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Historical Jesus

Old English
Old English is about as comprehensible to Modern English speakers as Icelandic (which it quite closely resembles). It was spoken from the fifth through to the eleventh centuries, when it was transformed into Middle English by the injection of Norman French, after the conquest of 1066.

Middle English isn't vastly easier to comprehend. It was spoken from the eleventh through to the fifteenth centuries, and is the language in which Chaucer wrote the Canterbury Tales.

The King James Bible seems a touch archaic to us today, because it is written in Early Modern English, in the seventeenth century, with all those Thees and Thous that were a hangover of Middle English.

It most assuredly isn't written in Old English, though, which neither me nor thee would like be able to fathom.

Old English stopped being used about a thousand years ago; The KJV was written about four hundred years ago. So we are closer in time to the authors of the KJV than they were to the last speakers of Old English.

Not everything that happened in the past happened at the same time.

Old English is the proper name of an extinct language. It's not just Modern English that is a few centuries old.
 
Swammer, I think the problem with reconciling what you and I are saying is that it appears when you say, “Jesus was historically true,” YOU are talking about, and you claim the historians are talking about, not Jesus, but some preacher named Yeshua. But when Christians and I hear you say, “Jesus is historically true,” the christians think you are talking about JESUS! i.e. the historically true, miracle-working, son of God who walked on water, and I’m hearing you tell them their religion is true.

We are a rather small community here at IIDB and argue discuss the same points over and over and over. By now, in these threads about Historic Jesus we almost know exactly what the post will claim as soon as we see the poster's name!

One poster defers ALL discussion of the historic Jesus to the holy "mathematical" writings of Dr. Richard Carrier, PhD (who has a doctorate). This poster isn't quite sure what Carrier writes but, boy is he sure Swammi is incompetent at probabilistic reasoning! (I actually have U.S. patents in the field of probability estimation! I'm not quite sure what field Carrier's doctorate is in, but it ain't in anything resembling a "hard" science.)

Another poster likens Jesus to Hemingway's fictional Santiago, among others. Another poster seems to think the Talebot Yeshu is a more reliable source for early Christianity than the New Testament. Another offers non sequiturs (e.g. claiming the Gospels were originally written in English) presumably intended to add humor to the thread. And so on. I think most of these regular participants know my views by now. Every third post or so I summarize them anyway at the top of my post.

If someone is so disinterested in my posts that they read a single one, and misinterpret it, so be it.

Let me summarize the four different positions on the matter of "Historic Jesus": I am in Camp 3, as are about 99% of non-Christian professional historians.
  1. Jesus was an invented myth -- For whatever reason some person(s), presumably Simon Barjona decided to create a mythical Messiah. They may have conflated 3 or 4 different individuals in Judea or Galilee, some of whom may or may not have been named Jesus. Saul of Tarsus became aware of 2 or 3 such myths and invented one of his own. It can be amusing to try to imagine their myth-creation, but that's beyond the scope of this post. (I think Monty Python may have done a skit on this.)
  2. Jesus was a "nobody" -- Jesus was a Galilean, probably baptized by John the Baptist (you'll have to ask bilby whether John was also a nobody), and eventually crucified by order of Pontius Pilate (a man much less famous and notable than Jesus, though presumably himself not a nobody). A major religion grew very rapidly after the crucifixion, but Jesus himself was presumably irrelevant: If he hadn't existed Simon Barjona would have found some other unemployed carpenter to use as his foil
  3. Jesus was a real human of historic importance -- This position is similar to Camp 2, except we guess that Jesus did have some charisma that made him a likely candidate for worship and myth-making. He was probably a preacher and/or a healer though some emphasize his putative role of insurrectionist.
  4. Jesus was the Son of God and had supernatural powers -- Jesus raised Lazarus among others from the dead; and presumably walked on water and did other unlikely things. This position has various subcamps. (Was Jesus' mother a perpetual virgin? Was Jesus already an eternal God when he was born, or did he become one?) AFAIK at IIDB only Lumpenproletariat is in Camp 4: Has he posted details of his position?

Since over 99% of competent historians accept the idea that there really WAS an Historic Jesus who, for whatever reason, joined Siddhartha Gautama and Muhammad ibn Abdullah in founding a major religion, you may well ask why I bother to express agreement with this obvious and common-sense position!

Good question! I've been an avid reader, and worker of puzzles all my life. I think it was way back in the 1980's that I first read a book on the subject of Jesus' historicity -- not because I found the topic particularly interesting but, as I say, I was a VERY avid reader. In very recent years -- provoked primarily by discussions right here at IIDB! -- I have revisited the topic. I deduced all by myself that Jesus' brother James was one of the strongest clues to historicity: Mythical men do not have flesh-and-bones brothers. I was proud to see, in a YouTube by a professional historian, that he agreed this was one of the strongest clues (though there are plenty of others).

Rhea, you seem worried that Christians may read my writings and conclude that their faith is, after all, well placed! I only wish I had such influence, especially since millions of Americans who believe Jesus worked miracles now believe that Donald Trump is a Second Cumming and also can work miracles!
 
From miracle Jesus we get historical Jesus. That much is certain. People who said miracle Jesus wasn't real got themselves burned alive. Lots of selection pressure to proclaim one's belief in miracle Jesus for a very loooooooooooooong time. Still is. Miracle Jesus is still hugely popular and provides wonderful cover for believing in the secular version of miracle Jesus. It's impossible to separate miracle Jesus from historical Jesus from secular Jesus. Let's just call the guy Wonderful Jesus so everyone can be happy. Just don't call him fictional Jesus.

Lots of people still think there's a god even though they might not think creationism is real. It's okay to not think creationism is real so long as you still believe in the magic spaceman, higher power, god guy. Gotta have the god guy and that makes lots of other things okay today even if it would have gotten you smoked a few short centuries ago.

And continents don't drift. What a bunch of crackpottery! Lock the guy up.

And planet Earth is the center of the universe. Don't think so? We have a nice stake and plenty of wood to help you rethink that one.

And why wash your hands? Everyone knows we can go from cadaver to making pelvic exams no problemo. Lock that nutcase away before he ruins our hospital protocol. Germs! What a fucking loon!

What? We came from monkeys? Toss him to the lions. He's clearly unhinged.

You say that wonderful Thomas Jefferson guy has been having sex with his slaves? I'm ashamed to hear that. You should be locked away. Traitor!

You say the earth is much older than it says in my sacred book? What crackpottery! Those fossils got there from the great big floody when spaceman killed everyone except the boat people. Either that or devil spaceman is testing you. It makes perfect sense. You just need to pray more and you'll be okay.

Let's face it. Saying gospel Jesus is fiction is presently taboo city. Sure, he didn't really fly around in the sky like Superman or make the universe or walk on water or make dead people be alive again. Those embellishments are fictional but he was still Mr. Wonderful and we all need to keep him in our thoughts. He was and is the ultimate victim of how mean we all can be. We killed him for no good reason. Shame on us.
 
Did Jesus do something noteworthy, or did he not?
If he did not, then

stop pretending that he was noteworthy
when you try to explain what really happened.





THE SOURCES

And it is from the alleged Q source. So I concede: although the mention is very brief and probably just shows that accounts of such miracles were in circulation very early, there are THREE sources for Jesus raising the dead (setting aside Jesus' own "resurrection"): proto-Mark, proto-John and Q.
No, there are more sources than only these hypothetical "sources" you're preaching here to the exclusion of others (even real ones). This is just your scheme for eliminating certain sources you want to exclude and including others which are only hypothetical, all artificially glued together so you can reduce the total number of sources down to fewer in order to prop up your contrived theory.

Your artificial scheme ignores that one of the raising-the-dead stories is Luke 7:11-17, and this is NOT in the Q category because it's in Luke only, not also in Matthew. So you have to add this as a 4th source.

This shows the phoniness of pretending to reduce down the number of sources based on these theories about hypothetical sources, or about "primary source" vs. "secondary source." When you start relying on theories and hypothetical this or that, or speculating where the author got his material or whether he was "dependent" or "independent," you go off into imaginary worlds where you can make up your own facts and probably find a way to prove or disprove anything you want, to just confirm your prejudice rather than find reliable facts about what happened.

The scholarship you rely on does NOT say there are only 2 Gospels rather than 4, or that these "sources" are fewer than the 4 (Gospel accounts) plus 1 (Paul Epistles). No, these are 4 (5) real sources, our main sources for the historical Jesus. The "2-Source Hypothesis" and "3-Source Hypothesis") which you rely on do not say that the 4 Gospels are not 4 sources. Virtually all scholars recognize that our main sources for the Historical Jesus are the 4 Gospels (4 sources) and the Paul Epistles (a 5th source). These sources are not reduced to a smaller number simply because there might be other sources also, mostly hypothetical, or because they quote from another source.

All we know is that we have the 4 Gospels, which are 4 genuine Sources, plus we have the Epistles of Paul = a genuine Source for the Resurrection = 5 sources for this major Jesus miracle. And actually there might be more than these 4 (5) sources -- e.g., some of the Paul Epistles are falsely attributed to him, in which case they're additional sources which might also make reference to the Resurrection, thus adding 2 or 3 more sources for this. So there are 5 main sources + a few other minor sources also.

So it's more straightforward and honest to simply recognize the 4 (5) real sources we have -- not hypothetical, not calculated by speculating on what they might have relied on or if they were "independent" or not. No, these 4 (5) sources really exist, in the form of real manuscripts existing in museums and studied by scholars who recognize them as separate documents. The identification of the sources should begin with and depend on what's real, what's known for sure, rather than hypothetical writings or fantasies on what or who they depended on.

(I plan sometime to go through Mt and Lk carefully to find the exact number of miracle stories there which are not from Mk or Q. There are a few of these. Bart Ehrman names more than only the 5 sources, because some examples are that which is from Matthew only, which is called the "M" source, and others are the "L" source, from Luke only. So there are many "source" theories.

And the truth is that there is NO CONSENSUS among the scholars how many sources there are. This is subjective, whimsical, each expert having his own particular scheme for identifying the number of sources, and giving their names to each one. But it's a recognized fact that the 4 Gospels and Paul Epistles do exist. These are REAL UNcontested 5 sources. And it's wacko to say these are not 5 but really on 3 or 2 sources.

It's more honest to just recognize the real documents we have, recognize that they are ALL legitimate sources, in the normal sense, and then give the details on some differences, and note where the same text is quoted by another. But it is dishonest to reduce the number of sources down and say it's really only 2 rather than 4. Again -- you haven't answered this -- where else do scholars do this with literature? history sources? reducing the number of sources down only because 1 or 2 of them quote from another? Unless you can give another case where scholars do this with some other kind of literature, you have to admit that this is a double-standard being applied to NT literature only and to no other literature.

Consider this excerpt from the Quran, apparently written mostly by Islam's Prophet himself and finalized soon after his death.
Quran said:
And remember, Jesus, the son of Mary, said: "O Children of Israel! I am the messenger of Allah (sent) to you, confirming the Law (which came) before me, and giving Glad Tidings of a Messenger to come after me, whose name shall be Ahmad [Mohammad]." But when he came to them with Clear Signs, they said, "this is evident sorcery!"
Jesus is mentioned in the Quran, shows "Clear Signs" and compares himself with another Messenger, Mohammad.

There are miracles attributed both to Mohammad and to the Buddha.
Yes, but -- you already know this? -- in both cases the attributions are not until 200 or more years later, from writers not near to the time they lived. Most Muslims don't believe the later miracle stories about Mohammed.

I think those miracles are down-played in part because attention focuses on Mohammad's and Buddha's own writings.
But they're downplayed mainly by the fact that everyone knows there are no good sources for them. The Muslims and Buddhists themselves just don't believe those stories, and for good reason, which is that there is no good evidence, i.e., no sources for them dating from near the time when the Teacher-Hero lived. Whereas the Jesus miracle stories were and are still believed because there is legitimate evidence that the events really happened, based on normal historical evidence, with extra evidence, or more evidence than is normally required for ancient history events.




WAS JESUS NOTEWORTHY OR NOT?

But Jesus left no direct writings. You ask What accounts for Jesus' uniqueness as an alleged miracle worker?
That question has been answered, and you're still not responding, or giving any other answer. He's the only reputed miracle-worker for whom there is any evidence. The evidence is very abundant, from 1st-century writings, near his time, as opposed to the pagan heroes for whom there is no such evidence. And he's virtually the most written-about historical figure of the 1st century, with possibly Caesar Augustus and Nero etc. as a few cases maybe more written about in the 1st-century record. What was special about the rich and powerful Emperors that we have writings about them? Well of course, they were rich and powerful and famous elites, and such people are 90% of the subject matter in the writings. We know what they did to become recognized as important.

So then, what did Jesus do to become recognized as important? No one has any answer, as long as they reject the accounts which say he did the miracle acts. Those reported acts are the only possible answer. What is your answer?

What accounts for Jesus' uniqueness as an alleged miracle worker? Could it mainly be just that Jesus and his inner circle lacked the wherewithal (literacy, money for papyrus) to create a major textbook?
What? He was poor? This made him important? brought him recognition to be made into the miracle Messiah and Son of God? like Caesar was also a son of God? This made him stand out as noteworthy? that he was poor? Do you realize how many millions of poor people there were? You think every poor person in history stands out as important and so is to be mythologized into a miracle-working resurrected Messiah Son of God Hero and founder of a new religion? Who is left to be the members of this new religion if ALL the poor people are now the Hero Son of God to be worshiped? Who is left to be his followers? So you think that being poor explains how Jesus became written about and made famous in the 1st-century writings? This would mean that every homeless person in our cities is also a miracle-working Messiah Son of God.

Obviously you're not taking the question seriously. You just start out with the assumption that Jesus is a noteworthy 1st-century historical figure, because of what you've been taught in your 20th-century education. Just as we in the West have all been taught this for centuries. This is what has planted in our minds the idea that he was noteworthy, and we just accept this as a given fact which has no explanation outside the indoctrination we received from having been raised in this Western culture.

The question is why are we taught this, or what is it that makes him important. What is told to us about him, from the record, or from the traditions or teachings about him, to raise him to such recognition or status? If there's more, from the entire history record, to explain what made him stand out -- then tell us what it is. If the tradition is in error, then what is the correct version of the facts which explains what made him stand out?

He was poor?

This kind of non-answer is just one more proof, one further indication that he must have done the miracle acts. All you're really saying is that the reported miracle acts (which apparently happened) are the only answer, and yet you're unable to acknowledge this because it causes you to choke up to say such forbidden words. Or, this answer is politically incorrect, because we're now indoctrinated that nothing like this is allowed as an answer, and so there is no answer, or the answer is taboo, forbidden, and we can either keep silent or we can say some unintelligible gibberish and pretend to have answered it.


So instead it was exciting fantasies that were memorized and passed on.
That makes no sense. But if somehow it does, it means we should find hundreds or thousands of miracle-workers in the writings, "Gospel" accounts and "Epistles" such as in the Jesus example, each along with the exciting fantasies the followers or inner circle in each case memorized and passed on. You're giving no reason why this should happen only in the case of Jesus in 30 AD. No explanation why there's not any other example of such a miracle-worker, even though there were easily thousands of others, even millions, who did the same as Jesus. I.e., he was poor, didn't have resources, lacked the "wherewithal" or papyrus or literacy. Like 99% of the population at that time, and so because he was such a common insignificant nobody, he therefore became famous, was mythologized into a miracle god-hero-messiah.

So, because he was a nothing, therefore he got made into a somebody. That's how to become important -- to be a poor nothing nobody, and everyone who accomplishes this then becomes an important somebody. This is what happens to all poor nobodies you're saying? All of them become mythologized into famous somebodies?

But the main reason most of us do not believe Jesus worked supernatural miracles is that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
No, that's just poetry. What such claims require is extra evidence. Same kind of evidence as for all facts, but more of it, or more than is required for normal events. Extra evidence, more sources, etc. The same as for any other unusual claims that are in the doubtful category. And we do have the extra evidence for the Jesus miracle acts, just as we have extra evidence for some other "extraordinary" historical events.

Even if your argument multiplies the a priori chance of such miracles by a million, the miracles remain unlikely if the a priori chance was one in a trillion.
The Jesus miracle acts are not one in a trillion, except in the sense that there are many facts of history which are "one a trillion" because of the unusual element. The Resurrection is in the same category as many unusual facts of history, because we have confirmed cases of "dead" bodies reviving after several hours. Nothing about it defies biology or laws of nature, etc. It's just in the very doubtful category because it's rare, or the cases of this that are confirmed are for several hours -- not longer than one day. But who's to say how long it could go before the body revives? There's no science to fix the time at 24 hours and no longer. Scientists have not determined what caused some "dead" bodies to return to life, or how long it could have continued. It's not known how it happens --
But it has happened several times, in documented cases. In this one case 2000 years ago it was for a longer time period, maybe twice as long. And in many cases like this one there is no explanation. You can call it "extraordinary" and other metaphors if you wish, but that does not erase the facts of history we know from the evidence, or the reported cases, in the written accounts. Those "extraordinary" cases are proven, or shown as probable, because of the extra evidence in each case.

And scientists have not proved that all those "dead" bodies were not really dead. There have been many cases of this, and the scientists who investigate it have not determined for sure exactly what "death" is vs. the ones who were not really "dead" but only appeared dead. This has not been figured out. All that's known is that it's very rare -- yes, maybe one in a million. Or 100 million. Or a billion. But that still means several cases in a world population in the billions, maybe 10-15 billion over 1000 or 2000 years etc. So even if there have not been millions of cases, there could possibly be several thousand. And maybe the ones who revived in only 30 minutes or so reduces the percentage way down. But still, there's nothing unrealistic about maybe several thousand cases over 100 or 500 years (or 1000). It's not one in a trillion. So the Jesus Resurrection is just one more of many unusual events ("one in a million" etc.) documented by the historical evidence.

ETA: Also: while proto-Mark, proto-John and Q may have been written VERY early, they all probably post-date the crucifixion and alleged resurrection. As part of the method of midrash, retrofitting fictitious accounts of "raising the dead" into pre-crucifixion stories might have been normal.
There are easily thousands of Jews, before Jesus and during his time, who were more important than he was and who should have been credited with "raising the dead" stories if this was "normal." Yet there is not one, except perhaps Elijah/Elisha (9th century BC), said to have done this. Even if we assume these Jesus miracles were later put into the record as fiction, or mythologizing, there's no explanation why Jesus is the only person chosen to be mythologized and no one else.

Again, you always commit the same error: You assume (for no reason) that Jesus was noteworthy, was worshiped as a god or messiah or savior who did miracles even though he did no such thing any more than anyone else did, and he had no status or recognition for anything important. You assume he was important and had status, even though you acknowledge that he did not have any special status or importance.

It's only your 20th-century upbringing which has taught you that he had status and recognition. You keep forgetting that it's only in the later Western Culture that he acquired this status (if he didn't do the miracle acts). You subconsciously maintain this picture of him, as someone important and to whom mythologizing could happen, and you keep forgetting that

he did not have any such status or recognition in the 1st century when these accounts were written. You can't (subconsciously) give him this status and then say he got mythologized for this reason, while at the same time recognizing that he did not have any such status in the 1st century when the accounts of him were written -- in which accounts he is said to have done these things. You keep assuming he must have had some status at that time, when the claims originated (and mythologizing took place), even though you also assume he had no such distinction at that time because he did nothing noteworthy.

As long as your theory continues to be based on this blatant contradiction, you are disproving your theory. And therefore it's reasonable to believe the evidence of history, which is that he did perform the miracle acts. Since any other theory repeatedly falls back on the blatant contradiction, trying to slip in an assumption that he was noteworthy, while at the same time claiming he did nothing noteworthy, or denying all the reported facts that make him noteworthy at that time.
 
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Revised listing / ranking of reputed miracle-workers

I'm adding another name to this list. This shows names of reputed miracle-workers and ranking them according to the volume of evidence supporting claims of their power to perform miracle acts. In any such ranking, Jesus is far up at the top of the list, way beyond any other reported cases of miracle-workers. If he was only slightly above the 2nd one, with others close behind (3rd, 4th, 5th, etc.), in a close race, it would be reasonable to say that Jesus is just one more reported miracle-worker among many down through history. But the reality is that he is by far the most documented of all the reputed miracle-workers, with no other even close.

The new name added is Baal Shem Tov -- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baal_Shem_Tov -- founder of the Jewish Hasidic movement. He is named by Bart Ehrman as another miracle-worker comparable to Jesus -- (YouTube debate on the Resurrection of Jesus -- "Bart Ehrman vs Justin Bass • Did Jesus of Nazareth rise from the dead?")

(Of course the methodology here is informal, and there is no way to precisely measure the amount of evidence in each case. The following ranking likely is incorrect for some of the names, so certain ones should be higher or lower, depending on how one judges the evidence in each case (the "batting average" for each is rounded off to the nearest 10 -- obviously these are approximations). But it's legitimate to attempt such a listing and give reasons for putting a name somewhere higher or lower relative to the other names. Obviously you can produce your own alternative listing/ranking and give your reasons for the ranking you attribute to each name.)


.000 - 1.000 "batting average" ranking and name of miracle cult/miracle worker


.950 -------------------- Jesus Christ 30-33 AD
.300 -------------------- Asclepius Cult 400-300 BC and 100 AD and later
.300 -------------------- Delphic Oracle
.250 -------------------- St. Francis of Assisi
.240 -------------------- Nostradamus
.230 -------------------- Prophets Elijah/Elisha (9th century BC)
.220 -------------------- Sai Baba 20th century
.210 -------------------- Rasputin, Russian Revolution "Mad Monk"
.190 -------------------- Baal Shem Tov (1698– 1760), founder of Jewish Hasidism
.190 -------------------- St. Genevieve 5th century
.170 -------------------- Edgar Cayce 20th century
.160 -------------------- Apollonius of Tyana* 1st century AD
.150 -------------------- Joseph Smith 19th century
.130 -------------------- Serapis, Egyptian god
.120 -------------------- Isis, Egyptian goddess

*No reported miracles until about 220 AD


What is the evidence for Baal Shem Tov (d. 1760) as a miracle-worker? (Original name -- Israel ben Eliezer or Yisroel ben Eliezer.)

There's apparently only one source.

The little biographical information about the Baal Shem Tov comes from oral traditions handed down by his students (Jacob Joseph of Polonne and others) and from the legendary tales about his life and behavior collected in Shivḥei ha-Besht (In Praise of the Ba'al Shem Tov; Kapust and Berdychiv, 1814–15).[6]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baal_Shem_Tov

The oral traditions per se are not a source unless they are published in something, but it's not clear when/where they're first published. Oral reports of something 300 years ago published 100-200 years ago are a poor source, as we need something close to the time of the alleged events. So the evidence for miracle-worker Baal Shem Tov is one source only, dated 60 years later than the events allegedly happened.

60 years is close enough, though for events this recent we generally have much better evidence than this, and more sources than only one. So this compares very unfavorably with the evidence for Jesus in 30 AD, for whom we have 4 sources 40-70 years later, and 5 sources for the Resurrection, with the closest being the Apostle Paul only 20 years later than this event happened. And actually the number of 1st-century sources as evidence is more than only these 4 (5), but these (4 Gospels and Paul Epistles) are the main sources, with possibly a few other minor sources. This amount is more evidence than we have for most of our known historical facts for ancient history, for which usually there is only one source, and usually this is dated 50-100-200 years later than the reported event(s). (And of course there are some conspicuous events for which there are extra sources and even contemporary sources in exceptional cases.) Yet even our sources for Julius Caesar are mainly 100+ years later, with almost nothing contemporary to Caesar. Contemporary sources are the rare exception for ancient history.

That debunkers like Bart Ehrman can't name any better example than someone like Baal Shem Tov is further indication that Jesus stands out conspicuously as by far the most documented case in history of a miracle-worker. As usual Ehrman falls back on the example of Apollonius of Tyana, also Romulus for whom there is no evidence other than legends from 500 years earlier than the sources. Why is it that no one can give other cases of reported miracle-workers for whom there is serious evidence?

In all the cases offered, as miracle-workers comparable to Jesus, there is never good evidence -- i.e., never extra sources near the time when the alleged events happened. All anyone can offer are legends from centuries earlier than the event is first reported in the written accounts.

This pattern of poor evidence does change somewhat as we proceed more toward modern times. As publishing becomes a major industry, and as it evolves into the vast mass media of modern times, you can possibly name some cases where there might be more sources to cite. But along with this increase in alleged sources, there is also an increase in sources which deny the miracle claims being made, and this denial of the claims is counter-evidence offsetting the evidence in support of the claims.
 
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While appreciating the high level of discourse on multiple sides of the debate in this thread, I must point out that Jesus' "batting average" must be significantly discounted by the new evidence scholars learned about His physical dexterity in the hacky-sack scene of The Chosen, S3E3.
 
^Love The Chosen. The cast is amazing.
I find it very similar to Game Of Thrones. Great cast, dialogue, costumes, scenery, and production value. A "prince that was promised." Folks brought back to life. A witty underdog hero followed by a prostitute and bad-guy soldiers in red-and-gold uniforms. Both shows are fairly true to the series of novels on which they were based. Both series of novels have a promised ending that we have yet to see.
 
Interesting how people today commonly mix modern mythology like Star Wars. LOTR, Matrix, and other narratives with discussions on religion and in everyday life.

If you want to understand how the Jeuss narrative became common you only have to look at out pop culture.
 
While appreciating the high level of discourse on multiple sides of the debate in this thread, I must point out that Jesus' "batting average" must be significantly discounted by the new evidence scholars learned about His physical dexterity in the hacky-sack scene of The Chosen, S3E3.

I'd never heard of The Chosen, but with 9.2 IMDB's it's worth a peek! (We have Netflix.)

Meanwhile, I'll repeat my comments on Lumpen's claims.
  • I think Lumpen has demonstrated that each of the four canonical Gospels mentions a miracle not mentioned in the other three. That is an interesting fact!
  • The large number of nearly-contemporaneous accounts of Jesus' life (and the sheer number of manuscripts which have turned up) IS impressive. How does THAT compare with others from 2000 years ago? Whatever one thinks of the miracles, this glut of papyrus tells us much about the rapid growth of this cult, and makes a strong suggestion about Jesus' charisma. (Most of the oldest papyrus manuscripts have turned up in Egypt, where they were preserved by very arid climate.)
  • Myths about Siddhartha Gautama 'the Buddha' claim that he worked miracles. If contemporary papyrus documents about him had survived in a desert (as Jesus' did), would he get a higher 'batting average'?
  • Crash course in probability arithmetic. If an argument increases the likelihood that Jesus performed miracles by a factor of a Million, BUT the a priori chance was one-in-a-trillion, the argument increases the chance only to one-in-a-million.
 
Will Durant, "Caesar and Christ" in his Story of Civilization series, about Jesus Christ himself.

p. 595
After discussing the first three canonical Gospels, the Synoptic ones, he turns to the Gospel of John.
The Fourth Gospel does not pretend to be a biography of Jesus; it is a presentation of Christ from the theological point of view, as the divine Logos or Word, creator of the world and redeemer of mankind. It contradicts the synoptic gospels in a hundred details and in its general picture of Christ. The half-Gnostic character of the work, and its emphasis on metaphysical ideas, have led many Christian scholars to doubt that its author was the apostle John. Experience suggests, however, that an old tradition must not be too quickly rejected; our ancestors were not all fools. Recent studies tend to restore the Fourth Gospel to a date near the end of the first century. Probably tradition was correct in assigning to the same author the “Epistles of John”; they speak the same ideas in the same style.
At least he's willing to bite the bullet and accept that gJohn is very different from gMatthew, gMark, and gLuke, the three Synoptic ones. GJohn as a theological treatise seems like a plausible story, a treatise with Jesus Christ in it like some fictional character for illustrative purposes.

p. 596
In summary , it is clear that there are many contradictions between one gospel and another, many dubious statements of history, many suspicious resemblances to the legends told of pagan gods, many incidents apparently designed to prove the fulfillment of Old Testament prophecies, many passages possibly aiming to establish a historical basis for some later doctrine or ritual of the Church. The evangelists shared with Cicero, Sallust, and Tacitus the conception of history as a vehicle for moral ideas. And presumably the conversations and speeches reported in the Gospels were subject to the frailties of illiterate memories, and the errors or emendations of copyists.
So far so good, and to me, it seems like the writers of the Gospels were making it all up as they went along.

He neglected to add "deliberate rewrites". Of the three Synoptics, gMark is generally considered to be the oldest. gMatthew and gLuke have word-for-word copies of much of gMark. gMatthew and gLuke have some additional material that are likely from a lost Gospel, "Q" (German Quelle, "source"), though Richard Carrier proposes that gLuke is a rewrite of gMatthew without any Q.
 
All this granted, much remains. The contradictions are of minutiae, not substance; in essentials the synoptic gospels agree remarkably well, and form a consistent portrait of Christ. In the enthusiasm of its discoveries the Higher Criticism has applied to the New Testament tests of authenticity so severe that by them a hundred ancient worthies—e.g., Hammurabi, David, Socrates— would fade into legend.* Despite the prejudices and theological preconceptions of the evangelists, they record many incidents that mere inventors would have concealed—the competition of the apostles for high places in the Kingdom, their flight after Jesus's arrest, Peter’s denial, the failure of Christ to work miracles in Galilee, the references of some auditors to his possible insanity, his early uncertainty as to his mission, his confessions of ignorance as to the future, his moments of bitterness, his despairing cry on the cross; no one reading these scenes can doubt the reality of the figure behind them. That a few simple men should in one generation have invented so powerful and appealing a personality, so lofty an ethic and so inspiring a vision of human brotherhood, would be a miracle far more incredible than any recorded in the Gospels. After two centuries of Higher Criticism the outlines of the life, character, and teaching of Christ, remain reasonably clear, and constitute the most fascinating feature in the history of Western man.

* Says a great Jewish scholar, perhaps too strongly: ‘If we had ancient sources like those in the Gospels for the history of Alexander or Caesar, we should not cast any doubt upon them whatsoever.”— Klausner, J., From Jesus to Paul, 260.
Some of the contradictions are rather severe. Did Judas hang himself? (Matt 27:3) Or did he trip and fall and his guts then burst out? (Acts 1:18)

What were his last words on the cross? “Eli, Eli, lema sabachthani?” ("My God, My God, why did you abandon me?") (Matt 27:46) "Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?” ("My God, My God, why did you abandon me?") (Mark 15:34) “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit!” (Luke 23:46) "It is finished." (completed, ended, accomplished) (John 19:30)

What "tests of authenticity"? If one applies Lord Raglan's mythic-hero profile, one finds that Jesus Christ scores *very* high and King David *very* low.

As to those deficiencies, they make Jesus Christ and the apostles seem more human. The Trinity is not in the New Testament; it was invented later as a way of tying up the doctrinal loose ends of the NT. So it's natural that the Gospel writers depicted JC as human, as opposed to being some superpowerful superbeing that is invulnerable and always level-headed.

Furthermore, there are three different sets of last words on that cross. That "despairing cry", and two not-so-despairing sets of last words. Those ones are more like saying "I'm all done here".

As to the idea that it is too hard to invent someone like the JC of the Gospels, I don't think that that gives enough credit to human imagination.
 
Speaking of "the voice of one crying in the wilderness" [Matthew 3:3, Mark 1:3, Luke 3:4 and John 1:23 :cool: ] or "in the desert" [as in Isaias 40:3], I feel like the iconoclast here! Should I feel ashamed to join with 99% of non-Christian historians? They believe, as I do, that JC existed but not that he worked miracles. I think there are a FEW others here that agree with the 99% but mostly we see supporters of Richard Carrier on the one hand (joined by those who use Toledot Yeshu as JC's biography), and at least one Infidel arguing for the truths of the miracles.

I hope my credentials as a skeptic are not in doubt. I am a firm believer in the Amerindian Hypothesis despite that it is ridiculed by many historical linguists. I was writing in support of the Gimbutas-Mallory theory of Indo-European origin when that was a ridiculed minority position. And of course I accept that the evidence strongly points to Edward de Vere as author of the poems and plays attributed to William Shakespeare.

All this granted, much remains. The contradictions are of minutiae, not substance; in essentials the synoptic gospels agree remarkably well, and form a consistent portrait of Christ. In the enthusiasm of its discoveries the Higher Criticism has applied to the New Testament tests of authenticity so severe that by them a hundred ancient worthies—e.g., Hammurabi, David, Socrates— would fade into legend.* Despite the prejudices and theological preconceptions of the evangelists, they record many incidents that mere inventors would have concealed—the competition of the apostles for high places in the Kingdom, their flight after Jesus's arrest, Peter’s denial, the failure of Christ to work miracles in Galilee, the references of some auditors to his possible insanity, his early uncertainty as to his mission, his confessions of ignorance as to the future, his moments of bitterness, his despairing cry on the cross; no one reading these scenes can doubt the reality of the figure behind them. That a few simple men should in one generation have invented so powerful and appealing a personality, so lofty an ethic and so inspiring a vision of human brotherhood, would be a miracle far more incredible than any recorded in the Gospels. After two centuries of Higher Criticism the outlines of the life, character, and teaching of Christ, remain reasonably clear, and constitute the most fascinating feature in the history of Western man.

Yes, Durant does a good job of outlining some of the reasons that professional historians are essentially CERTAIN that Jesus of Nazareth did exist. (The details of his ministry are, of course, up for debate.)

* Says a great Jewish scholar, perhaps too strongly: ‘If we had ancient sources like those in the Gospels for the history of Alexander or Caesar, we should not cast any doubt upon them whatsoever.”— Klausner, J., From Jesus to Paul, 260.
Some of the contradictions are rather severe. Did Judas hang himself? (Matt 27:3) Or did he trip and fall and his guts then burst out? (Acts 1:18)

Guess what! Some of the stories in the Gospels are FICTIONAL !!! I don't think professional historians even agree that Judas even existed!

What were his last words on the cross? “Eli, Eli, lema sabachthani?” ("My God, My God, why did you abandon me?") (Matt 27:46) "Eloi, Eloi, lema sabachthani?” ("My God, My God, why did you abandon me?") (Mark 15:34) “Father, into your hands I commit my spirit!” (Luke 23:46) "It is finished." (completed, ended, accomplished) (John 19:30)

Were Jesus' last words even recorded? Even if there were witnesses who wrote truthfully, some might have missed the whisperings of a dying man.

And what's with the "why did you abandon me" anyway, if Jesus is really supposed to be the Omniscient Omnipotent God Himself? Christians connect the peculiar valediction to David's 22nd Psalm which mutates from the gloomy first verse into praise and thanksgiving. What do non-Christian historians think of this alleged valediction? I dunno.
What "tests of authenticity"? If one applies Lord Raglan's mythic-hero profile, one finds that Jesus Christ scores *very* high and King David *very* low.

Oh no! Not you too, lpetrich. o_O I lack the emotional energy to mount another detailed discussion of Carrier's stupidities but one fact about the "Rank-Raglan mythotype" is worth repeating: Neither Rank nor Raglan advocated its use as a way of distinguishing historical persons from mythical persons.

As to those deficiencies, they make Jesus Christ and the apostles seem more human. The Trinity is not in the New Testament; it was invented later as a way of tying up the doctrinal loose ends of the NT. So it's natural that the Gospel writers depicted JC as human, as opposed to being some superpowerful superbeing that is invulnerable and always level-headed.

Furthermore, there are three different sets of last words on that cross. That "despairing cry", and two not-so-despairing sets of last words. Those ones are more like saying "I'm all done here".
(It's unclear what you're arguing for here.)

As to the idea that it is too hard to invent someone like the JC of the Gospels, I don't think that that gives enough credit to human imagination.

And I do not think you give enough credit to professional historians. Using clues -- external and internal -- to distinguish fact from fiction is a very important part of their craft.
 
Should I feel ashamed to join with 99% of non-Christian historians?
You should be ashamed to employ aurgumentum ad populum and argument from authority fallacies.
They believe, as I do, that JC existed but not that he worked miracles.
What the fuck would that even imply?

This boils down to the astonishing and controversial claim that a person lived in Roman Judea.

I suspect that the number of people who believe that to be true is even closer to 100% than you claim.

Take out the miracles, and JC is utterly unremarkable, and historically far less relevant than (for example) Wat Tyler.

I don't recall the last time someone tried to impose on my rights in the name of Tyler.
 
Should I feel ashamed to join with 99% of non-Christian historians?
You should be ashamed to employ aurgumentum ad populum and argument from authority fallacies.
They believe, as I do, that JC existed but not that he worked miracles.
What the fuck would that even imply?

:confused2: George Washington existed but probably didn't chop down the cherry tree.

This boils down to the astonishing and controversial claim that a person lived in Roman Judea.

I suspect that the number of people who believe that to be true is even closer to 100% than you claim.

Take out the miracles, and JC is utterly unremarkable, and historically far less relevant than (for example) Wat Tyler.

I don't recall the last time someone tried to impose on my rights in the name of Tyler.

I discussed your "theory" before: You take the Camp #2 case rather than the much more logical and probable Camp #3 -- see below. I even personalized the discussion -- look for the "bilby" in the prior post. I've reddened it now to help you find it.

If he were correct and I wrong that would be one thing: He'd be fighting ignorance. In fact his supercilious drivel is sophomoric. And any issue has been addressed already, repeatedly, for example:
Let me summarize the four different positions on the matter of "Historic Jesus": I am in Camp 3, as are about 99% of non-Christian professional historians.
  1. Jesus was an invented myth -- For whatever reason some person(s), presumably Simon Barjona decided to create a mythical Messiah. They may have conflated 3 or 4 different individuals in Judea or Galilee, some of whom may or may not have been named Jesus. Saul of Tarsus became aware of 2 or 3 such myths and invented one of his own. It can be amusing to try to imagine their myth-creation, but that's beyond the scope of this post. (I think Monty Python may have done a skit on this.)
  2. Jesus was a "nobody" -- Jesus was a Galilean, probably baptized by John the Baptist (you'll have to ask bilby whether John was also a nobody), and eventually crucified by order of Pontius Pilate (a man much less famous and notable than Jesus, though presumably himself not a nobody). A major religion grew very rapidly after the crucifixion, but Jesus himself was presumably irrelevant: If he hadn't existed Simon Barjona would have found some other unemployed carpenter to use as his foil
  3. Jesus was a real human of historic importance -- This position is similar to Camp 2, except we guess that Jesus did have some charisma that made him a likely candidate for worship and myth-making. He was probably a preacher and/or a healer though some emphasize his putative role of insurrectionist.
  4. Jesus was the Son of God and had supernatural powers -- Jesus raised Lazarus among others from the dead; and presumably walked on water and did other unlikely things. This position has various subcamps. (Was Jesus' mother a perpetual virgin? Was Jesus already an eternal God when he was born, or did he become one?) AFAIK at IIDB only Lumpenproletariat is in Camp 4: Has he posted details of his position?

Since over 99% of competent historians accept the idea that there really WAS an Historic Jesus who, for whatever reason, joined Siddhartha Gautama and Muhammad ibn Abdullah in founding a major religion, you may well ask why I bother to express agreement with this obvious and common-sense position!

Good question! I've been an avid reader, and worker of puzzles all my life. I think it was way back in the 1980's that I first read a book on the subject of Jesus' historicity -- not because I found the topic particularly interesting but, as I say, I was a VERY avid reader. In very recent years -- provoked primarily by discussions right here at IIDB! -- I have revisited the topic. I deduced all by myself that Jesus' brother James was one of the strongest clues to historicity: Mythical men do not have flesh-and-bones brothers. I was proud to see, in a YouTube by a professional historian, that he agreed this was one of the strongest clues (though there are plenty of others).

Rhea, you seem worried that Christians may read my writings and conclude that their faith is, after all, well placed! I only wish I had such influence, especially since millions of Americans who believe Jesus worked miracles now believe that Donald Trump is a Second Cumming and also can work miracles!
 
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^Socialism is nothing else but the secularization of Christ's teaching.
Communism is the secularization of Christ's teaching.

Socialism doesn't have enough authoritarianism, it's got too much democracy and human rights to be Christian. Communism doesn't bother with those modern secular values so much. It's much more christian.
Tom
 
As further example of this on-going pattern, look at this post.
bilby offers only the pretentious "So what?" When I offer him questions, to help him hone is own understanding, he ignores me; waits a week or so; then farts out another arrogant and useless dismissive.

Again, so what?

Let's digress and play a parlor game. Do something with the following list of a dozen men.
Rank them by historical importance; play odd-men-out; whatever. Are they all "nobodies"? Or is that a special designation just for Jesus?
  • Lao Tzu (Li Er?)
  • Confucius (Kong Qiu)
  • Moses, the Deliverer and Lawgiver
  • Siddhartha Gautama, the Buddha
  • Zarathustra
  • Jesus (Yeshua) of Nazareth, the Christ
  • Paul the Apostle
  • Josiah (Yoshia ben Amon), King of Judah
  • Martin Luther
  • Muhammad ibn Abdullah the Prophet (pbuh)
  • Akhenaten, Pharaoh (Amenhotep IV)
  • Saint Peter the Apostle (Shimoun Bar Younah)
Anyone else want to play?

I asked bilby a specific question. Got "Crickets" as reply.
 
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