossip and storytelling, like celebrities today become popularized in the tabloid journals. So the more likely explanation is that the gossip spread at some point, perhaps when something real happened, but still something normal and not a real healing produced in the victim(s).

So this can easily be explained as a normal case of mythologizing, which happens to some popular celebrities who had a widespread reputation. But this cannot explain the case of Jesus, who had a short public career, and was not a famous celebrity during his life.

So the case of Rasputin is really a better example. There is real evidence that he apparently did something to cause the healing of the sick child. It cannot be explained as normal mythologizing, because this man was very UNpopular and hated, and yet the Czar's family kept him and trusted him to deal with this child. Those witnessing this were very UNfavorable to Rasputin, so it's not due to him being venerated as a respected and popular faith-healer or as a normal hero figure or celebrity.
 
You're right Keith, seems like Lumpenproletariat would rather argue about stuff that has already been handled, beaten to death and forgotten by most of us rather than deal with the very real and damning evidence presented more recently to nuke his arguments.

Be that as it may, I can't help but argue with him. It's what I do.

No, the question is: Why did someone attach "these symbols" to this figure who is written about in the gospel accounts, and, more importantly, why is there ONLY ONE such figure, i.e., historical figure, who became mythologized into a miracle worker and about whom documents were written, i.e., multiple documents, near to the time that he reputedly lived? I.e., why are there no other such figures who have been similarly mythologized and about whom there is a written record, and to whom such symbols became attached?

If the time was ripe for such a miracle "messiah" figure of some kind, why is it that we have ONLY ONE who appears, or rather, only one about whom there is a written record?

So, over the centuries, from 2000 or 1000 BC to 1000 AD, over 2 or 3 thousand years, we should see several other "messiah" figures or "savior" figures, i.e., mythic miracle heroes, reputedly historical persons at a particular time and location, for whom there are documents attesting to their miracles.

The pagan gods like Mithras or Hercules or Perseus etc. do not fit this description, because there are no documents about them near to the time when these persons lived (if they were real persons).

What we should be seeing are many other deity figures, i.e., historical persons who were mythologized into miracle heroes, with written accounts, near to the time of the alleged miracle events.

The question is: why do we see ONLY ONE such historical figure (or reputed historical figure), instead of several? If he's someone's mythic figure invention, such myth inventors were not a single monolithic clique who got together and created only one historical person, or converged on one figure only. There were easily hundreds of myth-makers, probably thousands over many centuries, seeking to create mythic heroes and promoting their cult project and incorporating to it some pagan symbols. There was no logical reason for all these hundreds or thousands of myth-makers to converge on this one historical figure only.

So, Why only this one? is the question we're seeking an answer to.

You must have a mouse in your pocket because "we" don't need an answer to this make-believe question you keep raising. It is not that amazing that only one Jesus myth exists any more than it is amazing that only one Ramtha cult exists.

Your reasoning is circular. The story you have appears to have been fabricated by some people living in Rome circa 65-75 A.D. The main character in this story is a magic Jew living in a land 1500 miles away and some 45-55 years earlier. If they had used a famous character like John the Baptizer they would have risked gainsay, as people who actually knew that character might contradict their story. By using a completely unknown person they added the romantic rags-to-riches cliche so often found in narratives throughout history. Thus they could fabricate crowds of thousands of anonymous individuals who saw their hero make food for thousands using mere morsels without having to worry about anyone contradicting their story. By appropriating many of the miracle-feats of the Jewish culture from which they were borrowing they could give their hero super powers that would capture the imagination of the listeners to the story. As time went by others added elements of the Greek culture such as a virgin birth and turning water into wine.

I know it's probably difficult for you to understand, but written scripture was not important to many of the pagan religions. This was more of a Jewish influence. In addition to that there is a tremendous amount of evidence that many religions of the period before were "mystery religions," so named because their wisdom and practices were only for initiates. Again, appealing to Justin Martyr, one can see that he considered these religions to be false imitations of what he believed to be the one true religion. Why do their scriptures not flourish today? They didn't flourish back then. They were carefully guarded secrets that only left trace vestiges of their once far-reaching influence.

It is in evidence that there was early competition between these mystery religions and Christianity. Paul himself may have once been a participant in such a mystery religion before he realized that they were missing a huge opportunity by not going after all the riff-raff who were not really courted by most of the mystery religions. Tithes from thousands of commoners would spend just as well as tithes from dozens of rich folk.

In other words, there are lots of different scenarios that are completely consistent with the evidence we have and very tidily explain how we ended up with these stories about Jesus the magic Jew. It is not necessary to leap to the insane conclusion that a man could heal blind people with a touch, walk on storm-tossed water as if it were solid ground, raise dead people back to life and levitate off into the sky unassisted never to be seen again. There is a perfectly rational explanation for these stories. In other news there's not a boogie man hiding in your closet.
 
The story you have appears to have been fabricated by some people living in Rome circa 65-75 A.D. The main character in this story is a magic Jew living in a land 1500 miles away and some 45-55 years earlier. If they had used a famous character like John the Baptizer they would have risked gainsay, as people who actually knew that character might contradict their story.

Agreed. That's been suggested why the early Christian church had an easier time getting established in Rome than in Jerusalem.
 
If you exclude the gospel accounts as credible sources, you must exclude virtually ALL sources for ANY historical events.

We have Multiple sources attesting to his miracle acts (a large number of such acts, not just 3 or 4).

No we don't.

Of course we do. Can you count? Mt + Mk + Lk + Jn = 4, + (for the resurrection event) the epistles of Paul = 5 + additional accounts (canonical and perhaps even non-canonical) = 7 or 8 or 9. Don't you understand that "multiple" means more than 1?

Give your reasons why you reject these accounts, but don't deny that we do have these accounts. And there is nothing similar for any other reputed miracle mythic hero. And it's written accounts which form the evidence for virtually ALL of the historical record. What other evidence do we have for any historical events than written documents from near to the time that the reported events happened?


There are no first hand eyewitness accounts documenting his 'miraculous acts,' . . .

But first-hand eyewitness accounts are virtually non-existent for 99% of our historical record. Virtually all of it is based on INdirect witnesses, reporting what was spoken or written earlier (which written sources are mostly lost).

So we do not need first-hand eyewitness accounts for virtually everything we know from history (at least going back 1000+ years or so). Only in modern times is there a significant reliance on eyewitness accounts, and even for today it's mostly NON-eyewitness evidence we rely on.


. . . everything that has been written is based on word of mouth and penned a considerable time after they are supposed to have occurred.

Again, that is true for virtually ALL of the historical record for that long ago.

And when you say "penned a considerable time after they are supposed to have occurred" you are confirming the principle that reports which are closer to the time of the reported events are more reliable than those much later, which is precisely why the gospel accounts are more reliable or more credible than accounts about Simon Magus or Apollonius of Tyana, not to mention traditions about the pagan gods.

So, you are again pointing out why the gospel accounts are more reliable for the miracle events they report than are the other examples of miracle events or miracle myth heroes. You continue to confirm the point that we have more evidence for the miracles of Jesus than we have for other miracle legends.

And you continue to judge the gospel accounts, for credibility, by standards which, if applied to all other sources, would undermine the credibility of ALL our sources for any historical events. You still are unable to give any reason why the gospel accounts are not credible without also giving us reason to reject accounts for MOST of our historical record for the ancient events.

Why can't you point out something about the gospel accounts themselves, unique to them, which makes them less credible? Why is it that you can only come up with criteria for credibility which also make ALL of our sources for history less credible? Why is it that your whole argument boils down to that of rejecting ALL of history and ALL the sources instead of only rejecting these NT writings?

You're supposed to be telling us why we should disbelieve the Jesus miracle accounts in particular, not why we should disbelieve ANY historical accounts whatever.


We know how stories change and grow with retelling.

That's true of ALL historical events. We have to be skeptical of them all. And in the case of highly doubtful claims, like miracle events, we need more than only one source. Maybe more than only two. For the miracles of Jesus we have 4 (5) (6-7) sources. But we don't have this for other miracle legends, which is why they are much less credible.


There are modern examples of miracles and miracle workers. The reliability of these accounts tend to fade under close examination.

This has always been the case, going back centuries and into prehistory. The gospel writers knew this. They were not the brain-dead idiots you presume they were, and they would not have taken the trouble to record these events if they had not considered them to be an exception to the rule. They must have had multiple oral and written reports which convinced them that this case was different.

If this case was just another typical case of some miracle fraud claims, they would not have been taken seriously and recorded. There were hundreds of miracle frauds/cults etc. floating around, and they were rejected and not recorded for posterity. But this case was different. And there's more than one educated writer, several actually, who thought this case was different.


The gospel accounts are not reliable.

You say this only because of your fundamental dogmatic premise that NO account containing miracle claims is reliable. If you start out with this premise that no such account can ever be credible, then you will probably arrive at the conclusion that no such account, like the gospel accounts, can ever be credible.

Your conclusion is logical when it identically repeats your premise. But one does not logically have to start out from this premise. And many do not.


These sources are all dated to within 100 years after his life, and some less than 50 years.

Stories can change and grow with the retelling in a matter of days.

That's true of ALL historical events. It's not the norm. There is no proof that miracle stories become distorted faster than normal events.


In a matter of months they may not even resemble the initial events. Years? Forget about accuracy.

Again you give an argument for discounting ALL the historical record and ALL sources for any historical events.

When will you stop this and start telling us why the gospel accounts in particular are unreliable for accuracy? Why must you keep giving us only reasons for discounting ALL historical sources? Your inability to show how the gospel accounts per se are unreliable, as distinct from other accounts, is a further indication that these accounts are generally credible, in comparison to other accounts, and are subject to the same critical review standards as other accounts, and are not inferior to other accounts for credibility.

And once again, with this argument you are affirming that sources which are closer to the actual events, timewise, are more reliable than those which are farther distant. Which again supports the point that the gospel accounts are more credible, for the reported miracle events, than the accounts about Simon Magus, Apollonius of Tyana, the pagan gods, etc.
 
No we don't.

Of course we do. Can you count? Mt + Mk + Lk + Jn = 4, + (for the resurrection event) the epistles of Paul = 5 + additional accounts (canonical and perhaps even non-canonical) = 7 or 8 or 9. Don't you understand that "multiple" means more than 1?

Give your reasons why you reject these accounts, but don't deny that we do have these accounts. And there is nothing similar for any other reputed miracle mythic hero. And it's written accounts which form the evidence for virtually ALL of the historical record. What other evidence do we have for any historical events than written documents from near to the time that the reported events happened?


There are no first hand eyewitness accounts documenting his 'miraculous acts,' . . .

But first-hand eyewitness accounts are virtually non-existent for 99% of our historical record. Virtually all of it is based on INdirect witnesses, reporting what was spoken or written earlier (which written sources are mostly lost).

So we do not need first-hand eyewitness accounts for virtually everything we know from history (at least going back 1000+ years or so). Only in modern times is there a significant reliance on eyewitness accounts, and even for today it's mostly NON-eyewitness evidence we rely on.


. . . everything that has been written is based on word of mouth and penned a considerable time after they are supposed to have occurred.

Again, that is true for virtually ALL of the historical record for that long ago.

And when you say "penned a considerable time after they are supposed to have occurred" you are confirming the principle that reports which are closer to the time of the reported events are more reliable than those much later, which is precisely why the gospel accounts are more reliable or more credible than accounts about Simon Magus or Apollonius of Tyana, not to mention traditions about the pagan gods.

So, you are again pointing out why the gospel accounts are more reliable for the miracle events they report than are the other examples of miracle events or miracle myth heroes. You continue to confirm the point that we have more evidence for the miracles of Jesus than we have for other miracle legends.

And you continue to judge the gospel accounts, for credibility, by standards which, if applied to all other sources, would undermine the credibility of ALL our sources for any historical events. You still are unable to give any reason why the gospel accounts are not credible without also giving us reason to reject accounts for MOST of our historical record for the ancient events.

Why can't you point out something about the gospel accounts themselves which makes them less credible? Why is it that you can only come up with criteria for credibility which also make ALL of our sources for history less credible? Why is it that your whole argument boils down to that of rejecting ALL of history and ALL the sources instead of only rejecting these NT writings?

You're supposed to be telling us why we should disbelieve the Jesus miracle accounts in particular, not why we should disbelieve ANY historical accounts whatever.


We know how stories change and grow with retelling.

That's true of ALL historical events. We have to be skeptical of them all. And in the case of highly doubtful claims, like miracle events, we need more than only one source. Maybe more than only two. For the miracles of Jesus we have 4 (5) (6-7) sources. But we don't have this for other miracle legends, which is why they are much less credible.


There are modern examples of miracles and miracle workers. The reliability of these accounts tend to fade under close examination.

This has always been the case, going back centuries and into prehistory. The gospel writers knew this. They were not the brain-dead idiots you presume they were, and they would not have taken the trouble to record these events if they had not considered them to be an exception to the rule. They must have had multiple oral and written reports which convinced them that this case was different.

If this case was just another typical case of some miracle fraud claims, they would not have been taken seriously and recorded. There were hundreds of miracle frauds/cults etc. floating around, and they were rejected and not recorded for posterity. But this case was different. And there's more than one educated writer, several actually, who thought this case was different.


The gospel accounts are not reliable.

You say this only because of your fundamental dogmatic premise that NO account containing miracle claims is reliable. If you start out with this premise that no such account can ever be credible, then you will probably arrive at the conclusion that no such account, like the gospel accounts, can ever be credible.

Your conclusion is logical when it identically repeats your premise. But one does not logically have to start out from this premise. And many do not.

These sources are all dated to within 100 years after his life, and some less than 50 years.

Stories can change and grow with the retelling in a matter of days.

That's true of ALL historical events. It's not the norm. There is no proof that miracle stories become distorted faster than normal events.


In a matter of months they may not even resemble the initial events. Years? Forget about accuracy.

Again you give an argument for discounting ALL the historical record and ALL sources for any historical events.

When will you stop this and start telling us why the gospel accounts in particular are unreliable for accuracy? Why must you keep giving us only reasons for discounting ALL historical sources? Your inability to show how the gospel accounts per se are unreliable, as distinct from other accounts, is a further indication that these accounts are generally credible, in comparison to other accounts, and are subject to the same critical review as other accounts, and are not inferior to other accounts for credibility.

And once again, with this argument you are affirming that sources which are closer to the actual events, timewise, are more reliable than those which are farther distant. Which again supports the point that the gospel accounts are more credible, for the reported miracle events, than the accounts about Simon Magus, Apollonius of Tyana, the pagan gods, etc.

The gospels are rejected, because they are not supported by other sources - archaeological, scientific or documentary - so they stand or fall on their own. This is true of many other documents from antiquity, that are also rejected. Tales that involve cities of which no trace has been found; or events that would have profoundly affected neighbouring regions, but which went unremarked or unnoticed in those regions, are assumed to be false, particularly if they recount events that are not consistent with basic physical law - suns standing still in the sky; the generation of large masses of food from tiny precursors; dead people coming back to life; worldwide floods that cover the highest mountains - these things require massive and compelling evidence, not just one small collection of writings.

Julius Caesar is known to be a real person, because he is recorded in a way that is almost completely consistent with the archaeological evidence, and is written about by large numbers of unrelated authors whose work is also consistent with other non-Caesar sources. History is a complex framework of interrelated evidence, that, like an arch, supports itself - no one stone can stay up in the air alone, but as part of a larger archway or vault, it can stand for centuries. No one historical source stands alone; if it is NOT part of a much larger framework; If it does not fit in with many other pieces of unrelated evidence; then it is rejected.

If a writer says that Julius Caesar fought a great siege, and burned the town to the ground, then we can did in that spot and find building remains that show signs of fire; and we can see that other accounts of battles he fought fit in with the general ability of Roman soldiers to move around - Caesar isn't recorded in Rome the day he is also recorded in Alexandria, or Gaul, for example - and with the sort of campaign strategy that makes sense.

The Bible, and particularly the gospels have no such support; they stand alone as a document that is barely noticed by other sources until decades or more commonly centuries after the events; They describe nothing that is not either obvious (Bethlehem exists), or completely unsupported (The Romans required people to travel for a census).

Important real events leave real archaeological traces. The events described in the gospels left none. How could the census have been overlooked by all the Roman observers in Judea? It's extraordinarily unlikely that it could have been - so the document(s) claiming that it happened are, themselves extraordinarily unlikely to be factual.

Knowledge is a framework. Every part relies on every other part. The gospels do not rely on, nor are they relied upon, by other sources; This indicates quite clearly that they are not a part of the body of real factual knowledge.
 
Reason # 15 -- Shroud of Turn

Is there anything here that is a "reason to reject Christianity"? I will just copy the entire "reason" here without "rebutting" any of it because there is nothing here to rebut. One can believe in Christ without having any opinion about this "shroud" story. Nothing about this undermines basic Christ belief. Even if the "shroud" is a total fraud.

(15) The Shroud of Turin scam and the implications of confirmation bias

There are many historians and pseudo scientists who have assumed that the Shroud of Turin is the burial cloth of Jesus, and are consistently searching for (or creating) evidence to support that conclusion. This is despite a definitive dating process that placed the age of the cloth between 1260 and 1390 CE, precisely during the time that it first appeared in history and concurrent with a time that thousands of fake holy relics, including over 40 other ‘authentic’ shrouds of Jesus, were being made and sold.

Some shroud apologists claim that the analyzed segment was a patch that was made during the 14th century, while entertaining the utterly unbelievable idea that the esteemed team of scientists who selected the portion of the cloth for examination could not identify the presence of a patch, either from the weave pattern or the stitches that would have been present on the back side. The Vatican gave the final approval for the selection, and, clearly hoping that the science would support the authenticity of the shroud, they would have been very concerned about picking a patched area that would have returned a date inconsistent with Jesus’s death.

Most of the patchwork was done after a fire damaged the shroud in 1532. If one of these patches was selected by mistake, the dating process would have identified the date in the 16th Century instead of the 14th Century.

To counter this evidence, shroud apologists are now claiming that the patch was invisible on both sides of the cloth, but they fail to explain why this highly-skilled patching technique was not used two centuries later after the fire.

The apologists also dismiss or are ignorant of the fact that the shroud does not comply with the Gospel scriptures in certain ways, but most notably in its overall shape and construction:

‘Taking Jesus’ body, the two of them wrapped it, with the spices, in strips of linen. This was in accordance with Jewish burial customs.’ [John 19:40]

‘So Peter… reached the tomb first. He bent over and looked in at the strips of linen lying there but did not go in. Then Simon Peter… went into the tomb. He saw the strips of linen lying there, as well as the burial cloth that had been around Jesus’ head. The cloth was folded up by itself, separate from the linen.’ [John 20:3-7]

‘Peter, however, got up and ran to the tomb. Bending over, he saw the strips of linen lying by themselves…’ [Luke 24:12]

The Shroud of Turin is a single rectangular piece of cloth, not made of strips of linen. The Gospel reference to linen strips for the body and a separate cloth for the head is consistent with Jewish burial rites of the First Century. Thus, to believe that the shroud is the burial cloth of Jesus is also to concede that the Gospel accounts are wrong.

The image on the cloth has the appearance of a photograph, but if the shroud was actually wrapped around Jesus at the time he resurrected, the image would have been distorted by the way it would have been curved around his body. For example his two ears would have been widely distorted in the horizontal direction. For the image to have been made as seen, the shroud would have had to have been stretched out flat above his body and then curved around to the back side. Obviously, the shroud would not have been in this orientation.

Additionally, no examples of the shroud linen’s complex herringbone twill weave date from the first century. However the weave was used in Europe in the Middle Ages, coincidentally when the shroud first appeared.

Other problems exist with the figure on the shroud. His front is two inches taller than his back and he exhibits elongated limbs indicating that he would have been afflicted with gigantism if he had been an actual person. Also, pigments and paints widely used in Italy during the Middle Ages have been found on the shroud, used to mimic dried blood.

Also, the figure on the shroud is 6 feet tall, while the average Jewish man of the 1st Century was only 5 feet tall. It is highly unlikely that Jesus was a foot taller than the average man of his time.

An objective and more complete analysis of the Shroud of Turin is available at this website:

http://www.sillybeliefs.com/shroud.html#heading-0b

And additionally, at this website:

https://whyevolutionistrue.wordpress.com/2014/11/29/pope-francis-endorses-the-fake-shroud-of-turin/

What is occurring with the Shroud of Turin is also happening with other relics, supposed miracles, and other matters that Christianity has promoted as fact, by consistently using confirmation bias (the act of placing the conclusion before the research) as the means of determining truth. This is why critical thinking skills are not promoted by religious leaders, because the exercise of them inevitably leads to the evaporation of their claims.

The final point here is all that needs responding to:

Critical thinking leads to rejecting many religious claims. But not the claims about the miracles of Jesus, which are supported by a critical consideration of the evidence.

The only reason to reject these claims, i.e., the miracle events of Jesus reported in the gospel accounts, is that one must start out with the dogmatic premise that ALL miracle claims are ipso facto false, despite any evidence in a particular case.

Except for this premise, there is good reason to believe the miracles of Jesus really did happen. Not to believe it with 100% certainty, but with reasonable possibility. There is evidence for these events, just as we have evidence for other historical events, many of which are probable but not 100% certain.

So the exercise of critical thinking regarding this part of basic Christ belief actually leads the inquiring mind closer to a belief that these events really did happen, not farther away. Nothing in this critical thinking, and inquiry into the facts about the recorded events, leads away from their credibility, but toward the increased credibility of these reported events.


But as to the celebrated "Shroud of Turin" -- Who cares?

Let's get back to the "Reasons to Reject Christianity" -- leave the "shroud" to those who need symbols or relics to gawk at.
 
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I will just copy the entire "reason" here without "rebutting" any of it because there is nothing here to rebut.
....

Critical thinking leads to rejecting many religious claims. But not the claims about the miracles of Jesus, which are supported by a critical consideration of the evidence.
Very appropriate for an election year.
You see the CNN anchor or the reporter asking a candidate a specific question, which they won't answer, but turn it around to their preferred talking point.

One will ask how they'll increase jobs in America and they respond with why we need to bomb Muslims or why women's abortion rights need to be preserved.

Dude, if you have absolutely no intention of doing anything but flogging the Jesus Miracles yet again, why pretend you're interested in any other of kyroot's 1000+ reasons?
 
If you exclude the gospel accounts as credible sources, you must exclude virtually ALL sources for ANY historical events.
History isn't binary, Lumpy.

We can reject the gospel account (1) and the gospel fanfiction accounts as credible sources for impossible miracle stories while still retaining other historical sources for things we do not hold to be impossible in the face of the current body of scientific knowledge.

I mean, we do not reject EVERYTHING we see on television because one commercial makes some astoundingly unlikely claims. We tend to be suspicious of commercials because of the nature of commercials and our understanding of capitalism, while being less suspicious of the consumer fraud articles on the news shows, because of the nature of such shows and our understanding of journalism.

I'm not going to bet my life on the News At Ten's story of metal shavings in the soap dispensers at the YMCA, but also I'm not even going to change my buying habits because Prell says their shampoos now have 50% less strychnine!
 
If you exclude the gospel accounts as credible sources, you must exclude virtually ALL sources for ANY historical events.
History isn't binary, Lumpy.

We can reject the gospel account (1) and the gospel fanfiction accounts as credible sources for impossible miracle stories while still retaining other historical sources for things we do not hold to be impossible in the face of the current body of scientific knowledge.
Yep! Not that Lumpy hasn't been corrected on this particular red herring 13 or 19 times before on this shit thread.... The Bible/gospels do provide historical evidence to evaluate. For instance, the gospels provide another document that correlates with Roman documents making the historicity of Pontius Pilate more credible; even if the gospels try to turn him into a pansy. It is funny how Lumpy rejects portions of the gospels himself, while trying to claim that we reject 100% of the gospels, to suggest a contradiction in how non-believers look at documents from history.
 
The only reason to reject these claims, i.e., the miracle events of Jesus reported in the gospel accounts, is that one must start out with the dogmatic premise that ALL miracle claims are ipso facto false, despite any evidence in a particular case.
No. That's not the only reason.

how about with a starting premise that
I will only believe impossible shit if the evidence for that shit is just goddamned overwhelming.

Note that the first person to suggest continental drift did so without a whole lot of evidence. Resistance to the idea included people quoting the Bible where it says that the Earth's foundations do not move. So at first it was considered impossible shit, and the theory was easily dismissed.

But some people looked into the idea. And found evidence. And much faster than, say, the theory of evolution, the theory of continental drift was supported with overwhelming evidence and people were forced to accept the idea. To the point that people rejecting it, based on passages in scripture, are pretty much nutters on the fringes. Or stupid.

-----------

With respect to the miracles attributed to Jesus, you're simultaneously trying to say that
1) it's shit that's SO impossible that for it to have happened, then Jesus must have a line on the afterlife, good enough to believe in him (although not necessarily the rest of the book ABOUT him), and secure everlasting life
-and-
2) it's shit that's plausible enough that we don't need overwhelming evidence to even consider it a possibility and we can believe it based on testimony we wouldn't even allow into court for a divorce trial: anonymous and based on hearsay written down leagues away from and a generation (or more) after the event.
 
Thanks for the non-long winded rambling

Is there anything here that is a "reason to reject Christianity"? I will just copy the entire "reason" here without "rebutting" any of it because there is nothing here to rebut. One can believe in Christ without having any opinion about this "shroud" story. Nothing about this undermines basic Christ belief. Even if the "shroud" is a total fraud.

(15) The Shroud of Turin scam and the implications of confirmation bias
<snip>
I have to agree with you in this particular case. The Shroud of Turin is a pretty useless exercise as evidence of anything, beyond it being yet another example of the foibles of humans.


The final point here is all that needs responding to:

Critical thinking leads to rejecting many religious claims. But not the claims about the miracles of Jesus, which are supported by a critical consideration of the evidence.

The only reason to reject these claims, i.e., the miracle events of Jesus reported in the gospel accounts, is that one must start out with the dogmatic premise that ALL miracle claims are ipso facto false, despite any evidence in a particular case.

Except for this premise, there is good reason to believe the miracles of Jesus really did happen. Not to believe it with 100% certainty, but with reasonable possibility. There is evidence for these events, just as we have evidence for other historical events, many of which are probable but not 100% certain.

So the exercise of critical thinking regarding this part of basic Christ belief actually leads the inquiring mind closer to a belief that these events really did happen, not farther away. Nothing in this critical thinking, and inquiry into the facts about the recorded events, leads away from their credibility, but toward the increased credibility of these reported events.

Like any of this really needs to be said over and over, but then someone keeps spouting the same wished, washed, and re-rinsed gibberish... I don't know of anyone here who has said that only because the gospel accounts are "anonymous", they are not credible. That is just Lumpy's pretend punching bag he keeps attacking. Most don’t start out with just that the miracle claims are not credible. Most don’t claim that the Bible is “no evidence”, they are claiming it is grossly insufficient to suggest that Christian theology is anything other than silly. Paul’s letters (even the forged ones) particularly provide insight (aka evidence) into the emergence of this new cult within the Roman Empire. Most start out with that all miracle claims from history need strong evidence to support them, if they are going to seriously consider any particular case of the thousands upon thousands of miracles claimed around the world throughout history. The Jesus evidence is incredibly weak, no matter how many times you wish, wash, and repeat the same vacuous claims. And central to the issue is the big picture of Yahweh worship (Judaism) all the way thru to this newer Christ cult.

A very short list of issues that strongly suggest that the atypical Christian theological construct is not credible:
- Humans don’t live hundreds of years long, like Genesis claims
- There was never anything even close to the Noah Deluge fable, but there was a thousand year older Sumerian tale that they borrowed from
- The Tower of Babel fable...is well babel BS, as language development history contradicts this fable
- Moshe and his Exodus fable is at least 99.9% BS
- The whole conquering of Canaan is largely made up
- There was never any day the Earth stood still for Joshua
- The sun was not set back 10 degrees for Hezekiah
- The Jesus of the gospels cleved to the Jewish holy writings as if they were true. So either what Jesus said was false, or was falsely added to the Gospels, or Jesus isn't part of a triumvirate, or some other variant of falsity.
- Besides time, distance, and unknown authors of the gospel writings, it also includes discounting the conflicting birthing narratives of GMatt & GLuke and the forged ending of GMark (as Lumpy has acknowledged).
- It also includes a bizarre forced march census that never happened
- It includes Harod's killing of the babies that didn't happen
- It includes the earthquake and blood red sky that no one bothered to record
- It includes a fake Davidian genealogies
- It also includes forged letters that were put under the name of Paul within the Bible
- Even with the vast historical RCC power, there are still about 5 major Christian Bible canons.
- and one Roman documented reference to Pilate, where he was recalled back to Rome as he was too brutal even for their tastes...not quite the patsy of the gospels.

Regarding sources, even the forward to GMark in The New Oxford Annotated Bible; NRSV with the Apocrypha; an Ecumenical Study Bible says: "Mark is by far the shortest of the four canonical Gospels and is generally thought to be the earliest, and to have been used in the composition of both Matthew and Luke". It's not just us heathen saying that there is one primary gospel source Lumpy, it also includes well respected Christian theologians.
 
Critical thinking leads to rejecting many religious claims. But not the claims about the miracles of Jesus, which are supported by a critical consideration of the evidence.

And you keep repeating this lie. There is NO evidence to support the miracle claims of the Bible other than the anonymous writings of someone separated by many decades and thousands of miles from whence these miracles allegedly happened.

The only reason to reject these claims, i.e., the miracle events of Jesus reported in the gospel accounts, is that one must start out with the dogmatic premise that ALL miracle claims are ipso facto false, despite any evidence in a particular case.

Name one miracle claim that is believed to be factual by modern historians. Just one. Name one person who rose up from the dead and floated up into the atmosphere under his own power. There are none. It is a lie that historians routinely accept claims of supernatural occurrences.

Except for this premise, there is good reason to believe the miracles of Jesus really did happen. Not to believe it with 100% certainty, but with reasonable possibility. There is evidence for these events, just as we have evidence for other historical events, many of which are probable but not 100% certain.

No there is not. Just as there is no reason to believe that Hanuman was a flying monkey king who could tear up large mountains from their roots, even though his exploits are better documented than the Jesus mythology. The supernatural stories of the Bible can be easily discarded.

So the exercise of critical thinking regarding this part of basic Christ belief actually leads the inquiring mind closer to a belief that these events really did happen, not farther away. Nothing in this critical thinking, and inquiry into the facts about the recorded events, leads away from their credibility, but toward the increased credibility of these reported events.

Wrong again. The exercise of critical thinking leads us to believe that corpses don't rise up from the dead and fly up into the sky. No matter what an old book filled with mythological stories claims.

Repeating the same lies over and over is not helping your case. It is just exposing the fundamental dishonesty of your position and your willingness to act in a less than honest manner.
 
We have source for the miracles of Jesus. Pretending they do not exist will not make them go away.

A very short list of issues that strongly suggest that the atypical Christian theological construct is not credible:
- Humans don’t live hundreds of years long, like Genesis claims
- There was never anything even close to the Noah Deluge fable, but there was a thousand year older Sumerian tale that they borrowed from
- The Tower of Babel fable...is well babel BS, as language development history contradicts this fable
- Moshe and his Exodus fable is at least 99.9% BS
- The whole conquering of Canaan is largely made up
- There was never any day the Earth stood still for Joshua
- The sun was not set back 10 degrees for Hezekiah
- The Jesus of the gospels cleved to the Jewish holy writings as if they were true. So either what Jesus said was false, or was falsely added to the Gospels, or Jesus isn't part of a triumvirate, or some other variant of falsity.
- Besides time, distance, and unknown authors of the gospel writings, it also includes discounting the conflicting birthing narratives of GMatt & GLuke and the forged ending of GMark (as Lumpy has acknowledged).
- It also includes a bizarre forced march census that never happened
- It includes Harod's killing of the babies that didn't happen
- It includes the earthquake and blood red sky that no one bothered to record
- It includes a fake Davidian genealogies
Assuming all the above are fictional, none of it undermines the credibility of the Christ miracles in the gospel accounts. The above "myths" or fictions etc. are not any evidence to disprove the Jesus miracles.

The above all come from various documents, each from one source only, none of them supported by a second source. The origin of the Jesus miracle stories is not the same as the origin of the above myths or fictions. The compilers put these together, but there are many different sources from which the above were taken. The Jesus accounts are not undermined by having been put together with some of these earlier traditions or other fictions which emerged from one place or another.

- It also includes forged letters that were put under the name of Paul within the Bible

The Paul letters are authentic, up to about Thessalonians, but the addition of others which are not does not undermine the Jesus miracle stories or the resurrection claims of the authentic Paul. There are many later "epistles" and "gospels" falsely attributed to Paul or the original disciples or characters in the gospels. None of this detracts from the credibility of the healing miracle stories or the resurrection event.

It is easy to explain how additional stories and "forged" letters emerged, after the Jesus miracle legend became established. What is not explained is how the original miracle stories emerged, if they were fiction.


- Even with the vast historical RCC power, there are still about 5 major Christian Bible canons.

The gospel accounts and Paul epistles were firmly established long before any official canon was adopted. It doesn't matter that there are differing "canons."


- and one Roman documented reference to Pilate, where he was recalled back to Rome as he was too brutal even for their tastes...not quite the patsy of the gospels.

There's good reason to believe Pilate at first resisted the demands for Jesus to be crucified. He could easily have seen this as a petty squabble between a group of Galileans and a group of Judeans, in which he wanted no part. It's irrelevant that this later got exaggerated into the current account of him seeming to defend Jesus against the charges.


- Regarding sources, even the forward to GMark in The New Oxford Annotated Bible; NRSV with the Apocrypha; an Ecumenical Study Bible says: "Mark is by far the shortest of the four canonical Gospels and is generally thought to be the earliest, and to have been used in the composition of both Matthew and Luke". It's not just us heathen saying that there is one primary gospel source . . .

No, there was more than one source. No one knowledgeable says there was only one source. Your above quote does not say that. You need to make your point without playing games with the term "primary source." This term is often tossed around incoherently by people who have difficulty figuring out what their point is.


. . . it also includes well respected Christian theologians.

They do not say there is only one source.

The accounts about Jesus, the miracle events, etc., emerged from differing sources. Mt and Lk obviously had other sources than just Mark.

We have at least 5 sources for the Jesus events, near to the time they reputedly happened. You cannot change this basic fact with your semantical acrobatics and game-playing, as much as it pains you to have to admit that in this one case we have alleged miracle events which are reported in multiple documents within a short time after they reputedly happened.

We have this evidence for the events, which is lacking for other reputed miracle-worker legends.

One can reasonably believe the events happened, based on this evidence, or one can reasonably demand that there be additional evidence before believing it. But one cannot erase this evidence from the historical record.
 
Why can't you ever give EVIDENCE for the pagan miracle myths like we have for the Jesus miracles?

. . . there is good reason to believe the miracles of Jesus really did happen. Not to believe it with 100% certainty, but with reasonable possibility. There is evidence for these events, just as we have evidence for other historical events, many of which are probable but not 100% certain.

No there is not. Just as there is no reason to believe that Hanuman was a flying monkey king who could tear up large mountains from their roots, even though his exploits are better documented than the Jesus mythology.

Why don't you ever provide the documentation when you make these claims?

When did Hanuman reputedly live? And when were the earliest documents written which tell about him?

If you don't know answers to basic questions like this, or cannot provide this to us, then you cannot claim it's better documented than the Jesus miracle events.

Jesus reputedly lived about 30 AD and is documented in written records from about 50-100 AD. These documents do exist and those dates are reliable.

Why can't you give similar dates for these other mythic hero figures, pagan legends, Hindu myths, etc.?

We have this information for Apollonius of Tyana and Simon Magus and Mohammed and others. And in all such cases the miracle legends do not appear in writing until many generations after the reputed events. And usually in only 1 or 2 sources.
 
Lumpenproletariat, we get it. Christianity is popular. The bible is highly published and is available everywhere. That's the good news. The bad news is this remains an argument from popularity.

Just because the ancient myth are hard to get your hands on doesn't mean they don't exist. You have yet to produce an original copy of GMark by the way. You keep appealing to copies centuries removed from what you believe to be the originals. Then you say really inane stuff like "those dates are reliable." Your definition of "reliable" is obviously some new twist on the word that I was not previously aware of. Last time I checked the dates for everything except the authentic Pauline epistles go all over the place depending on whether the scholar making the estimate is conservative or liberal.

You also have yet to address the fact that the stories of the miracles all appeared in ROME, not in or around Jerusalem. 1500 miles and 45-50 years removed. Plenty of time and abundant distance for folks to add juicy morsels to the oral traditions about Jesus the Magic Jew. This is an inconvenient truth I know, but we're not going to quit holding your feet to the fire about it.

Paul only ever mentions the crucifixion and resurrection. You keep claiming that is Jesus' most powerful miracle, yet this goes against every other resurrection in the Judaeo-Christian bible and there are quite a few. In every other instance the miracle part was performed by a prophet on someone who was dead. Was it Elijah who performed the miracle of raising the widow's son in I Kings 17 or was it the widow's son who performed the miracle? Did the dead army Ezekiel saw in the valley of dry bones (Ezekiel 37) perform miracles on themselves by coming back to life or was it someone else who raised these dead people back to life? When Jesus said "Lazareth come forth" was he only hoping Lazarus had it in him to come forth or would you say it was Jesus who performed that miracle? Ditto the ruler's daughter who came back from the dead in Matthew 9:24-25. Resurrection is not typically presented as a miracle wrought by the person being raised so much as the one doing the raising. The implication would be that it was Yahweh who raised Jesus from the dead, not Jesus raising himself from the dead.

So to once again beat this dead horse, Paul wrote of a non-historical Jesus who did not live in any particular place, didn't do any particular things or say any particular things. Paul's Jesus was one-dimensional, a savior god who (like many gods of previous lore) journeyed to Hades and came back. You can continue in denial all you want but the exploits of ancient god-men who did this very thing are well documented. Egypt's Osiris, Greek's Heracles, the Mayan Hero Twins, Sumerian Endiku (considered by most authorities to be a later addition to the ancient Sumerian Epic of Gilgamesh), Roman Dionysus, Hindu gods and others from Norse, Mongolian and so on. This is why Justin Martyr compared this very thing to known myths of the day.

And again your ignorance about the paucity of pagan scripture is a problem of your own, not one we should have to keep educating you about. I say keep because it has been covered several times already in this thread and you seem unwilling to read anything that contradicts your ready-made view of the world. Most pagan religions did not produce written scripture. Now go learn about it and stop asking the same silly question over and over again.

It was and remains orders of magnitude more likely that people make up stories about miracles and retell them than it is that the miracles happen. Get your god to reliably send fire down from heaven on command or move a few mountains by faith and we will have good reason to believe this god exists and can back up the miracles ascribed to him in these myths. Otherwise you have no evidence that these miracles occurred, only stories about them.
 
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