Aepervius
Non credunt, semper verificare
I think the problem here is that you are using a definition of evidence that dosnt apply to ancient history. The consensus is arrived by standard historiography practices. The evidence in this case is an interpretation of what evidence there is ie the text.
No the problem is that there are quasi no source for any information on Jesus except for a religious document called the bible and that is the main problem. You realize that there are more varied source of description of the life of say, Siddhārtha Gautama ? 500 BCE ? The problem is that the source used, the NT, more or less the single source, is a mythical recollection some of which happened long time after the fact (ETA and were not present there , just heard the story, and/or dreamt about it).
Thats true enough ... I just dont see what that changes.
The case for historicity of Jesus is the basic discipline of historiography. If you accept its historicity, as I have already said, a historical Jesus is subjective. I find little reason to doubt he existed as a fairly unremarkable migrant preacher man that gathered a small following.
Thats all I would claim, and its a rather unremarkable claim derived by standard historiography practices.
Now it might be wrong, but in order to make that case you essentially have to demonstrate the whole field of historiography is fundamentally flawed and needs radical reform.
That itself might be true also ... but it requires a bit more than revisionists with an agenda on the internet to make that case.
I am personally split on this. Looking at all side of the argument, historian never made a good case for historicity, even Ehrman. I tend to think there is more probability that some errant human preacher existed, which spouted banality that some group of people thought were great and new (and in reality aren't either) but i place it at 51% historical 49% mythical.
There is simply no real evidence compared to other historical figures which make it more than a loaded coin toss.
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