You know perfectly well that it's never been about a lack of magical claims in the Gospels, or even much about the specific contents within the Gospels in general. You're back to just lying to us about us again. It's a pity; you showed a brief flash of maybe possibly wanting to have a real discussion about the subject a while ago. Now you've reduced yourself to just another dejudge.
The books' modern names are not mentioned anywhere in the books, the books aren't even written first-person, and nobody else refers to them by those names for the first few hundred years. The names got added hundreds of year later, and, since no note of a reason why was made at the time, if we're going to suppose a made-up motivation, we might a ...s well suppose convenience for commentary writers referring to them, as deception. (Or straightforward honest inference.)
You know perfectly well that nobody here has claimed that Paul ever claimed to have met Jesus. You're back to just lying to us about us again. It's a pity; you showed a brief flash of maybe possibly wanting to have a real discussion about the subject a while ago. Now you've reduced yourself to just another dejudge.
According to Wikipedia (the link is below) - quote "All four were anonymous (the
modern names were added in the 2nd century), almost certainly none were by eyewitnesses, ... "
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gospel
- we do not have any more-or-less complete and fully legible/readable gospels until the 4th to 6th century. So the detail that everyone knows and discusses from those gospels comes from those 4th century copies ... and that (according to Wiki) is 200 years after the names were added!
What I am saying is that for most of the last 2000 years, almost everyone believed (wrongly!) that those 4 gospels were written by actual named disciples Mark, Matthew, Luke and John, who would have been eye-witnesses to Jesus ... but we now know that is not true - they were not the writers of any of those gospels, and the writers were not eye witnesses to Jesus.
I have no idea what you mean by writing
"it's never been about a lack of magical claims in the Gospels, or even much about the specific contents within the Gospels in general". ... that does not seem to make any sense in English to me. But what I had said is that as far as actual "evidence" is concerned, those 4 gospels are actually evidence
against the reality of Jesus, because they describe a figure who, whilst universally believed for most of the last 2000 years, is now known to be impossible ... and that is unarguably evidence
against Jesus as described in any gospels ... That is - the writing in any of those gospels is very clearly, and quite unarguably, evidence
against a real Jesus.
As far as eye-witnesses are concerned – John and Matthew are supposed to be 2 of the original 12 apostles. And in the gospel of Luke, “Luke” claims there were in the end 70 or 72 apostles (also called disciples) which also included Mark. All of them were described as being known to Jesus. See the Wiki links below -
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seventy_disciples
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_...iple of Jesus,youngest of his Twelve Apostles.
As far as Paul and his letters are concerned - if (as you agree) Paul never witnessed any real Jesus, then where he writes of his own experiences (which is pretty much 100% of all that he writes about), he cannot possibly be giving evidence of Jesus! And that's really not arguable. So again, his letters are actually
evidence against a real Jesus ... because the only Jesus he ever describes is an impossible figure drawn from his own religious belief in divine supernatural revelation.