It doesn't matter the topic: people on my side of the debate are genuinely convinced through evidence and clear thinking. It's the people on the other side of the debate who are hopelessly biased.Hands up if you agree!
The problem on this thread isn't that someone is not happy to have their mind changed. It's that we often have no common ground for the debate in the first place. Do we need credible evidence that someone actually meat Jesus? Is it meaningful to talk about a historical 'supernatural' Jesus? Does Paul describe Jesus as a man and is that important to the debate?
If one side thinks 'yes' and the other thinks 'no', then we will just keep talking past each other. And that's what's happening on this thread. Framing the debate in the first place so that both parties are on the same understanding with regards to what the topic is about is a requirement before the debate can occur. Since it won't happen here, this thread will go on forever. Maybe the next thread will establish this at its start.
Here is what happens if common understanding is not established beforehand (2 mins 51 secs):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lXpmHuCE9Ls
Edited to add: I just noticed I wrote "Do we need credible evidence that someone actually meat Jesus?" Seems a suitable slip-of-the-tongue!![]()
First of all, if people are Christians and follow the faith, eg going to church as believers and praying etc. Then it's undeniable that they are likely to be not just biased towards belief in Jesus, but so enormously biased as to make it virtually impossible to believe otherwise (no matter what the evidence is).
And I don't mean "biased" in the sense of criticising them as dishonest or deliberately lying. I mean biased in the sense of being already committed to belief in Jesus through their faith, and thereby completely unwilling to, or unable to, have their minds changed regardless of how much evidence is against them and regardless of what is at best a vanishing small extent of evidence to support their beliefs.
And far from having "no common ground for the debate", all of the ground that we have for debate is "common" to all of us ... we are all using exactly the same information. But that information really all comes from a 2000 year old religious Bible that is totally discredited by it's constant claims of miracles and the supernatural ...
... you cannot have a source or "witness" like that which has been found (eventually, after nearly 2000 years) to be repeatedly making untrue claims about the very thing that is under discussion.
A witness like that is completely discredited by it's constant untruths.
If you had a witness like that in any democratic court, then (a) no lawyer would put that witness before any jury, or else it would make their case a laughing stock, and (b) the judge would probably refuse to allow such a constantly dishonest witness to be put before the jury.
But in the case of Jesus, that is really the only witness that you have.
That is the "common ground" for all of us.
The HJ side in these threads (and biblical scholars) are quoting the bible as their evidence of Jesus. And the sceptical side saying (1) the bible is not a credible source anyway, so you need something vastly more credible and more honest than that if you are going to claim evidence, and (2) if we have to respond to claims or evidence made from quoting the bible, then what has been shown about that in every HJ thread ever made, is that the biblical quotes offered as evidence are in fact all definitely untrue claims of the supernatural.
That amounts to a zero case for a HJ. But it is unarguably a massive case of showing undeniable evidence confirming that the biblical accounts are definitely invented mythical religious fiction and simply not admissible as credible evidence of a human Jesus.