ddt
Mafia Penguin
I'm far from the most knowledgeable in that field, but yes, they only try to pick on the part of gassing in the extermination camps. The Einsatzgruppen are generally not disputed, the records from transit camps like Westerbork neither (which tally how many Jews/gypsies/... were shipped to Auschwitz/Sobibor/...) but they pick on testimonies which may indeed be contradictory or seemingly contradictory. Elie Wiesel is a favourite there, or the couple of recent forged accounts of people who never were there.Yup. I'm not as knowledgeable about the holocaust denial theories as you are, but my guess is they pick up on relatively minor points in each of those sources. The point is that the preponderance of evidence points towards it happening, even with little curiosities or errors here and there in the sources.
In that regard, your contributions would have been better in place in the recent Christ Myth theory thread. Don't let that remark chase you away here though.Naturally, the contention that they wrote nothing but the truth is false.
The Bethlehem story clearly seems to be fitting in with OT prophecy. The claim that Jesus came from Nazareth is already present with Mark, see Mark 1:9:The contention even that they were always primarily interested in historical accuracy is false.
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.
If the two accounts conspired, they could have done a much better job of getting the stories to work, so it is reason to believe that, for this tale, they were independent. But they both agree on a few points. One is that Jesus was born in Bethlehem. This is unsurprising as that was predicted in the old testament, so this could have been made up by two independent sources quite easily. Another is that Jesus was from Nazareth.
That is more interesting. Why would two independent sources make up stories that are wildly contradictory but make sure that Jesus comes from a small village that nobody had heard of? A good bet is that Jesus really was from Nazareth, and so the two authors couldn't claim he was from Bethlehem, and instead did some horrible fudging to make him be both. The two authors picked different solutions, and so we have the wild contradictions.
And if you check the Greek, it really says "ἀπὸ Ναζαρὲτ τῆς Γαλιλαίας", i.e., it names the town. Well, town - archaeological evidence says that the village had less than 500 inhabitants, so Luke's and Matthew's calling it a "polis" (city) is a stark embellishment.And it came to pass in those days, that Jesus came from Nazareth of Galilee, and was baptized of John in Jordan.
Then, the two solutions Matthew and Luke choose for this are quite different. Matthew doesn't mention Joseph and Maria being natives from Galilee: they seem natives from Bethlehem in his story. They flee to Egypt with their newborn son to escape the massacre of the innocents. Returning from Egypt, Herod is succeeded by his son Archelaus in Judea and they decide to resettle in the Galilee (never mind Herod's other son Antipas reigned there); and that's the first time Nazareth is mentioned.
Luke has Joseph and Maria actually come from Nazareth. They go to Bethlehem on orders of Quirinius' census while Mary is pregnant (El Al wouldn't have taken them on board, but donkeys don't have such qualms) and Jesus is born there. When he's 8 days old, they take him to the Jerusalem Temple to be circumcised and then return to Nazareth.
So, they both run with Mark's only mention of the village Nazareth and weave a totally different fantastic story around it. The other mentions in Mark are the Greek words "Nazarenos" and "Nazoraios", and it is disputed whether these words actually mean "from Nazareth".
The 12 disciples is a no-brainer. They are symbolic of the 12 tribes of Israel. Jews were (are) fond of such numerology. As to such details you mention: let's take Luke 1. Our OP has stressed time and again that Luke is the most historical gospel. Yet Luke 1 starts with the annunciation and birth of John the Baptist - during the reign of Herod the Great. Then it skips to Jesus' birth story. I nowhere see mention that ten years passed; OTOH, it suggests that they are less than a year apart, because Jesus' coming is announced around the time of John's birth.This is an interesting point. Egyptian myths might include Pharaohs and Egyptian landmarks that really existed, when the story is actually fabricated. 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 quite see the relevance of including weekdays or holidays in the story in general, though. Any fiction writer would do that, wouldn't they? Suppose 2,000 years from now, archaeologists discover a copy of "The Day of the Jackal". Was that true? No, it's fiction, but the whole background fits. De Gaulle was French president, the OAS existed and they actually planned multiple and executed at least one attempt on De Gaulle's life. Yet Forsyth's particular story is fiction, and there's plenty of detail in his story.