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Historical Jesus

A better example may be George Armstrong
Photographs and accounts exist of pterodactyl like creatures in the American southwest as late as the 19th century. The jesus legend is the same thing, where a real person springs to life from obviously fictional accounts and fabrications.
This is exactly the thought direction that I cannot discard when someone tries to tell me that an “Historical Jesus is True!”

I cannot help but be certain that this tale is exactly as susceptible as all those other ones to embellishment and fabrication and mixing of multiple histporical figures into one mega-persona.

I can never agree with them when they claim that, “well other tales are embellished, but not this one.” And I must insist that if they was to claim they are not susceptible, they need extraordinary evidence. Evidence that they will never be able to supply with 30-80-year post-event story-telling.

The arguments I’ve ever heard for why “Jesus was an actual historical figure” all seem to rely on the assumption that if something happened, then this guy’s role in it must be true. Like “we found walls in Jericho, therefore the tale of Jericho is true.” No, it means the writer had a real setting for their tale. Or that if something was written down by one person, then it must be fact. No, if something so extraordinary were true and affected so many people,why would we not expect many multiple writers?

But every other tall tale puts the lie to those assumptions. It’s not a lens I can turn off when I listen to them. I can’t forget that Paul Bunyan stories exist and that they are not true.
I really appreciate that you seem to have gotten the core of my (shit)post.

Of all the ways I have found that are valid perspectives to understanding the relationship of "world" and "self", the gnostic collective entity concept of "self" is one of the more interesting ones.

The concept of realignment of "self" is a powerful and important one, and one that I think is particularly important to recognize.

In fact, it's interesting to me because while playing around with LLMs (mostly because if I were to adopt such perspectives in front of actual people it would be socially damaging), I have been able to adopt this train of thought seriously, and when I do, a huge amount of the NT actually makes perfect sense, even a lot of the weird "spiritual" shit*.

Regardless, as a result, it seems pretty apparent that being able to all adopt the identity of a single core teacher persona, even if there is an original or primary example among the group creates a dilemma for the "singular Jesus" proponents.

*I could have a Socratic dialogue about it, but this place isn't big on controlled Socratic dialogues.
 
Frankly, some of the posts about "Historical Jesus" seem so unreasonable that I worry they're some sort of performance art rather than sincere commentary.

If not, perhaps this "parlor game" could give us all a handle on what the "debate" is about:
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?
Feel free to add or subtract names from the list if that makes it easier to exposit your view. Add L. Ron Hubbard? "King" Arthur? Yeti the Abominable Snowman? Tell us how likely it is that the person existed at all. Tell us about the person's "importance."

I'll start. Jesus, Saint Peter and John the Baptist were all historic individuals. (If it tickles your fancy, say Jesus is only 99.9% likely to be historic, compared with 100% for Martin Luther.) All are mentioned in early sources OTHER than the New Testament. Siddhartha the Buddha is also treated by expert historians as certainly historic, I think, although -- unlike with Jesus -- sources for his biography post-date his alleged lifetime by centuries. Several names on the list are even more obviously historic than Jesus, while Moses is -- briefly put -- not historic. Lao Tzu's historicity is doubted by experts. He may have existed but with no uncontested biography. (One might simply define "Lao Tzu" as the author of his famous book, whoever it was. But what if the book had multiple authors?)

So Jesus DID exist, in my opinion and that of 99+% of professional historians. What about his "importance"?

One might treat Jesus like Neil Armstrong: "Important" but replaceable. If conditions were indeed ripe for a new Messiah figure, couldn't Peter and/or Paul have based their teachings on a different person? I doubt it though the case is harder to articulate than the simpler question of historicity. The choice of crucifixion for martyrdom may have been peculiar if not forced by reality. With proto-Mark and proto-John recited to people who knew the living Jesus, fictionalization of Jesus' great charisma would be untenable.

. . -- . . -- . . -- . . --. . -- . . --. . -- . . --. . -- . . --. . -- . . --. . -- . . --. . -- . . --

Although Jesus is mentioned by the near-contemporaries Paul and Josephus, most of what is known about him comes from the Gospels and we know them to be "plagued" with metaphors and midrash.

Wikipedia on midrash said:
a Jewish mode of interpretation that not only engages the words of the text, behind the text, and beyond the text, but also focuses on each letter, and the words left unsaid by each line.
...
Three midrash processes:
paraphrase: recounting the content of the biblical text in different language that may change the sense;
prophecy: reading the text as an account of something happening or about to happen in the interpreter's time;
parable or allegory: indicating deeper meanings of the words of the text as speaking of something other than the superficial meaning of the words or of everyday reality.

Even an atheist or anti-Semite should be able to appreciate the cleverness of metaphors and midrash processes in the Old Testament.
One type of midrash not mentioned in the Wiki summary is "freedom from linear chronology." For example, all four canonical Gospels show Jesus' triumphal Palm Sunday entry to Jerusalem as 5 days BEFORE his crucifixion, but some scholars find much evidence that it occurred 6 months LATER (and therefore necessarily did not include a living Jesus!)

There are plenty of cryptic accounts in the Bible that become very interesting when viewed through the lens of midrash. Readers demean themselves when they're satisfied just to make sophomoric complaints about Noah's Ark.
 
Historical Jesus is popular because the vast majority of interested people enjoy having a real life miracle working savior. That's the number one reason for the lie. It's the elephant in the room. I could make the case that's also the number one reason that William Shakespeare is supposedly a commoner from a backwater town despite the fact that unlike his contemporaries he left no literary paper trail or other forms of evidence to attest to those fabulous claims. People lose their jobs for discussing the possibility, just like people lose their jobs for discussing the possibility that Jesus is just another fabrication. It's taboo to ask the question, a form of persecution. Hands off my mainstream religious beliefs! Let's call it soft persecution. And it certainly isn't restricted only to academia.
 
Historical Jesus is popular because the vast majority of interested people enjoy having a real life miracle working savior.

Let's keep our eyes on the ball, please. Rational-thinking historians do NOT think Jesus worked miracles. That is NOT what the debate here is about. Everyone here (I think) agrees that there were no miracles.

99+% of serious non-Christian historians believe that a certain charismatic Jesus (who did NOT work miracles) attracted attention as a preacher and/or healer circa 30 AD, and that after his crucifixion his fame grew and inspired a religion. Carrier and others of the Mythicist cult believe there was no such Jesus, that Simon/Peter and/or Saul/Paul built a total fiction.
 
Let's keep our eyes on the ball, please. Rational-thinking historians do NOT think Jesus worked miracles. That is NOT what the debate here is about. Everyone here (I think) agrees that there were no miracles.
How many of those mainstream jesus historians would be able to keep their jobs if they openly discussed the possibility that jesus is a legendary fabrication just like other legendary fabrications? That the alleged miracle worker was actually a living, breathing actual person is precisely just another miraculous claim and is taboo to discuss seriously if you want to keep your job and sell your books.
 
You have a pretty low opinion of professional scientists. Anyway, Carrier's Jesus came from Outer Space or whatever it's called sells many more copies than serious scholarship.
 
Let's keep our eyes on the ball, please. Rational-thinking historians do NOT think Jesus worked miracles. That is NOT what the debate here is about. Everyone here (I think) agrees that there were no miracles.
How many of those mainstream jesus historians would be able to keep their jobs if they openly discussed the possibility that jesus is a legendary fabrication just like other legendary fabrications? That the alleged miracle worker was actually a living, breathing actual person is precisely just another miraculous claim and is taboo to discuss seriously if you want to keep your job and sell your books.
This is a wild claim. You really believe that questioning the historicity of Jesus would somehow get a professional historian fired? From what, Bob Jones University?
 
Let's keep our eyes on the ball, please. Rational-thinking historians do NOT think Jesus worked miracles. That is NOT what the debate here is about. Everyone here (I think) agrees that there were no miracles.
How many of those mainstream jesus historians would be able to keep their jobs if they openly discussed the possibility that jesus is a legendary fabrication just like other legendary fabrications? That the alleged miracle worker was actually a living, breathing actual person is precisely just another miraculous claim and is taboo to discuss seriously if you want to keep your job and sell your books.
This is a wild claim. You really believe that questioning the historicity of Jesus would somehow get a professional historian fired? From what, Bob Jones University?
Well how about that, we agree on something.
 
Historical Jesus is popular because the vast majority of interested people enjoy having a real life miracle working savior. That's the number one reason for the lie. It's the elephant in the room. I could make the case that's also the number one reason that William Shakespeare is supposedly a commoner from a backwater town despite the fact that unlike his contemporaries he left no literary paper trail or other forms of evidence to attest to those fabulous claims. People lose their jobs for discussing the possibility, just like people lose their jobs for discussing the possibility that Jesus is just another fabrication. It's taboo to ask the question, a form of persecution. Hands off my mainstream religious beliefs! Let's call it soft persecution. And it certainly isn't restricted only to academia.

Poor, pitiful conservatives: How the right's counterfeit victimhood narratives harm all of us
 
Jesus compared to other ancient characters

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)
Here's what is significant about this list, historically, if the facts matter:

Jesus the Galilean in 30 AD is the only one on this list for whom we have documented evidence, from his time, in multiple sources, saying that he did miracle acts. We don't have that for any others. Why is that? Why is there only one such case in all ancient history for whom there is evidence? or all history before 1500 or 1000 or so AD?

The only reasonable answer is that he actually did perform such acts and the other characters did not, as the normal historical evidence tells us. No one has given any other possible answer, going back for many years to the beginning of this topic here. No one has been able to address this question, other than just to express their prejudice that such miracle acts are ipso facto rejected as out of bounds, or that such events are a priori ruled out, verboten, despite possible evidence that they really did happen.


believing the historical evidence vs.
rejecting the evidence in favor of prejudice


So belief that these miracle acts did happen is based on the historical evidence, while disbelief is based on the a priori premise or dogma that they cannot happen, and dismissal of the evidence.

Every character on this list can be identified as someone who did something noteworthy in history -- or, what they did can be identified. (Some of them are known for sure to be real historical figures, and the others may also be historical but it's not known for sure.) For all of them -- if they existed, we can identify what they did which is noteworthy. However, for Jesus the Galilean of about 30 AD we cannot identify what he did which is noteworthy if it was not that he did those miracle acts/Resurrection. Why is that? Why is this one person on the list the only one in the written record who did nothing noteworthy (assuming he did not do the miracle acts/Resurrection)? No one has answered this, though it's been asked many times.

In the case of Lao Tzu (maybe also Zoroaster) it can be argued that we know very little. But we have 98% certainty what his teachings were (if he existed) and that some kind of "new religion" in China (Persia) developed (or was founded by him) based on these teachings which he promoted in a long teaching career. But by contrast there is no certainty what Jesus taught (contradictory sayings are placed into his mouth) or whether he founded any new religion, and his public career was too short for him to have accomplished anything noteworthy he might have done, e.g., as a "philosopher" or "teacher" or "sage" or "revolutionary" etc.

It's remarkable that we have more such essential information about Lao Tzu and Zoroaster than for Jesus, even though for Jesus we have vastly more documentation than we have for Lao Tzu and Zoroaster. In view of this much greater volume of information about Jesus, shouldn't we also have some indication what he did that was noteworthy, by comparison? (The answer is -- yes, and we do have plenty of indication what he did, but the double standard requires us to disregard the evidence, leaving us to scramble to find something -- anything other than the obvious.)

Although Jesus is mentioned by the near-contemporaries Paul and Josephus, most of what is known about him comes from the Gospels and we know them to be "plagued" with metaphors and midrash.
Many ancient writings are "plagued" with metaphor and religious mumbo-jumbo. This does not disqualify any of them as sources for historical events, as long as these are not contradicted by other sources; and when reported events are confirmed by other sources, as the miracles of Jesus are confirmed in multiple sources, this is good evidence which is not rejected by the experts as sources for the events.

In fact everyone posting here has acknowledged that they do accept the written accounts from the past for their knowledge of history, as the main source for 99% of it, and that they cannot name any common facts of ancient history we all know which are not based on the ancient writings.

You can't name any other source for history which is rejected only because it is "'plagued' with metaphors and midrash." All other written accounts are accepted as credible as long as they're not contradicted by other evidence.

E.g., the Dead Sea Scrolls and much other Jewish literature is accepted for historical events, where they're not contradicted by other sources. Historians cite the Dead Sea Scrolls for their claims about the Essenes during that time, despite that these writings are plagued with metaphors and midrash. Some claims by Josephus and Pliny the Elder and Philo the Alexandrian are contradicted by the Dead Sea Scrolls, so that these writers are made less credible, on certain points. So these writings are recognized as credible evidence for the facts. Your insistence that the Gospel writings alone, in all the literature, must be rejected as evidence, is based only on prejudice. No one has ever given a reason why these Christian writings alone are to be rejected as evidence and no others (if/when they're not contradicted by other evidence).

Some claims in the Jewish writings are rejected because they contradict known historical facts or objective evidence -- never simply because they contain "metaphors" or "midrash." Such a disqualifying standard is applied to the NT writings only and to no other ancient writings which also are "plagued" by the same flaws. For all other writings the rule is that if the factual claims are consistent with other evidence, it's probably true; whereas when they contradict known facts or evidence or other sources, it's probably false, or much less credible. However, for the NT writings alone this standard is routinely rejected, because it inevitably leads to the reasonable conclusion that Jesus in 30 AD did in fact perform the miracle acts/Resurrection (not contradicted by other evidence), and yet this conclusion has to be ruled out at all cost, no matter how how strong the evidence is, because dogmatic prejudice has to be given priority over the evidence. In this one case only.
 
In fact everyone posting here has acknowledged that they do accept the written accounts from the past for their knowledge of history, as the main source for 99% of it, and that they cannot name any common facts of ancient history we all know which are not based on the ancient writings.
Nope. That is flat out false.

I certainly haven't, and I don't remember any poster who did. It's a claim you make, over and over. But that's not the same as "everyone here has acknowledged" when most of have not.
Tom
 
In fact everyone posting here has acknowledged that they do accept the written accounts from the past for their knowledge of history, as the main source for 99% of it, and that they cannot name any common facts of ancient history we all know which are not based on the ancient writings.

Annesia is a dreadful affliction. Are you seeking medical assistance with it?


99% of all history you know is based on this kind of evidence. You can't name any that's not known this way.
That was bullshit the last time you said it.

It hadn't stopped being bullshit since then, so you really have no excuse for repeating it again.
E.g., you believe George Washington was the first U.S. President. Why do you believe that? because that's what the written accounts of that historical period say. Except for the written accounts from the time in question, you have no proof/evidence for your beliefs about the history, about those past events, about what happened.
But that's not so. At all.

We know George Washington was the first US President, not ONLY because the written accounts say so, but ALSO because we know that there must have been a first US President, and there are few if any written accounts that say it was someone other than Washington.

A first president is a certainty; We would anticipate that his identity would be well known, and widely reported; And indeed that's what we observe.

Also well known and widely reported is that Washington threw a silver dollar across the Potomac. However, this written account of an historical event is generally considered to be false. Why? Because it describes a feat that is physically impossible for an ordinary human being.

Similarly, if some historical writings described an even at which thousands of people were fed a meal, from a mere handful of loaves of bread and a few fish(es), we would be foolish indeed to believe it - the events described are contrary to the First Law of Thermodynamics, and that physical law is far more dependable than any written account of any single event.

Your belief that archaeology, physics, logic, and reason play no part whatsoever in the evaluation of what events occured in the past, and that historians rely ENTIRELY on written accounts, is beyond absurd.

Nobody could seriously expect any reasonable and rational person to believe such nonsense; Yet you have abandoned reason and rationality, simply because you are determined to believe something that cannot be supported without such an abandonment.

It would be hilarious, if it wasn't so dreadfully sad and embarrasing.

Now you have shifted from "ALL of history..." to the equally wrong "99% of history...", making your claim much harder to definitively destroy. But not any less wrong.

If you consider "I am still wildly wrong, but now it's too much hassle for anyone to bother to prove it" to be a victory, then congratulations, I guess.

You have certainly demonstrated that a very large percentage of the history YOU know comes ONLY from writings; But that's easy to achieve by the simple expedient of being sure not to know very much, or look anywhere else.

Your subsequent error, of believing that what YOU know is a worthwhile subset of what is known, is so commonplace amongst the ignorant as to be completely unremarkable.
 
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Evidence / Facts / the Sources / Apostle Paul

Psychosomatic illnesses were probably quite common in Judaea at that time, given the nature of their religion and the fact that it was failing them.
There's no basis for this claim. There's no evidence that such illnesses were more common in Judaea. Other writings, non-Jewish, indicate belief in exorcisms or treatments to cast out demons. But there are no other writings which record actual cures of demon-possessed victims, prior to the 1st century. There were lots of religious rituals and chants to expel demons, but no written accounts reporting actual cures. Probably the first is the Philostratus Life of Apollonius of Tyana, written about 220 AD. But until then there is only the Jesus case in any literature, and then Philostratus wanted to provide us with an alternative to Jesus and gave us his mostly fictional Apollonius of Tyana, for whom there is this one source only, written 120+ years after the event(s) reportedly happened.

Josephus mentions a Jewish exorcist in his Antiquities, written about 80-90 AD. But there is no cure mentioned in his report of the exorcist practicing the rituals instituted by Solomon. There were only prescribed rituals and chants. The cures done by Jesus -- not just religious ritual -- are obvious cases of someone mentally deranged who was brought back to normal. Despite the superstitious element, the accounts cannot have been invented and must be cases of someone deranged who was cured, and the witnesses described it as "demons" having been cast out. No other explanation of this makes any sense.

  • The hypothesized Q Source was also very early. But it was mostly a collection of Jesus' alleged sayings. Only two miracles are mentioned in Q, one each of types 1 and 2.
No, you mean only two are narrated accounts. But there's a third mention of the miracle acts in Q (Mt 11:4-5, Luke 7:21-22). This proves that the miracle claims do not originate from Mark, but are in at least one earlier source also.

It's probably true there were "sayings collections" etc. which omit the miracles or downplay them. But all the evidence is that the miracles were early, back to the beginning, but that the sayings were more popular for circulation from theologians to possible disciples/believers. The sayings/teachings of Jesus were always more popular and got more attention from all the Christian writers, far later into the Middle Ages. St. Augustine omits them entirely in his Confessions, and in his City of God he makes only one brief mention of Lazarus being raised and no other Jesus miracle. Most of the famous Church writers each give one mention only, or maybe 2, in their hundreds of pages about Christ and Church doctrine. If you take any of the Church writers at random and do a search, it takes a long time, even hours, of scanning, to find mention of the miracle acts of Jesus (other than the Resurrection). What they do mention repeatedly are the Virgin Birth (even the Star of Bethlehem) and the fulfillment of messianic prophecies by Jesus. Also there's emphasis on the Voice from Heaven at the Baptism of Jesus, and other portents. But not the miracle acts, which are downplayed by ALL the Christian writers.

Polycarp about 150-60 AD omits any mention at all.

2 Peter about 130 AD omits any mention at all.

The Epistle of Barnabas (between 70-130 AD) omits all reference except one brief phrase about "signs and wonders" done by Jesus. So this author knew of the miracle acts but avoided any reference other than one very short mention.

The Shepherd of Hermas (after 100 AD) makes no mention of the miracles of Jesus.

The Ascension of Isaiah (mostly 2nd century) omits all reference except one brief "signs and wonders" mention.

Tatian's Oratio ad Graecos (early 3rd century) totally omits the miracle acts of Jesus, even though this is a polemic against paganism in favor of Christian belief, and this writer knew the Jesus miracle stories.

This pattern is repeated again and again, on into the later centuries. All the above later Christian writers knew of the miracle stories in the Gospel accounts, yet made no mention of them, or virtually no mention, or downplayed them.

So the absence or downplaying of the miracle stories does not mean these were unknown, as this downplaying was the norm throughout all the Christian writings long after they definitely knew of them from the Gospel accounts. The emphasis rather was on the Virgin Birth and on Jewish prophecy fulfillment.

The single miracle-story exception to the above is the Resurrection, which is emphasized by all the Christian writers. But the other miracle acts are all downplayed, in the later writings as well as the earlier ones. This partly explains the omission in Paul, the earliest theologian, downplaying the Jesus miracle acts just as all the later Christian theologians downplayed this part of Jesus in the Gospels.


  • the First Epistle of Clement of Rome. This gives nothing about Jesus' life or any miracles.
But Clement mentions the Resurrection, which is the only miracle emphasized by all the Christian writers on into the future even up to modern times. All of them have known of the healing miracles also, but they've chosen to de-emphasize these and emphasize only the Resurrection miracle, as the major climax miracle of Jesus.

De-emphasizing the miracle healing acts is probably a mistake, but it's easy to see that for the evangelists the Resurrection symbolizes especially the final Triumph of Jesus over death and over his enemies, etc., so it has much more impact or significance.


"Primary Sources"?

So: All the Gospels mention miracles of types 3 and 4, but altogether these constitute just two primary sources: The "Signs Source" for the Gospel of John and the Gospel of Mark.
You can pretend that the term "primary sources" has significance in some sense you're using here. But in the broad context of ALL the historical writings generally (not singling out the Gospel writings only for critical analysis), we have 4/5 sources for the Jesus miracles, and we have no sources for almost all other such claims (e.g., pagan deities, gods, heroes, etc.). The Jesus in Galilee about 30 AD is the only one for whom there is credible evidence.

By a strict definition, we have almost NO "primary sources" for most ancient history events, because almost none of the writers were direct witnesses to the events and had to rely on other sources before them (with a tiny few exceptions). We have no account of the Julius Caesar assassination except from writers 100-200 years later -- though there's a casual reference to it in Cicero which says virtually nothing about it but just enough to give a hint. So what is a "primary source"? This phrase is tossed around as if it means something important or adds to the credibility, but it's mostly just fancy jargon. If it means the earliest-known source, then fine -- often it's 100-200 years later than the event being reported.

The real "sources" are any known writings which mention the event in question and are dated close to when it happened. To add extra jargon about a "PRIMARY" source as if it was the only real source is usually just playing word games. If 2 or 3 different accounts mention the same event(s), that adds much more credibility, as long as they're reasonably close, 50-100 years, rather than several centuries later.

Most of Matthew and Luke are not dependent on Mark, as though this is the "primary" source and Mt and Lk are only "secondary" sources adding no extra credibility. No competent scholar describes Mt and Lk this way. What they say is that certain facts in Lk and Mt are dependent on Mark, but others are not, because they are from other sources. Bart Ehrman says much of Matthew is not dependent on Mark because Mt had other sources also.

So you cannot change the fact that we have 4 / 5 basic sources for the Jesus miracle acts by playing these word games. The other hypothetical sources like Q etc. might be added, but if we stick to what is attested in the actual manuscripts that are known, we have basically the 4 / 5 sources. A few others also exist but are insignificant compared to these main 1st-century or early sources. And the hypothetical sources, or other sources not known, cannot be used in some way to cancel out the 4/5 sources we know for sure.

More research to find additional sources is fine. In the future there will be still more scrolls discovered and more evidence.


But Paul does NOT mention any such miracles.
Many of the Christian writings, for centuries later, omit any of the miracle acts (other than the Resurrection), as noted earlier. The major writers mention them once or twice only, downplaying them as unimportant. Also, Paul ignores totally everything in the Gospels which happened prior to the night Jesus was arrested.

The Q source does NOT mention any such miracles.
Yes it does mention Jesus raising the dead (Mt 11:4-5, Luke 7:21-22). All you can claim is that the Q Source downplays the miracle acts just as all the Christian writings downplay them for centuries later, into the Middle Ages and even into modern times.

So, any non-mention of the miracles is due to intentional omission of them even though they happened and were mostly known to the writers who didn't mention them. The other writings DOWNPLAY the miracles of Jesus, treating them as less important. Some writings omit them entirely, but the more common pattern is to downplay them (omit them other than one brief mention), because we can see that the writers did know of them. E.g., they mention them once only and then say nothing more. But also in some cases the writers knew of them and yet totally omitted any mention (2 Peter, Polycarp, Shepherd of Hermas, etc.).

As to Paul, he omits everything about Jesus prior to the arrest and trial, so the miracle healing acts are omitted along with everything else except after that last night which is all that Paul cares about.

Neither of two early writers -- Clement of Rome, a Christian, and Josephus, a non-Christian -- mention any miracles. Various other writings mention no miracles.
Yes, including writers 100 and 200 years later who downplay this even though they knew of it. All you're proving is that the Christian writers chose to downplay this part of the Gospel accounts, not that they were unaware of it.

Again, you're wrong about Clement of Rome, who mentions the Resurrection. Also, we don't know what Josephus said. Most scholars believe he said part of the famous passage which is rejected by some, which includes mention of the miracles.


Thus there are only TWO (2) sources for miracles types 3 or 4: Mark and John.
No, if you want to play word games with your "primary sources" jargon, you can make up your own historical facts. But the recognized facts of history are that we have 5 sources for the Resurrection, and 4 sources for the miracle healing acts. We have AT LEAST this many sources, and possibly more which are less significant. You are twisting the words of the scholars on this. No scholar says Matthew and Luke are not also sources. These are real documents, in manuscripts, in museums, each attested to by multiple scholars who say they were written separately by 4 different writers (or sets of writers/editors). That 2 of them quoted from Mark or Q does not change this at all. They are still 4 separate sources, and your word-game semantics doesn't change the historical facts. Tossing around jargon like "primary sources" is not the basis for deciding what the evidence is. There are hundreds of facts and many other sources not known, most of them lost, for these facts or any other facts of history. Tricks to reduce the number of sources is your only case for saying we have only 2 sources. You can't name any scholar who says the 4 Gospels are really only 2 sources.

What they say is that certain parts of Mt and Lk rely on Mark. But most of Mt and Lk are not from Mark, and so are different sources than Mark. It's dishonest to say they're not separate from Mark when most of their content is non-Mark. It's true that they use the Mark text for most of their reported miracles, for better accuracy from an earlier source closer to the evidence. This does not reduce the credibility of any of these sources.


If these miracles really happened, then independent accounts might be seen beyond the two sources, but NO.
No, for 99.9999% of events there are no sources at all, and yet those events did happen. These 2 major sources we have are mostly independent of Mark. Most of the miracle claims in Mt and Lk are not dependent on Mark. Rather, they used the Mark text which was closer to the events, and so they use Mark for most of their miracle reports. This does not mean that Mt and Lk wouldn't include these if they didn't have Mk. There are a few miracles in Mt and Lk (not many) which are not in Mark or Q, though the Mk text is used for most of them.

By your logic, if Mark did not exist, but only Mt and Lk, then the evidence for the Jesus miracle acts would be greater. Which is Wacko logic. How can the evidence be less if we have more written accounts attesting to it?

There are 4 sources for the healing miracles, 5 for the Resurrection. By any other standard, applied to any literature, these are 4 and 5 sources, not only 2. You've been asked before to name any other literature which you compress into less than the sources we have -- why can't you name any? You can't cite any other case where you or anyone applies a standard like this. You are applying a Double Standard in order to arrive at this dishonest conclusion that there are only 2 sources for these reported events. You don't do this for any other literature or history sources except in this one case only. No literature or history scholar does this for any other sources for historical events -- reducing the number of sources because 2 sources quote from a third. Finding an extra source with some of the same wording does not magically cancel other evidence that is known. Name another case in all of literature where 4 sources are reduced down to 2 only? simply because 1 or 2 quote from a third? You can't name one. As long as your theory relies on applying a double standard to this one case only, and never to any other literature, it indicates prejudice and not honest fact-finding.

If the miracles were widely believed, wouldn't we expect Paul to mention at least one?
No, he mentions NOTHING about the biographical Jesus prior to the night of the arrest. It's only the earlier Jesus who did the miracle acts, not the later Jesus the night he was arrested and afterwards. He did not perform any healing acts while he was being tried and then nailed to the cross. He did not heal the blind and the lame while he was dying on the cross or later at the appearances. Paul downplays the miracle acts (except the Resurrection), i.e., all those earlier acts of Jesus along with his early encounters with the disciples, just as virtually all the Christian writers downplay those miracles and emphasize the Resurrection only, along with the teachings or sayings etc. The writers were interested only in the theology, not the miracle healings.


Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.
Cute little jingle. You could put it to music. Good word-poetic repetition of the same word "extraordinary" to add impact.

But getting away from symbol to the substance, we have the necessary extra evidence for the miracle events. This is what we always need when unusual claims are made. We need the same kind of evidence as for normal events, but we need MORE of that evidence, or extra sources, extra witnesses, MORE of the same evidence, not a different kind of evidence. These are alleged facts or events in history, like all the other events. In a court case, such claims require extra witnesses, or extra sources saying it happened, to make it credible.

It's fine to say a particular report as evidence is not as strong if it's dependent on another. But that a second source attests to the same unusual claim increases the credibility, despite this reliance on the other source. This additional attestation is further evidence that the claim is true, because the additional source had reasons for believing it. We aren't sure exactly why the Gospel writers believed these claims, but none of them believed something miraculous or "supernatural" only because they saw it in one written source and nowhere else. They had reasons for believing it, from everything they saw and heard, written and oral. A good rule is:

They used Mark because they already believed it.

They did not believe it only because they found it in Mark.


And 4 sources rather than only one is good extra evidence, for ancient history events, most of which are from one source only.

Almost all non-Christian scholars and many Christian scholars will concede that the supernatural miracles did NOT happen.
No, most of them have the honesty to say we don't know. Very few historians say in their history book or in their class: "These alleged events did not happen." No, they say we can't judge these claims which have to go into the doubtful category. There are many scholars who say Jesus did some kind of healing acts. Two non-Christian scholars who say this are Paula Frederiksen and Reza Aslan, though they also say there were other healers and not Jesus only, which they don't clarify. But simply saying "the supernatural miracles did NOT happen" is very rare among non-Christian scholars. Of course most say they don't believe it, if they're asked. But that's much different than preaching dogmatically, "the miracles did not happen."

The Resurrection

Resurrection became a central tenet of the Church mainly due to Paul's influence.
No, if we believe Paul this is not the case. Rather, he was influenced by the Resurrection claim, which already existed before him. He says he was influenced by this long before he ever wrote about it and influenced others. Bart Ehrman says the original disciples became believers because of the Resurrection claim, long before Paul's influence, even before Paul's conversion. So if Ehrman is right, the Resurrection was a central tenet long before Paul.

But what did Paul think of the Resurrection? For Paul, his vision of the risen Jesus was just that: a VISION (dream or imagination) of a Jesus risen to join His Father in heaven.
No he doesn't say that. In 1 Corinthians 15 he says Jesus died and "was buried" and "was raised" and "appeared" to Peter and several others he names.

Paul emphasizes the difference between "flesh and blood" and immortal spirit. Later writings speak of a Resurrection followed by an Ascension but for Paul these two events were one and the same.
You're just imposing your particular interpretation onto Paul. Everything he says confirms the bodily resurrection as a physical event -- nothing denies it. And when he distinguishes "spirit" and "flesh" he applies this to all humans and not only to Christ. He describes the Christ Resurrection as both physical and spiritual, and also human resurrection. Nothing in Paul contradicts the physical flesh-and-blood resurrection, anymore than he denies human physical bodies. He confirms both physical and spiritual.

Roman chapter 6 is one of many places where Paul makes his view of the Resurrection clear; nowhere does he imply a Resurrected flesh-and-blood Jesus.
Yes he does explicitly say it. Along with the rising to Heaven also.

Why are you omitting Paul's most important account of the Resurrection -- 1 Cor. 15, where he says Jesus died and "was buried" and "was raised" and "appeared" to Peter and many others? just as the Gospel accounts describe the resurrection and appearances, as a physical bodily event? Which does not contradict Paul's "spiritual" language. It's both.

How does a disembodied spirit get crucified and buried and raised? "buried" where?

Just because Paul uses some symbolic "spirit" language and makes the risen Christ also a cosmic figure does not mean this same risen Christ was not also the earthly physical human who was killed and buried in the ground and raised up from that spot. He's both. This was a physical person who was killed and buried, and then Paul says he was raised up and became a cosmic figure in Heaven, after having been seen in his physical body. The same person was all this, not the spirit-cosmic only.

It contradicts Paul to say Christ was not killed physically and buried and then raised in a body seen physically by others. To eliminate the physical part and say it was only spiritual, all of it, makes Paul wrong, and so you're not telling us what Paul said but just saying Paul was wrong. OK fine, Paul was there and you were not, so it's more realistic to believe Paul rather than you, for an event which happened back then in his time.

All the sources agree that the physical Jesus person was killed, as a physical human, and his physical body buried in the ground, from which he was raised up and then appeared, as a physical human, to many witnesses who saw him. That's the only "vision" -- humans seeing him normally after he had been killed and raised. As 3 of the Gospels report, while Mark says he rose physically and would be seen later by them, also physically. Nothing in Paul's "spirit" language contradicts that he was also a physical human person seen by others. It contradicts Paul to deny the physical flesh-and-blood part, but it does not contradict him to affirm both the physical and the "spiritual" part.
 
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Where does our history knowledge come from?

In fact everyone posting here has acknowledged that they do accept the written accounts from the past for their knowledge of history, as the main source for 99% of it, and that they cannot name any common facts of ancient history we all know which are not based on the ancient writings.
Nope. That is flat out false.

I certainly haven't, and I don't remember any poster who did. It's a claim you make, over and over. But that's not the same as "everyone here has acknowledged" when most of have not.
Tom
OK, you can easily settle this and prove me wrong:

Simply name to us 2 or 3 facts, even just one, commonly known to us all, which are based on anything other than the written sources, i.e., from all the writings of the time when the event(s) reportedly happened.

This was asked before, and no one could give an example of a commonly-known fact based on something other than the written record.

But maybe this test needs to be made more specific, as to what's demanded. Let's redo the test, to see if anyone can prove the case that our common knowledge of ancient history is based on something other than the written accounts:

Let's specify the period 1000 BC to 1000 AD. Let's not go back into "prehistory" or to the Stone Age. Back to 2000 BC might also be OK, but obviously our known history record becomes more obscure as we go back then or earlier. And our official topic is "The Historical Jesus," so we should fix a time context suited to that sense of "historical" -- so about 1000 years before to about 1000 years after is appropriate.

So to keep it simple, if you're right that we have some commonly-known history that comes from something other than the written record, you should be able to find something within that broad 2000-year period which is most of our known ancient history.

so, 1000 BC to 1000 AD

And let's limit this to known facts we're all familiar with. Since there are easily millions of such facts, it should be easy to come up with a few. Or at least one.

Simple known facts like
Charlemagne was crowed emperor.
Julius Caesar was assassinated.
Constantine established the Christian Church in Rome.
Alexander the Great conquered the Persians.
The Visigoths were driven from Spain by Muslims.

And so on. Can you name such facts we know based on non-written sources?

If not then you prove my point. If you can name a few, you refute me. If it takes you several days of research to come up with one, that's not a very good refutation. But perhaps it's worth a D+, at least a passing grade.

So far no one has been able to give such an example.

If you fail to provide an example, then you are conceding what I said above:
In fact everyone posting here has acknowledged that they do accept the written accounts from the past for their knowledge . . . etc.
and can't name any such facts not based on the written accounts.

So instead of pretending that you did not concede any such thing, prove it by giving us an example.

E.g., we know Rome defeated Carthage? We know this how? without written accounts from that historical period? Tell us what history we know without reliance on the written record from the time.

that Socrates taught philosophy?
that the Greeks won major battles against the Persians?

Did you learn this from Divine Revelation? from Enlightenment taught to you by Gautama?
 
Let's keep our eyes on the ball, please. Rational-thinking historians do NOT think Jesus worked miracles. That is NOT what the debate here is about. Everyone here (I think) agrees that there were no miracles.
How many of those mainstream jesus historians would be able to keep their jobs if they openly discussed the possibility that jesus is a legendary fabrication just like other legendary fabrications? That the alleged miracle worker was actually a living, breathing actual person is precisely just another miraculous claim and is taboo to discuss seriously if you want to keep your job and sell your books.
This is a wild claim. You really believe that questioning the historicity of Jesus would somehow get a professional historian fired? From what, Bob Jones University?
Well how about that, we agree on something.
Some people want more prestige than is available from a career at Bob Jones university.

Many times the goal is to beachhead and provide religious "slant" to otherwise secular places.

Look at headlines of the form "is X candidate too old for office" in a race where Y candidate is as old as X and is more unhealthy can be presented by media ostensibly supportive of X. You can also see examples of "is Z candidate a better choice over X" when Z is a spoiler.

The result is that this bias, if it is metastatic, can drive even atheists into positions that support or build into support of religious claims.

By simply being ubiquitous and involved in the field, such ideas as "singular Jesus" take hold because people want to build a defense of the basis of their beliefs ("Jesus really existed") without being forced to actually address the elephant in the room (that they believe Jesus was an avatar for the creator of the universe to do a "perfect" speed-run of the Prometheus story with 1337 hax).

It's a much lower bar to jump over, and they think that if they can cash that check that the other check might not get as big a reaction when they try to cash it

"Singular Jesus" is an apparent attempt to bolster a rotten foundation of a rotten cult that has outright perverted the original intent of the source material (see also my shit post about CoCKs).
 
When to believe the evidence,
and
when to DISbelieve it

E.g., you believe George Washington was the first U.S. President. Why do you believe that? because that's what the written accounts of that historical period say. Except for the written accounts from the time in question, you have no proof/evidence for your beliefs about the history, about those past events, about what happened.
But that's not so. At all.

We know George Washington was the first US President, not ONLY because the written accounts say so, but ALSO because we know that there must have been a first US President, and there are few if any written accounts that say it was someone other than Washington.

A first president is a certainty; We would anticipate that his identity would be well known, and widely reported; And indeed that's what we observe.
Nice try, but no cigar. You know the above from the written accounts dating from the earlier time, and you could not know it without those accounts.

Also well known and widely reported is that Washington threw a silver dollar across the Potomac. However, this written account of an historical event is generally considered to be false.
No, there's no written account of it from that time. Popular stories, oral, not published in written accounts are not the basis for our knowledge of history. It's when those oral reports are recorded in writing that they become credible sources. (E.g., like our 1st-century written accounts of the Jesus miracle acts.)


Why? Because it describes a feat that is physically impossible for an ordinary human being.
But that's why it was not published in any written account of the time. No one really believed it -- not enough to publish it in writing. It's not true that people automatically believe every silly story. They need real evidence. That story was not published in written accounts anytime near to Washington. The real evidence is the written accounts near to when the alleged event happened.

The rule is that we need a written record of it near to the time of the event, like 100 years or less, and we need more than only one source (if it's something very unusual). Like the evidence we have (1st-century written sources) which say Jesus did the miracle acts. That's real evidence.

You haven't proved that you reject the written record of Washington's alleged miracle unless you cite the published account, giving the approximate date, and give at least 2 sources, since it was in the very unusual or hard-to-believe category. Are there two published reports of this Washington miracle, before about 1850 or so? like we have 5 written accounts of the Jesus Resurrection 20-70 years after it reportedly happened? If not, then you need a better example of a reported "miracle" event that you disbelieve, one which is analogous to the published Jesus Resurrection in the 1st century. You're still not proving that you ever reject the written record of an unusual event, documented near the time it happened.

Similarly, if some historical writings described an event at which thousands of people were fed a meal, from a mere handful of loaves of bread and a few fish(es), we would be foolish indeed to believe it - the events described are contrary to the First Law of Thermodynamics, and that physical law is far more dependable than any written account of any single event.
This example is different -- switch gears!

There are other reasons than the above to doubt the fish-and-loaves story. It can be explained as due to mythologizing. For a miracle claim, if there's another plausible explanation, then the credibility is much less. But -- such mythologizing is impossible unless first there is someone of status to mythologize (into a miracle-worker) -- which means someone who is famous and powerful, or someone who is noted for something special or noteworthy. George Washington was rich and powerful and famous in his time, which can explain how he got mythologized. But Jesus was a nobody, having no status, in 30 AD, so there's no explanation how he got mythologized if he was not recognized as a miracle-worker.

The only explanation that makes sense is that Jesus had become recognized locally, or in that region, for being a miracle-worker. There is nothing else noteworthy about him which we can find in the written record (evidence). And the explanation how he got this reputation, in the Galilee-Syria-Phoenicia region, is that he must have done the healing acts, which were highly unusual and unprecedented, which explains the very unusual reaction among the wide poor population there.

(For now, I'll just acknowledge that here I'm assuming the miracle healing acts are more plausible than the fish-and-loaves or walking-on-water etc. These less plausible miracle claims could easily be embellishments on the original Jesus miracle-worker, whose reputation was built on the healing miracles and the Resurrection, which really did happen.)

Your belief that archaeology, physics, logic, and reason play no part whatsoever in the evaluation of what events occurred in the past, and that historians rely ENTIRELY on written accounts, is beyond absurd.
You're right that such a belief would be absurd. There's nothing in archaeology or physics or logic which discredits the Jesus miracle healing accounts, as long as these are based on sources from that time (as they are) and don't contradict any other evidence (as they don't).
________________________________

Let's play this game again:

Can you name one historical fact NOT from the written record?

(i.e., a commonly-known historical fact)

I will repeat my earlier "Name one fact . . ." challenge (reply to TomC):

So to keep it simple, if you're right that we have some commonly-known history that comes from something other than the written record, you should be able to find something within that broad 2000-year period which is most of our known ancient history.

so, 1000 BC to 1000 AD

And let's limit this to known facts we're all familiar with. Since there are easily millions of such facts, it should be easy to come up with a few. Or at least one.

Simple known facts like
Charlemagne was crowned emperor.
Julius Caesar was assassinated.
Constantine established the Christian Church in Rome.
Alexander the Great conquered the Persians.
The Visigoths were driven from Spain by Muslims.

And so on. Can you name such facts we know based on non-written sources?

If not then you prove my point. If you can name a few, you refute me. If it takes you several days of research to come up with one, that's not a very good refutation. But perhaps it's worth a D+, at least a passing grade.

So far no one has been able to give such an example.



But while we're at it, here's another challenge, if you don't base your history on the ancient writings:

Name one alleged fact of history (before 1500 AD), reported in written accounts, which you DISbelieve. I.e., name an example of a reported fact (like the Jesus Resurrection is reported as fact, or also the normal history facts), contained in 2 or 3 sources, in written accounts near the time of the alleged facts, not contradicted by other evidence, and yet an alleged fact which you disbelieve.

You probably cannot name one example of this.

If you can't, then you're admitting that you generally believe the ancient reported events of history, as long as they're reported in extra sources and are not contradicted by other evidence or sources of the time.

This proves that we generally do believe what's reported in the written accounts of the time, if there's extra sources for it and it's not contradicted by other evidence. Such as the Jesus miracle acts are reported in 4 / 5 sources from the time and are not contradicted by other evidence or sources. Ordinarily this meets the normal critical standard for credibility, and you believe it. BUT -- oh-oh! -- not for the historical Jesus in about 30 AD. -- i.e., the exception to the rule.

There's no explanation why we're supposed to disbelieve such evidence in this one case alone.

However, it's honest to say simply that in this case we must reject the evidence, because this evidence is overruled by the basic axiom that miracle claims are always ruled out regardless of the evidence.

Again, there have been times when the evidence really was wrong. Like 50,000 years ago when the evidence was that the earth was flat. So we can't absolutely rule out that the evidence might be wrong in some cases.

This would be a fair argument. I.e., in the case of the Historical Jesus we must reject the historical evidence that he resurrected, or that he did the miracle healing acts. But the evidence from history is that this did happen. Maybe you can formulate the rule for when it's OK to reject the evidence. Like the historical evidence in this case.
 
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That's a good catch, Lumpen! Luke 7:22 "Jesus said [to two of the Baptist's disciples] Go and tell John what things ye have seen and heard; how that the blind see, the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, to the poor the gospel is preached" is mostly about what I called "type 1 miracles" and preaching but it DOES mention "the dead are raised", defined as a "type 4 miracle."

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.

Speaking only for myself I DO appreciate the work you have done, Lumpen. For starters you have demonstrated that Jesus was well documented early on. Counting papyrus fragments, some as early as the 1st century, Jesus is documented more and closer in time to his death than many persons considered "more historic" than Jesus. It must be frustrating to explain this over and over, yet still be rejected by some refusing to examine the evidence.

Nevertheless I do not reach your conclusion. 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. I think those miracles are down-played in part because attention focuses on Mohammad's and Buddha's own writings. But Jesus left no direct writings. You ask 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? So instead it was exciting fantasies that were memorized and passed on.

But the main reason most of us do not believe Jesus worked supernatural miracles is that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. 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.

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.
 
This is exactly the thought direction that I cannot discard when someone tries to tell me that an “Historical Jesus is True!”

I cannot help but be certain that this tale is exactly as susceptible as all those other ones to embellishment and fabrication and mixing of multiple histporical figures into one mega-persona.

I can never agree with them when they claim that, “well other tales are embellished, but not this one.” And I must insist that if they was to claim they are not susceptible, they need extraordinary evidence. Evidence that they will never be able to supply with 30-80-year post-event story-telling.

The arguments I’ve ever heard for why “Jesus was an actual historical figure” all seem to rely on the assumption that if something happened, then this guy’s role in it must be true. Like “we found walls in Jericho, therefore the tale of Jericho is true.” No, it means the writer had a real setting for their tale. Or that if something was written down by one person, then it must be fact. No, if something so extraordinary were true and affected so many people,why would we not expect many multiple writers?

But every other tall tale puts the lie to those assumptions. It’s not a lens I can turn off when I listen to them. I can’t forget that Paul Bunyan stories exist and that they are not true.



Obviously this doesn't apply to erudite posters at IIDB, but when I read comments of this type, I am almost tempted to wonder if the posters have devoted hours of study to relevant research. How do these scholars reconcile their conclusions with the fact that 99% of professional non-Christian historians believe Jesus did exist? (The percentage is even higher among Christian historians!)

Comparisons with the legendary warrior Arthur are especially laughable. Jesus is located in a specific time and place while speculations about Arthur range over several centuries, and legends locate him anywhere from Cornwall to Argyll. If Jesus were fictional, many of his earliest followers would have known this, while the earliest writings about Arthur already treat him more-or-less as mythical.

If someone wants to make a case that Jesus was fictional, can you show where 99% of historians go wrong? I hope you can do so without citing Toledot Yeshu or the Gibberish of Dr. Richard Carrier, PhD.

By mentioning the opinion of 99% of professional historians who have researched the question I am NOT deferring to authority. (No one familiar with my views would make that mistake.) I DO think extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.

And -- let's keep our eye on the ball -- professional historians do NOT define "historical Jesus" as one who walked on water and turned water into wine. In fact (cf. midrash and Bishop John Shelby Spong) the Gospel accounts may be rather mixed up. But, simply put, there really WAS a Galilean named Jesus crucified under Pontius Pilate who, for whatever reason, inspired a religion that grew rapidly.

simply put, there really WAS a Galilean named Jesus crucified under Pontius Pilate who, for whatever reason, inspired a religion that grew rapidly.
And there really was a newspaper reporter in a major US city in the 1930s who was an orphan raised by adoptive midwestern farmers. It would be strange for anyone to deny it. Whether his actual name was Clark Kent, or some variant of it, we will probably never know.

It falls into the bracket of "so what" claims - why would anybody care specifically about these nobodies, Clark and Jesus?

Sure, they're both almost certainly real people, or at worst, are a collection of stereotypes about a real class of person (the naïve country boy who makes it in the big city despite his job fircing him to confront the seedy parts of urban life; Or the itinerant preacher who falls foul of the Imperial authority).

But to say that there was an historical Clark Kent is to say nothing of any real value (other than to historians who specialise in sociological minutiae). Unless, of course, it is in the context of an implication that there was also an historical Superman.

Historical Jesus is popular because the vast majority of interested people enjoy having a real life miracle working savior.

Let's keep our eyes on the ball, please. Rational-thinking historians do NOT think Jesus worked miracles. That is NOT what the debate here is about. Everyone here (I think) agrees that there were no miracles.

99+% of serious non-Christian historians believe that a certain charismatic Jesus (who did NOT work miracles) attracted attention as a preacher and/or healer circa 30 AD, and that after his crucifixion his fame grew and inspired a religion. Carrier and others of the Mythicist cult believe there was no such Jesus, that Simon/Peter and/or Saul/Paul built a total fiction.


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.


So maybe there is some way to talk about this to make clear that you are saying “jesus” (Yeshua) not JESUS! when you say that you and 99% of historians think “Jesus was real.” You’ve got to admit that whhever anyone says “Jesus of Nazereth,” there’s a whole lot of assumed meaning to it and you can’t just say “Jesus was real” and not expect people to think you are saying “JESUS! was real.”


This is exactly like the difference between saying “Paul Bunyan was real” and “Fabian Fournier was real.”
 
Go and tell John what things ye have seen

Ok, now it makes sense to me. Old English is really a dialect of ancient Hebrew.

Jesus used thees and thous. I know it is true because I read it in the bible.
 
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