The Jesus Myth, and it's failures

OK, well that may be a reasonable indication that Pilate was a real person. Though, I don't suppose Philo's writing is actually known to us from anything other than copies made centuries after Philo had died, is it? And I don't suppose Philo has much to say about Pilate, does he? Also, where did Philo get any of his information, and where was he when he wrote any of this (eg was he in another land altogether)? I’m not sure what confidence or trust we should place in any of this early writing where it says person X did various things.

But the only reason I was asking about any evidence of Pilate in connection with the crucifixion of Jesus, is the discovery of the Pilate Stone, which seems to me to be obviously rather suspicious ... in the same way that James Ossuary is rather suspicious.

Except the James Ossuary was bought through a collector while the Pilate Stone was found in situ.

What I make of it (as given by that link) is that it's extremely long with huge great dense slab-like paragraphs of verbiage about all sorts of opinions on people and events. More like a small book.

But do you or Max know where in all that lot the author talks about Pilate?

I expressly state this if you had bothered to actually READ what I wrote:

Personally I think it distracts from the issue at hand: no reference to Pilate as being involved in the execution of Jesus exists well until the 2nd century.

Besides we do have evidence of Pilate outside of the Bible and the Stone: Philo of Alexandria and Josephus.

Philo is the more interesting of the two because it is actually a letter to him...from Herod Agrippa. It is buried in the Embassy to Gaius (c40 CE) and starts at XXXVIII.

I give you a link. I expressly told you where in that huge wall of text the referenced material is and you still ask "where in all that lot the author talks about Pilate"?!?

I EXPRESSLY TOLD YOU WHERE! :mad:

And even I hadn't there is this little thing available in all browsers: the Find command. What prevented you from using this and looking for "Pilate" in the text? :mad:

There is a BIG difference between 'it's hard to find' and 'I'm too lazy, could you spoon feed me the material?' This is most definitely in the later.

Sheesh.
 
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I see your point about the translation.
And that awful wordiness.

The references to Pilate start at XXXVIII. (299) where Philo quotes Herod Agrippa's story about the gilt shields of the Roman legions being set up in the Temple.

Which I why I said this:

Philo is the more interesting of the two because it is actually a letter to him...from Herod Agrippa. It is buried in the Embassy to Gaius (c40 CE) and starts at XXXVIII.

Never mind a Find on "Pilate" would have found the text.

Political maneuvering at its finest, indeed.
This text has been commented on at the monster thread over at RatSkep
http://www.rationalskepticism.org/christianity/historical-jesus-t219-3920.html#p569530

I don't know how seriously Philo's account of Herod's letter is to be taken, though.
Here's a pdf I downloaded from Brill about that text, if you're interested

The PDF for the record is of Ellen Muehlberger's "The Representation of Theatricality in Philo’s Embassy to Gaius" Journal for the Study of Judaism 39 (2008) 46-67

Herod's letter is clearly for propaganda reasons so there always going to be the issue of much of it is true. All Muehlberger is really doing is moving who the propagandist is. But the best propaganda is that which has some fact behind it. Logically the fact here is that Pilate ruled Judea during the time of Tiberius.

As Irenaeus' Against Heresies and Demonstrations shows even in 180 CE cross checking things to make sure everything fit was NOT the Christians strong point. Epiphanius's ramblings about Jesus "was born in Bethlehem of Judaea, in the days of Alexander (Jannaeus)" while putting Jesus firmly in the 1st century CE elsewhere in the same work shows they hadn't improved any by the 4th century.

In fact, Eusebius in his The History of the Church claimed "It is also recorded that under Claudius, Philo came to Rome to have conversations with Peter, then preaching to the people there ... It is plain enough that he not only knew but welcomed with whole-hearted approval the apostolic men of his day, who it seems were of Hebrew stock and therefore, in the Jewish manner, still retained most of their ancient customs." (Eusebius, The History of the Church, p50, 52)

But here in Embassy to Gaius we have a letter to Philo regarding Pilate with NO mention of Jesus. More over Jesus is NEVER mentioned in ANY of Philo's writings. Certainly if the Christians were the master forgers some people claim they were, they would have done something about Philo. But they didn't.
 
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Except the James Ossuary was bought through a collector while the Pilate Stone was found in situ.

...

I have been in complete agreement with the last several of Maximara's posts but the thread has been moving fast enough that by the time I had anything to say about my complete agreement with Maximara the thread had moved on.

But I thought I would comment on the above. I edited the James Ossuary Wikipedia article a bit and as a result did a little research on the subject. As a minor piece of davefoc trivia the first thread I started in the JREF forum was about the James Ossuary. It was also the first and only thread I've started that was deleted (There was already an ongoing thread about the James Ossuary).

For all practical purposes it is reasonable to assume that at least part of the inscription on the James Ossuary was faked. The evidence for this is overwhelming and straightforward. Of course, that doesn't stop miscellaneous true believers from arguing otherwise and it doesn't stop the Biblical Archeology Review from exploiting the situation to sell magazines.

But because the James Ossuary is an obvious fake doesn't mean that every ancient artifact from the middle east was faked. There don't seem to be any credible researchers seriously suggesting that the Pilate plaque was faked, there is an archeological record associated with its discovery (as Maximara mentioned), no tie in to biblical artifact dealers has been described, no tie-in to religious archeological zealots has been described, the existence of the plaque is plausible, and the existence of the plaque doesn't conflict with any secular notions about early Christian history. In short, none of the things that suggest the James Ossuary is a fake seem to be true for the Pilate plaque.

If one wanted to seriously investigate the possibility that the Pilate plaque is a fake, one might look for papers that were written about its discovery and validation. Personally, I think it's nice that anything associated with the HJ topic can be judged to be unambiguously true and in davefoc land Pilate is going to be accepted as having been a real individual until somebody finds the tiniest reason to doubt it.

ETA: I think IanS was probably pursuing this topic more as some miscellaneous musing about the limits of what is knowable about the history of first century Palestine than any particular skepticism about Pilate's existence. And that is fine, but there is another thing that might be considered about this topic. Just how easy it is to pull together a few different bits of evidence about a person of only moderate importance in first century Palestine to build a case that the individual almost certainly existed. I think it is interesting to compare this situation to the evidence for the existence of the HJ.
 
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Except the James Ossuary was bought through a collector while the Pilate Stone was found in situ.



I expressly state this if you had bothered to actually READ what I wrote:



I give you a link. I expressly told you where in that huge wall of text the referenced material is and you still ask "where in all that lot the author talks about Pilate"?!?

I EXPRESSLY TOLD YOU WHERE! :mad:

And even I hadn't there is this little thing available in all browsers: the Find command. What prevented you from using this and looking for "Pilate" in the text? :mad:

There is a BIG difference between 'it's hard to find' and 'I'm too lazy, could you spoon feed me the material?' This is most definitely in the later.

Sheesh.


Your anger is misplaced, and you are taking it too seriously :rolleyes:.

When I asked Paheka which passage he/she was referring too re. the mention of Pilate, I was only looking at Paheka's post, I did not re-check what you had posted earlier because I was not intending to reply to your post. Paheka did not have any problem with that, and neither should you. It's not that important, and what Philo says there is not especially definitive on Pilate anyway.
 
Except the James Ossuary was bought through a collector while the Pilate Stone was found in situ. ...

Of course you're right about the vast difference in the findings. I was musing, rather than seriously analysing the finds and you're quite right to bring me up short on that.

...Never mind a Find on "Pilate" would have found the text.

Absolutely.
I read through the thing because I wanted to get a feel for what Philo wrote and the relative context of the Pilate reference.
While I rely a great deal on the summations and conclusions of the better informed, I like to read through the (translated) texts in their entirety when time permits me.
I need to hear the author's voice when I can.
Thanks to the Web, I have this possiblity!





...
Herod's letter is clearly for propaganda reasons so there always going to be the issue of much of it is true. All Muehlberger is really doing is moving who the propagandist is. But the best propaganda is that which has some fact behind it. Logically the fact here is that Pilate ruled Judea during the time of Tiberius. ...

But here in Embassy to Gaius we have a letter to Philo regarding Pilate with NO mention of Jesus. More over Jesus is NEVER mentioned in ANY of Philo's writings. Certainly if the Christians were the master forgers some people claim they were, they would have done something about Philo. But they didn't.

While the hilited bit is a truism, it's a convincing argument, indeed, which is why I wanted to read as much as I could of the context. I'd plump for Pilate's existence.

I don't know if the early Christians were master forgers, but didn't one early writer call Philo a bishop, IIRC?

...If one wanted to seriously investigate the possibility that the Pilate plaque is a fake, one might look for papers that were written about its discovery and validation. ...

Kudos on the work for the James Ossuary!
Regarding the Pilate plaque, have you found those papers about its discovery and validation?
I'd appreciate the links- my Google fu didn't turn up much.
 
I have been in complete agreement with the last several of Maximara's posts but the thread has been moving fast enough that by the time I had anything to say about my complete agreement with Maximara the thread had moved on.

But I thought I would comment on the above. I edited the James Ossuary Wikipedia article a bit and as a result did a little research on the subject. As a minor piece of davefoc trivia the first thread I started in the JREF forum was about the James Ossuary. It was also the first and only thread I've started that was deleted (There was already an ongoing thread about the James Ossuary).

For all practical purposes it is reasonable to assume that at least part of the inscription on the James Ossuary was faked. The evidence for this is overwhelming and straightforward. Of course, that doesn't stop miscellaneous true believers from arguing otherwise and it doesn't stop the Biblical Archeology Review from exploiting the situation to sell magazines.

But because the James Ossuary is an obvious fake doesn't mean that every ancient artifact from the middle east was faked. There don't seem to be any credible researchers seriously suggesting that the Pilate plaque was faked, there is an archeological record associated with its discovery (as Maximara mentioned), no tie in to biblical artifact dealers has been described, no tie-in to religious archeological zealots has been described, the existence of the plaque is plausible, and the existence of the plaque doesn't conflict with any secular notions about early Christian history. In short, none of the things that suggest the James Ossuary is a fake seem to be true for the Pilate plaque.

If one wanted to seriously investigate the possibility that the Pilate plaque is a fake, one might look for papers that were written about its discovery and validation. Personally, I think it's nice that anything associated with the HJ topic can be judged to be unambiguously true and in davefoc land Pilate is going to be accepted as having been a real individual until somebody finds the tiniest reason to doubt it.

ETA: I think IanS was probably pursuing this topic more as some miscellaneous musing about the limits of what is knowable about the history of first century Palestine than any particular skepticism about Pilate's existence. And that is fine, but there is another thing that might be considered about this topic. Just how easy it is to pull together a few different bits of evidence about a person of only moderate importance in first century Palestine to build a case that the individual almost certainly existed. I think it is interesting to compare this situation to the evidence for the existence of the HJ.



First, just re. the highlight - I've said several times in all these posts that I am only raising that doubt about the authenticity of the Pilate Stone because (a)the circumstances of the discovery seem to me to be quite obviously suspicious (see below), and (b)it seems that no independent experts have ever been asked to corroborate it's claimed authenticity. And in a field of religiously related issues which appears packed with erroneous claims and assumptions, I think someone has to ask whether that tablet is even authentic anyway.

However before I say anything more about that highlighted sentence, just on your other points agreeing, as you say, so completely with Maximara -

- you are especially influenced by the fact that in the case of the James Ossuary, that object was offered for sale by a dealer, whereas the Pilate Stone was said to be discovered through an archaeological dig? You think that is a vital difference in the circumstances?

OK, well just to continue exploring that issue a bit further - you are reasonably satisfied that there is no particular reason to doubt the find of the Pilate Stone by Antonio Frova? What do you or any of us actually know about Antonio Frova? He is described as an Italian archaeologist, but with just a quick Google search I could not find any other information about him or how he came to make that expedition. If he is the usual sort of university lecturer who makes archaeological expeditions of this sort, then he would almost certainly have relied on funding from some external organisation (university lecturers do not normally fund these things themselves), in which case who funded his archaeological expedition? What, if any, connection did Frova have with any of the Israeli biblical antiquities groups who either excavate in that region or who have connections to local Israeli museums or who fund ventures like that?

I think this entire subject of anything to do with the existence of Jesus, is so fraught with quite deliberate deceptions and misrepresentation, that all such discoveries now have to be questioned at that most basic level of asking what we know about the circumstances of the discovery, about who the discoverers actually are, and what connections they may have to all interested parties in this field, and particularly the very obvious question of who actually verified the object as genuine (and how). However, in this case, none of that information seems to be known by anyone at all.

Iirc, Maximara said it was untrue that any sceptics had doubted the existence of Pilate before the tablet was discovered in 1961. Afaik, that is wrong, and prior to 1961 sceptics in general had often expressed doubts about the reliability of historical writing as evidence of Pilate, eg here are some typical remarks about that which appear on page one of even the most brief of Google searches -


http://ancienthistory.about.com/od/pontiuspilate/g/PontiusPilate.htm
An archaeological find made during an excavation, led by Italian archaeologist Dr. Antonio Frova, effectively put to rest the doubt that Pilate was real. The artifact is now in the Israel Museum in Jerusalem as inventory Number AE 1963 no. 104. There had also been literature, both Biblical and historical and even contemporary with Pilate, testifying to his existence, but it is filled with religious biases, so the 20th century find was important. Pilate appears in Latin on a 2'x3' (82 cm x 65 cm) limestone inscription found in 1961 at Caesarea Maritima that links him to the reign of the Emperor Tiberius. It refers to him as prefect (a Praefectus civitatium) rather than procurator, which is what the Roman historian Tacitus calls him.


http://www.bible-history.com/empires/pilate.html
Inscription by Pontius Pilate
It wasn't long ago when many scholars were questioning the actual existence of a Roman Governor with the name Pontius Pilate, the procurator who ordered Jesus' crucifixion. In June 1961 Italian archaeologists led by Dr. Frova were excavating an ancient Roman amphitheatre near Caesarea-on-the-Sea (Maritima) and uncovered this interesting limestone block


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilate_Stone
The stone is significant because it is the only universally accepted[not in citation given] archaeological find with an inscription mentioning the name "Pontius Pilatus" to date.[2][3]



OK, so the point there is, I think Max is wrong if he says no sceptics had doubted the existence of Pilate prior to the discovery of the Pilate Stone in 1961.

That raises the question of why, before 1961, some sceptics thought that the writing of Philo, Tacitus and Josephus (any others?) was not very persuasive as evidence of Pontius Pilate.

The obvious answer is that our extant copies of Tacitus and Josephus (my “theme”) are so long after the original authors had died, that 11th century Christian copying is barely credible at all as a reliable source of detail on what the named authors may ever have originally written about Pilate executing Jesus. And afaik, the same presumably applies to the writing of Philo? That is - what is the actual date that we have as the earliest extant copy of whatever Philo may have originally written in the 1st century?

That is presumably one reason that sceptics have often doubted the reliability of sources like Josephus and Tacitus (and as afaik, Philo also) as credible sources on issues like this. And it should not need repeating why writing as late as that is simply too unreliable to be regarded as likely fact in a subject packed from end to end with obvious fabrications and errors.

However, just reading from paragraphs 299 up to 315 in that link to the writing of Philo - the author is recounting why the Jews in that area did not want Pilate to erect either “shields” or a statue. And if all of what Philo says there is true and to be taken at face value, and if that is what Philo actually wrote in c.40AD (not altered by any copying), then of course we should accept that Philo at least believed that the governor in question was a man named Pilate. Fine.

However, if I was to remain suspicious about that as evidence of Pontius Pilate, I might say that what is written there from 299 to 315 reads more like the author recounting a well known story which he knows as current of the time. IOW it reads as if Philo is saying “here is what has been said about local unrest over a governor named Pilate, who was cruel and wanted to erect shields and a statue against the wishes of the local people…etc.”. I think it reads more like that sort of story being told (whether the story was true or not), rather than sounding like the author (in this case Philo) giving a factual historical account of events actually known to him personally or known to him from reliable informants. Eg does Philo tell the reader how he knows any of that story about Pilate and the local unrest over the shields and statue etc? A lot of the story involves Philo saying things like “and the people said X, Y & Z, to which person B replied A, B & C and hence the Emperor took action G ….” etc., as if Philo actually knew verbatim what individual people had said to one another (which obviously cannot be literally true).

So to that extent at least, where Philo appears to be describing actual conversations, the account is presumably impossible and an invention by whoever wrote those passages under the name “Philo“. That may be an entirely innocent practice of just bringing a real story to life by giving a general idea of what sort of grievances local people were said to be expressing on the streets. But that does look like Philo is creating or embroidering that aspect at least, if not simply recounting a legend of Pilate as the cruel governor.

OK so finally, turning to the issue of why the Pilate Stone is suspicious, I’ve said this before but to spell it out -

1. Prior to 1961 there was no physical evidence of Pilate’s existence. Outside of the gospels, all that apparently exists are some questionable references to Pilate in the writing attributed to Philo, Josephus, and Tacitus. However, it appears that all three of those works are known only as copies written many centuries after the named authors had died. So that leaves the obvious possibility that the mention there of Pilate may be a later addition in support of what had earlier been written in the gospels.

At any rate, it’s obvious that people were sceptical about Pilate prior to the discovery of the Pilate Stone in 1961. On which point -

- afaik, it is commonly said that there are many other authors of that time who wrote extensively about the history of the Jewish people in that region and about the period of Roman rule etc. But where not only do those authors’ never mention Jesus, they don’t mention anyone called Pontius Pilate either. Now I don’t personally know if that lack such mention is true. What I am saying is, I have the impression throughout all these discussions on HJ and the various references to sceptical authors on this subject, that it is commonly said that most writers of that period, who might all have been expected to mention Jesus and Pilate, in fact say nothing about either of them.

2. The inscription on the Pilate stone looks very sharp, clean and almost modern (at least as shown in photographs). Is that suspicious? Are such inscriptions usually so clear and sharp after 2000 years?

3. The remaining portion of the inscription says almost exactly what biblical scholars would wish to find in support of the gospels saying that Pilate executed Jesus in 30AD. Ie, it apparently confirms that Pilate was the governor, in the required region of Judea, at the appropriate period. Presumably a decayed 2000 year old partial inscription might easily have said something far less definitive with far less clarity, but fortunately it confirms precisely the three elements that bible scholars would wish to know.

4. Who was Antonio Frova, the Italian archaeologist who was said to have lead the group that discovered the tablet being used as part of a stairway in an ancient theatre which had previously been excavated at a place on the coast of Israel named Caesarea? What do we know about Frova? What connections or interests did he have with religiously important archaeological sites in Israel? Who paid for his expedition on this trip? What connection if any did Frova have with any of the Israeli museums who commonly display these religiously important local archaeological finds?

5. 1961 it might not have been thought vital to have the inscription verified by anyone outside of the Museums own staff. However, in the light of the subsequent discovery of the James Ossuary and the Jehoash Tablet, and the trial which ensued over their authenticity, it should now be obvious that suspicions must also arise over the Pilate Stone, since all three items share very obvious similarities - (a)they are all stone inscriptions of importance mainly if not entirely as evidence of biblical issues, (b)all three were discovered in Israel, and it seems all three were quite easily found without needing any great excavations, (c)two of the three say just exactly what is needed to support the two main evidential claims which bible scholars have typically offered as their main proof of the life of Jesus, ie that he had a real brother James, and that he was executed by a real man named Pilate, (d) all three were declared genuine by the museums own experts, but apparently not by any external experts.
 

My apologies for misstating the intent of your skepticism about the existence of Pilate.

I did spend some time trying to find the original paper and any other papers dealing with authentication of the Pilate stone without much success. I found the original paper by Frova on-line in JSTOR but it is in Italian and I decided not to try to look at it since I only am allowed three articles in my free JSTOR account.

I did find numerous scholarly references to it beyond the Frova paper, but every one just accepted the authenticity without discussing that aspect of the Pilate plaque. I think it is much less likely that the plaque was faked than the Ossuary but it is not inconceivable. Although the James Ossuary story has so many red flags suggesting forgery plus actual evidence of forgery that I think caution should be used if the Ossuary story is going to be compared to the Pilate plaque story.

I don't have time for much of a response right now. Do you have some thoughts on whether any of the other Judean prefects were real or was their existence faked also to set the stage up to create a fake character who would execute Jesus? Maybe you think there was a real prefect who ruled from 26 to 36, but some nefarious copyists changed his name from whatever it was to Pilate in the existing documents? The Pilate inscription was written in Latin. Do you think that should be the basis for suspicion?

ETA: You said that it was obvious that prior to 1961 people were skeptical about the existence of Pilate. Who were those skeptical people?
 
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My apologies for misstating the intent of your skepticism about the existence of Pilate.

I did spend some time trying to find the original paper and any other papers dealing with authentication of the Pilate stone without much success. I found the original paper by Frova on-line in JSTOR but it is in Italian and I decided not to try to look at it since I only am allowed three articles in my free JSTOR account.

I did find numerous scholarly references to it beyond the Frova paper, but every one just accepted the authenticity without discussing that aspect of the Pilate plaque. I think it is much less likely that the plaque was faked than the Ossuary but it is not inconceivable. Although the James Ossuary story has so many red flags suggesting forgery plus actual evidence of forgery that I think caution should be used if the Ossuary story is going to be compared to the Pilate plaque story.

I don't have time for much of a response right now. Do you have some thoughts on whether any of the other Judean prefects were real or was their existence faked also to set the stage up to create a fake character who would execute Jesus? Maybe you think there was a real prefect who ruled from 26 to 36, but some nefarious copyists changed his name from whatever it was to Pilate in the existing documents? The Pilate inscription was written in Latin. Do you think that should be the basis for suspicion?

ETA: You said that it was obvious that prior to 1961 people were skeptical about the existence of Pilate. Who were those skeptical people?



OK, thanks for that constructive and non-confrontational response.

First, I would not accuse you of seriously misinterpreting my position on the Pilate Stone. In fact, I think you had said above that you realised that I am simply saying that there appear to be quite obvious reasons to think the inscription itself and way in which it was discovered are suspicious, and in the light of that I am just asking what if anything has been done to get independent experts to verify that inscription.

On the highlighted bit - no, of course I don't suspect that all the Roman governess were fictitious. I expect they all existed.

I suspect Pilate may well have existed too. Though not necessarily in the right region at the right time to fit chronologically with a date when anyone could reasonably show that Jesus was supposed to have been executed. I suspect the gospel writers may have been just guessing about Pilate, and that all the detail of that gospel description of what Pilate said to Jesus and what Jesus said back to him is probably an invention.

The issue is simply whether that Pilate Stone is genuine, and if not, then where that would leave the writing of Philo, Josephus and Tacitus as evidence of Pilates existence, given that prior to 1961 it seems many sceptics doubted whether Pilate even existed.

That's all.

But in view of what has later transpired re. very similar inscriptions being discovered on the James ossuary and the Jehoash Tablet, its seems to me unsatisfactory merely to take it on trust when the Israeli Museum says the object is authentic.



ETA: You said that it was obvious that prior to 1961 people were skeptical about the existence of Pilate. Who were those skeptical people?


I don’t know. I haven’t tried to look up what any named sceptical authors had written prior to 1961. I am taking it as correct that, as those several links say (see previous post), that until the Pilate stone was discovered in 1961 various authors, apparently inc. some “scholars” (I assume they mean bible scholars), thought Pilate may not have even existed.
 
I don’t know. I haven’t tried to look up what any named sceptical authors had written prior to 1961. I am taking it as correct that, as those several links say (see previous post), that until the Pilate stone was discovered in 1961 various authors, apparently inc. some “scholars” (I assume they mean bible scholars), thought Pilate may not have even existed.

I imagine they were few and far between. Even Joseph Wheless who in 1930 Forgery in Christianity was suggesting insanely organized effort to forge the existence of Jesus didn't say Pilate himself was an invention. He does pound the infamous Acts of Pilate (from Acts of Peter and Paul) for all he is worth.
 
...

I don’t know. I haven’t tried to look up what any named sceptical authors had written prior to 1961. I am taking it as correct that, as those several links say (see previous post), that until the Pilate stone was discovered in 1961 various authors, apparently inc. some “scholars” (I assume they mean bible scholars), thought Pilate may not have even existed.

The only references to people skeptical of the existence of Pilate that I can find are religious sites claiming that they existed before the stone was found and skeptical sites claiming that the existence of Pilate was not questioned before or after the discovery of the Pilate stone.

My guess, right now is that you aren't going to find any article that seriously questions the existence of Pilate, regardless of whether it was written before or after the alleged discovery of the Pilate stone.
 
The only references to people skeptical of the existence of Pilate that I can find are religious sites claiming that they existed before the stone was found and skeptical sites claiming that the existence of Pilate was not questioned before or after the discovery of the Pilate stone.

My guess, right now is that you aren't going to find any article that seriously questions the existence of Pilate, regardless of whether it was written before or after the alleged discovery of the Pilate stone.


That may well be true (eg the highlights). As I say, I don't have any books from sceptics writing before 1961, so I don't know what doubts if any they expressed about Pilate. But since you have done a quick Google search, you will know that most religious websites talking about the Pilate Stone do say that its' discovery put to rest earlier doubts about Pilates existence. So ...

... I wonder where all those religious sites got the idea that people had expressed such doubts prior to 1961? Why would they invent a notion like that (and keep repeating it)? What’s in it for any Christian sites to falsely claim something like that? It does not seem to me to be a falsehood that would be of any advantage or value to them. Any idea where they could have got that idea?

If you check the main Wikipedia page on this, although it does not explicitly say that the Pilate Stone resolved earlier doubts about Pilates existence, the description it gives for his “Historicity” is quite obviously being described as confused, contradictory and seemingly involving various mythical tales and beliefs, eg tales of him being born in Scotland and dying in Switzerland etc. If it were not for the part about the Pilate Stone, descriptions such as the following would not sound very convincing at all (would they?) -


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pontius_Pilate
Historicity of Pilate
Little is known of Pilate and there are no formal records of his birth or early life.
There is an old tradition linking his birthplace with the small village of Bisenti, Samnite territory, in today's Abruzzo region of Central Italy.[11] There are alleged ruins of a Roman house known as "The House of Pilate in Bisenti".[12]
There is also a tradition in Scotland that Pilate was born in Fortingall, a small village in the Perthshire Highlands.[13]
Other places such as Tarragona in Spain and Forchheim in Germany have been proposed as Pilate's birthplace, but it is more likely that he was a Roman citizen, born in central Italy.[14][15][16]
Eusebius, quoting early apocryphal accounts, stated that Pilate suffered misfortune in the reign of Caligula (AD 37–41), was exiled to Gaul and eventually committed suicide there in Vienne.[11] The 10th century historian Agapius of Hierapolis, in his Universal History, says that Pilate committed suicide during the first year of Caligula's reign, in AD 37/38.[17]
Another legend places his death at Mount Pilatus, in Switzerland.
The first physical evidence relating to Pilate was discovered in 1961, when a block of limestone, the Pilate Stone, was found in the Roman theatre at Caesarea Maritima, the capital of the province of Judaea (Iudaea). Bearing a damaged dedication by Pilate of a Tiberieum,[18] the dedication states that he was [...]ECTVS IUDA[...] (usually read as praefectus Iudaeae), that is, prefect of Judaea. The early governors of Judaea were of prefect rank, the later were of procurator rank, beginning with Cuspius Fadus in AD 44. The inscription was discovered by a group led by Antonio Frova and has been dated to AD 26–37. The inscription is currently housed in the Israel Museum, Jerusalem, while a replica stands at Caesarea.[19]
 
That may well be true (eg the highlights). As I say, I don't have any books from sceptics writing before 1961, so I don't know what doubts if any they expressed about Pilate. But since you have done a quick Google search, you will know that most religious websites talking about the Pilate Stone do say that its' discovery put to rest earlier doubts about Pilates existence. So ...

... I wonder where all those religious sites got the idea that people had expressed such doubts prior to 1961? Why would they invent a notion like that (and keep repeating it)? What’s in it for any Christian sites to falsely claim something like that? It does not seem to me to be a falsehood that would be of any advantage or value to them. Any idea where they could have got that idea?

Likely the same place Jim Walker got the ideas regarding "Letters of Pontius Pilate" in his Did a historical Jesus exist? article; somebody does poor research and makes claims that simply are not true and ala The Bermuda Triangle other authors simply copy the claims and don't do cross research to make sure the original author is not spouting nonsense.

The Letters of Pontius Pilate section of Rationalwiki's Evidence for the historical existence of Jesus Christ explains what is really going on:

Letters of Pontius Pilate
There is an a double myth that Pontius Pilate wrote letters to Seneca in Rome that mention Jesus and his reported miracles.[111]

I say double myth because it is claimed that apologists often quote letters from a 1928 book Letters of Pontius Pilate: Written During His Governorship of Judea to His Friend Seneca in Rome[112] by W. P. Crozier, an Oxford-educated Guardian journalist (and later the paper's editor) with an interest in Greek, Latin, the Bible and Zionism.

The reality is far more interesting:

The Acts of Pilate (Gospel of Pilate) thought to been written in the middle of the fourth century as the Acts of Peter and Paul[113] contains a supposed letter from Pilate to Caesar. There seems to be two versions of this; one were the letter is addressed to Tiberius (d 37 CE)[114] and another where it is addressed to Claudius (41 CE)[115][116][117][118]

Eusebius comments on "Letters of Pilate" being referred to by Justin and Tertullian while also noting an anti-Christian text called Acts of Pilate.[119]

The often quoted letter of Pontius Pilate to Claudius is NOT from Crozier's book but from the far older The Acts of Pilate as proven by its citation in a work from 1827, 1880 and other from 1883 so the claim the letter come from there is false. However, The Acts of Pilate is not considered genuine so the part about apologists using a known fiction is true.[120]


All serious doubts expressed about Pilate I have seen are regarding his behavior, title, and-or letter supposedly by him not his existence.

If I had to guess I would say the religious sites are confusing the discovery of the Tel Dan stele in 1993 which supported the existence of King David with the Pilate Stone discovery.

Now King David's existence was debated before 1993 because there was no mention of him in Egyptian, Syrian or Assyrian documents of the time and up to that time the many archaeological digs in the City of David hadn't turned up anything with his name on it.
 
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When, indeed.
Marcion, bless his excommunicated heart, puts an upper figure of 140 for Luke, correct me if I'm wrong.
Do we have any other fixed limit for any other Gospel?

Well there is Against Heresies by Irenaeus c180 CE who quotes what appear to our Gospels at length but (and this is important) he also makes claims that don't fit with the Gospels and history as we know them both in Against Heresies and in Demonstrations: Jesus being at least 46 years old when he was crucified and this happening under Claudius Caesar (ie no earlier then 41 CE)

So while something like our Gospels were about in 180 CE it is clear there were differences from what existed then and what exists in the 4th century.

I would rather that important dates were determined by people who did not have a direct personal interest in Jesus and Christianity. And in fact I believe that has been attempted with the use of C14 dating for some biblical fragments. Though afaik that is not ideal because C14 only becomes reasonably accurate with materials much older than the gospel fragments.

I doubt this as C14 (both Beta counting and Accelerator Mass Spectrometry) requires the material to be tested to be destroyed in the process of testing. While AMS does allow for samples as small as 20 milligrams (one sheet of 20 lb printer paper is 4724 mgs and a modern Roosevelt Dime 2400 mgs for comparison) it also has greater issues with contamination.

As for the accuracy of C14 while it varies through out the range it can be used for it gets worse the older the sample is (Reimer, P. J., et al. (1998)):

"The 2004 version of the calibration curve extends back quite accurately to 26,000 years BP. Any errors in the calibration curve do not contribute more than ±16 years to the measurement error during the historic and late prehistoric periods (0–6,000 yrs BP) and no more than ±163 years over the entire 26,000 years of the curve, although its shape can reduce the accuracy as mentioned above." (Reimer, Paula J; et al. (2004). "INTCAL04 Terrestrial Radiocarbon Age Calibration, 0–26 Cal Kyr BP". Radiocarbon 46 (3): 1029–1058. A web interface is available.)

Also we must remember C14 dates are a range and based on the material at NatGeo gJudas: Was the C14 result of 280CE (+/- 60 yrs) subject to radiocarbon calibration we are looking a +/- 47 years to +/- 58 years for objects of the 3rd century the range for earlier work is bleh.

The apologists no doubt would grab the earliest date they could while the skeptics would point to the oldest possible date and with a range of about a century that would be akin to hitting yourself in the head with hammer.

Regarding the new nondestructive C14 test of 2010 there is still a lot of work to find out what its limitations are.
 
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Likely the same place Jim Walker got the ideas regarding "Letters of Pontius Pilate" in his Did a historical Jesus exist? article; somebody does poor research and makes claims that simply are not true and ala The Bermuda Triangle other authors simply copy the claims and don't do cross research to make sure the original author is not spouting nonsense.

The Letters of Pontius Pilate section of Rationalwiki's Evidence for the historical existence of Jesus Christ explains what is really going on:

Letters of Pontius Pilate
There is an a double myth that Pontius Pilate wrote letters to Seneca in Rome that mention Jesus and his reported miracles.[111]

I say double myth because it is claimed that apologists often quote letters from a 1928 book Letters of Pontius Pilate: Written During His Governorship of Judea to His Friend Seneca in Rome[112] by W. P. Crozier, an Oxford-educated Guardian journalist (and later the paper's editor) with an interest in Greek, Latin, the Bible and Zionism.

The reality is far more interesting:

The Acts of Pilate (Gospel of Pilate) thought to been written in the middle of the fourth century as the Acts of Peter and Paul[113] contains a supposed letter from Pilate to Caesar. There seems to be two versions of this; one were the letter is addressed to Tiberius (d 37 CE)[114] and another where it is addressed to Claudius (41 CE)[115][116][117][118]

Eusebius comments on "Letters of Pilate" being referred to by Justin and Tertullian while also noting an anti-Christian text called Acts of Pilate.[119]

The often quoted letter of Pontius Pilate to Claudius is NOT from Crozier's book but from the far older The Acts of Pilate as proven by its citation in a work from 1827, 1880 and other from 1883 so the claim the letter come from there is false. However, The Acts of Pilate is not considered genuine so the part about apologists using a known fiction is true.[120]


All serious doubts expressed about Pilate I have seen are regarding his behavior, title, and-or letter supposedly by him not his existence.

If I had to guess I would say the religious sites are confusing the discovery of the Tel Dan stele in 1993 which supported the existence of King David with the Pilate Stone discovery.

Now King David's existence was debated before 1993 because there was no mention of him in Egyptian, Syrian or Assyrian documents of the time and up to that time the many archaeological digs in the City of David hadn't turned up anything with his name on it.



Yes, the above may indeed be the explanation.

I have to admit that I may have been misled by those Christian websites that all seem to say the Pilate Stone ended earlier doubts about Pilates existence. And obviously that Wiki page is hardly any more convincing about that either. But, …

Perhaps there never were any such doubts from earlier sceptics.

Though I think there is a bit of a problem with all of this anyway. Eg, if it was only ever a minority view from certain sceptical writers, and a view which changed after 1961, then not much of that may have ever made it's way on to the internet anyway, and perhaps with nothing now left to be found in a Google search 50 years later.

Also, as I've maintained throughout, there are quite obvious reasons why, prior to the Pilate Stone, sceptics would not take at face value what was written in a minority (I think it's a minority) of very late copies (mostly copying by Christians themselves, afaik) of books from Philo, Josephus and Tacitus. Ie, the very late nature and the possibility of "interpolations" makes sources like that obviously unreliable.

So, I think there are quite obvious reasons why people might very well have questioned claims about Pilate's existence &/or the dates when he was living and governing in any particular region.

If we could travel back in time to see what actually happened in those days, it would not surprise me to find that, from the usual list of 30 governors’ ruling Judea from about 6AD to 135AD, a number of them either were not in place at the given dates, or that the names had been confused with names of other rulers, or that they were actually governing in some other region entirely, or even that some of them never existed at all.

I only say that because my impression is that all of these early records about various named individuals and various events (eg destructions of temples etc.), seem to be wide open to all manner of mistakes about what really happened, and who did what at which particular times.
 
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Well there is Against Heresies by Irenaeus c180 CE who quotes what appear to our Gospels at length but (and this is important) he also makes claims that don't fit with the Gospels and history as we know them both in Against Heresies and in Demonstrations: Jesus being at least 46 years old when he was crucified and this happening under Claudius Caesar (ie no earlier then 41 CE)

So while something like our Gospels were about in 180 CE it is clear there were differences from what existed then and what exists in the 4th century.



I doubt this as C14 (both Beta counting and Accelerator Mass Spectrometry) requires the material to be tested to be destroyed in the process of testing. While AMS does allow for samples as small as 20 milligrams (one sheet of 20 lb printer paper is 4724 mgs and a modern Roosevelt Dime 2400 mgs for comparison) it also has greater issues with contamination.

As for the accuracy of C14 while it varies through out the range it can be used for it gets worse the older the sample is (Reimer, P. J., et al. (1998)):

"The 2004 version of the calibration curve extends back quite accurately to 26,000 years BP. Any errors in the calibration curve do not contribute more than ±16 years to the measurement error during the historic and late prehistoric periods (0–6,000 yrs BP) and no more than ±163 years over the entire 26,000 years of the curve, although its shape can reduce the accuracy as mentioned above." (Reimer, Paula J; et al. (2004). "INTCAL04 Terrestrial Radiocarbon Age Calibration, 0–26 Cal Kyr BP". Radiocarbon 46 (3): 1029–1058. A web interface is available.)

Also we must remember C14 dates are a range and based on the material at NatGeo gJudas: Was the C14 result of 280CE (+/- 60 yrs) subject to radiocarbon calibration we are looking a +/- 47 years to +/- 58 years for objects of the 3rd century the range for earlier work is bleh.

The apologists no doubt would grab the earliest date they could while the skeptics would point to the oldest possible date and with a range of about a century that would be akin to hitting yourself in the head with hammer.

Regarding the new nondestructive C14 test of 2010 there is still a lot of work to find out what its limitations are.

Thanks for an interesting post to think about at work this afternoon.
Of course I refer to both the unknown nature of the NT earlist texts to the infors on dating.


... I wonder where all those religious sites got the idea that people had expressed such doubts prior to 1961? Why would they invent a notion like that (and keep repeating it)? What’s in it for any Christian sites to falsely claim something like that? It does not seem to me to be a falsehood that would be of any advantage or value to them. Any idea where they could have got that idea? ...
...I have to admit that I may have been misled by those Christian websites that all seem to say the Pilate Stone ended earlier doubts about Pilates existence. And obviously that Wiki page is hardly any more convincing about that either. But, …

Perhaps there never were any such doubts from earlier sceptics...

Perhaps there weren't, IanS.
It may well be we're observing the results of a rather nasty debater's technique, a mixture of the classic and quite effective "Have you stopped beating your wife yet?" approach mixed with a bit of strawman and wrapped up in glossy archeological references.

Added:
I should have explained this debater's/rhetorical technique is also used by preachers and apologists. I've slogged through enough Philo recently to see there's nothing new under the sun by way of rhetoric.
 
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Sorry if this isn't responsive to any particular post. Someone, somewhere, recently linked to this page called "Evidence for the historical existence of Jesus Christ" -- Rational Wiki.

http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Evidence_for_the_historical_existence_of_Jesus_Christ

It could have been called "Evidence or its Lack" -- perhaps that would have been more accurate.

This matches my thinking so exactly that I felt reassured reading it. (I don't like to argue, in any case.)

The rest of the article (not quoted here) is also good.

Pastes:

Evidence for the historical existence of Jesus of Nazareth (the Christ) as portrayed in the Bible is only found in three places: the Bible itself, other early Christian writings, and references by the various early churches (c. 100 CE) to the long dead leader of those churches. There are no contemporaneous sources outside of the early Christian community.
Historians focusing on this era generally accept that there was likely some fellow named Jesus who lived in Palestine roughly two millennia ago, had a very small following of people studying his views, was killed by the government for some such reason, and whose life became pivotal to some of the world's largest religions. Beyond this, however, there is doubt over the accuracy of any of the descriptions of his life, as described in the Bible or as understood by his believers. A handful of authors, past[1] and present[2] believe there is insufficient justification to assume any individual human seed for the stories.

Ancient history, evidence and Jesus studies

Ancient history is a process of reconstructing entire narratives from very scant evidence, which may be overturned at any time by a new archaeological discovery. What an ancient historian means by the words "probably" or "likely" is not what a scientist means by those words.
If the question were the existence of any arbitrary first-century Judean who was not otherwise special, historians could provide the evidence, with weight, and give a nuanced answer. However, Jesus is the entire beginning and endpoint of Christian theology, and his existence and death is a critical point for virtually all Christians, and his life being exactly as detailed in the Gospels is important to a majority of Christians. The politics against any discovery of fact contradicting his existence and the details of what he said and did is vast. Further, a growing community of non-believers challenge Christian legitimacy, especially as it relates to secular laws and agendas. A lot of people are highly invested in the result either way, and have insufficient regard for the evidence or process. In studies of the history of Jesus and the New Testament in particular, the epistemology and methodology used is lower quality than in the study of other areas in comparable eras.[3]
The most compelling argument for historians that "a man named Jesus existed as the leader of a religious movement" is that a handful of pre-Christian churches existed[citation needed][4] and cited Jesus[5] as their leader[citation needed]. The theory is that people do not generally make up leaders for all that they aggrandize and mythologize them.
Further, the existence of modern Christianity proves only that Paul of Tarsus — the man who revolutionized Christianity by pitching it to Gentiles — existed, and that Paul spoke of Jesus the Christ, based on oral stories going round and his own vision. The existence of a founding figure who can reasonably be tagged Paul is quite good as these things go, e.g. textual analysis showing that several of the Biblical texts attributed to Paul do indeed seem to have been written by the same single hand. This is comparable to the evidence we have for the existence of figures such as Socrates and Pythagoras; as with Paul, their existence is secondary to their body of work.
For comparison, other stories of semi-mythical figures such as King Arthur or Robin Hood appear to have no original author,[6] instead being legends that accreted — possibly from a basis of one original person, possibly from several, or possibly from pure invention. For example, John Frum is a claimed cargo cult founder in the range of current living memory, but even for him we don't have enough evidence to establish whether or not he was a real person - we just don't know whether the stories started from any actual person or just accreted spuriously.
 
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I added the citation needed comments into the RationalWiki article that Calebprime quoted and created a subject to discuss the claim in the talk section of the article. The section was archived so that it no longer appears in the talk page.

Part of the RationalWiki article quoted by calebprime:

...The most compelling argument for historians that "a man named Jesus existed as the leader of a religious movement" is that a handful of pre-Christian churches existed[citation needed][4] and cited Jesus[5] as their leader[citation needed]. ...
A discussion of this sentence from an archived section of the talk page:
Early churches most compelling evidence for Jesus
The article contains this sentence: "The most compelling argument for historians that "a man named Jesus existed as the leader of a religious movement" is that a handful of pre-Christian churches existed[4] and cited Jesus[5] as their leader."

I tried to follow up on what the source for this claim was and got this: "These early churches took the name of disciples of Jesus, for example, the Church of Mary, the Church of Thomas, and the Church of Peter". Was that supposed to be a source? It was in a section called notes so I guess it was supposed to be a note and not a source. So is there a source for the claim about the existence of pre-Christian churches that cited Jesus as their leader?

I am skeptical. It is the first time I have heard an argument like this and I've participated in debates about the existence of the HJ for several years. It looks to me like the earliest confirmed Christian churches might date to about 300 AD and anything earlier is very speculative, but I stand to be corrected.

As an aside I will login as davefoc if there is follow up discussion to this.
I am lost. If there were no churches before 300AD then who was Paul writing to in his letters? DamoHi 08:29, 9 June 2013 (UTC)
Who Paul was writing to is an interesting question but not the point. What is the evidence for the claim that pre-Christian churches existed that cited Jesus as their leader? How do we know this is the most compelling argument for historians that Jesus existed? What is the time frame intended by the term, pre-Christian? Is the term, church, here meant to refer to a physical structure or is it meant to refer to a group of people?
A simplistic interpretation of the sentence might be that since Christianity exists it had to have a beginning and therefore there had to be pre-Christian churches. If that is what is intended then the sentence is just stupid and should be removed. If the sentence was intended to a convey a substantive idea about the evidence for the beginning of Christianity I would like to understand better what the claim is and what the evidence is for that claim. --Davefoc (talk) 17:11, 9 June 2013 (UTC)
Although, nothing was done about the issue I raised, it does look like there has been some editing of the article going on since the last time I visited the article and it looks to me like the article might have benefited from it.
 
I doubt this as C14 (both Beta counting and Accelerator Mass Spectrometry) requires the material to be tested to be destroyed in the process of testing. While AMS does allow for samples as small as 20 milligrams (one sheet of 20 lb printer paper is 4724 mgs and a modern Roosevelt Dime 2400 mgs for comparison) it also has greater issues with contamination.
No. AMS dating routinely uses sub-milligram samples, so for fairly generic 80gsm paper (as an example) 10-15 square millimetres would be adequate for a single sample run.
Further decontamination pretreatment of radiocarbon samples is a routine procedure at all labs, contamination is rarely a significant issue.
 
Sorry if this isn't responsive to any particular post. Someone, somewhere, recently linked to this page called "Evidence for the historical existence of Jesus Christ" -- Rational Wiki.

http://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Evidence_for_the_historical_existence_of_Jesus_Christ

It could have been called "Evidence or its Lack" -- perhaps that would have been more accurate.

This matches my thinking so exactly that I felt reassured reading it. (I don't like to argue, in any case.)

The rest of the article (not quoted here) is also good.

That should be no surprise. There are a lot of what would be considered reliable sources by regular Wikipedia standards backing much of the article. The parts that don't have reliable sources generally follow each other logically. There is a reason the article has silver status.
 
Gday,

I have to admit that I may have been misled by those Christian websites that all seem to say the Pilate Stone ended earlier doubts about Pilates existence. And obviously that Wiki page is hardly any more convincing about that either. But, …

Perhaps there never were any such doubts from earlier sceptics.

Indeed, I haven't found any evidence that anyone ever doubted Pilate's existence.

What I HAVE seen is many CLAIMS they did before the Pilate stone was found - but no such sceptic is ever quoted or named. The claim is always attached to comments about the Pilate stone.

It seems to just be apologists saying :
"see? Pilate did exist, all you sceptics were wrong about him, you are wrong to be sceptical about other things in the bible too".

I searched through all the old writings and some modern ones, and no-one ever doubted Pilate that I could find :

http://five-essences.blogspot.com.au/2013/09/did-any-sceptics-ever-consider-pilate.html

Meanwhile, I must admit am now starting to be sceptical about the Pilate stone too.

K.
 

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