The Historical Jesus III

Status
Not open for further replies.
... in the case of the bible we are not actually talking about "historical records". We are talking only about religious devotional writing, most of which is simply presented as preaching of religious beliefs in the supernatural.

Yeah but you have do admit that it doesn't read like Greek gods having a chat on mount Olympus. Aside from the magical stuff, it reads like fictionalised biographies. And even the accounts of the otherwise non-fictional battle at Thermopylae contain improbable and impossible stuff.

Which other important figures in ancient history are believed to be real, on the basis of evidence as poor as the biblical writing about Jesus?

Well, someone brought up Socrates. We have pretty much nothing on him except what his alledged pupil wrote. There's quite a bit of discussion about whether he existed or not, but not to the point we're seeing here. I guess not being the founder of a religion a lot of atheists like me loathe helps.

As I just tried to show, the bible really is the only known original source for any mention at all of a figure named Jesus being the claimed messiah of OT prophecy.

Yes, the evidence outside the bibble is unconvincing, to say the least. I think it's safe to say that, within the bible, Paul and Mark are the only actual sources we have, and Paul tells us he never met Jesus, only his disciples.

2. from authors who never even tried to claim that they had ever known Jesus

In fact, the author of Luke flat-out says that he didn't.

4. where those unknown anonymous sources claimed that Jesus was witnessed to be overtly supernatural on almost every single page in almost everything he ever did.

To be fair, the ancients kept doing that. Oh, when my king was born ? Comet. When he made a speech ? Rainbow. When he was taking a bath ? Aphrodite herself came down from heaven and gave him a towel. True story !

. no physical remains of any kind
ii. no contemporary writing by Jesus himself
iii. no contemporary writing by anyone who ever claimed to have met Jesus
iv. no official records of any kind ever mentioning anyone called Jesus

None of this would be particularily surprising, but for the difference between you and I: you consider Jesus' post-mortem historical importance to somehow make this more damning. I don't.

vi. it has been shown beyond all doubt that the biblical writers were certainly taking their Jesus stories from what had been written centuries before in the OT.

Matthew sure embellished a lot of what he took from Mark and other sources by referencing the OT.

And the comparison which HJ people so often make to figures such as Pythagoras, is not a valid comparison, because as I just tried to explain - it does not matter if Pythagoras really was the one and only real individual responsible for Pythagorean Philosophy and/or Pythagoras Theorem. Because one or more real living individuals certainly did produce that particular philosophy and that particular theorem at a very early date around the time claimed for Pythagoras ...

Well, someone started that religion. Assuming Paul is a real person, he's either the originator -- in which case I wonder why he bothered to lie about meeting the disciples of an earlier religion rather than just rely on his "vision" -- or there was someone before him who founded that cult and he co-opted it.

OK, well any of us can always have different opinions. But as I have tried to explain - if a claim turns out to be entirely untrue, then it's literally impossible for any claimed evidence to be actually evidence of the truth of the untrue claim.

Yes but that's my question: as long as you don't know if it's true or not, how do you determine what's evidence for the hypothesis ?

... but where there is if fact a very well known earlier source!, ...and that is the OT. That was certainly being used by the gospel writers as a source for creating their Jesus stories.

I'm not sure there's much in Mark to corroborate this. It seems to share more with Homeric literature than Hebraic literature.

The point is that you have distinguish carefully and clearly between what is “evidence” of some sort about something, vs. whether or not that particular evidence is in fact evidence of that which is being claimed.

Noted.
 
Well, someone started that religion. Assuming Paul is a real person, he's either the originator -- in which case I wonder why he bothered to lie about meeting the disciples of an earlier religion rather than just rely on his "vision" -- or there was someone before him who founded that cult and he co-opted it.

Here's my question: Is there any reason that James couldn't have made it up? For example: Suppose James had these radical ideas and had gathered a small following. Recognizing that he'd be getting into trouble with the big religious leaders, he could well have made up the idea that he was preaching "his brother's" ideas, and said "you have to keep quiet about this stuff, look what happened to my brother, it got him nailed up." Then along comes Paul, who makes fun of these people before his epileptic fit, and suddenly he buys into it. What follows is (as Piggy had brought up a while back) straight out of "When Prophecy Fails"--when Jesus fails to return, Paul begins to broadcast the message that had previously been kept relatively quiet. (Piggy bailed when I pointed out that if James=Mrs. Keech, and Paul=Dr. Armstrong, then Jesus=The Guardians.)
 
Here's my question: Is there any reason that James couldn't have made it up? For example: Suppose James had these radical ideas and had gathered a small following. Recognizing that he'd be getting into trouble with the big religious leaders, he could well have made up the idea that he was preaching "his brother's" ideas, and said "you have to keep quiet about this stuff, look what happened to my brother, it got him nailed up." Then along comes Paul, who makes fun of these people before his epileptic fit, and suddenly he buys into it. What follows is (as Piggy had brought up a while back) straight out of "When Prophecy Fails"--when Jesus fails to return, Paul begins to broadcast the message that had previously been kept relatively quiet. (Piggy bailed when I pointed out that if James=Mrs. Keech, and Paul=Dr. Armstrong, then Jesus=The Guardians.)

It's a possiblity. There are a lot of possibilities. Question is: which one is more likely, given what we know ?
 
It's a possiblity. There are a lot of possibilities. Question is: which one is more likely, given what we know ?

Well, we know a whole lot of the story was made up. The question becomes "how much of it."
 
Well, we know a whole lot of the story was made up. The question becomes "how much of it."

Belz... said:
My guess is "almost all of it."

There is no need to guess.

Please examine the writings of antiquity.

1. The Baptism of Jesus with the Holy Ghost bird and the voice from heaven was made up.

2. The Temptation of Jesus by SATAN was made up.

3. The walking on water by Jesus was made up.

4. The transfiguration of Jesus was made up.

5. The miracles of Jesus were made up.

6. The triumphal entry into Jerusalem by Jesus was made up.

7. The trial under Pilate where Jesus was crucified even though he was not guilty was made up.

8. The Barabbas exchange was made up.

9.The burial of Jesus was made up.

10. The RESURRECTION of Jesus was made up.

The Jesus character was made up based on the abundance of evidence from antiquity.

It can be easily argued based on the massive amount of evidence from antiquity that Jesus of Nazareth was MADE up.

In addition, an historical Jesus was MADE up RECENTLY since no writings of antiquity mentioned a mere man, an OBSCURE preacher/rebel/rabbi/false prophet/idiot/liar by the name of Jesus of Nazareth.

Essentially Jesus of Nazareth and the supposed historical Jesus are MADE UP.

Jesus of Nazareth was MADE up from the OT and the recent invention called HJ was MADE UP from the NT.
 
Last edited:
... in the case of the bible we are not actually talking about "historical records". We are talking only about religious devotional writing, most of which is simply presented as preaching of religious beliefs in the supernatural.


Yeah but you have do admit that it doesn't read like Greek gods having a chat on mount Olympus. Aside from the magical stuff, it reads like fictionalised biographies. And even the accounts of the otherwise non-fictional battle at Thermopylae contain improbable and impossible stuff.


Well you say "aside from the magical stuff", but that magical stuff fills almost every significant mention of Jesus in all four gospels (and in Paul’s letters, wherever Jesus is mentioned). There really is nothing else of any substance there at all except for the magical stuff.

If you take away all the miraculous and supernatural stuff, and also take away the various examples where Jesus is said to be offering some amazing insight to his dumbfounded disciples, then all you actually have left is sentences saying Jesus walked to some place or other, and there he did absolutely nothing because we have had to erase the miracles and divine insights that he was supposed to have produced there.

If there were just one or two such miracles or divine insights in the bible amongst a whole load of otherwise perfectly mundane normal activities, then we might give it the benefit of the doubt and say that the couple of untrue miracles were perhaps just a bit of artistic licence copied from the ancient scriptures. But the opposite is actually the case; whereby the vast mass of the bible is choc-a-block full of the impossible miracles, supernatural and divine amazing insights.

Another factor is this - until about 150 years ago by which date modern science was beginning to convince educated people that the miracles could not actually have been true, almost everyone on earth did actually believe that Jesus literally had performed all the miracles and risen from the dead to meet a certainly existing God in the heavens.

Certainly at the time when the bible was written, nobody would have dreamt of questioning the truth of those miracle stories - everyone at that date was quite certain that such miracles and the supernatural happened all day every day somewhere around them through the actions of the heavenly gods. So at that date, 3rd century say, anyone could write or preach such fictional stories, especially revered priests and church leaders, ie people who claimed a direct communication with God, and get away without anyone questioning their honesty or integrity.

But if you tried to produce that biblical account for the first time now in the 21st century, nobody would believe you were anything other than either mentally insane or else an uneducated charlatan trying to trick people with the sort of storytelling expected of an impressionable 8 year old.

I have no idea what nonsense any Greek gods were supposed to have spoken to one-another on Mount Olympus, but the biblical writing certainly could never be regarded as credible or reliable in what it says about an impossible Jesus figure.

And the idea of simply erasing almost everything that was written about Jesus in the miracles, supernatural and divine or amazing insights, is clearly not justified at all, or certainly not without an extremely good explanation (which I have never seen offered).


Which other important figures in ancient history are believed to be real, on the basis of evidence as poor as the biblical writing about Jesus?


Well, someone brought up Socrates. We have pretty much nothing on him except what his alledged pupil wrote. There's quite a bit of discussion about whether he existed or not, but not to the point we're seeing here. I guess not being the founder of a religion a lot of atheists like me loathe helps.


Well first of all, as Mcreal just said above (Post #1227) - we are not really talking about any of those other figures. We are talking here very specifically about the case of Jesus, who was described in the bible (the only known primary or original source for any mention of Jesus) in the terms I summarised before as follows, where the biblical writing is -

1. completely anonymous
2. from authors who never even tried to claim that they had ever known Jesus
3. who were apparently repeating earlier legend obtained from other unknown anonymous sources
4. where those unknown anonymous sources claimed that Jesus was witnessed to be overtly supernatural on almost every single page in almost everything he ever did.
5. and where there is no other independent evidence of any kind for Jesus, i.e. -

i. no physical remains of any kind
ii. no contemporary writing by Jesus himself
iii. no contemporary writing by anyone who ever claimed to have met Jesus
iv. no official records of any kind ever mentioning anyone called Jesus

But where on the contrary -

vi. it has been shown beyond all doubt that the biblical writers were certainly taking their Jesus stories from what had been written centuries before in the OT.



Afaik, Socrates was not written about purely and entirely in terms like that. And neither was anyone else, except for the accounts of imaginary gods.

Can you name any other figures in history who were written about only in terms like the above, and where real historians (not bible scholars) claim that is nevertheless sufficient to believe the figure was more likely than not a real person?


As I just tried to show, the bible really is the only known original source for any mention at all of a figure named Jesus being the claimed messiah of OT prophecy.


Yes, the evidence outside the bibble is unconvincing, to say the least. I think it's safe to say that, within the bible, Paul and Mark are the only actual sources we have, and Paul tells us he never met Jesus, only his disciples.


Well, exactly. And not only had Paul never met Jesus (even though he was supposed to be about the same age as Jesus and a contemporary of his, and apparently spending all his time physically persecuting members of a so-called Church of God who were claimed by bible scholars and many HJ posters here to have been people who actually knew Jesus (inc. amongst their number "James" said to be the actual family brother of a living Jesus)), but in addition to that, Paul only ever really describes Jesus in theological terms as a spiritual belief which he gained through divine revelation and through an understanding of scripture.

And as for the author of g-Mark, not only had he clearly never known Jesus either, but as Randel Helms clearly showed (Gospel Fictions), the author of g-Mark was certainly using various parts of the OT to compose or create stories of Jesus.


4. where those unknown anonymous sources claimed that Jesus was witnessed to be overtly supernatural on almost every single page in almost everything he ever did..


To be fair, the ancients kept doing that. Oh, when my king was born ? Comet. When he made a speech ? Rainbow. When he was taking a bath ? Aphrodite herself came down from heaven and gave him a towel. True story !.


Oh, I am sure they wrote about all sorts of famous figures with claims of miracles and superhuman feats of strength etc. But I don't know of any real figures who were written about only in such terms. Whereas Jesus was really written about only in such wondrous terms ... there is really nothing remotely reliable in the gospels where Jesus is described in some ordinary human mundane acts. For example - when I said that previously to Craig, Stein and others here, they immediately cited the Lords Supper as a normal human act. But in Paul's letter, which is said to pre-date the gospels and which in that case would have very obviously been a likely source for the later gospel writers, Paul actually says that he obtained the story of that last supper through revelation (from memory I think he said he "received" it, and said that he was now "passing it on" to others as something they clearly would not otherwise have known except for Paul having "received it").


5. and where there is no other independent evidence of any kind for Jesus, i.e. -

i. no physical remains of any kind
ii. no contemporary writing by Jesus himself
iii. no contemporary writing by anyone who ever claimed to have met Jesus
iv. no official records of any kind ever mentioning anyone called Jesus!.


None of this would be particularily surprising, but for the difference between you and I: you consider Jesus' post-mortem historical importance to somehow make this more damning. I don't.!.


Oh, I am not saying that i-iv alone are particularly damming. I am just saying that apart from all the other problems listed prior to i-iv, in addition we also have none of the things listed in i-iv, and they would usually be the sort of things we'd like to see to show that a story was actually true.


And the comparison which HJ people so often make to figures such as Pythagoras, is not a valid comparison, because as I just tried to explain - it does not matter if Pythagoras really was the one and only real individual responsible for Pythagorean Philosophy and/or Pythagoras Theorem. Because one or more real living individuals certainly did produce that particular philosophy and that particular theorem at a very early date around the time claimed for Pythagoras ... so those are real remaining tangible things which can be shown to have been produced by someone at that early date..!.


Well, someone started that religion. Assuming Paul is a real person, he's either the originator -- in which case I wonder why he bothered to lie about meeting the disciples of an earlier religion rather than just rely on his "vision" -- or there was someone before him who founded that cult and he co-opted it..!.


Well first of all I don’t think we have to guess who started the religion or precisely how it first began. Because that is really a separate question from whether the claimed evidence in the bible should be considered good enough to conclude that Jesus was more than likely a real person.

And perhaps in passing I should again emphasis my own position re. the possible existence of Jesus -

- I am not saying that he could not have existed (in some sense at least).

Nor am I am I even saying that he probably did not exist.

I don't actually get so far as to say anything like that. What I say is only that the claimed evidence is not actually evidence of Jesus, and that in fact there is no reliable evidence of a human Jesus ever known to any of those people who wrote about him.

And in that case I think the safest conclusion is just to say that whilst he might have lived, there is actually no evidence of that ... and the best conclusion is then to say that it's impossible to make any meaningful guess as to any probability of whether he was more likely, or less likely, or any such guess at any likelihood all.


However, on the negative side (against a HJ), what we certainly can say is that -

1. the biblical accounts are constantly fictional and certainly untrue (and that was not always known)
2. the OT was certainly being used as a source for creating Jesus stories (and that was not always known either).
3. claims of the first gospels and letters being written within only about 20 to 40 years after the death of Jesus, are totally misleading. Because we have no such letters or gospels until the earliest Christian copyist accounts several centuries later.
4. although until relatively recent times (say about 1800) the church and early bible scholars sought to present the gospels as actually written by the disciples themselves as eye-witnesses to Jesus, that turns out to be entirely untrue.

5.And similarly whilst even today those bible scholars and church leaders try to claim non-biblical sources such as Tacitus & Josephus as independent corroborative accounts, there is in fact no evidence at all that they are independent of the biblical writing ... in fact, it is almost certain that they were relying entirely on earlier biblical accounts.

6. and also .... whilst they sought to claim, and still do try to present Josephus and Tacitus as writing about Jesus within less than a century after his death, in fact that is a complete misrepresentation of documents that are in fact only known to us as Christian copying made as late as the 11th century and later.

7. Etc. Etc....

All of which shows that for most of the past 2000 years the Christian church and bible scholars have sought continuously, and still seek continuously, to completely misrepresent the quality and authenticity of their claimed evidence. And the point about that sort of behaviour from the church and from religious scholars is that it's suspicious in the extreme, and really quite damming of such people as credible un-biased commentators in this matter.


OK, well any of us can always have different opinions. But as I have tried to explain - if a claim turns out to be entirely untrue, then it's literally impossible for any claimed evidence to be actually evidence of the truth of the untrue claim.


Yes but that's my question: as long as you don't know if it's true or not, how do you determine what's evidence for the hypothesis ?..!.


The information or data (or testimony) only becomes genuinely "evidence" of that which is being claimed, after it has been subjectively decided that the claim itself was really true. To that extent, as I said above, there is a conceptual and practical problem with the whole idea of "evidence".

But what then becomes necessary is to consider whether or not the data, information or testimony really does show beyond all reasonable doubt that which is being claimed as the ultimate fact. for example - in the case of Jesus the ultimate claim of fact from bible scholars is that Jesus was certainly a real human person. So then you have to ask what is the data, information or testimony that proves that to be the case (here it requires actually literal "proof" by the way, because they are claiming Jesus as a matter of literal "certainty") ... and to that their the answer is that the biblical writing is their proof! ...

.... but of course, the biblical writing is a million miles from being proof of Jesus.

Even you allow for any bible scholars who merely say they think Jesus was most probably a real figure, which means they are actually claiming a probability greater than 50%, then again you have to ask what is their data or information or testimony that shows a likelihood of greater than 50%. And again their answer is the bible! ...

....but as I said before - the bible does not contain any actual testimony or information from anyone who had ever known Jesus! It only contains the testimony of peoples un-evidenced anonymous religious beliefs in the supernatural. So you have to ask - where then is the biblical scholars actual testimony or information from anyone who had ever known a living Jesus? And the answer is that they have no such testimony or information! All they have is those same anonymously written religious beliefs said to have come from other anonymous sources who were said to have once believed in the existence (of some sort) of a supernatural messiah of OT legend.


... but where there is if fact a very well known earlier source!, ...and that is the OT. That was certainly being used by the gospel writers as a source for creating their Jesus stories.


I'm not sure there's much in Mark to corroborate this. It seems to share more with Homeric literature than Hebraic literature.


You mean it's not corroborated when I say that the gospel writers were certainly using the OT as source of their Jesus stories? OK, well Randel Helms is an academic author who has written a whole 200 page book full of examples of where, how and why the gospel writers were looking in the OT for any passages they could re-intemperate as actions' of Jesus.

I don't particularly want to spend even more time copying out examples from that book and posting them here, but afaik nobody doubts that what Helms showed in his book is actually true. The book is of course freely available on Amazon if anyone want to see for themselves how Helms shows examples of where g-Mark was using the OT to create stories of Jesus using what bible scholars themselves acknowledge as a process they call "fulfilment citation".
 
You need to actually read what I write, then, and be less dismissive. This is a discussion forum, not Youtube.

You tell everyone that, maybe the problem is in the writing and not the reading.
 
Another factor is this - until about 150 years ago by which date modern science was beginning to convince educated people that the miracles could not actually have been true, almost everyone on earth did actually believe that Jesus literally had performed all the miracles and risen from the dead to meet a certainly existing God in the heavens.


Certainly at the time when the bible was written, nobody would have dreamt of questioning the truth of those miracle stories - everyone at that date was quite certain that such miracles and the supernatural happened all day every day somewhere around them through the actions of the heavenly gods. So at that date, 3rd century say, anyone could write or preach such fictional stories, especially revered priests and church leaders, ie people who claimed a direct communication with God, and get away without anyone questioning their honesty or integrity.

You missed a very significant piece of evidence. People of antiquity did QUESTION the Jesus story.

You forgot that there were Christian Heretics and Skeptics of antiquity for hundreds of years who REJECTED the NT Bible stories of Jesus.

Christians of antiquity did argue that Jesus was NOT born and was WITHOUT flesh.

Non-Christians of antiquity argued that the Jesus story was a Pack of LIES

See "Against Heresies" attributed to Irenaeus, "Against Celsus" attributed to ORIGEN, , "First Apology" attributed to Justin, "De Principiis" attributed to Origen,

About 1800 years ago and for hundreds of years many persons in the Roman Empire did NOT believe the Jesus stories.

Even Christians in the 2nd century and for hundreds of years claimed that the Son of God was WITHOUT birth and WITHOUT Flesh.

Some other Christians believed that Simon Magus was God and that he would never die.

Other Christians claimed Christ was a Spiritual being.

Even in the 5th century Christians argued that Jesus was NOT born.

The Emperor Julian claimed that the Jesus story was a MONSTROUS fable.

Macarius Magnes admitted Paul was a LIAR.

Hierocles also exposed that the Jesus stories were vamped up by men who were LIARS.

What happened to the writings of those who QUESTIONED the veracity of the Jesus stories since at least the 2nd century??

Based on Julian the Christians KILLED those who QUESTIONED the Jesus story.


Against the Galileans
As for purity of life you do not know whether he so much as mentioned it; but you emulate the rages and the bitterness of the Jews, overturning temples and altars,63 and you slaughtered not only those of us who remained true to the teachings of their fathers, but also men who were as much astray as yourselves, heretics.......

Jesus cult Christians SLAUGHTERED other Christians who QUESTIONED or did NOT accept their Jesus story.
 
Last edited:
You missed a very significant piece of evidence. People of antiquity did QUESTION the Jesus story.

You forgot that there were Christian Heretics and Skeptics of antiquity for hundreds of years who REJECTED the NT Bible stories of Jesus.

...

Non-Christians of antiquity argued that the Jesus story was a Pack of LIES

...

The Emperor Julian claimed that the Jesus story was a MONSTROUS fable.

Macarius Magnes admitted Paul was a LIAR.

Hierocles also exposed that the Jesus stories were vamped up by men who were LIARS.

What happened to the writings of those who QUESTIONED the veracity of the Jesus stories since at least the 2nd century??

Based on Julian the Christians KILLED those who QUESTIONED the Jesus story.
...
Jesus cult Christians SLAUGHTERED other Christians who QUESTIONED or did NOT accept their Jesus story.


Quite right!
 
If you take away all the miraculous and supernatural stuff, and also take away the various examples where Jesus is said to be offering some amazing insight to his dumbfounded disciples, then all you actually have left is sentences saying Jesus walked to some place or other, and there he did absolutely nothing because we have had to erase the miracles and divine insights that he was supposed to have produced there.

Not quite. He did preach quite a bit of nonsense, too. But yeah, as I said before, there's so much made up stuff that there's not much left for us to determine anything about his life, if life there was.

But if you tried to produce that biblical account for the first time now in the 21st century, nobody would believe you were anything other than either mentally insane or else an uneducated charlatan trying to trick people with the sort of storytelling expected of an impressionable 8 year old.

Amazing what faith does isn't it ? If Jesus actually existed, is the son of the, and came back today, nobody would believe it. :p

And the idea of simply erasing almost everything that was written about Jesus in the miracles, supernatural and divine or amazing insights, is clearly not justified at all, or certainly not without an extremely good explanation (which I have never seen offered).

This wasn't what I was suggesting. I was simply making a point about the writing style. I'm not saying, at all, that we should remove the supernatural and give any credence to the mundane.

Afaik, Socrates was not written about purely and entirely in terms like that. And neither was anyone else, except for the accounts of imaginary gods.

The point is that it's hearsay. We have only Plato's word. By your own logic, his belief about Socrates' existence.

Can you name any other figures in history who were written about only in terms like the above, and where real historians (not bible scholars) claim that is nevertheless sufficient to believe the figure was more likely than not a real person?

I would have to get back to you on that, but I'm not sure that a match is required for us to be discussing standard of evidence.

And not only had Paul never met Jesus [snip], but in addition to that, Paul only ever really describes Jesus in theological terms as a spiritual belief which he gained through divine revelation and through an understanding of scripture.

Indeed. I'm still puzzled as to why he'd even mention meeting the disciples if there was no preexisting cult, however.

Oh, I am sure they wrote about all sorts of famous figures with claims of miracles and superhuman feats of strength etc. But I don't know of any real figures who were written about only in such terms. Whereas Jesus was really written about only in such wondrous terms ...

Not only. He goes from place to place, talking nonsense to people and doing things that may seem miraculous to some but not necessarily to the reader, and then also a number of actual BS miracles that can't possibly have happened. I'm not sure I'd characterise the stories even as "mostly" miracles. I guess I'd have to read them again but... my is that book boring.

But in Paul's letter, which is said to pre-date the gospels and which in that case would have very obviously been a likely source for the later gospel writers, Paul actually says that he obtained the story of that last supper through revelation

Paul really was an *******. I can see him meeting the disciples, and then one of them mentions the last supper and he's like "yeah, er... I knew about that! [takes notes]"

I don't actually get so far as to say anything like that. What I say is only that the claimed evidence is not actually evidence of Jesus, and that in fact there is no reliable evidence of a human Jesus ever known to any of those people who wrote about him.

And in that case I think the safest conclusion is just to say that whilst he might have lived, there is actually no evidence of that ... and the best conclusion is then to say that it's impossible to make any meaningful guess as to any probability of whether he was more likely, or less likely, or any such guess at any likelihood all.

Ok. That's actually very close to my own take on it, actually.

The information or data (or testimony) only becomes genuinely "evidence" of that which is being claimed, after it has been subjectively decided that the claim itself was really true. To that extent, as I said above, there is a conceptual and practical problem with the whole idea of "evidence".

Well, I can't agree to that. I think there should be a way through which we can all agree that X is evidence for A, even pending a consensus or conclusion, and that this fits with how the word is used in every day life, in science, in court, and in dictionaries.

But what then becomes necessary is to consider whether or not the data, information or testimony really does show beyond all reasonable doubt that which is being claimed as the ultimate fact.

Well, this isn't a court. I don't think reasonable doubt should be our threshold in such historical contexts, unfortunately. I really wish we had more complete records of stuff, but unfortunately people keep destroying our heritage.

You mean it's not corroborated when I say that the gospel writers were certainly using the OT as source of their Jesus stories? OK, well Randel Helms is an academic author who has written a whole 200 page book full of examples of where, how and why the gospel writers were looking in the OT for any passages they could re-intemperate as actions' of Jesus.

I'll bow to his superior knowledge.
 
I'll answer your post later, IanS. There's a lot of stuff to read there. :)


Yeah, there is a lot of stuff in that post. Too much probably.

I don't think you need to spend time replying to each individual point (or any of the points really). Because apart from anything else, it's mostly all stuff I've said many times before.

And it just all boils down to saying that there really isn't any decent reliable evidence of Jesus ever known to anyone.

On a separate point re. that question of who or what started a belief that somebody called Jesus was the messiah -

- from memory (I can easily check in Carriers book), Carrier says that in the OT book of Zechariah, it actually prophecies that God will send his Son called "Joshua" (i.e. literally "Jesus"), who is a pre-existent heavenly figure, and who will "rise up from below", in some sort of symbolic act of salivation for the Jewish nation.

If you check Carriers references in Zechariah, the actual passages are not quite as clear as Carrier's summary may suggest. But the main points of what he says seem to be correct.

The book of Zechariah is said to date from 520 BC. And yet that does appear to be a very clear source actually naming Jesus as some sort of "rising" (he is actually called "Rising" or "Branch") pre-existent celestial son of the heavenly god, who's acts, which iirc appear to include his death (perhaps at the hands of Satan), are somehow symbolic as a saving act for the Jewish people and somehow connected to the long held idea of all the faithful thereby being raised up to heaven on a day of God's judgement .... IOW almost exactly the Jesus belief that Paul was preaching 500 years later, and where he repeatedly insisted that he obtained his belief "according to scripture" and through divine "revelation" where "God was pleased to reveal his Son in me".

As I say - if you check Carriers references by actually looking at what is written in Zechariah (we are of course relying on various translations of Zechariah, some of which may differ as to which words were actually written there, and what those words actually meant), although it may not be as clear or definitive as Carrier suggests, you can certainly find that passage naming "Joshua" as this pre-existent celestial saviour son of God.
 
Last edited:
think this was the crux of our disagreement in the past. Although the relative importance of Jesus historically should certainly influence our desire to know the truth about the biblical claims (magical or otherwise), in the sense that believe in him has had quite an impact in history, it shouldn't influence the logic of what we consider evidence about historical characters. In other words, the standard should be the same for all such characters.

The highlighted part as I previously demonstrated is the issue. The people Jesus is compared to have far better evidence in term of quality because the HJ proponents in question are trying to prove a form of Triumphalist Jesus exist.

Also as demonstrated with Sun Tzu if existence of someone who was supposedly recorded in official records that were complied and evaluated by the Grand Historian is question then why is it considered so off the wall to question the existence of Jesus whose evidence is in far worst shape? The standard being used clearly is NOT the same.

Moses is no longer believed to be historical and King David is in the iffy category even with Tel Dan Stele and Mesha Stele and yet we are told Jesus did exist

Again INCONSISTENT standards.
 
Last edited:
The highlighted part as I previously demonstrated is the issue. The people Jesus is compared to have far better evidence in term of quality because the HJ proponents in question are trying to prove a form of Triumphalist Jesus exist.

Also as demonstrated with Sun Tzu if existence of someone who was supposedly recorded in official records that were complied and evaluated by the Grand Historian is question then why is it considered so off the wall to question the existence of Jesus whose evidence is in far worst shape? The standard being used clearly is NOT the same.

Moses is no longer believed to be historical and King David is in the iffy category even with Tel Dan Stele and Mesha Stele and yet we are told Jesus did exist

Again INCONSISTENT standards.


Special pleading of the most desperate kind to alleviate a chronic and acute Cognitive Dissonance... and in many cases of these "scholars" there is a lot of vested interest even if it is not on the conscious level.

Nothing but arrant casuistry trying to somehow still maintain some FACE SAVING from having to admit that their culture and society and history has been based upon nothing more than a FAIRY TALE fabricated by huckstering poltroons and enforced by the swords of pillaging brigands. Nothing but an ancient Pyramid Scheme or Multi-Level Marketing Scam.

So they rationalize that ok, we can throw away the fairy tale aspect, but then there is still REAL stuff left in there and we have not been UTTERLY AND TOTALLY DUPED for all those centuries by a MYTHICAL FABLE.

They are desperate to prove that it is not all a big hoax like all the other woo they are increasingly beginning to realize is claptrap.

Much like children who are driven to tears and dismay after discovering the level of adult complicity of their society and parents in deceiving them for so long and in so many ways with the Santa fable.

So they carry on ferociously debating against the fictiveness of the Jesus fables postulating tenuous modicums of possible likelihood of perhaps maybe something approaching a near similarity to some kind of similitude of a real person or an amalgam persona who they begrudgingly and with extreme consternation concede might maybe possibly not have had anything magical about him, but could have been a xenophobic zealously benighted fanatically religious Rabbi or terrorist or freedom fighter or old-new-age hippie or cult leader according to one's own wishful thinking for what one needs this Jesus to be.
 
Last edited:
The highlighted part as I previously demonstrated is the issue. The people Jesus is compared to have far better evidence in term of quality because the HJ proponents in question are trying to prove a form of Triumphalist Jesus exist.

Perhaps, but that wasn't what I was talking about. I was talking about requiring MORE evidence for characters with more historical importance, something I disagree with. Whether or not your statement above is true is irrelevant to that.
 
...... we are told Jesus did exist......Again INCONSISTENT standards.

We are told God exists by people who claim Jesus did exist.

We are told Satan exists by people who claim Jesus did exist.

We are told the Holy Ghost exists by people who claim Jesus did exist.

We are told the Angel Gabriel exists by people who claim Jesus did exist.


The same people who claim Jesus did exist have DENIED the existence of ALL other Gods and sons of Gods like Jupiter, Zeus, Romulus, Remus, Mars, Aesclapius, Dionysius, Hercules, Perseus and Apollo.

The inconsistency of the HJ argument is blatant.

ONLY the Jesus story is MANIPULATED and CORRUPTED to historicise Jesus.

The Jesus story was MANIPULATED in order to historicise the obvious myth/fiction character called Jesus.

The people who MANIPULATED and TAMPERED with the Jesus story to historicise Jesus DARE NOT change a single word in Jewish and Greek/Roman mythology.

The HJ argument is the very worse known to mankind since those who argue for an HJ MUST first MUTILATE and CORRUPT the Jesus story and INVENT their OWN fiction.

Jesus of Nazareth is a fiction/myth character just like Romulus, Remus, Adam, Eve, Jupiter, Mars, Perseus, Aesclapius, Apollo, Achilles and ALL other myth/fiction characters of the Jews, Greeks and Romans.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Back
Top Bottom