Akhenaten
Heretic Pharaoh
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As mentioned, the biblical evidence is sufficient that not a single biblical scholar at an accredited university doubts the existence of Jesus.I set the requirement for fact here:
which can only be named, "fact," by,[eta]which has not been offered.[/eta]
I've said what the evidence is. It is applying the historical method to the sources available. Every relevant scholar at an accredited university who has done this concludes that Jesus existed. For this reason I call it undisputed.No, you couldn't. You could use the term, "disputed, but unprovable either way, theory," or, "disputed, but unprovable either way, possibility."
To name the existence of Jesus as, "undisputed," is irrational logic.
The OP insinuates absolute truth and having the evidence to prove it, which has been done by neither DOC or you.Rubbish, as was pointed out earlier by ddt.
Contrariwise, GB hasn't posted a single biblical scholar at an accredited university who doubts the existence of Jesus. He is now trying to ignore this point, and vaguely implying that my standards are too high. The biblical scholar on the top of his list (who does meet the criteria) is currently working on a book aiming to debunk the Jesus-as-myth theories, so he shot himself in the foot a bit.I think he meant that as a way to say we haven't proven a dubunking of his claim that there aren't any; although, that's ludicrous. GB's post about a specific biblical scholar more than doubles as proof that there is at least one.
The assertion that JesusTM existed as a historical fact is laughable almost to the point as dismissing your assertion unreservedly. Aside from apologists, evangelicals, the faithful and bare faced liars, nobody with any decent level of education ('o' level or higher) believes this to be true. To assert that JesusTM is an historical figure is to assert that 2000 odd years ago some geezer:
Surfed without a board.
Fed 1000's with a fish sandwich.
Dodged his round at a wedding.
Was the best MD that Lazarus had ever consulted.
Was a whizz at reversing ear-ectomies.
Could perform post-mortem appearances.
Or are you saying some guy travelled about the desert, preaching a new kind of religion that may or may not have been called Jesus.
I think most people would say that JesusTM is a crock, but Jesus may, just may have existed.
Just as Moby-Dick is quite the best source of evidence that Moby-Dick is true.
Ok then: Jesus knew John the Baptist
The sources we have available are close to the events.
The sources include independent testimony even though some had the others available.
The event fits the historical context, and rough social standing.
Christians are unlikely to have made up Jesus associating with an apocalypticist as they knew the apocalypse hadn't happened.
Christians are unlikely to have made up Jesus associating with a baptist who worked for sinners, as Jesus wasn't a sinner. (The counterargument to this that Jesus died for our sins wasn't actually Christian doctrine until later. The initial idea was the forthcoming end of the world.)
Thus it seems likely that Jesus knew John the Baptist.
I don't understand why you have rephrased my argument as "all or nothing". Are there any alternatives to a part of the NT being sincere or being a fake? Keep in mind that sincere doesn't mean "true" yet. But yes, the fact that parts are presented as sincere history means they should be studied as such, because the idea that they are fakes is highly unlikely. With regard to Jesus' trial, they are sincere historical accounts, but when the historical method is applied, they turn out to be of very little historical value.
And we know none of them gave an account of Jesus' trial which is even remotely plausible.It seems I worded myself too confusingly. We do not know who the authors are (apart from Paul really), but we know which are different.
I didn't mean forged no. He is working on a book called "Did Jesus Exist" which isn't out yet, and which debunks the Jesus-as-myth hypothesis. I have read Forged and it was pretty good. Pretty standard stuff, though he is in a minority with his dismissal of Acts. My favourite Ehrman book is "Jesus, Interrupted" which documents and discussed the contradictions in the NT, why they're there, and what they mean in terms of historical study. Highly recommendIf you mean his latest: Forged which I'm halfway through,all he has to say is that most of the writings in the N/T are forged and not by who is claimed as the authors. The synoptics for example were all by anonymous writers, only much later given names such as Mark, Luke etc. Around half the Pauline writings were actually written by Paul, the rest are forgeries written in his name so as to be taken seriously by the readers. That goes for the "acts of the apostles" as well.
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.
...With regards to Jesus' birth, that's an interesting point that I've talked about in this thread. The presence of wild contradiction doesn't actually mean that the stories can be dismissed. It makes the stories much more interesting.
... My argument in general would be that there is much more historical reporting than in myths. The writers frequently give us what day of the week something happened, or will mention an upcoming festival, to give us a frame of reference in time. It could still be historical background to a fictional story, but this becomes less likely.
The other point is the agreement among independent sources. If one author makes up that Jesus had 12 disciples, then how come the other authors all think so too? Not to mention paul thinking this was the case as well
I don't really understand what you mean by "this thread is a search for truth via evidence, not a speculative debate".
The sources are known to be close to the events for a whole variety of reasons. A key point in this is the destruction of the temple in 70AD. Luke appears to have known about it while Mark does not. Another means by which scholars identify the date is how relevant the material would have been at the time. Jesus is always getting annoyed at the Pharisees, but doesn't seem to care about the Sadducees. Why? Well, they didn't exist after 70AD, so what would be the point of Luke recording whatever it was Jesus said about them? The dating mostly agreed on is Mark 65-70, Matthew 70-100, Luke 80-110 and John 90-110.These are are simple assertionswith no evidence to back them up.
Please post up the evidence, phelix.
Why have you simply repeated your earlier example of John the Baptist?
Is it really your best case?
Still-
Where is the evidence Jesus and John the Baptist had similar 'social standing'?
Where is the evidence of 'independent testimony'?
Remember, this thread is about evidence.
They include known forgeries yes. These have been identified and known for quite some time. It is because we have eradicated the forgeries that we know which aren't forgeries. Luckily for historians, this includes the four canonical gospels. Something presented as sincere history should be studied as such once the option of forgery has been ruled out. Note that sincere history can still be 100% wrong, and that the historical method would be able to find that. The book of Exodus contains sincere history concerning the Jews escaping from Egypt, and when tested historically we find that absolutely nothing like that happened.You don't?
The sincerity of the NT writings has yet to be demonstrated, especially in light of the fact they include known forgeries.
Why do you assert something presented as sincere history should be studied as such?
Correct. Plausibility is a factor that comes into play a lot in the NT. With the trial, it is difficult to take anything of historical value from the sources.And we know none of them gave an account of Jesus' trial which is even remotely plausible.
What do you mean 'which are different'?
The sources are known to be close to the events for a whole variety of reasons. A key point in this is the destruction of the temple in 70AD. Luke appears to have known about it while Mark does not.
Correct. This is the reason why we cannot really say "Luke's account is right and Matthew's is mistaken". It is most probably "Neither account has much historical value".It makes the stories much less believable, phelix. Especially when they contradict each other.
Even more so when it is clear they were written to push along a particular theology.
With regards to historical reporting, just reading the gospels should be enough. The intro to Luke. Luke 22:1 and 22:7. This general style of giving a time and place as a frame of reference.Could we have some examples of that historical reporting?
Who are these independent sources?
We all know about the symbolism of the 12 disciples, phelix.
What IS your point in posting here?
That's fine. It's just that given Luke's inclusion, and the events prominence, it has struck many as unlikely that Mark was written after the event. Even if it was, it doesn't buy that much time. We can maybe squish it up to 80AD with the other gospels at 90, 100 and 110, before the church fathers begin making reference to them.The fact that Mark doesn't mention the destruction of the temple in a purported account of events which took place around 40 years before the destruction of the temple does not mean that the author was not aware of it. We've been over this repeatedly.
I didn't mean forged no. He is working on a book called "Did Jesus Exist" which isn't out yet, and which debunks the Jesus-as-myth hypothesis. I have read Forged and it was pretty good. Pretty standard stuff, though he is in a minority with his dismissal of Acts. My favourite Ehrman book is "Jesus, Interrupted" which documents and discussed the contradictions in the NT, why they're there, and what they mean in terms of historical study. Highly recommend![]()
Indeed. There are none. Two people have now claimed that there are, and then failed to name a single one when challenged.
A few pages ago I could name no biblical scholars at accredited universities that question the historicity of Jesus. I still can name none...
Not certain, but incredibly likely. We have to be more lenient with our requirements for evidence when it comes to history from the time period, because the sources will never be as good as for modern history.I have that here. Agree it's a great book that even laypersons like me can get their teeth into it. But let's not forget that Bart was once a fundamental christian. It is ingrained in him that there actually existed a historical Jesus. He takes it as the default line for the historicity of Jesus as do most other babblical scholars. None have started their quest for a HJ with a blank piece of paper, most carry baggage in their scholarship.
There is not one scrap of evidence for such a scenario as a HJ from any eyewitness. The earliest source of the tale are Pauls writings around two decades after Jesus so-called crucifiction. All we have a copies of copies of copies. From this it's not certain there ever was a HJ.
We don't have to prove anything to you (even though I did). The burden is on you to provide evidence for your claims.
1) Prove that you are an atheist
2) Prove that you are actually qualified to decide who is a Biblical Scholar
3) Prove the NT is true without using the NT (or the Tanakh too for that matter)
Like most Theists you come in puffing smoke and Pseudo-Philosophical rubbish, and huffing about some sort of "historical criteria" (contrivance more likely) You seem slightly more intellectual than DOC. What Rhetorical device will you use next? Maybe The Undistributed Middle or something equally blithering no doubt?
Sorry, you don't get a pass to use the Greek First Principles of Rhetoric (which are nearly all tautologies and fallacies in themselves). That won't fly here. Neither will your faux indignation. Nor your willful inability to comprehend the distinction between a compilation of texts copied and reedited over hundreds of years, and Conspiracy Theory.
You probably think you're some hotshot with a couple of semesters of philosophy 101 under your belt, and thought that you were going to dazzle us with your wit.
You'll have to do better than pretending that you're Socrates, and pretending that you're an Atheist. We've seen it all before. This is probably the longest running thread in internet history, so we know what babble looks like.
The next time you try to prove the Bible is true with the Bible, I'll ask Akhenatan to trot out his Circular Argument Wheel.
GB