The Historical Jesus III

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The HJ argument is just a waste of time.

The very same people who admit the NT is nothing but myth fables are using the very same myth fables as credible historical sources for their Jesus.

GDon as a Christian admits the Bible is myth and fables yet use the same Bible as a credible historical source.

GDon said:
...I'd never thought the Bible was anything other than a collection of myths and fables"


Craig B claims gMatthew is about a biological family when Jesus is LISTED as the son of a Ghost and a Transfiguring Water Walker.

Craig B said:
This is about a biological family.

How much longer can this awful REPETITIVE ridiculous HJ argument continue?
 
@dejudge

I see you're putting REPETITIVE in caps in case I don't notice this new repeated expression picked up by you from my criticism of your utterances. But I do. So be reassured.
How much longer can this awful REPETITIVE ridiculous HJ argument continue?
Quite so. I'll need to think up another word for you. Let me ponder that.
 
You keep appealing to 'tacitus'.

Your posts lack nuance.

You fail to either realize or acknowledge the tenuous nature of annals 15.44 in the big picture.

It's either (i) edited interpolation or (ii) hearsay about a non-specific Christ-entity.

well, we know one thing: those are directly contradictory. Which shall we choose?

The most troubling clause for the Mythists:

"suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberius at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilatus."

Nuanced as a sledge hammer.
 
Thanks IanS, but I have Carrier's book, so I do know what he says on this. I'd be more interested in your own analysis. That is, present the data but tell me what you think is correct, incorrect, speculative, etc.


OK, well one of us needs to write the entire passage of what is said in Carrier's book "Element 6, pages 81-83", and in "Element 40, pages 200 to about p 205. So that we can see what Carrier actually does say. The mods may object to that (very long quotes from a book), but as far as I know there is no link that can be given to that as the relevant section of text under discussion.


But when you ask what is my opinion - as I made clear over the past few weeks when I have on probably 4 separate occasions in 4 separate posts mentioned what I think Carrier is claiming as his interpretation of what is said about "Jesus" in the book of Zechariah ... I do not have any firm opinion about it one way or the other, because I have no access to what was actually written in the earliest extant copies of Zechariah, and I would have to rely on the accuracy and impartiality of various translators anyway.

But what I did say about it is - that in his YouTube films, and now in his book, Carrier does claim that in Zechariah there is talk of what Carrier describes as a "pre-existent celestial being, named Jesus, crowned king in heaven, and given supreme power over God's domain, who will somehow rise up from below to cleanse the world of all sin". But where he (ie Jesus) is at some point confronted by Satan and where his "rising" is somehow supposed to be connected to a dying and rising "Christ" (i.e. a "messiah) described in other books of the OT such as Isaiah and Daniel. That seems to be what Carrier is proposing.

And what I said about that was, to paraphrase from previous posts (from rough memory), what I think Carrier is saying is that in the book of Zechariah, you can actually find not only the name "Joshua i.e. Jesus" being used for a pre-existent celestial son of God, but that those prophecies in Zechariah, perhaps in conjunction with other writing that Paul regarded as "scripture" (such as the book of Isaiah and the writing called "The Ascent of Isaiah", for example), would appear to be a very obvious source from which Paul may have got his belief that the messiah was a figure named "Joshua" (i.e. Jesus), who was according to scripture crucified but then raised up by God on the third day, in an act proving to the faithful how they too would surely be raised unto heaven providing they kept the faith which Paul preached.

As I cautioned many times in those posts - I do not know if Carrier is correct in that interpretation, and I did not check further than to see what Bible Gateway said about those particular passages in the book of Zechariah, where I could not actually find a direct example of what Carrier was claiming and where there seemed to be some confusion about the actual translations of words apparently meaning "Rising" and/or "Branch", but that overall it seemed that you certainly can find the passages that Carrier is referring to, and that his overall interpretation may well be correct.

The point, as far as I was making it was, and is, only to say that passages such as that in Zechariah, in Isaiah, in Daniel, in The Ascent of Isaiah etc., do seem to be very obvious examples of what Paul described as "according to scripture", from which he may easily have got the idea that the scriptures had foretold a message "hidden so long" (iirc correctly, that is how Paul somewhere described it), by which he believed that the messiah was a figure named Jesus, who would be killed (perhaps by his own people, or by "the rulers of this age", eg see 1-Corinthians 2:8), but who would then be raised up again on the 3rd day in an act demonstrating to the faithful that they too would be raised up from death if they just kept the faith which Paul preached.

IOW - sources like that appear to be a likely place from which Paul got his Jesus belief, when he insisted that it was "according to scripture".


Here is Earl Doherty's opinion on Carrier's use of Philo and Zechariah 6:

http://ntweblog.blogspot.com.au/2012/12/did-jesus-exist-with-richard-carrier.html

What he [Carrier] seems to have done is make a deduction about what was in Philo's mind, something that would have been dependent on an (uncertain) implication in Zechariah. Perhaps Carrier was right, but the difficulties in demonstrating that compromise his claim. Perhaps he should have made the uncertainty clear.​

I agree with Doherty here. The problem is that Carrier's point is highly speculative, but it leads people who read his book uncritically to make the claim as you did: that there are passages "in the book of Zechariah, describe a figure actually named there as “Jesus”, who is a celestial being and described as the Son of God." That's simply not true. The Jesus in Zech 6 is a man. Carrier's actual case is much more speculative, as it is based on Carrier's 'reading' Philo's mind on what Philo thought the Zech 6 text meant, as Doherty points out. But once you see that Zech 6 is about a man, it not only undermines Carrier's 'celestial Jesus' point, but it provides strength to the idea that Paul saw Jesus as a man with all those titles like "Son of God", etc.


Well you say that you agree with Doherty, but if you read the whole of Doherty's replies in your own link, he is not in fact disagreeing with Carrier, and he actually takes to task another poster there who implied that he (Doherty) was disagreeing with Carrier. Here is that exchange from your own link -

http://ntweblog.blogspot.com.au/2012/12/did-jesus-exist-with-richard-carrier.html

By the way, on Richard Carrier’s Logos as Jesus, I do feel he did stretch things a bit. One can make that link through rather indirect channels, but the difficulties compromise the specific connection he seemed to be trying to make. Which is not to say that he is not right in the general point that Philo’s Logos was a paternal grandparent to Paul’s Jesus.

Earl Doherty

Earl Doherty said...
BM: " '(Doherty)By the way, on Richard Carrier’s Logos as Jesus, I do feel he did stretch things a bit. One can make that link through rather indirect channels, but the difficulties compromise the specific connection he seemed to be trying to make."

It's a sweet way to say that Carrier is wrong on that matter."

I did not say that Carrier was wrong. What he seems to have done is make a deduction about what was in Philo's mind, something that would have been dependent on an (uncertain) implication in Zechariah. Perhaps Carrier was right, but the difficulties in demonstrating that compromise his claim. Perhaps he should have made the uncertainty clear.

Don't put words in my mouth, please.



Also from those same posts in your link, I notice that you yourself appear to have been active there arguing this same stuff about Zechariah, and where that thread appears to be dated Dec. 2012 (also appears to be a "blogspot" run by a well known Biblical Scholar named Mark Goodacre?). E.g., as in this exchange -

Roo said...
What is this “Greco-Roman (Platonistic) culture”?

Critic GakuseiDon rejects Doherty's "World of Myth" as his invention, irrelevant to the practices and beliefs of ancient Greek religion. See
http://www.freeratio.org/showthread.php?t=320326&page=4
with a full selection of the relevant texts of Doherty.
He also has a Jan. 2011 four-part review of Doherty’s last book:
http://members.optusnet.com.au/gakuseidon/JNGNM_Review1.html

There was no "World of Myth" in the ancient Greeks' Weltanschauung — a concept likely borrowed from the title of a high-school primer by David A. Leeming (1992). Doherty's first book describes a celestial sublunar sphere where the mythical gods were supposed to act out their stories and lollygag for eternity, as "a Platonic higher world (even if just above the earth)", assumed to originate from the very idiosyncratic Plutarch.

But Gilbert Murray, in "Five Stages of Greek Religion" (1951) and Walter Burkert, in "Greek Religion: Archaic and Classical" (1985) warn that the musings of one specific writer, casually expressed in a few lines, can in no way reflect the multitudes of ancient Greeks, whose beliefs were never dogmatic, but flexible, open to variation, according to their city, social status, literacy, knowledge, and period in history.

The "World of Myth" concept, also dismissed out of hand by G.A. Wells as a spurious concoction, seems to be an invention contrived by an autodidact who pounced on the phrase of David A. Leeming to claim he is bringing "new" ideas to the field. Hence, Doherty's rough proletarian language against a critic like GakuseiDon, who kept pointing out how vacuous and artificial this concept was.

Ehrman had also pointed out the wildly hypothetical character of this idea:

"In the first edition of Doherty's book, he claimed that it was in this higher realm that the key divine events of the mysteries transpired; it was there, for example, that Attis had been castrated, that Osiris had been dismembered, and that Mithras had slain the bull.
In his second edition he admits that in fact we do not know if that is true and that we do not have any reflections on such things by any of the cult devotees themselves since we don't have a single writing from any of the adherents of the ancient mystery cults.
Yet he still insists that philosophers under the influence of Plato-such as Plutarch, whom we have met-certainly interpreted things this way." ("Did Jesus Exist?" p. 253)

Then Doherty, to correct his thesis, started invoking "a failure of nuance", now limiting the "World of Myth" concept to the devotees of mystery cults. This "failure of nuance" is a phrase most likely borrowed from Gilbert Murray's Ch.4 title, "A Failure of Nerve", in his famous book "Five Stages of Greek Religion". A comical lampoon for future critics. "Hey, look, another failure of nuance by Doherty!" No wonder, Doherty is a free-wheeling tale-spinner, an amateur floating adrift in a vast universe of ancient culture where he has no qualified expertise, but where he grabs a few lines as guideposts for his modern construction

GakuseiDon, a student of ancient pagan mythology, planned to demonstrate with scholarly quotations that even in Doherty's last book, the "World of Myth" did not fit mental images of the ancient Greeks, as ascertained from their writings, inscriptions and art.
.
GakuseiDon got so violently lambasted by Doherty (who compared him to a Hamas terrorist, and later invoked Hitler versus Churchill to justify his demonization of an honest critic) that the sensitive Japanese-Australian withdrew, licking his wounds. A street-fight with proletarian Doherty is a royal waste of time. You’ll end up drowned in his typical “flow of a collapsed reservoir”, or by a “juggernaut that has overswept its banks”.
8:35 a.m.




But going back to what Carrier says in his book about Zechariah being a likely source for Paul, or at least my impression that Carrier is presenting this as quite obviously a likely source, what I had not noticed in my previous very quick skim through those passages in Carrier's book (also stated by him in his YouTube clips, so people can watch/listen to those for simplicity), is that he is tying all of that in with the writing of Philo circa 25 BC to 50 AD, i.e. writing at about the same time as Paul, or perhaps even a little earlier) where if I understand him correctly, Carrier says that Philo was partly misunderstanding, or if not actually misunderstanding then drawing a particular inference (see Carrier's quote below) from what was written in the translated Greek Septuagint copies of the book of Zechariah, and assuming that Jesus who is there referred to as Jesus ben Jehozadak, was a spiritual figure of prophecy rather than actually a real man.

So that, according to Carrier, Philo then writes of this same "Jesus" as if he thinks that same Jesus in that same passage from Zechariah, most likely should be taken to mean a celestial firstborn "Logos" Son of Yahweh in the heavens. Though, crucially - Carrier appears to think that Philo is correct to interpret Zechariah in that way, because in his book Carrier actually says this about that passage in Zechariah (Carrier, p 82) -

"As I mentioned, an "esoteric" reading of Zechariah 3 and 6 would conclude the author originally meant the first high priest of the second temple, Jesus ben Jehozadak (Zech. 6.11: cf, Hag 1.1) who somehow came into an audience with God, in a coronation ceremony (one would presume in heaven , as it is in audience with God and his angels and attended by Satan) granting him supreme supernatural power over the universe (Zech. 3.7). But such a scene hardly seems descriptive of any living person, and would more readily be "esoterically" read as being about a celestial being named Jesus (as in fact we know it was. Philo of Alexandria having made exactly this inference: see Element 40), who was given by God supreme authority over the universe in defiance of Satan (Zech. 3.1-2). As it happens, the name Jehozadak means in Hebrew "Jehovah the Righteous", so one could also read this as "Jesus, the son of Jehovah the Righteous", and thereby conclude this is really "Jesus the son of God"."


Do you want to write out and post the whole of Carrier pages 81 -83 (Element 6) & pages 200 to 205 (Element 40), or shall I do it?
 
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Probably worth giving the counter-point:

Scholars use sources like Tacitus and Suetonius to try to build a picture of what happened before those historians were born all the time. Often they have no choice: we only have available to us a small amount of literature from that period that is extant.

Nearly ALL literature -- pagan and Christian-- has come to us as copies of copies of copies. Most of the writings of Justin Martyr that are often used in mythicist debates today come from one source, in the year 1364:
http://www.ccel.org/ccel/richardson/fathers.x.ii.ii.html

Justin would be known to us only by a few spasmodic quotations had not a Byzantine scribe copied an invaluable, if defective, MS., in the year 1364.​

But scholars of history accept this, because that is the reality of the situation. They understand the limitations. And that drives them to try to determine what corruptions and interpolations may have appeared within those texts over that long period. **

There is a hypocrisy among some mythicists that can be seen in this thread. Though they will eliminate texts as 'credible evidence' because the historian wasn't born at the time of the event they were recording, they are quite happy to use such texts to support mythicist readings, without pointing out that they are copies of copies.

If there is one thing that I think this thread demonstrates, it is that double-standard.

** Interestingly, mythicist scholars like Dr Richard Carrier and Dr Robert M Price also accept the limitations on the texts and use them in the same way as other scholars do. They don't make this point about 'the historian wasn't born then therefore it is hearsay' or 'we can't use copies of copies of copies'. Those anti-scholarly views are a feature of Internet forums. It is weird that Carrier and Price are not criticized for doing the same things. IanS, Mcreal: you need to teach Dr Carrier and Dr Price the truth about how to use those texts! Tell them where they are going wrong!


Well that is a very silly post, with deliberate personalised overtones at the end (as many of your posts have been).

This is a subject where frankly, sceptics should have no further "truck" with this argument that says historians trust Tacitus as a good source for what it says about Roman history of the time, so hence we should trust it also for what it's author says about Jesus.

We are not talking about what Tacitus may have said or not said about anyone else. Forget about all those other historical figures and events. We are not arguing anything either way about any of those things at all. So please stick to the point, which is what Tacitus may or may not ever have written about Jesus.

And what is now found in 11th century and later Christian copies of Tacitus, cannot possibly be anything Tacitus himself could ever have personally known, because he was not even born at the time!

And whether Carrier or Price think it's worth pointing out that such writing is vastly too late to be a credible as reliable source of fact about Jesus (and we are dealing here with what is said to be "fact" about Jesus, not mere possibility or inference etc.), and whether or not they care to make the point that such authors could at best only have posted nothing more than hearsay from unknown never mentioned sources, it is certainly a fact that hearsay like that is not at all reliable.

It's a total red-herring, in fact it's a piece of dishonest deceit, for HJ people here (or anywhere) to keep claiming that because historians use Tacitus as a very early source for other historical figures & events of the time ie pre circa 120 AD (events and figures which might very well be cross-checked with, and independently checked against, all sorts of other writing and even against all manner of physical remains etc.), that we must therefore treat such vastly late Christian copyist writing as credible for the absolutely minimal anonymous hearsay that it's original authors may or may not ever have written about any beliefs in Jesus.
 
Yes, it is IanS. Welcome to the study of Ancient History. That mention in Josephus alone is enough to put him in the history books. And if a cult hadn't formed around Jesus you would have absolutely zero problem with it.


No it is not!

We are not talking about "studies in Ancient History". The subject here is biblical studies of Jesus and the new testament bible!

And we are not talking about reading the bible to decide only that Jesus might have been a real person, or that it's merely possible that he existed.

We are trying here to determine whether there is sufficient real and genuine reliable evidence of his existence to conclude that his existence was more likely than not ... i.e. upon the weight of genuine credible reliable evidence of people having actually met such a person.

You need to show reliable evidence that anyone ever truthfully claimed to have met this person "Jesus". If you cannot show where anyone ever reliably made that claim, then you simply have no evidence full stop!

If you want to believe without any such evidence then that's up to you. But belief like that without evidence is what's usually known as "faith".
 
Well that is a very silly post, with deliberate personalised overtones at the end (as many of your posts have been).

This is a subject where frankly, sceptics should have no further "truck" with this argument that says historians trust Tacitus as a good source for what it says about Roman history of the time, so hence we should trust it also for what it's author says about Jesus.

We are not talking about what Tacitus may have said or not said about anyone else. Forget about all those other historical figures and events. We are not arguing anything either way about any of those things at all. So please stick to the point, which is what Tacitus may or may not ever have written about Jesus.

And what is now found in 11th century and later Christian copies of Tacitus, cannot possibly be anything Tacitus himself could ever have personally known, because he was not even born at the time!

And whether Carrier or Price think it's worth pointing out that such writing is vastly too late to be a credible as reliable source of fact about Jesus (and we are dealing here with what is said to be "fact" about Jesus, not mere possibility or inference etc.), and whether or not they care to make the point that such authors could at best only have posted nothing more than hearsay from unknown never mentioned sources, it is certainly a fact that hearsay like that is not at all reliable.

It's a total red-herring, in fact it's a piece of dishonest deceit, for HJ people here (or anywhere) to keep claiming that because historians use Tacitus as a very early source for other historical figures & events of the time ie pre circa 120 AD (events and figures which might very well be cross-checked with, and independently checked against, all sorts of other writing and even against all manner of physical remains etc.), that we must therefore treat such vastly late Christian copyist writing as credible for the absolutely minimal anonymous hearsay that it's original authors may or may not ever have written about any beliefs in Jesus.

1. Tacitus WAS alive during the time of the burning of Rome, and OF COURSE the events regarding the Christians and Pilate could have been "cross checked." Such a fundamental error makes the rest of your post completely suspect.

2. the vastly later writing to which you refer is also the source for other historical figures and events. It is curious that Mythists are prepared to find everything in Tactus authentic and authoritative EXCEPT the part about Christ.i
 
well, we know one thing: those are directly contradictory. Which shall we choose?

The most troubling clause for the Mythists:

"suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberius at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilatus."

Nuanced as a sledge hammer.

You have only exposed your lack of knowledge of writings of antiquity.

You have completely forgotten that Tacitus was NOT a witness of Jesus of Nazareth and it has been conclusively shown that Annals 15.44 has been CORRUPTED.

Now that very claim in Tacitus' Annals shows that it is NOT about Jesus of Nazareth.

PILATE WASHED his HANDS and FOUND NO Fault with Jesus in the stories of the trial.



Christian writings of antiquity claimed THEIR Jesus was KILLED by the JEWS.

The Christian's Jesus died at the HANDS of the JEWS--NOT at the hands of Pilate.

Jesus was KILLED because of BLASPHEMY---NOT because he started a religion.



1. 1 Thessalonians----14 For ye, brethren, became followers of the churches of God which in Judaea are in Christ Jesus: for ye also have suffered like things of your own countrymen, even as they have of the Jews Who both killed the Lord Jesus, and their own prophets


2. Aristides Apology---The Christians, then, trace the beginning of their religion from Jesus the Messiah; and he is named the Son of God Most High. And it is said that God came down from heaven....... But he himself was pierced by the Jews

3. Justin's Dialogue with Trypho--- Accordingly, these things have happened to you in fairness and justice, for you have slain the Just One, and His prophets before Him

4. Hippolytus Treatise Against the Jews ----7. But why, O prophet, tell us, and for what reason, was the temple made desolate?...... it was because they killed the Son of their Benefactor, for He is coeternal with the Father.

5. Tertullian's Answer to the Jews ----Because in their indignation they slew men— that is, prophets— and in their concupiscence they hamstrung a bull! — that is, Christ, whom— after the slaughter of prophets— they slew, and exhausted their savagery by transfixing His sinews with nails.

6. Origen's Against Celsus-----in seeking after the cause of the fall of Jerusalem and the destruction of the temple, whereas he ought to have said that the conspiracy against Jesus was the cause of these calamities befalling the people, since they put to death Christ


7. Lactantius On How the Persecutors Died ---In the latter days of the Emperor Tiberius, in the consulship of Ruberius Geminus and Fufius Geminus, and on the tenth of the kalends of April, as I find it written, Jesus Christ was crucified by the Jews

8. Acts of the Apostles 2.22 ----Ye men of Israel, hear these words; Jesus of Nazareth....... Him, being delivered by the determinate counsel and foreknowledge of God, ye have taken, and by wicked hands have crucified and slain

9. Luke 23:4 Then said Pilate to the chief priests and to the people, I find no fault in this man.

10. NO Christian writer of antiquity used Tacitus' Annals 15.44 to show that Jesus was KILLED at the hands of Pilate.

Tacitus Annals is NOT about Jesus of the NT.

Jesus of the NT did NOT start any new religion when he was KILLED.

Jesus of the NT was a myth God and was KILLED by the Jews for supposed BLasphemy.
 
Do you want to write out and post the whole of Carrier pages 81 -83 (Element 6) & pages 200 to 205 (Element 40), or shall I do it?

No need to as the Jesus was foretold crowd makes Carrier's case for him. Besides I provided a two post first sentence summation of Carrier's Elements with 1-22 in one post and 23-48 in the other.

"The Son of Man, whose eternal kingdom is foretold by Daniel. Dan. 2. 44. 9. 24." Henry Rutter (1817) A key to the Old Testament - Page 407

If as Rutter claim Daniel 9 is some form of "foretelling" of Jesus then clearly it can NOT refer to any then current earthly king because then it could NOT be a "foretelling" of Jesus. :D

Zechariah 6 is there so is Isaiah 53, and Daniel 9 as well.

Remember Carrier's Element 8 is "(a) Many messianic Jewish sects were searching the (Hebrew and Greek) scriptures for secret messages.
(b) It follows that the Jews who became the first Christians had been searching the scriptures this way this long before they became Christians." (pp. 87-88)

One can easily point to Matthew as an example of this search for secret messages "foretelling" the coming Messiah run amok even if you accept Jesus as being an actual historical person. Matthew makes all but the most rabid Nostradamus fan look sane with his spewing of "prophecy" after "prophecy". if there was one gospel NOT to use in looking for a historical Jesus it is Matthew.
 
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1. Tacitus WAS alive during the time of the burning of Rome, and OF COURSE the events regarding the Christians and Pilate could have been "cross checked." Such a fundamental error makes the rest of your post completely suspect.

2. the vastly later writing to which you refer is also the source for other historical figures and events. It is curious that Mythists are prepared to find everything in Tactus authentic and authoritative EXCEPT the part about Christ.i

Even Remsburg who said that odds were there was a flesh and blood man behind the Gospels Jesus said there was a LOT wrong with Tacitus:

"This passage, accepted as authentic by many, must be declared doubtful, if not spurious, for the following reasons:

1. It is not quoted by the Christian fathers.

2. Tertullian was familiar with the writings of Tacitus, and his arguments demanded the citation of this evidence had it existed.

3. Clement of Alexandria, at the beginning of the third century, made a compilation of all the recognitions of Christ and Christianity that had been made by Pagan writers up to his time. The writings of Tacitus furnished no recognition of them.

4. Origen, in his controversy with Celsus, would undoubtedly have used it had it existed.

5. The ecclesiastical historian Eusebius, in the fourth century, cites all the evidences of Christianity obtainable from Jewish and Pagan sources, but makes no mention of Tacitus.

6. It is not quoted by any Christian writer prior to the fifteenth century.

7. At this time but one copy of the Annals existed and this copy, it is claimed, was made in the eighth century -- 600 years after the time of Tacitus.

8. As this single copy was in the possession of a Christian the insertion of a forgery was easy.

9. Its severe criticisms of Christianity do not necessarily disprove its Christian origin. No ancient witness was more desirable than Tacitus, but his introduction at so late a period would make rejection certain unless Christian forgery could be made to appear improbable.

10. It is admitted by Christian writers that the works of Tacitus have not been preserved with any considerable degree of fidelity. In the writings ascribed to him are believed to be some of the writings of Quintilian.
11. The blood-curdling story about the frightful orgies of Nero reads like some Christian romance of the dark ages, and not like Tacitus.

12. In fact, this story, in nearly the same words, omitting the reference to Christ, is to be found in the writings of Sulpicius Severus, a Christian of the fifth century.

13. Suetonius, while mercilessly condemning the reign of Nero, says that in his public entertainments he took particular care that no human lives should be sacrificed, "not even those of condemned criminals."
14. At the time that the conflagration occurred, Tacitus himself declares that Nero was not in Rome, but at Antium.

Many who accept the authenticity of this section of the "Annals" believe that the sentence which declares that Christ was punished in the reign of Pontius Pilate, and which I have italicized, is an interpolation."


Rhiannon Ash's 2012 Oxford Readings in Tacitus is an excellent reference for nearly every take on the Annals out there; and yes Ross Tacitus and Bracciolini: the Annals forged in the Fifteenth Century is mentioned for those wondering.
 
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1. Tacitus WAS alive during the time of the burning of Rome, and OF COURSE the events regarding the Christians and Pilate could have been "cross checked." Such a fundamental error makes the rest of your post completely suspect.

Again, you show you have little or no knowledge of writings of antiquity.

Christians of antiquity MANIPULATED Tacitus' Annals 15.44. The word ChrEstians was changed to ChrIstians

Tacitus' Annals did NOT mention any people called Christians [followers of Christ].

The Jewish Christus has NOT yet come up to this very day.

Tacitus admitted in HISTORIES 5 that the Jewish Christ was EXPECTED c 70 CE but NEVER came.

Tacitus in Histories 5 admitted that Vespasian was the prophesied Messianic ruler--NOT Jesus.

Tacitus' Annals mentioned followers of the GOOD God [chrestos]

The LORD GOD was CHRESTOS and followers of the GOOD LORD GOD would be called CHRESTIANOS.

Tacitus' Annals 15.44 must be a forgery since it is contradicts Tacitus' Histories 5 and was conclusively shown to be manipulated.


It is DOCUMENTED in the Greek Bible that the LORD GOD of the Jews was CHRESTOS.

See Psalms 106---O give thanks unto the LORD for he is CHRESTOS [good]
 
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Tacitus' Annals mentioned followers of the GOOD God [chrestos]

The LORD GOD was CHRESTOS and followers of the GOOD LORD GOD would be called CHRESTIANOS.

Tacitus' Annals 15.44 must be a forgery since it is contradicts Tacitus' Histories 5 and was conclusively shown to be manipulated.
What a heap of rubbish!
It is DOCUMENTED in the Greek Bible that the LORD GOD of the Jews was CHRESTOS.

See Psalms 106---O give thanks unto the LORD for he is CHRESTOS [good]
Chrestos is the translation of "good" from Hebrew to Greek. Christos on the otherhand means "anointed". You are repetitively writing Chinese propaganda whispers, and you are misrepresenting the words of Tacitus!
ergo abolendo rumori Nero subdidit reos et quaesitissimis poenis adfecit, quos per flagitia invisos vulgus Chrestianos appellabat. auctor nominis eius Christus Tibero imperitante per procuratorem Pontium Pilatum supplicio adfectus erat.

How long can you be permitted to write these Chinese propaganda whispers? It is an outrage!
 
1. Tacitus WAS alive during the time of the burning of Rome, and OF COURSE the events regarding the Christians and Pilate could have been "cross checked." Such a fundamental error makes the rest of your post completely suspect.


The Burning of Rome is evidence that Tacitus knew Jesus?

Pilate stories "could have been cross checked"? OK, so please just quote where in Tacitus it says he cross checked to make sure there was indeed a written record of Pilate executing Jesus. Just quote Tacitus saying that please.



2. the vastly later writing to which you refer is also the source for other historical figures and events. It is curious that Mythists are prepared to find everything in Tactus authentic and authoritative EXCEPT the part about Christ.i



Which mythicists are arguing about any other parts from Tacitus? We are not talking about any other parts! Just stick to the point please.

What is a "mythicist" by the way.
 
What a heap of rubbish! Chrestos is the translation of "good" from Hebrew to Greek. Christos on the otherhand means "anointed". You are repetitively writing Chinese propaganda whispers, and you are misrepresenting the words of Tacitus!



You have NOTHING to contribute to this thread but the "biological family" of the son of a Ghost.

Please, just go and learn a little Greek instead of repeating your "biological" nonsense.

The Greek word 'χρηστος' [chrestos] means 'good' and is so translated in the Psalms.

The LORD GOD of the Jews is Chrestos [χρηστος].
.
Psalms 105:1 αλληλουια εξομολογεισθε τω κυριω οτι χρηστος οτι εις τον αιωνα το ελεος αυτου

Psalm 106:1 Praise ye the Lord. O give thanks unto the Lord; for he is good: for his mercy endureth for ever.

Psalms 106:1 αλληλουια εξομολογεισθε τω κυριω οτι χρηστος οτι εις τον αιωνα το ελεος αυτου

Psalm 107:1 O give thanks unto the Lord, for he is good: for his mercy endureth for ever.
 
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It's a total red-herring, in fact it's a piece of dishonest deceit, for HJ people here (or anywhere) to keep claiming that because historians use Tacitus as a very early source for other historical figures & events of the time ie pre circa 120 AD (events and figures which might very well be cross-checked with, and independently checked against, all sorts of other writing and even against all manner of physical remains etc.), that we must therefore treat such vastly late Christian copyist writing as credible for the absolutely minimal anonymous hearsay that it's original authors may or may not ever have written about any beliefs in Jesus.

The Burning of Rome is evidence that Tacitus knew Jesus?

Pilate stories "could have been cross checked"? OK, so please just quote where in Tacitus it says he cross checked to make sure there was indeed a written record of Pilate executing Jesus. Just quote Tacitus saying that please.

Suppose I said "might very well be" instead I "could" I would have survived the withering condemnation from the person who made up the whole cross checked thing in the first place?

By the way, look at those goalposts move! Tacitus was alive during the burning of Rome, and thus your comment was wrong. QED
 
Again, you show you have little or no knowledge of writings of antiquity.

Christians of antiquity MANIPULATED Tacitus' Annals 15.44. The word ChrEstians was changed to ChrIstians

Tacitus' Annals did NOT mention any people called Christians [followers of Christ].

The Jewish Christus has NOT yet come up to this very day.

Tacitus admitted in HISTORIES 5 that the Jewish Christ was EXPECTED c 70 CE but NEVER came.

Tacitus in Histories 5 admitted that Vespasian was the prophesied Messianic ruler--NOT Jesus.

Tacitus' Annals mentioned followers of the GOOD God [chrestos]

The LORD GOD was CHRESTOS and followers of the GOOD LORD GOD would be called CHRESTIANOS.

Tacitus' Annals 15.44 must be a forgery since it is contradicts Tacitus' Histories 5 and was conclusively shown to be manipulated.


It is DOCUMENTED in the Greek Bible that the LORD GOD of the Jews was CHRESTOS.

See Psalms 106---O give thanks unto the LORD for he is CHRESTOS [good]

Well considering that your explanation makes UTTERLY no sense in the context of a man who suffered the extreme penalty under Pilate, we'll just going to have to take your comments on Faith.

After I read your posts, I usually want to add an AMEN, because I have not seen that much faith based proselyting since Jimmy Swaggert went off the air.
 
Well considering that your explanation makes UTTERLY no sense in the context of a man who suffered the extreme penalty under Pilate, we'll just going to have to take your comments on Faith.

After I read your posts, I usually want to add an AMEN, because I have not seen that much faith based proselyting since Jimmy Swaggert went off the air.

You have NOTHING to contribute to this thread.

All you do is repeat what is written in the manipulated copy of Tacitus Annals which is completely useless to argue for an historical Jesus.

1. Tacitus was not an eyewitness of the character called Christus.

2. Tacitus believed MYTHOLOGY was history.

3. Tacitus' Annals 15.44 has been conclusively proven to have been manipulated.

4. Tacitus' Histories 5 contradicts Tacitus' Annals 15.44

5. Josephus' Wars of the Jews contradicts Tacitus Annals 15.44.

6. Suetonius' Life of Vespasian contradicts Tacitus Annals 15.44.

7. The Pauline Corpus contradicts Tacitus Annals 15.44.

7. Acts of the Apostles contradicts Tacitus Annals 15.44.

8. Severus' Sacred History contradicts Tacitus Annals 15.44

9. The very HJ argument is contradicts Tacitus Annals 15.44.

10. HJers argue that their OBSCURE HJ was crucified because of a FRACAS at the Temple.

The HJ argument is a farce.

No writer of antiquity mentioned any person called Jesus of Nazareth who was killed because he made a disturbance at the Jewish Temple.

In addition, HJers DENY that their OBSCURE Jesus was the Messianic ruler of Jews and DENY he was known as the Christus of the Jews while he was ALIVE.

The Obscure HJ argument is the worst argument known to mankind.

At one time their HJ is an OBSCURE NOBODY and then suddenly like a Chameleon he becomes the WELL KNOWN Christus of the Jews.

Tacitus Annals is NOT about OBSCURE HJ.
 
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Suppose I said "might very well be" instead I "could" I would have survived the withering condemnation from the person who made up the whole cross checked thing in the first place?

By the way, look at those goalposts move! Tacitus was alive during the burning of Rome, and thus your comment was wrong. QED


Nice of you to say that I am the first person to think of cross-checking peoples claims, but I cannot actually take the credit for that - many people before me had thought of it.

But lets cut the crap now. Just post your evidence of anyone ever writing to claim they had met a human Jesus.

Where is that evidence please? Just post it without any more evasion.
 
You have NOTHING to contribute to this thread but the "biological family" of the son of a Ghost.

Please, just go and learn a little Greek instead of repeating your "biological" nonsense.

The Greek word 'χρηστος' [chrestos] means 'good' and is so translated in the Psalms.
The LORD GOD of the Jews is Chrestos [χρηστος].
Psalms 105:1 αλληλουια εξομολογεισθε τω κυριω οτι χρηστος οτι εις τον αιωνα το ελεος αυτου
Psalm 106:1 Praise ye the Lord. O give thanks unto the Lord; for he is good: for his mercy endureth for ever.
Psalms 106:1 αλληλουια εξομολογεισθε τω κυριω οτι χρηστος οτι εις τον αιωνα το ελεος αυτου

Psalm 107:1 O give thanks unto the Lord, for he is good: for his mercy endureth for ever.
Psalms. Yes, in Greek translations of Hebrew Scriptures the word "good" appears as "chrestos". But the word "Christos" is a different word with a similar spelling which means "anointed" not "good". Not the same word.

So Chrestos has nothing to do with Christos. And Christos doesn't mean "God"! If it did, then the Persian king Cyrus must be God. Here he is being called "Christos" in Isaiah 45:1.

οὕτως λέγει κύριος ὁ θεὸς τῷ χριστῷ μου Κύρῳ οὗ ἐκράτησα τῆς δεξιᾶς ἐπακοῦσαι ἔμπροσθεν αὐτοῦ ἔθνη καὶ ἰσχὺν βασιλέων διαρρήξω ἀνοίξω ἔμπροσθεν αὐτοῦ θύρας καὶ πόλεις οὐ συγκλεισθήσονται

But that simply means "anointed" because Kings were anointed in those days. Here's the AV.

45 Thus saith the Lord to his anointed, to Cyrus, whose right hand I have holden, to subdue nations before him; and I will loose the loins of kings, to open before him the two leaved gates; and the gates shall not be shut;
 
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