• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

Historical Jesus

Status
Not open for further replies.
"Christians believing Jesus was divine does not disprove him existing historically" is indeed absolutely correct.

"And no Christian sect believed that Jesus never walked the earth, not even the Gnostics" however is a non-sequitur. My highlight. And that's the part I was really addressing.

1. Belief is not evidence.
"No Christian sect believed that Jesus never walked the earth" is a fact as far as I know. What early Christians believed is relevant. It's not proof of historicity, I'll grant you. But when trying to decide the better explanation for the origin of Christianity between HJ and MJ, it's an applicable fact to bring up, don't you think?

2. Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, or not unless such evidence would be both unavoidable to happen and utterly impossible to miss. But certainly not at the other end of more than a millennium worth of monks actively destroying anything that wasn't supporting their story.
We have the writings of early anti-heresy apologists starting from the Second Century, with descriptions of many groups of heretics. We'd have to suppose that, out of all the heresies, the apologists decided to target the MJ heresies and not even record them. It's possible, I suppose. Is that what you think happened? I'm genuinely curious: in your opinion, does the existence of the anti-heresy writings play a part into deciding whether a HJ or an MJ is the better fit to explain the origin of Christianity? Or is such data irrelevant?

3. It applies verbatim to other gods, as I mentioned.
I agree, it does apply.

E.g., I don't know of any Norse cults that DIDN'T believe that Thor walked on Earth at various points. I mean, stuff like his almost fishing the world serpent seems to be one of the most central myths.
I agree. If the argument is between whether there really was a Thor that walked the earth, vs there wasn't a Thor that walked the earth, all things being equal the stories of him walking the earth might well weigh into the debate.

But we have an understanding of the Thor stories that makes such a debate a non-starter, e.g. the length of time between the myth's origin and the recording of it. If there was sufficient information though, then stories of Thor walking the earth may well be relevant.

E.g., I don't know of any cult of Inanna which DIDN'T believe that she did a lot of walking around the middle east.

E.g., I don't know of any cult of Mythras which DIDN'T place him on Earth.

Now granted, you could say that we probably don't know everything about those, but then see how that also fits point #2 above about Jesus.
I think we have enough data to conclude that a HJ is the better explanation over a MJ for the origin of Christianity, while such data is lacking with regards to Thor, Inanna and Mithras. Since "No Christian sect believed that Jesus never walked the earth" adds to the evidence (even if not final proof), I don't see it as a non-sequitur.
 
Last edited:
But isn't the MJ case that there was a Christian cult who worshipped a spiritual Jesus? I mean isn't that what Richard Carrier is all about?



Did anyone ever produce any evidence for these "Spirit Christ" believers who supposedly preceded the gospel writers. Doesn't carrier argue that the "earthly" aspects of Jesus were progressively added by later generations of scribes?



If so, noting the total absence of any such group in the historical records is a valid argument against the MJ case.



If not, just ignore me...
You seem to view this as if not making a claim is the same as making one.

For example I am more than happy to claim that the Jesus of the Christian religions has never existed, didn't exist 2000 years ago, doesn't exist today and will not exist tomorrow. And I'm sure that you will agree with my claim.

Then we have another claim about a "historical" Jesus, a real person that lived 2000 years ago that was the inspiration for the Christianity we recognise today.

At the moment I am of the mind that we have no evidence for such a character, the only evidence we have for Jesus back then is the Christian Jesus, which I am sure you will agree is a mythical Jesus.

Now unlike some others I do go a step beyond that and make another claim but at the heart of it is that those that claim a different* Jesus existed need to provide the evidence for their claim.


*I am assuming we all agree the mythical or perhaps another way to describe it the religious Jesus does not exist.
 
"No Christian sect believed that Jesus never walked the earth" is a fact as far as I know. What early Christians believed is relevant. It's not proof of historicity, I'll grant you. But when trying to decide the better explanation for the origin of Christianity between HJ and MJ, it's an applicable fact to bring up, don't you think?

As I was saying, in better informed days, in a poll 58% of the UK believed that Sherlock Holmes was real, and really lived at 221B Baker Street. Meanwhile 27% believed Florence Nightingale was myth, while about a fifth believed that WINSTON CHURCHILL is a fictional character.

And any of those numbers FAR outstrips the percentage of Xians in the first century. That should be more than enough reason not to base historicity on finding a group that BELIEVED something was real.

We have the writings of early anti-heresy apologists starting from the Second Century, with descriptions of many groups of heretics. We'd have to suppose that, out of all the heresies, the apologists decided to target the MJ heresies and not even record them. It's possible, I suppose. Is that what you think happened? I'm genuinely curious: in your opinion, does the existence of the anti-heresy writings play a part into deciding whether a HJ or an MJ is the better fit to explain the origin of Christianity? Or is such data irrelevant?

I think you don't even need to find a Carrier-style MJ cult -- which idea I'm not particularly married to, either -- to be back at the problem that the only guys we have who claim to have ever talked to Jesus have done so in visions. One is Paul, and one is John of Revelation fame. Maybe they thought their hallucination of a divine Jesus in heaven was once a guy on Earth, or maybe they didn't, but it's still not the kind of evidence that would be admissible in any court these days.

People believing their hallucinations are real is quite mundane, and doesn't require anything historical.
 
Last edited:
You seem to view this as if not making a claim is the same as making one.

For example I am more than happy to claim that the Jesus of the Christian religions has never existed, didn't exist 2000 years ago, doesn't exist today and will not exist tomorrow. And I'm sure that you will agree with my claim.

Then we have another claim about a "historical" Jesus, a real person that lived 2000 years ago that was the inspiration for the Christianity we recognise today.

At the moment I am of the mind that we have no evidence for such a character, the only evidence we have for Jesus back then is the Christian Jesus, which I am sure you will agree is a mythical Jesus.
Now unlike some others I do go a step beyond that and make another claim but at the heart of it is that those that claim a different* Jesus existed need to provide the evidence for their claim.


*I am assuming we all agree the mythical or perhaps another way to describe it the religious Jesus does not exist.

The problem is, you have no explanation for how such a character arose. You have to provide an alternative explanation for the origin of the Jesus tradition.
 
Last edited:
Christians believing Jesus was divine does not disprove him existing historically. And no Christian sect believed that Jesus never walked the earth, not even the Gnostics.
The problem with that kind of line of thinking is that it would make most gods ever worshipped need to be real.
No, it wouldn't. There was no claim that the Christians' belief that Jesus was real proved him real. There was only a counter to a false claim that Christians considered Jesus a spiritual entity.

But isn't the MJ case that there was a Christian cult who worshipped a spiritual Jesus? I mean isn't that what Richard Carrier is all about?

Did anyone ever produce any evidence for these "Spirit Christ" believers who supposedly preceded the gospel writers. Doesn't carrier argue that the "earthly" aspects of Jesus were progressively added by later generations of scribes?
Carrier's mythical Jesus argument boils down to two components:

1. The six or seven legitimate Epistles came before the Gospels, so any differences between the beliefs represented in the Epistles and Gospels would indicate that the Epistle beliefs came first, and those make Jesus sound more spiritual than physical.

2. An extrabiblical book called "The Ascension Of Isaiah" depicts Jesus as an angel or other non-human supernatural entity, who gets sacrificed by evil angels/demons in one of the multiple layers of Heaven or The Heavens. This would then be shifted into a story of a human sacrifice on Earth, thus serving as an explanation for how anybody had ever believed a made-up human-but-still-supernatural Jesus (a sociological absurdity which other mythicists have never produced another way around that I know of).

But there are problems with this...

1a. The dating of these books is hazier than he allows for.

1b. As Carrier suggested, I read those Epistles. Jesus's physical presence in human form on Earth was, in fact, mentioned several times. It's sparse, but it's there. And the ghostly-sounding references fit just as well as describing the state he was in after leaving Earth, not necessarily the only state he was ever in. (Some posters here have repeatedly harped on the fact that Paul had visions of Jesus, but a person can have visions of a dead real person, so that's irrelevant, which is why Carrier doesn't bother with it.)

2a. TAOI seems to have been written about the same time as the Gospels or slightly later; an argument that it represents what the Gospel version of Jesus was derived from needs it to be earlier. To be fair, it could have longer oral history behind it, and he's not presenting TAOI itself as if it must be the original belief, but only as an example the kind of thing that the idea of Jesus could have come from without Jesus being real, as an answer to those who object to mythicism with "then where did the idea come from and how did anybody buy it". And for that purpose, merely the possibility that it could be old enough is sufficient, and it's better than the sociological absurdity "well, you could just make up something like that and people would believe you" that other mythicists have been coming up with. But still, without definitively being older than the human Jesus beliefs it's open to possibly being too late, as well.

2b. The fact that the character in TAOI has the common human name "Jesus" instead of an angelic name points to his having originally been a human who then got elevated to angelic status, not the other way around. (If it was originally about an angel and the name was replaced, that would indicate that there were already Jesus believers to do the replacing, whose Jesus beliefs did not come form TAOI.)

2c. The story has Jesus descending from the highest heaven through the lower ones toward Earth, stopping at each one along the way and taking the form of that level's angelic inhabitants. Different churches have written their own endings for it, with their own versions of the part where Jesus is on Earth, so, as Carrier points out, the original that can be backtracked from them has no known Earthly component. But that doesn't mean there wasn't one that got replaced, as opposed to not having one at all and then having it get added in later diverging versions. Carrier's argument seems to need the lowest heaven to be the last stop on the trip, but whether it was or there was one more stop on Earth is ambiguous. But if we follow the pattern, the pattern tells us that if he did come to Earth, he would have done so in the form of the Earth's inhabitants: a human body.

2d. One aspect of TAOI does actually look more consistent with Carrier's supernatural mythical Jesus than with a historical human one. Another part of the repeating pattern of this journey is that Jesus stops at the gates of each level and tells the guards a password. Being born as a baby from a human woman's body is not giving the guards a password at a gate. So if the pattern in TAOI would have held for its last iteration, Jesus would have entered Earth by means other than what real historical people have done. And this is consistent with the lack of baby/childhood stories in the earliest of the Gospels. But, without this part actually being included in what we know of the original TAOI, we don't know that the final iteration did follow the pattern. Maybe this is the only one where he would have originally entered a realm through a mother instead of by walking through a gate. There are, after all, other Gnostic traditions that have "Christ" as a spirit which possesses a human baby named "Jesus" at birth (which would seem to be be why at least one Gospel talks about the spirit leaving him when he died), for example.

E.g., I don't know of any Norse cults that DIDN'T believe that Thor walked on Earth at various points. I mean, stuff like his almost fishing the world serpent seems to be one of the most central myths.

E.g., I don't know of any cult of Inanna which DIDN'T believe that she did a lot of walking around the middle east.

E.g., I don't know of any cult of Mythras which DIDN'T place him on Earth.
The issue for Jesus is not just whether physically existing on Earth as a human is among Christian beliefs at all or not, but whether there was also a separate Christian belief in a spiritual one, and, if so, which was first. If the spiritual version was first, it's easier to say that was entirely imaginary all along. If the physical version was first, it's easier to say that described a real person.

Question for those who say the spiritual version was first: is getting sacrificed a part of that? If so, how does that work, since spirits don't die and all previous Jewish temple sacrifices had been corporeal? If not, then why do the Epistles talk about him getting sacrificed?
 
Last edited:
The problem is, you have no explanation for how such a character arose. "They made it up" is not an answer.

Only if you want to be gullible at all cost. In reality "they made it up" is actually

1. exactly what they did with just about every bit of the story. Unless you want to believe that the turning water into wine, walking on water, resurrection, the great zombie invasion of Jerusalem, etc, are also historical, then in fact you have almost NOTHING about Jesus that's not part of such a made up scene.

2. exactly what people had no problem doing for other religions. "They made it up" works perfectly well for Alma The Elder of the Mormons, or for Xenu of Scientology, then it works perfectly well for Jesus too. Demanding that only Jesus works by different rules is a fallacy.

3. exactly the Occam-conform version. Anything being historical in the gospels needs extra entities. It needs an uninterrupted chain of people actually transmitting that faithfully between Jesus and, say, Mark. "They made it up" requires only the author.
 
Only if you want to be gullible at all cost. In reality "they made it up" is actually

1. exactly what they did with just about every bit of the story. Unless you want to believe that the turning water into wine, walking on water, resurrection, the great zombie invasion of Jerusalem, etc, are also historical, then in fact you have almost NOTHING about Jesus that's not part of such a made up scene.

2. exactly what people had no problem doing for other religions. "They made it up" works perfectly well for Alma The Elder of the Mormons, or for Xenu of Scientology, then it works perfectly well for Jesus too. Demanding that only Jesus works by different rules is a fallacy.

3. exactly the Occam-conform version. Anything being historical in the gospels needs extra entities. It needs an uninterrupted chain of people actually transmitting that faithfully between Jesus and, say, Mark. "They made it up" requires only the author.

Why would they make up a crucified messiah? Why would they make up that he was baptized by John Baptist (something Matt and Luke are clearly uncomfortable with)? Why if Jesus was a made-up god, does he only claim to be God in the latest gospel, John? Why does Josephus mention Jesus? Why is there no record of Jews and pagans disputing Jesus' existence?
 
Question for those who say the spiritual version was first: is getting sacrificed a part of that? If so, how does that work, since spirits don't die and all previous Jewish temple sacrifices had been corporeal? If not, then why do the Epistles talk about him getting sacrificed?

Now I'm not particularly married to Carrier's idea, but actually, the idea that spirits can't die is a very new one. People, even gods, could most certainly die in myths all over the Middle East.

I mean, the whole idea of giving people grave goods in Egypt or later the spells for the afterlife was precisely that, yes, you could jolly well die in the afterlife. Hell, without the proper rituals when embalming, your spirit might not even make it TO the afterlife.

Even in Judaism, the idea that there was a war in heavens, where angels fought and killed each other, is at least as old as the 1st century BCE.

So, you know, the idea that some archangel would be used as a perfect sacrifice isn't even that ridiculous. Now mind you, I'm not saying that that IS what the original story was, but it wouldn't particularly be incredible either.
 
Ah, I was picturing this thing about Jesus the angel going down the layers and then back up again, and, even though that was depicted as a sacrifice, it really seemed more like just going from place to place than "dying".
 
Why would they make up a crucified messiah?

Given that that's the story that WORKED, it seems to me like a rather silly objection. Why wouldn't they make up something that the audience lapped up?

Plus, given that it comes from Paul, I think you don't really understand how hallucinations work, if you expect them to only follow whatever logical patterns you wish.

Why would they make up that he was baptized by John Baptist (something Matt and Luke are clearly uncomfortable with)?

I don't think that was even a point of debate between MJ and HJ proponents. Scholars of both camps are agreeing that they wanted to legitimize themselves by making Jesus the successor of JTB.

Why if Jesus was a made-up god, does he only claim to be God in the latest gospel, John?

I'm not sure how that even follows. Each author is free to write the story as he sees fit, and how his skills allow.

Why does Josephus mention Jesus?

He doesn't. That Testimonium Flavianum passage was even agreed by biblical scholars that it's a BLATANT forgery, and we even have a pretty good idea who put it there. But since nobody was really challenging the HJ idea seriously, nobody needed it to be real either. It's only a VERY recent phenomenon that apologists try to argue it as totally the real deal.

Why is there no record of Jews and pagans disputing Jesus' existence?

Now that's getting downright nonsensical by now. By the same logic, Inanna would have to be real too, because we also have no records from that time arguing that she doesn't exist. And so would Osiris.
 
Given that that's the story that WORKED, it seems to me like a rather silly objection. Why wouldn't they make up something that the audience lapped up?

Plus, given that it comes from Paul, I think you don't really understand how hallucinations work, if you expect them to only follow whatever logical patterns you wish.

It was a huge stumping block for both Jews and gentiles. Crucifixion was the most shameful way to die and there are no traditions in Judaism of a crucified figure raised by God. The early followers really needed to sell it.


I don't think that was even a point of debate between MJ and HJ proponents. Scholars of both camps are agreeing that they wanted to legitimize themselves by making Jesus the successor of JTB.

Jesus being baptized implies that he sinned. In addition, why does a mythological god need to be a successor to some hermit preacher?



I'm not sure how that even follows. Each author is free to write the story as he sees fit, and how his skills allow.

Not an answer.



He doesn't. That Testimonium Flavianum passage was even agreed by biblical scholars that it's a BLATANT forgery, and we even have a pretty good idea who put it there. But since nobody was really challenging the HJ idea seriously, nobody needed it to be real either. It's only a VERY recent phenomenon that apologists try to argue it as totally the real deal.

FALSE. Most scholars agree that Josephus did originally mention Jesus without the resurrection claims.



Now that's getting downright nonsensical by now. By the same logic, Inanna would have to be real too, because we also have no records from that time arguing that she doesn't exist. And so would Osiris.

Mythological gods were not treated as humans. Jesus was. Opponents of Christanity felt the need to make all kinds of accusations about Jesus but not one claim he didn't exist.
 
Last edited:
"No Christian sect believed that Jesus never walked the earth" is a fact as far as I know. What early Christians believed is relevant. It's not proof of historicity, I'll grant you. But when trying to decide the better explanation for the origin of Christianity between HJ and MJ, it's an applicable fact to bring up, don't you think?


We have the writings of early anti-heresy apologists starting from the Second Century, with descriptions of many groups of heretics. We'd have to suppose that, out of all the heresies, the apologists decided to target the MJ heresies and not even record them. It's possible, I suppose. Is that what you think happened? I'm genuinely curious: in your opinion, does the existence of the anti-heresy writings play a part into deciding whether a HJ or an MJ is the better fit to explain the origin of Christianity? Or is such data irrelevant?


I agree, it does apply.


I agree. If the argument is between whether there really was a Thor that walked the earth, vs there wasn't a Thor that walked the earth, all things being equal the stories of him walking the earth might well weigh into the debate.

But we have an understanding of the Thor stories that makes such a debate a non-starter, e.g. the length of time between the myth's origin and the recording of it. If there was sufficient information though, then stories of Thor walking the earth may well be relevant.


I think we have enough data to conclude that a HJ is the better explanation over a MJ for the origin of Christianity, while such data is lacking with regards to Thor, Inanna and Mithras. Since "No Christian sect believed that Jesus never walked the earth" adds to the evidence (even if not final proof), I don't see it as a non-sequitur.


What "data" is that? I have never yet seen any such data (despite 12 years of probably 50,000 posts by HJ people) ... we are talking about evidence that genuinely shows Jesus was real ... not evidence of people' beliefs ... and not evidence cited from OT prophecy etc.

What is the data evidence of anyone at all every knowing a real human Jesus?

And those are genuine questions (ie, in the spirit of your previous post, and not as any kind of confrontation against you or against what you believe about a HJ)
 
Just as a thought experiment, hypothetical, without getting into actual events.

Imagine you’re a Joseph Smith type living in those times. Or someone more genuine but still cynical about people. You know about apocalyptic preachers claiming to be the expected messiah from the OT, getting followers and stuff, and you think, I can do better than that, but I don’t want to actually try to play the messiah myself. That sounds like too much trouble. So I’m going to play a follower instead, and recruit people to this messiah second-hand.

You figure step one is to put together a new apocalyptic preacher messiah, a convincing and compelling one, with a scriptural prophecy basis.

If you were really doing this from scratch at the time, what would you have pulled from OT scripture and called prophecy? What kind of character would you make, to try to appeal to the people at the time, and what audience would you be trying to capture?

Basically, if the HJ idea is that “OT prophecies fulfilled” were pulled at a stretch to justify a real person as messiah, then what do you think it would look like if it was the other way around and prophecies were hand picked to create an appealing messiah, with some excuse why you can’t go meet them (they were here but they left, they were never here, you can only see them if Impossible Thing, it was a while ago, etc)

Or to put it more simply, imagining a definite MJ, what do you think would be different?
 
Quit being literal. I meant that no Christian sect believed that Jesus didn't live among humans on earth and was part of history.

Again, what a ridiculous statement!!! Please, get familiar with the writings of antiquity.

Don't you understand that Christians of antiquity and even today believe characters can exist without a physical body??

Don't you understand the difference between spiritual and physical existence?

How many times must I show you that Christians themselves were arguing against one another for hundreds of years whether or not their Savior had a physical body?

Tertullian's On The Flesh Of Christ
Let us examine our Lord's bodily substance, for about His spiritual nature all are agreed.

It is His flesh that is in question.

Its verity and quality are the points in dispute.
Did it ever exist?
Whence was it derived?

And of what kind was it

Christians believed without any doubt at all that their Savior was a SPIRITUAL being but argued whether of not he existed in the flesh.
 
Last edited:
Again, what a ridiculous statement!!! Please, get familiar with the writings of antiquity.

Don't you understand that Christians of antiquity and even today believe characters can exist without a physical body??

Don't you understand the difference between spiritual and physical existence?

How many times must I show you that Christians themselves were arguing against one another for hundreds of years whether or not their Savior had a physical body?

Tertullian's On The Flesh Of Christ

Christians believed without any doubt at all that their Savior was a SPIRITUAL being but argued whether of not he existed in the flesh.

You still fail to show that any Christian sect did not consider him part of history and living among humans. Debates over the nature of his flesh are irrelevant.
 
Last edited:
Just as a thought experiment, hypothetical, without getting into actual events.

Imagine you’re a Joseph Smith type living in those times. Or someone more genuine but still cynical about people. You know about apocalyptic preachers claiming to be the expected messiah from the OT, getting followers and stuff, and you think, I can do better than that, but I don’t want to actually try to play the messiah myself. That sounds like too much trouble. So I’m going to play a follower instead, and recruit people to this messiah second-hand.

You figure step one is to put together a new apocalyptic preacher messiah, a convincing and compelling one, with a scriptural prophecy basis.

If you were really doing this from scratch at the time, what would you have pulled from OT scripture and called prophecy? What kind of character would you make, to try to appeal to the people at the time, and what audience would you be trying to capture?

Basically, if the HJ idea is that “OT prophecies fulfilled” were pulled at a stretch to justify a real person as messiah, then what do you think it would look like if it was the other way around and prophecies were hand picked to create an appealing messiah, with some excuse why you can’t go meet them (they were here but they left, they were never here, you can only see them if Impossible Thing, it was a while ago, etc)

Or to put it more simply, imagining a definite MJ, what do you think would be different?

If we're talking about Paul, I think the big difference would be that there would be no James or the other "Pillars of the Church" in Jerusalem with whom Paul had so many disputes.

Paul talks about how this group of "super Apostles" were involved with Jesus in the flesh before Paul came along. He would have to have invented them too. Maybe he paid some actors to come into town and force circumcision on his followers so he could complain about how horrible they were...

Not sure why he would do that though...
 
You still fail to show that any Christian sect did not consider him part of history and living among humans. Debates over the nature of his flesh are irrelevant.


You keep writing sentences in "double negatives", and that makes it very difficult for anyone to know what you mean.

If you mean that all Christians of that time (e.g. 1st century AD) believed Jesus to be quote "a part of history and living among humans", then that is not evidence of a real Jesus ... the fact that they believed all sorts of religious claims (from preaching and writing) is not any kind of evidence at all that such religious beliefs were actually true.

In fact, almost all religious beliefs about figures such as gods or messiahs, are now known to be untrue!

And all claims that were made about Jesus, wherever we have been able test or check them, have also now turned out be untrue!
 
The problem is, you have no explanation for how such a character arose. You have to provide an alternative explanation for the origin of the Jesus tradition.


That's not a problem at all. And anyone here can guess at how belief in Jesus could very easily arise without anyone knowing a real Jesus.

For a start it's a matter of universal knowledge that from at least as far back as 500BC OT prophecy promised the coming of a saviour from God for the people of Israel. So that's already the entire basis of it all right there.

But it's also a well known fallacy to say that because someone can't think up an answer that satisfies you, that must mean that what was said was wrong ... it's known as "the fallacy from personal ignorance or personal incredulity" ... i.e. ; just because you yourself cant think of how Jesus beliefs might have arisen without a real Jesus, does not mean Jesus must therefore be real ... and nor does it mean that anyone else must offer an explanation which you are willing to agree with.
 
You still fail to show that any Christian sect did not consider him part of history and living among humans. Debates over the nature of his flesh are irrelevant.

You suffer from amnesia or is being dishonest.

I did show that Jesus and the Devil had a history of being together in Jerusalem on the pinnacle of the Jewish Temple in the Gospels.

Matthew 4.
5 Then the devil taketh him up into the holy city, and setteth him on a pinnacle of the temple,

6 And saith unto him, If thou be the Son of God, cast thyself down: for it is written, He shall give his angels charge concerning thee: and in their hands they shall bear thee up, lest at any time thou dash thy foot against a stone.
7 Jesus said unto him, It is written again, Thou shalt not tempt the Lord thy God.
8 Again, the devil taketh him up into an exceeding high mountain, and sheweth him all the kingdoms of the world, and the glory of them

The Devil and Jesus had a history of being together on earth.

You don't seem to understand that there is no requirement for a character to physically exist to be regarded as figures of history in the Christian writings.

In the Christian Bible, the Jewish God, Satan, the angel Gabriel, the Holy Ghost and Jesus the son of the Ghost had a history of being on earth and talking to human beings.
 
The problem is, you have no explanation for how such a character arose. You have to provide an alternative explanation for the origin of the Jesus tradition.


No I don’t.

The only Jesus that we have any evidence for is the religious/mythical Jesus and I would hope we all agree that Jesus never existed!
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Back
Top Bottom