Perhaps I might take this opportunity to explain what I mean by there not being a "single source" comprising the "Bible"; although I'm rather surprised that any explanation is required.
The Bible is certainly a definable literary entity, but it consists of a collection of works of very disparate origin, assembled into a collection at different historical periods.
As must be well known to every contributor to this thread, this collection is notorious for the contradictions it displays between different accounts of the same event. As we have seen before: David kills Goliath - Elhanan kills Goliath; God makes David conduct a census - Satan makes David conduct the same census. Michal has no sons - Michal has five sons. These discrepancies reflect two sources of the David story, both in the Bible. Other stories are subject to similar variation, where they have been assembled from more than one, originally free-standing, account of events finally incorporated into the canonical scriptures.
That there is more than one separate source of stories about Jesus, and that these often disagree even in important matters, is surely too well known for me to be required to restate it.
An examination of these different sources, of the apparent order in which they were composed, and of the nature of the various things they relate, gives valuable clues about the possible historicity - or otherwise - of the events and characters described therein.
This, or certain aspects of this study, may well be controversial, or produce controversial results. That I understand. But that such commonplace statements should also arouse strong indignation, as they evidently do, seems very strange to me.
Craig - the above is entirely irrelevant.
Firstly everyone here is very well aware that what we have now as the modern version of the bible, is something that was created over time and through many changes, redactions, and with many other gospels being discarded or even destroyed by the Church.
But when you yourself quote passages as "evidence" from "the bible", you are using exactly the same gospels and letters that we are all using as "the NT bible".
And your reply to me (it's quoted below at the foot of this post), was your response to me pointing out in considerable detail why those same gospels and letters that your yourself are relying on as evidence, could never be regarded as a credible reliable source of factual evidence about Jesus.
Those same gospels and letters that you are totally reliant upon, are not credible for numerous quite unarguable reasons (as detailed in the
full post that you replied to), but the most obvious reasons are that they are totally discredited by the fact that they are filled from end to end with claims about Jesus that have since (it took nearly 2000 years!) been proven to be certainly untrue (and mostly proved physically impossible). As well as the fact that serious academic authors like Helms have shown how, why, and exactly where, those gospel writers were all certainly creating Jesus stories from what had been written centuries before in the OT.
And as if that was not enough (which it certainly is), none of those gospel writers have ever known any such person as Jesus anyway. The Jesus that they all knew was known to them only as a figure of religious belief handed down to them as messianic legend of the past.
The entire problem here is that you do not have any credible reliable evidence of a living Jesus ever known to anyone. And that has been pointed out to you many hundreds of times here before.
If you really believe there is some evidence in any of those gospels and letters of the writers ever knowing anything about any living Jesus, apart from what they had been told as legend by other unnamed unknown preachers of their past, then what is stopping you from posting that evidence for all these years?
But if all that you have are those same gospels and letters which admit that their authors had never known anyone called Jesus, then at very best all you can possibly have as what you are calling "evidence of Jesus", is nothing more than evidence of their un-evidenced religious
beliefs about Jesus.
What you actually have is evidence only of religious belief. But no sceptics here are arguing about mere belief ; everyone accepts that Christians had religious beliefs about Jesus.
What you do not have, and have never had, and have never been able to produce here, is any evidence of a human Jesus ever claimed to be known by any of those believers.
So all you are really left with is the bible. And that, as just described (and explained!), is just about the most unreliable, and most “proven” unreliable, source ever in the history of mankind. And yet, that is what we are being offered as the source of evidence of Jesus. In fact, that is all we are being offered as the evidence of Jesus.
I deny and have always denied, that there is any single source definable as "the Bible". So there is no point in my perusing your dissertation any further.