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Historical Jesus

How about this for the history of Jesus: qhttps://en.m.wikisource.org/wiki/Translation:Story_of_Jesus

The Toledot has had it's history in being independently documented by Jews for just as long as the gospels have been known.

It seems to indicate that Jesus is a name used for people whose name has been stricken.
 
I didn't realize you were a Christian. Had I known I wouldn't have replied to your post. I don't get into discussions about whether miraculous things happened 2000 years ago. It's completely absurd. There's just no way to have a logical discussion about that topic. It's like interacting with conspiracy theorists, they can just come up with any excuse to believe whatever they want. It's a complete waste of time.
 
We could be arguing with a heretic or some other sort of stand-alone, which might make it worthwhile. Heresies and independents always make for good discussions.
 
response to thingsweneverdid, Aug 2, #812

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The nonexistent "miracle-loving age" of Jesus

As already mentioned, Asclepius was also known for miraculous healings.

I.e., the priests at the temples were reported to do divine healings in the name of the ancient healing deity, as is common with religious cults in all periods of history.

Of all the ancient legends and miracle myths, those of Asclepius are suggested as the ones most resembling the healings of Jesus. If Asclepius really lived, it was probably around 1500 BC, perhaps getting a reputation as a healer, and legends evolved over the centuries.

But there's no documentation of Asclepius the actual ancient person who might have had some healing skill, such as we have documentation of the Jesus healings, in writings of the time. No written record of the historical Asclepius, such as we have a written record of the historical Jesus.

All legends about him, the actual historical Asclepius, are found in much later writings which passed on the myths which evolved. But the reported miracles for which there is some evidence are those which happened at the later shrines or temples or statues of Asclepius, which were performed by the Asclepius priests, at the temples, the main one being at Epidaurus in Greece. These are mostly from 400-300 BC. There are no miracle healings of Asclepius reported, among the inscriptions, from about 300 BC (or 250 BC) to about 100 AD, at which time there was a revival of the ancient cult and miracle claims.

The following "miracle" (maybe it qualifies to be called that) is probably from the very early period, 4th or 3rd century BC, or if not that, then probably it's among the ones appearing after 100 AD. There is no way to determine where this is to be found, as the author, Delbert Burkett, does not give proper documentation to locate it. The proper reference for all the Asclepius inscriptions is in Emma J. Edelstein and Ludwig Edelstein, Collection and Interpretation of the Testimonies.

Maybe the quote is accurate, though there's no way to check it without a reference other than Burkett's "W3" which doesn't locate it in the Edelstein collection.

An introduction to the New Testament and the origins of Christianity (Cambridge University Press, 2002), Delbert Burkett:

Here's the "miracle" supposed as comparable to the Jesus healing miracles:

W3: "A man with all the fingers of his hand crippled except one came to the god as a supplicant. When he saw the tablets in the temple, he doubted the healings and sneered at the inscriptions. While he slept, he dreamed that he was divining with bones under the temple. As he was about to cast the bones, the god appeared, seized his hand, and stretched out the fingers. He seemed to bend the hand to stretch out the fingers one by one. When he had straightened all of them, the god asked him if he still doubted the inscriptions on the tablets in the temple. “No,” he said. Asclepius replied, “Since before you did not believe things that are not incredible, from now on your name will be ‘Skeptic.’ ” When it was day, he came out healed."

One possibility is that some kind of therapy was performed on him as he slept. The Asclepius cult did practice actual cures which were partly legitimate or effective. Some of these were done when the patient slept. Depending on what the affliction was, maybe it was curable, or at least could be helped by some form of therapy, which the Asclepius priest performed.

Also it's questionable if this patient was really crippled -- what does it mean that the fingers were "crippled"? It's not so unusual for some fingers to have difficulty moving, bending, or unbending, at some periods, and then to function correctly at other times. So it's not a clear case of someone with a physical affliction, comparable to the paralytic or the lepers or blind men healed by Jesus.

Nevertheless, the report intends to say he was truly afflicted physically. Maybe it's to be accepted as a "miracle" if it did happen, a non-medical healing. But there's much extra doubt here, as all these inscriptions were from patients who worshiped Asclepius, and from the cult priests.

All the "miracle" cures are found in the inscriptions at the temples, mostly the Epidaurus temple, and yet the vast majority of these inscriptions are not "miracle" cures at all, but normal recoveries, due in most cases to just natural recovery which would have happened anyway, but also due to some therapy or treatments which were successful in some cases. So only a small minority are in the "miracle" category, and a few are bizarre.

The question when the inscription is dated is important. If it's before 300 BC, then it's outside the period of the "Age" in which Jesus appears in history. The absence of miracles in the culture refers to the absence during the "Age" of Jesus which is referred to as the "his miracle-loving age" -- which has to be the 1st century AD, when he lived, and the centuries leading up to it. So this "age" is 100 BC to 100 AD, or maybe 200 BC to 100 AD, or maybe even 300 BC to 100 AD.

No one defined "his miracle-loving age," but it cannot simply be all of ancient history. Even if it meant all history prior to 100 AD, the fact is that the age AFTER that (Dark Ages and later) is far more miracle-loving than the age of Jesus before, even more miracle-loving than all of ancient history. The truth is that miracle fascination is far greater AFTER 100 AD than before. So how can the time of Jesus be called "his miracle-loving age"? compared to what?

There have been vastly more numerous miracle legends AFTER the 1st century than before. And also much more in the time before 300 BC and on earlier.

And it's clear that the miracle fascination was far greater in that earlier period than it was in the 1st century when Jesus lived. As you go farther back you find far more miracle legends than in the 1st century, and period leading to it. There's a virtual total absence of miracle stories in the 1st century, BC or AD. So 100 BC to 100 AD has virtually no miracle stories in the literature, other than mention of the ancient deities and heroes, in the epic poems.

The above Asclepius inscription almost certainly dates from either the earlier period, before 200-300 BC, or after the later period beginning 100 AD, when the Asclepius cult revived.

When you try to prove that Jesus was part of an already-existing "miracle age," and cite miracles appearing during the "age" of Jesus, so that they lead up to him, showing that he is part of a "miracle-loving" culture of the time, you need to give us the evidence, the date, the citation, the ancient quote.

It's not good enough to cite a modern author only, like Burkett, giving his own theories. For the facts, you have to cite the ancient sources, the ancient text, including the date. Even though it's OK to rely on a modern author, you also have to give the ancient quote, including the date. This Asclepius healing story, even if we include it as a "miracle" claim, requires the date, in order to determine if it's part of a "miracle-loving" culture in which Jesus appears.

It's true that as you go back to 500 BC and earlier there are more miracle legends appearing. But these are not part of any "miracle-loving age" of the time of Jesus. The fact is that the time of Jesus was NOT a "miracle-loving age," as all the evidence is that the culture of miracle legends came much earlier, long before the "age" of Jesus, and that it was dying down, and there was virtually no miracle culture to be found near the time of Jesus, from about 200 BC to 100 AD, or even 300 BC to 100 AD.

And the reported Asclepius miracles, in the inscriptions, date from BEFORE 300 BC. All the later inscriptions are not "miracle" stories. In fact, the vast majority of the Asclepius inscriptions are not about miracles at all. They are normal healing stories, of people recovering from an illness, and the god Asclepius is given credit for bringing the recovery.

Also there are normal treatments described, therapies, and also psychological treatment of the patients, according to some legitimate therapy practice. There were some good dieting and exercise prescriptions, along with several prescriptions for odd herbal remedies, ointments, etc., and many superstitious rituals, and maybe also some treatments which were more harm than good, although the practitioners at the Asclepius temples were pretty smart about judging between what was healthy and what was not.

The ancient Asclepius cult even to this day is given credit as an ancient medical institution or establishment which did some good in its prescriptions, mixed in with the superstitions or primitive practices.

For the above Burkett quote to be legitimate, we must have the date of the quote. The miracle claims had died down by the time of Jesus, and this one probably falls outside the "age" of Jesus in one of the 2 periods (the early or the late) when the Asclepius inscriptions reported miracle cures. They did not report miracle cures in the period of 300 BC to 100 AD.

Those who pretend that there were many other reported miracle-workers during the period of Jesus tend to be very sloppy in their facts and quotes and documentation, as we see in this example. When the facts are looked at, in detail, there is no other evidence of miracle claims or miracle-workers throughout this period. No real evidence is provided, showing such reports in any of the literature of the period leading to the time of Jesus and the NT writings.

A few 1st-century charlatans are mentioned in Josephus, but all discredited -- no indication anyone took them seriously, no report that they actually performed the miracles they promised.

What we need are the quotes making the miracle claims crediting miracle acts to this or that prophet or teacher etc., from the ancient sources, with the dating of them included. I.e., proper documentation in the written record of the time, such as we have for the Jesus miracle acts.
 
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ongoing response to thingsweneverdid, Aug 2 2022, #812

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Vespasian's healing powers were said to come from the god Serapis who was already known for miraculous healings.
. . . .
As already mentioned, Asclepius was also known for miraculous healings.
. . . .
Isis (who was often worshiped alongside Sarapis/Osiris) and Horus were also know for miraculous healings.

Though it's popular to mention the above and other gods or hero miracle-workers, the evidence for them, from the ancient literature, is virtually never presented, but only quotes from modern sources. When all the evidence is considered, especially the written record from the time of the reputed miracle-worker or miracle claims, we can give each claim a rating, or score, on how credible the claim is. Thus . . .



"Batting averages" of various and sundry reputed Miracle-Workers and Miracle Cults, ancient, medieval, and modern

It is a mistake, for both believers and non-believers, to consider a one-only alleged true divine religion to the exclusion of all others as false or imposters or satanic or superstitious only. Rather, the rational and scientific approach is to consider the claims for all/each of them, their evidence, their testimonies, their "theology" or "apologetic" arguments, etc., whatever claims they make for their particular god or "divine man" or hero inspired by god or the gods. And, having done this assessment, rather than simply brand them as fake and superstition only, give them a rating, based on a serious critical evaluation of their claims.

In many cases there could be some legitimacy, even truth, to their claims, at least in part, even for a non-believer of that particular cult or miracle belief. Where something unexplainable is reported to have happened, and there were witnesses, or extra sources which report it, the rational conclusion to draw is that there is some credibility, and maybe the claim is partly true, even if there's also error or some superstition mixed in with it.

Just for starters, to illustrate by comparison how the many miracle cults or miracle-workers could be judged, as to credibility, here is a suggested "Batting Average" listing of the major ones, down through history up to the present. Obviously this does not reflect precise scientific data for each of these. This is just something to offer for starters, and of course it needs revisions as additional facts might be presented to bear on these comparisons and ratings.

.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 (or -100 AD)
.300 -------------------- Delphic Oracle
.280 -------------------- Edgar Cayce 20th century
.250 -------------------- St. Francis of Assisi
.240 -------------------- Nostradamus
.220 -------------------- Sai Baba 20th century
.210 -------------------- Rasputin, Russian Revolution "Mad Monk"
.190 -------------------- St. Genevieve 5th century
.160 -------------------- Apollonius of Tyana 1st century
.150 -------------------- Joseph Smith 19th century
.130 -------------------- Serapis, Egyptian god
.120 -------------------- Isis, Egyptian goddess
.100 -------------------- Horus, Egyptian hero
.100 -------------------- Emperor Vespasian 70-80 AD
.100 -------------------- St. Patrick
.020 -------------------- Jim Jones 20th century
.020 -------------------- David Koresh 20th century



Of course there are many others not included here, which will have to be added. Also, the dates of each will need to be filled in to make the listing more complete.

This preliminary listing is just to first present the idea of such a ranking, and the improvements/corrections can be added later. (And maybe some of the above should be deleted from the list.)

If your reaction is only to snicker/sneer at this, it exposes your contempt for the facts and preference for your dogmatism. The truth lies more with the scientific consideration of the facts, rather than on your prejudice or dogmatic instincts.

My intention is to pursue this further, in later posts, and add more facts to support the general hypothesis that we can rank all the miracle claims in such a listing as this, based on reason and facts about each of the examples offered. And my contention is that we can show with facts that the historical Jesus is far up at the top of this list, with a wide separation from those farther down. Anyone serious (not prejudiced but open to looking at the facts) will hopefully add further facts to help modify the rankings, plus also offer any arguments about the usefulness or reasonableness of such a ranking.

Of course you can rearrange the rankings, putting your favorite miracle-worker up high, above Jesus, as you figure it. You should of course give some facts, especially presenting quotes from the sources close to the events in question, showing evidence about the case you want to include or shift higher or lower in the rankings. To just quote modern authorities claiming that Osiris or Apollo etc. were worshiped for having miracle power is not good evidence, by itself. You have to also quote from the ancient sources telling us of their miracle deeds, such as we have the written record about the Jesus miracle acts in the 1st century. This is where the Jesus-debunker crusaders always fall short.

But obviously you're free also to just snicker and snaffle and further expose your prejudice, with your outbursts such as
"Aaaaaaa, people just made up shit!"

And you can scoff and post your roars of laughter with your :rotfl:and :hysterical:and rofl's lol's, etc., because you have nothing thoughtful to offer.

And any believer, including a Christ-believer, should be willing to admit that there is some evidence in the other cases also, and the non-Christ examples cannot be summarily dismissed without critically considering the evidence. And also, believers and non-believers alike, and honest skeptics and truth-seekers, must admit the reality of what we don't know, so that there is no 100% Absolute Truth to be found here, but only probabilities. And even the probabilities are difficult to calculate. Nevertheless, probabilities are legitimate, even if they are only estimates.

"History is mostly guessing. The rest is prejudice." --- Will Durant


Excerpt from Albert Schweitzer, The Quest of the Historical Jesus on the author Hermann Samuel Reimarus:
The following are the titles of fragments which he published:
The Toleration of the Deists.
The Decrying of Reason in the Pulpit.
The Impossibility of a Revelation which all men should have good grounds for believing.
The Passing of the Israelites through the Red Sea.
Showing that the books of the Old Testament were not written to reveal a Religion.
Concerning the story of the Resurrection.
The Aims of Jesus and His Disciples.

What would a "Revelation" have to be in order that "all men should have good grounds for believing" it? Why should this be ruled out as a dogmatic premise, rather than looking at the evidence in each case?

Grounds for believing does not mean 100% certainty. Most of what we believe, even history and science, is not based on absolute 100% probability/certainty. Much is only 90% probable, even 80% or 70%. The lower-down is the less certain, or more dubious, including knowledge of history and science. But just because it's not 99% or 100% certain, doesn't mean it's untrue and that we should not believe it. Much of what we know, or claim to know (and even teach), from history, is not certain, and some of it is probably even false. And yet it's reasonable for us to believe it based on the evidence we have so far.

Based on this, the fact that the historical Jesus had "supernatural" (or superhuman) power can be believed reasonably, based on the extra evidence in this case, compared to other cases, or examples of reputed miracle power, which all can be ranked in a listing such as the above.

Just as we believe commonly-accepted facts of science and history based on such comparison and critical judgment of the evidence.


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Most pagan and earlier literature was destroyed by early Christian zealots from the 4th - 6th centuries. We will never know how much was lost.
 
Most pagan and earlier literature was destroyed by early Christian zealots from the 4th - 6th centuries. We will never know how much was lost.
There's virtually no evidence of such destruction of earlier literature by Christians. Nothing from written sources of that time. This claim is based on popular prejudice, not facts.

(There is one case of a band of Paul followers who burned books on divination, which literature sometimes was also destroyed by the authorities in those days, because some of that literature was dangerous, causing accidents in which people were killed.)

There is one quote in a 5th-century source saying some books were "consigned to the flames" during the early 4th century (about 150 years earlier than the source). But these could only have been Aryan documents, as it was only that kind of literature or belief which was condemned at that time. No other literature was condemned by the Council of Nicaea, and no other heresies persecuted.

And even if some "heretical" literature was destroyed later, it was all Christian literature, like the Aryan literature was all Christian. If any Gnostic or other writings were destroyed (for which there is no evidence), it was all Christian literature which acknowledged the Jesus miracles/Resurrection as factual. None of the Gnostic writings contradict the Gospel reports of the Jesus miracles/Resurrection.

There is no evidence of any persecution of heresies other than Christian heresies, all of which believed in the Christ miracles/Resurrection.

Again, if you look at the facts, rather than popular prejudice, the evidence is that the Jesus miracles/Resurrection did happen, and there is no evidence of any other miracle cults or miracle-workers, and no indication of any such literature which could have been destroyed.

Virtually all the book-burning events were many centuries later, but all of them were burnings of Christian literature which contradicted the Council of Nicaea theology, and not any which contradicted the Jesus miracles/Resurrection or proposed other alternative miracle-worker beliefs or competing beliefs about alternative miracle-workers.
 
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There's virtually no evidence of such destruction of earlier literature by Christians. Nothing from written sources of that time.
How much evidence for the destruction of evidence many centuries ago would you expect to find? With several centuries of scrubbing the evidence that might have existed, 1800 years ago?
This claim is based on popular prejudice, not facts.
Just like claims for Jesus's miracles. No facts, just stories from many years later. Popular prejudice after centuries of Christian cultural dominance.

Whatever happened in first century Judea, you have no way of knowing about it that hasn't been edited and redacted by the RCC.
Tom
Dammit
I got the quote tags messed up.
 
With this outburst you can dismiss even the moon landing as fiction.
Your argument is absurd as the scenarios are not even remotely similar.
1. We have a ton of high quality evidence that the moon landing happened.
2. There is nothing about the claim that humans performed a moon landing that requires us to believe that the natural laws of the universe were broken.

These writings are entitled to the same treatment as for other written accounts. We should accept ALL the written accounts as sources for what happened (i.e., what happened near the time in question) rather than single out certain ones out of prejudice and disqualify them from consideration.
Except for writings that claim that the laws of the universe were broken by the human clone of a supernatural entity from outside the universe. It is reasonable to treat claims like that with extreme prejudice, until evidence sufficient to overcome our skepticism has been presented. Unfortunately for you, this evidence does not exist.
It is also ridiculous to assert that anything that is written down should be treated as factual by default. That is not the standard by which truth claims are evaluated. and using this absurd standard would require us to accept that pretty much every single claim concerning the existence of supernatural events and gods are necessarily true. Yeah, it really is that stupid when you shine a light on it.


Based on this, the fact that the historical Jesus had "supernatural" (or superhuman) power can be believed reasonably, based on the extra evidence in this case, compared to other cases, or examples of reputed miracle power, which all can be ranked in a listing such as the above.

Just as we believe commonly-accepted facts of science and history based on such comparison and critical judgment of the evidence.
Point us to an example of a supernatural claim in the historical or scientific realm that is commonly accepted as fact by scientists and historians. Just one. You can't, because none exist. You keep repeating this falsehood even though it has been debunked over half a dozen times in various threads where you have made this claim previously.

I think the more interesting question to ask is why Christians like you continue to repeat their debunked claims over and over with full knowledge that their claims are false. Do you want to talk about that for a bit? Or maybe just take a few minutes to think about it?
 
We have five of them who proclaim that this one was killed and buried and then resurrected back to life, bodily

That you find this more believable than that Trump got mad in a car says it all about your arguments.
 
Response to TomC, Aug 16 2022, #829

lostone: Most pagan and earlier literature was destroyed by early Christian zealots from the 4th - 6th centuries. We will never know how much was lost.

There's virtually no evidence of such destruction of earlier literature by Christians. Nothing from written sources of that time.

TomC: How much evidence for the destruction of evidence many centuries ago would you expect to find?
If such destruction had happened we'd have plenty of evidence by now, even if not 100-200 years ago (though even back then there should have been evidence of it if it had happened).

The evidence by now would be abundant, because we've had major discoveries of non-Christian and non-Orthodox literature, thousands, even tens of thousands of documents not known for centuries. The two largest finds have been that of the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Gnostic Gospels. You could even go off the charts and claim a massive Conspiracy at the top levels to cover up these documents, for centuries. But now that they've been discovered, we can examine to see what was being written back then, and we can examine to see what might have been covered up, if that's the conspiracy you're alleging.

And there is nothing in these documents putting forth any alternative miracle-working Messiahs or Saviors or Sons of God, which the Church could have suppressed. It's true that the Church suppressed some theological heresies, maybe even destroying some of that literature in the later centuries. But there's no indication of literature about any miracle-working messiah cults. There were none.

And none of these newly-discovered documents contradict the reported Jesus miracles/Resurrection. Even though many later "Gospels" from the 2nd and 3rd centuries were discovered, and they contain alternative biographies of Jesus and other New Testament characters, they all take for granted that Jesus did the miracle acts and that he resurrected after being killed. So the evidence is that this part of the original Jesus events was accepted by all those (e.g. Gnostics, Apocryphal Gospels) who wrote anything relating to the historical Jesus.


With several centuries of scrubbing the evidence that might have existed, 1800 years ago?
"evidence" of what? the existence of other Messiahs or miracle-worker cults which were suppressed? or whose writings were destroyed?

You're really proving that there were no other Messiah cults. Even if it were true that there was such "scrubbing the evidence" back then, your conspiracy theory has to assume that the "scrubbing" is still going on even today, for almost 100 years, since the recent discoveries.

Your conspiracy theory has to be that the modern scholars, Jewish and Christian and atheist, are covering up documents/evidence of other Messiah cults, revealed in these suppressed documents -- cults who worshiped other miracle-working messiahs and saviors etc., in competition with the Christ cults beginning in the 30s AD after Jesus was gone. Or even later and earlier such cults, from centuries earlier and up to 100 AD or after, in the Jewish and pagan cultures of those centuries. And yet no such documents have been found, or other evidence of such alternative miracle-worker cults.

Despite the many new discoveries, nothing has been found showing any such other messiah cults which the Church could have suppressed even if it had wanted to. There's much new evidence, many documents, but nothing indicating any other Messiah cults or miracle-workers whose literature must have been destroyed. No, the only evidence is of earlier NON-miracle cults, like Qumran's Dead Sea Scrolls (which contain no new miracle stories), and evidence of later Christian writings which still presumed the same Jesus miracle-worker. Nothing to indicate anything different that has been covered up by the RCC or Evil Empire or Jewish-Christian Establishment or Sons of Darkness or Freemasons or other Secret Cabal conspiring to keep us in the Dark.

What this indicates is simply: The reason we have the Jesus reported miracle acts in written accounts is that these events must have really happened. (Or there were significant believers in this one miracle-worker only and not in any others.) If there were any others, we'd see some indication of it in some other writings. If there were other such writings, we should see some cases of it, just as we have found the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Gnostic Gospels and can see what other non-Christian or non-Orthodox cults were teaching or promoting. So, probably there were no other reported Jesus-like miracle-workers. Only this one. Unless -- well, you could suppose that the early Christ cults were busy running around to dig out alternative Messiah cultists and killing them and destroying any trace of them. Even searching out the Messiah-Prophets they worshiped and killing them. Seeing them as rivals which must be stamped out.


This claim is based on popular prejudice, not facts.
Just like claims for Jesus's miracles. No facts, just stories from many years later.
But that's what almost all ancient history is -- stories from the writers reporting to us what happened generations earlier. How much ancient history is not stories from writers "many years later" reporting what happened? i.e., reporting what they heard from someone else? Only a small fraction of the ancient history was written by someone contemporary who witnessed it directly. At least 90% of it was written by writers 50-100 years later who heard it from others. The (ancient) history written 200 years later than the reported events is a greater amount of the recorded history than that written by contemporaries.


Popular prejudice after centuries of Christian cultural dominance.
No, not "centuries" after, but about 20 to 70 years after the reported events, long before any such Christian "dominance."

specifically: The earliest report we have as a source is the Apostle Paul, writing 20-30 years after Jesus and reporting the Resurrection event; then the 4 Gospels, 40-70 years later, reporting the miracle healing acts and also the Resurrection. That makes 5 major sources for the Resurrection, 4 of which also report the healing miracles. So we have these extra sources, i.e., not just one, but 4 (5) sources, whereas for many/most of our ancient history facts we have only 1 or 2 sources, and that usually 50-100 years later.

So our sources are not from after "centuries of Christian cultural dominance." There was NO such dominance when these sources were written. The Christian dominance does not begin until the 4th century, long after our NT documents were written.


Whatever happened in first century Judea, you have no way of knowing about it that hasn't been edited and redacted by the RCC.
We can know about it just as we can know about the other historical events, in the written record, which means ALL the ancient documents, not arbitrarily excluding any.

Despite some editing and redacting, there is plenty of evidence that there was no significant change in the substance, in the 1st-century text, as to the basic facts reported, after about 100 AD (or maybe 150 at the latest). Some major facts are established, using the Gospels and other NT writings as evidence, for the events of the time, just as for all other historical events through those centuries. There are editing and redacting issues and discrepancies with ANY ancient source of history, especially if there are multiple accounts reporting the same event(s). Where the differing sources agree, it's reasonable to believe them, but to be doubtful of them on the points where they contradict each other. (And it's reasonable to require extra sources for miracle claims, which we have in the case of the reported Jesus miracle acts.)

The only unique point about the NT writings as a source is that we have so many mss/copies of these, compared to other writings. This causes extra work for scholars today trying to establish the original exact text, because of the many variants which are mostly insignificant as to the content and reporting of what happened. The many discrepancies are of minor details only.

There is no inconsistency as to the main facts, that Jesus resided first near the town of Capernaum, or northern Sea of Galilee, attracted followers, later traveled to Jerusalem and was crucified there. Along with this, all the accounts agree that he performed the miracle acts and that he resurrected after being killed. There are discrepancies only in the details, but not in these main points of what happened. And none of this was scripted by the later "Church" after it came to be dominant, and none is a product of any editing or redacting by someone later.

The basic Jesus narrative in the Gospels, regardless of minor discrepancies, was not a product of any later Church which had dominance -- but rather, it's the later Church which was produced by those 1st-century events, told in the narrative of those earlier documents, which the Church after 300 had to rely on to explain its origin or its identity in trying to establish its influence and dominance. So its dominance was derived originally from the 1st-century facts, while those facts happened independent of any later Church power.

Nothing the Church imposed in the 4th century was a source for the familiar Jesus narrative we have in the 1st-century Gospel accounts -- all the later Church added were some theological interpretations of those earlier writings. The whole Jesus narrative we're familiar with, containing minor discrepancies, is established very early in these writings, long before there was any "dominant" Church having any power to control those who wrote these texts. Interpretations are widely divergent, but the basic facts are consistent throughout these main sources.

Our NT text today, with the many small variants of minor significance, is substantially the same text as in the 1st century when the original documents were written. And the original documents (especially the 4 Gospels) are understood to have been produced mostly from earlier sources which are unknown, or at least there is no consensus on who the original authors (or editors or redactors) were and their exact sources. There was no Christian dominance of any kind during that period, dictating the content of the writings to someone, and it's not the case that the later Church after 300 did any significant change to the documents after the Church came to be dominant. Our text today is substantially that of the original 1st-century documents, not something spun out later by a "dominant" Church establishment (or Cabal or Conspiracy).

What modern critical theory has established is doubt about many reported details in the accounts, including some traditional beliefs, and undermining of the scriptural "infallibility" framework requiring to try to harmonize all the accounts, to eliminate all the contradictions, which is an impossible task. But it has not undermined the general picture of Jesus the miracle-worker presented to us in the accounts. Since on this there is no contradiction between the 4 (5) sources, this general presentation of Jesus is credible, because it's reasonable to believe the written accounts where they are all in agreement.
 
We have five of them who proclaim that this one was killed and buried and then resurrected back to life, bodily

That you find this more believable than that Trump got mad in a car says it all about your arguments.
It's very easy to assess the value of his arguments; The more words he uses in defence of a claim, the more utterly absurd the claim is.

Once he goes over about thirty words, you can be completely confident that he's totally wrong in every way, and save yourself the effort of reading the drivel.

I strongly suspect that his 'write only documents' are a desperate (but doomed) effort to persuade himself of things he knows to be nonsensical, but would really like to believe.
 
Once he goes over about thirty words, you can be completely confident that he's totally wrong in every way,
It can be fascinating to discover just how many ways an argument can be wrong (if you are a social anthropologist, that is) - like peeling back the outer layers of an onion, only to find new layers of fallacious reasoning and rotting misinformation nestled beneath the outer layers of fallacious reasoning and rotting misinformation. He once argued that the US constitution allowed police to shoot looters and thieves without due process, and even attempted to defend himself when it was demonstrated that he was wrong. Fascinating, utterly fascinating.

I stopped reading his posts years ago because all he is doing at this point is repeating the same crap on an endless loop. I would rather be watching videos of Mr Max the cockatoo on Youtube.
 
“Anything based on faith, no matter how ludicrous, can be made to be consistent with the available evidence, given a little patience and ingenuity.”
--Stephen Law, (Believing Bullshit: How Not to Get Sucked into an Intellectual Black Hole (Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2011), p. 75.

“Virtually anything and everything, no matter how absurd, inane, or ridiculous, has been believed or claimed to be true at one time or another by somebody, somewhere in the name of faith."
--James T. Houk (The Illusion of Certainty. Amherst, NY: Prometheus Books, 2017), p. 31.
 
Some of this discussion reminded me of an entry from Bierce's famous dictionary. (I'll leave it up to individual Infidels to determine what the relevance, if any, is.)
Ambrose Bierce said:
INADMISSIBLE, adj.
Not competent to be considered. Said of certain kinds of testimony which juries are supposed to be unfit to be entrusted with, and which judges, therefore, rule out, even of proceedings before themselves alone. Hearsay evidence is inadmissible because the person quoted was unsworn and is not before the court for examination; yet most momentous actions, military, political, commercial and of every other kind, are daily undertaken on hearsay evidence. There is no religion in the world that has any other basis than hearsay evidence. Revelation is hearsay evidence; that the Scriptures are the word of God we have only the testimony of men long dead whose identity is not clearly established and who are not known to have been sworn in any sense. Under the rules of evidence as they now exist in this country, no single assertion in the Bible has in its support any evidence admissible in a court of law. It cannot be proved that the battle of Blenheim ever was fought, that there was such as person as Julius Caesar, such an empire as Assyria.

But as records of courts of justice are admissible, it can easily be proved that powerful and malevolent magicians once existed and were a scourge to mankind. The evidence (including confession) upon which certain women were convicted of witchcraft and executed was without a flaw; it is still unimpeachable. The judges' decisions based on it were sound in logic and in law. Nothing in any existing court was ever more thoroughly proved than the charges of witchcraft and sorcery for which so many suffered death. If there were no witches, human testimony and human reason are alike destitute of value.
 
Have we invented a new word, Hearsayism?

If my operating system is emotionally based I'm a sucker for things I hear that sound and feel good. If my operating system is forensically and observationally based I'm not going to fall prey to religious tall tales. Not everyone has an operating bullshit detector.
 
Get rid of the supernatural and Jesus makes sense in the politics of the day.
This is really the point.

A guy named Jesus grew up in Nazareth, joined the anti-Roman underground, was executed for treason. All that is utterly plausible. I believe that there was a historical Jesus.

But the elephant in the room is the term "Jesus the Messiah". Everyone then, including the Romans, knew what a messiah is. That's a human warrior king, anointed by God, to save The Chosen People from foreign oppressors. That would be the Romans. Messiahhood was a capital crime. Even being closely associated with a messiah could get you killed. So, of course, none of His closer followers, or their followers, would say anything about that. They certainly wouldn't write anything about it.

So in a process similar to evolution, the original disciples died out. Leaving the Pauline Jesus for history and Gospel writers and such. Because the Romans didn't care about squabbles between Jews and heretical offshoots.

Can't you just picture a real Jew turning to some Christian, as the temple is being destroyed, saying, "Where's that messiah of yours now? Hunh!?"
Tom
 
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