Bart Ehrman believes that the apostle Paul met with Peter (Jesus' right hand man) and James (the brother of Jesus)....
You will of course be giving a proper cite for this claim, won't you..
On page 164 of his new book "Did Jesus exist?", Bart Ehrman writes this:
You're going to continue to pretend that you've read the book, are you, DOC?
Do you have any idea how dishonest this makes your already threadbare arguments look?
And don't carry on with that garbage about having read more of the book than most others here or trying to cast aspersions about other members' reading of it. It's transparently dishonest, it's demonstrably wrong and it's completely irrelevant.
"And it is important to remember that Jews were saying that Jesus was the crucified messiah in the early 30s. We can date their claims to at least 32 CE, when Paul began persecuting these Jews.
How can we date these claims and why do need to verify the existence of Christians anyway? Has anyone here suggested that there's no such thing as Christians?
Simply parroting something that someone said in a book isn't providing evidence of anything more than the author's beliefs. What you're supposed to be explaining is how he came to arrive at those beliefs, but of course you can't do that, can you, DOC?
Because you don't own and haven't read the whole book, have you?
In fact, their claims must have originated even earlier.
Why must they, and in what way does this constitute evidence that the claims were in any way true?
Paul knew Jesus's right-hand man, Peter, and Jesus's brother James.
Where is your evidence for this claim?
And if you're simply going to repeat this nonsense that "Ehrman said so" then my obvious follow up question is "Where is Ehrman's evidence?"
They are evidence that this belief in the crucified messiah goes all the way back to a short time after Jesus's death."
Belief in a messiah goes all the way back to centuries before the time when the alleged Jesus was even born, DOC.
Are you now going to start presenting the existence of Judaism as evidence for the truth of Christianity?
That'll be a hoot.
Some might say, well you are using what's in the bible as evidence.
And why wouldn't they? It's exactly what you're doing and as you well know (and even appear to be tacitly acknowledging in this very observation), it's quite fallacious to do so.
Here is a quote from Bart Ehrman on page 73 of the book cited above;
"To dismiss the Gospels from the historical record is neither fair or scholarly".
Did he say anything about this only being true where the biblical record is backed up by extra-biblical sources?
If so, which page?
If not, he's flat-out wrong.
Remember the gospels were written by 8 or 9 writers who had no idea their writings would end up in something called a bible.
Even if we knew any such thing, how are you proposing that it's evidence of anything?
And one of those writers was Luke, a man archaeologist Sir William M. Ramsay said was a great historian {regarding non-supernatural events}.
As always, it's both hilarious and tragic that you still put this dreck forward as your best argument.
Does it ever occur to you that you haven't advance your cause even one micron from where it was when this thread started?
Ever?