Yet Philo says not a word about jesus, christianity nor any of the events described in the new testament. In all this work, Philo makes not a single reference to his alleged contemporary "jesus christ", the godman who supposedly was perambulating up and down the Levant, exorcising demons, raising the dead and causing earthquake and darkness at his death.
A rather disingenuous argument when you know full well, or would had you read up to this point, that none of your interlocutors are arguing for the historicity of miracles and so forth. And irrelevant in any case, as you still haven't explained
why Philo would be expected to write about such things even had he heard about them, to the point that his not mentioning them is proof that they didn't happen. It would not serve any of his interests to repeat such rumors even if he believed them to be true, and he would have had no more reason to assume that said rumors
were true than you do. He wasn't there, so all he could have known is the same thing you do: that some people said they had, and others said they hadn't. Why would he voluntarily bring up the matter, when it could only possibly hurt his cause of lessening ethnic tensions in Alexandria?
If Jesus actually healed lots of people, why did he do it? If he did it because he cared about them, why did he only heal a very small fraction of the sick people in the world? If he did it in order to demonstrate his power, why did he restrict demonstrating his power to a very small geographic region in the world? If you rose from the dead, and wanted people to know that you rose from the dead, you would not limit your appearances to just a few people in one small geographic region in the world. There do not seem to be sensible motives for many of the things that JC did, which suggest that he did not do many of the things that the New Testament attributes to him.
Your post here is more or less an admission that you're arguing theology, not history. Didn't you read the manual? Mythicists are supposed to pretend that they're just "following the evidence" of history and coming to the only natural conclusion, not seeking out evidence that supports their religious convictions.
There is only theology to argue.
As this thread ably demonstrates, the historical certainties about Jesus are an empty set. We can guess, speculate, and try to assign relevances to the surviving tall tales after their 1500+ years of corruption by both accidental errors and deliberate politically motivated alterations, but ultimately it is not, and never will be, possible to say for sure whether a real Jesus ever lived.
And, more importantly, it doesn’t matter one iota either way, to anything other than the entirely self referential mythology. The only real effects Jesus and the stories about Jesus have had on anything non-fictional are themselves fictions. Christians behaving in ways that are predicated on their beliefs in the myths.
Jesus the historical person has no more influence on reality than Marx had on the Holodomor - People being total cunts to each other (or being unaccountably kind, for that matter) because they interpret a bunch of writings as saying something that they wanted to say anyway, and as providing some kind of authoritative backing for their actions, is utterly unremarkable human behaviour.
If Jesus didn’t exist, we would have to invent him. If he wasn’t a God, or at the very least a prophet, then he was just one of millions of irrelevant people of his time. And Gods and prophets are solely theological in scope.
Take the theology away, and what are people left wasting their lives on here? Debating a meaningless question for which no evidence will ever exist might be entertaining, but it’s not worth shit beyond what little entertainment we extract from participating in the debate. It’s of no more value to humanity than any other light entertainment.
If the scientific and technological development of humanity had been held back by a millennium of diverting almost all scholarly effort, and the minds of almost every literate person, into analysis of a different light entertainment - the minute study of every aspect of Ross from the TV show
Friends, for example - it would be no less stupid and futile.
Jesus is an irrelevant bit of mindless entertainment. There’s nothing wrong with mindless entertainment, but when people take it seriously, other people get hurt - just ask anyone who’s been caught up in football hooliganism. We shouldn’t encourage that.
The entire and complete discussion of the non-theological history of Jesus is simple:
Might have existed. Doesn’t matter in any way whether he did or not. We will never know anyway.
Anything and everything else is theology.