geni
Anti-homeopathy illuminati member
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2003
- Messages
- 28,209
Julius Gaius Caesar would have been well known just for his defeat of the Gauls even if he hadn't moved against Pompeii and made himself emporer. But we have ample evidence for his existence - in statues, coins, witnesses, historical events, etc.
Not authoritative, but check here...
You are talking about a person at the center of a massive imperial power. There could be no question that people at the time knew that this was a person makeing history. People tend to record leaders and generals. Relgious teachers tend to be less widely mentioned (look at how few references to john the baptist there are).
Well, yeah, Yeshua was a back-water hick. But he also spawned the largest religion in Europe for the past two millenia. Nothing was saved? Nothing was written? (Despite the locale, there were plenty of literate Romans, Greeks, and Persians loafing about back then. Obviously much ado about nothing since no records that they may have kept (including Pontius Pilatus') exist today.
Lets see what would have been writen. The gospels claim one significant contact with the authorities. That would have resulted in a record in some archive or other but over the fall of the roman empire and the like people had better things to do than copy archives. Letters? Do you have the letters your grandparents wrote?
It took at least fifty years after the supposed death for 'the story' to be penned. Very suspicious.
It's pretty clear that cristianty started out as an end of the world cult. No point in writeing things down under those conditions.
Chinese kept copious records going back 5000 years! And the Romans and Greeks were very good at keeping records. Many were lost. Surprisingly, again, almost nothing that would provide evidence beyond a couple of unreliable sources and the NT itself.
Many? Outside of egypt pretty much everything was lost.
I dismiss anything to do with Paul. You are trying to use the letters of Paul as extrabiblical? Anything after the gospels is at a time when the spreading Christianity was already established all along the Mediterranean (even if just small cultish pockets). And not even all of them could agree on whether there was a man, a spirit, a logos, or a god.
Paul thought that James was the brother of Jesus. He met James.