Evidence for why we know the New Testament writers told the truth.

Status
Not open for further replies.
phelix said:
Instead of all this sorrow, maybe it would be better if you just stopped posting the first thing that comes into your head.





Undisputed fact???

This is going to be good.
But insults are kinda pointless in getting anywhere in a discussion.
That wasn't insulting... Part A was an honest piece of advice. Part B was the expression of rearing up for your inevitably failing 'undisputed fact' evidence.

.
Is it 500 pages yet?
.

Nope soon. And nearly 20000 post too.
20,000 posts is 500 pages...:D Well, no, my mistake. 20,001 is.
I can smell pizza cooking!

I am finishing watching an anime then going to get some barbecue stuff :D. BY that time we should be at the correct page.
Yumm. Which anime?
 
That wasn't insulting... Part A was an honest piece of advice. Part B was the expression of rearing up for your inevitably failing 'undisputed fact' evidence.

Given the initial poster's inability to provide someone who disputes this, I'd be interested to see if you can, or indeed if you can answer the arguments given :)
 
Harry Potter knew Hermione Granger:
detailed in all HP books, all of the movies and all the fanfic
completely likely
almost definitely happened.

http://vridar.files.wordpress.com/2011/03/jpottercover2.jpg

Edited by LashL: 
Changed hotlink to regular link. Please see Rule 5.


ETA:Content
The primary aim of this investigation is to increase awareness of the fact that a debate over the reliability of the historical Jesus exists, that the evidence for Jesus is insufficient to prove a historical founder, and that a strong case can be made in favor of a mythological, literary character that was mistakenly assumed to be historical by later Christian converts. To that end, Jesus Potter Harry Christ begins by comparing the similarities between Jesus and J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter, and concludes that the only difference between the two is that Jesus has traditionally been regarded as historical.



GB
 
Last edited by a moderator:
If you believe all historical criteria that are used on these sorts of sources to be illogical, then we need to replace it with something equally able to distinguish the true bits from the false bits.
That's not my argument, so this point needs no rebuttal.

If the approach is to totally disregard the bible from the outset though, then historical scholarship from the time period does indeed tumble like a house of cards. How can we say Pythagoras existed when our sources for him are even more removed than the sources for Jesus? How can we say Apollonius existed when the sources also reckon he could bring people back from the dead?
I have no problem believing Jesus was real. I simply do not believe the mythical accounts in the bible are true.

I do not see how the position of complete biblical falsehood can be maintained alongside the positions that the authors are sincere, and that there was not a conspiracy.
I've never said the bible is completely a falsehood. But your point doesn't make sense. It is quite possible for one to be completely sincere yet be completely false. How else do you explain Heaven's gate?

How could so many people believe that someone existed, to the extent that they document the minutiae of his life in a detail far greater than any myth, when actually he didn't?
you seem to believe that I think Jesus didn't exist. that's false. I am sure the story of jesus has roots in someone real. whether or not the stories attributed to him are real is what is what I doubt.
 
That's not my argument, so this point needs no rebuttal.


I have no problem believing Jesus was real. I simply do not believe the mythical accounts in the bible are true.
It seems we are in large agreement then :) I'd be interested to know how you determine which bits of the stories are likely accurate and which likely are not though? How do you rule out the passages which aren't miraculous, but which skeptical biblical scholars have decided did not happen, while keeping in the stories which they have largely decided did?

I've never said the bible is completely a falsehood. But your point doesn't make sense. It is quite possible for one to be completely sincere yet be completely false. How else do you explain Heaven's gate?
Of course this is possible. It is also possible for multiple people to be sincere but wrong about the same thing, without a conspiracy, though this is stretching things a bit. When it comes to easily disprovable claims though, such as the existence of Jesus, or his being put to death by the Romans, then it seems very very unlikely that such a thing would happen.
With something like Heaven's gate, you do need some sort of groupwork for the mass-delusion. Two separate groups of people are unlikely to think up such craziness without contact with each other. And it is easier to be deluded about something like a future event, because it isn't such a clear cut right/wrong claim like the existence of Jesus would have been.

you seem to believe that I think Jesus didn't exist. that's false. I am sure the story of jesus has roots in someone real. whether or not the stories attributed to him are real is what is what I doubt.
Fair enough. Yes I did believe that but I stand corrected. :) As above I'd be interested to know how you would sift through the given stories to find which are true and which are not.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
As you rightly point out, the amount of fantasy makes it clear that they were not especially good historians, but they were definitely trying. The example I gave about the birth story makes it clear that the writers weren't too keen on changing the facts, to the extent that they invent ludicrous portions of narrative trying to get the facts to fit together. The answer is far from a resounding no.

I fully disagree on that. Their objective was clearly not to report the historical fact or truth. Their objective was to convince, to do proselythism.

There are other author of the epoch which earned 1000 times more the title of "historien" and made chronicle relating fact.

At worst the bible is a set of 100% myth. At best the bible is a set of near 100% myth with a few incidental "truth" sprinkled to give it an shine of validity.
Truth was not necessary to do proselythism or convince the people to believe. A good story on the other hand was. And if you go for the good story, making it seem real and give your main guy weakness is frankly a basic literrary trick.
 
Last edited:
It seems we are in large agreement then :) I'd be interested to know how you determine which bits of the stories are likely accurate and which likely are not though? How do you rule out the passages which aren't miraculous, but which skeptical biblical scholars have decided did not happen, while keeping in the stories which they have largely decided did?
It's a case by case issue. In general, things that can be largely corroborated from extrabiblical evidence can be assumed to have happened. things that only have the other gospels (which do not really equal independent sources), I can't claim any of them happened as they say they did. It is likely there was a Jesus who preached end of days and was anti-establishment. Beyond that, Don't know.

Of course this is possible. It is also possible for multiple people to be sincere but wrong about the same thing, without a conspiracy, though this is stretching things a bit. When it comes to easily disprovable claims though, such as the existence of Jesus, or his being put to death by the Romans, then it seems very very unlikely that such a thing would happen.
With something like Heaven's gate, you do need some sort of groupwork for the mass-delusion. Two separate groups of people are unlikely to think up such craziness without contact with each other. And it is easier to be deluded about something like a future event, because it isn't such a clear cut right/wrong claim like the existence of Jesus would have been.
Past events are extremely easy to be self-delusional. Just ask Holocaust deniers, 9-11 truthers, moon hoaxers... People are able to invent a whole host of stories that are peppered with truth, but are largely false.

Fair enough. Yes I did believe that but I stand corrected. :) As above I'd be interested to know how you would sift through the given stories to find which are true and which are not.
No problem. you are debating many here. It's easy to lump everyone into one bin.
 
you seem to believe that I think Jesus didn't exist. that's false. I am sure the story of jesus has roots in someone real. whether or not the stories attributed to him are real is what is what I doubt.

I am split on that one. I think I tend to be an agnostic(*) Jesus Existed Believer to 55% and Agnostic Jesus did not exists to 45%. It is more likely he existed, but the evidence presented are faaaar from making it a sure-thing-undisputable-fact.

(*) I think by that that we will never know baring incredible archeological discovery.
 
I am split on that one. I think I tend to be an agnostic(*) Jesus Existed Believer to 55% and Agnostic Jesus did not exists to 45%. It is more likely he existed, but the evidence presented are faaaar from making it a sure-thing-undisputable-fact.

(*) I think by that that we will never know baring incredible archeological discovery.
I get your point. But to put my opinion in perspective, It should be noted that I am also sure that the story of Achilles has roots in a real warrior.

Being based upon a true story and being a true story are far form the same thing.
 
I fully disagree on that. Their objective was clearly not to report the historical fact or truth. Their objective was to convince, to do proselythism.
Both of these things were objectives. I would like to know on what ground you dismiss the historical biographical aims of Luke, given this is widely accepted. Also, why would Luke and Matthew both fudge so badly the reason for Jesus being from Nazareth? What would be the proselytizing purpose of a wildly implausible account making sure that three people are ultimately based in a village that nobody had ever heard of?

There are other author of the epoch which earned 1000 times more the title of "historien" and made chronicle relating fact.
Yes and no. Historians were generally pretty bad at the time as standards hadn't really been set. Trying to extricate any knowledge at all from the rambling, and often blatantly exaggerating texts is tough work. Have a read of any Josephus and you'll see what I mean. Furthermore, if you want to find out about minor figures, like Jesus or Apollonius, you are often limited to the writings of their followers, who's works naturally include implausible and miraculous claims.
The gospels aren't the best historical sources for the time, but there wasn't much better.

At worst the bible is a set of 100% myth. At best the bible is a set of near 100% myth with a few incidental "truth" sprinkled to give it an shine of validity.
Truth was not necessary to do proselythism or convince the people to believe. A good story on the other hand was. And if you go for the good story, making it seem real and give your main guy weakness is frankly a basic literrary trick.
You're going with the stance that the appearance of historicity is a literary trick in order to better convert people to Christianity. I'd be interested to know if you think this "basic literary trick" was used anywhere else in that time period or before in a way that has gone completely unnoticed by all relevant scholars? Also, was the crossover in story between the various authors of the New Testament achieved by conspiracy, or luck?

Edit: Yes I am named after the laser :) ..... or am I named after your cat....
 
Last edited:
It's a case by case issue. In general, things that can be largely corroborated from extrabiblical evidence can be assumed to have happened. things that only have the other gospels (which do not really equal independent sources), I can't claim any of them happened as they say they did. It is likely there was a Jesus who preached end of days and was anti-establishment. Beyond that, Don't know.
That is pretty much what I think too, but for a couple of things. The main one is that Jesus knew John the Baptist. We are accepting that both these characters exist, now in all four gospels and a non-canonical gospel they have multiple run-ins. Often inconsequential ones. The accounts across the gospels sometimes match and sometimes differ and sometimes contradict. The chance that absolutely all of that is false strikes me as unlikely, especially since the message about Jesus gains nothing at all by its inclusion, so this is something that I accept probably happened.

Past events are extremely easy to be self-delusional. Just ask Holocaust deniers, 9-11 truthers, moon hoaxers... People are able to invent a whole host of stories that are peppered with truth, but are largely false.
Holocaust deniers, 9/11 truthers and moon hoaxers are all different kettles of fish to multiple biographies of someone who never existed. All the examples mentioned involve a lack of understanding over concepts of evidence and analysis. The "every gospel writer was wrong" idea requires multiple full-sensory hallucinations.
 
Pakeha:
I don't understand why my use of mainstream historical criteria are seen as strange assertions, but anyway...
.....
Doc's argument for the historical nature of the gospel is totally fine, but hardly ground-breaking. The methods he uses are also used to identify whether individual passages in a gospel are historically accurate or not. Have a look over things like the Criterion of embarrassment:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criterion_of_embarrassment

I call strawman for your first. Or, perhaps more likely, a lack of clarity on my part in my original post. The strange assertion being your (reiterated) defense of DOC's argument.

I find bringing up the Criterion of embarrassment at this point in the thread is quite odd, especially considering the number of times it's been rebutted.
Have you read through the thread?

Still, if you have any evidence the NT writers were telling the truth, I for one would like to see it.
All the evidence presented in the last 500 pages has come down on the other side, so a change would be welcome.
 
If you have any evidence that followers of Apollonius of Tyana, or the followers of Pythagoras, were telling the truth, I would like to see it.
For low-importance historical figures, the only sources we often have are from the followers. These cannot be dismissed or we are left with nothing, so they have to be worked with. We use historical criteria to find out which of the stories are likely to be true and which are not. Criteria like earliness, plausibility, corroboration and dissimilarity are used.
These historical criteria have not been replaced by anything else, because they are the best we have. Of course there are problems with each one, but historians have to find out what the preponderance of evidence points towards.
In the case of certain things, such as Jesus' existence, Jesus prophesying the imminent end of the world, Jesus' death by the Romans, relevant historians have come down near-universally on the side of truth. With regards to his existence, it is total agreement.
 
Last edited:
Here's a list Phelix. Not exhaustive by any means, but it's a start. Note--Pretty much all the ones listed as Biblical Scholars started out as full fledged Christians. The fact that they are all Atheists or Agnostics now, for all intents and purposes, means they don't believe in Jesus.


Bart Ehrman Biblical Scholar Agnostic

John W Loftus Biblical Scholar Atheist

Greg Dawes Biblical Scholar Agnostic/Atheist

Graham Oppy Biblical Scholar Atheist

Nick Everitt Philosophy of Religion Atheist

Nick Trakakis Biblical Scholar Atheist

William L Rowe Biblical Scholar Atheist

Michael Martin Philosophy of Religion Atheist

GB
 
If you have any evidence that followers of Apollonius of Tyana, or the followers of Pythagoras, were telling the truth, I would like to see it....
This has nothing to do with this thread. Please keep in mind this thread is a search for the truth via evidence, not a speculative debate.
We have other threads for that!

For low-importance historical figures, the only sources we often have are from the followers. These cannot be dismissed or we are left with nothing, so they have to be worked with. We use historical criteria to find out which of the stories are likely to be true and which are not. Criteria like earliness, plausibility, corroboration and dissimilarity are used.
These historical criteria have not been replaced by anything else, because they are the best we have. Of course there are problems with each one, but historians have to find out what the preponderance of evidence points towards.
Ah, finally you mention the key word in this thread.
Evidence.
Post it up and let's discuss it.

In the case of certain things, such as Jesus' existence, Jesus prophesying the imminent end of the world, Jesus' death by the Romans, relevant historians have come down near-universally on the side of truth. With regards to his existence, it is total agreement
Again, there are threads to discuss the existence of Jesus. This isn't among them.
 
Last edited:
Edit: In response to Gandalf's Beard

All of those listed believe in Jesus. Bart Ehrman is actually working on a book called "Did Jesus Exist" in which he explains why no serious scholar doubts his existence.
 
This has nothing to do with this thread. Please keep in mind this thread is a search for the truth via evidence, not a speculative debate.
We have other threads for that!
I don't really understand what you mean by "this thread is a search for truth via evidence, not a speculative debate". We use the same historical approach to assess when certain sources are lying, when they're sincere but wrong, and when they're telling the truth for the bible as for any other historical source from devoted followers.
At many points throughout the gospels the writers are telling the truth, and there is no extra-biblical source for the claim, just as many times throughout our stories about Pythagoras, his followers were telling the truth, even though there is not a critical source to back up the claim.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Back
Top Bottom