Nailed: Ten Christian Myths that show Jesus never existed

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Yes, I was thinking that about the various teachings of Jesus. Why are they completely supernatural?

For example, in Mark 4, a 'very large crowd' gathers, and Jesus uses the parable about seed falling on stony ground, and so on. This is normal for a Jewish preacher, isn't it? In fact, as far as I can see, Jewish rabbis still like to tell stories.

Jesus also offers specific ethical instructions, interpretations of the Torah, deals with questions, including trick questions, and so on. I don't see why any of this is 'supernatural' - it is what Jewish charismatic hasidim did.

It is a myth and illogical that only supernatural anecdotes in the NT could be tacked on.

Scholars have already deduced that there are non-supernatural events in the NT that most likely did not happen.

For example, Bart Ehrman claimed in "Did Jesus Exist?" that the triumphal entry of Jesus in Jerusalem and the Barabbas exchange are most likely fiction.

Plus, Scholars have deduced that the Gospels are not eyewitness accounts so just accepting the non-supernatural parts of the Gospel is really quite useless.
 
It is a myth and illogical that only supernatural anecdotes in the NT could be tacked on.

Scholars have already deduced that there are non-supernatural events in the NT that most likely did not happen.

For example, Bart Ehrman claimed in "Did Jesus Exist?" that the triumphal entry of Jesus in Jerusalem and the Barabbas exchange are most likely fiction.

Plus, Scholars have deduced that the Gospels are not eyewitness accounts so just accepting the non-supernatural parts of the Gospel is really quite useless.

How could anyone find that offensive? I mean, just because a person has spent their entire career studying this stuff, doesn't mean they know more about it than dejudge. That's preposterous!

Of course he has the right to tell them how to do their jobs. They obviously don't know how to do it, or they would come to the same conclusions as dejudge. Simple!

So all those stupid Academics better buck-up and pay attention to dejudge, or face the consequences! (Like not being a laughingstock)

They'll just have to live with it.
 
Craig B

How true! But here is another true statement: not everything that gMark attributes to Jesus is a miracle.
Not quite. The "supernatural" events in Mark through 16:8 have sufficient natural explanations, with black letter evidence for being natural occurences in the text.

The Marcan women do not find an empty tomb. They find the tomb unexpectedly disturbed (the entryway is open), with an unidentified living man inside. He explains his presence with a wagon load, and tells them to get lost. They get lost. The End. There is neither manuscript witness nor any compelling "literary" reason to think that there ever was more than that to the original Gospel. (You find that abrupt? No problem, Paul, already in circulation, picked up the story from there. This is Butch and Sundance, The Early Years; if you want a shootout in Bolivia, that's a different movie.)

If you need to find supernatural things happening, then master storyteller that "Mark" is, he will accommodate you. If you aren't interested in horse manure, but are interested in what might be the backstory to Paul's letters, then Mark will accommodate you, too. Mark doesn't appear in his story; he never says what he believes. Even if you assume that he's Christian, there's no particular reason to think that he would have been a proto-Nicene Christian.

There's a fresh thread here at JREF about Hamlet. Did the author intend a "supernatural" reading (the ghost is Prince Hamlet's father, restless until he is avenged) or a "psychological" reading (Prince Hamlet has the hots for his mother, and the "ghost" is his fantasy, "corroborated" by the superstitious guards and his ever-agreeable best friend for life)?

You can't tell from the text. Shakespeare doesn't appear in the play to tell us what he intended. It has been played successfully either way, including both ways at once, from the same playscript. One thing's for sure - Bill intended you show up at a performance, preferably as a paying guest. Your money's just as good if you believe in ghosts or believe in Oedipal madness.

All we know about "Mark" is that he was a writer. We may infer his intention to be read. The rest is retrojection. We can accept that a pious Jewish Jesus would puke if he saw the living religion that venerates him as God. Why is it such a stretch to consider that "Mark" would laugh to think that anybody would imagine that he believed that in life Jesus was anything except a fellow wordsmith who could enchant an audience with words and showmanship?

Such a belief would place no constraint on what Jesus could do later on, if and when God confirmed his Christhood and raised him up. The religions we know require nothing more from the man before that.
 
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The "supernatural" events in Mark through 16:8 have sufficient natural explanations, with black letter evidence for being natural occurences in the text.

The Marcan women do not find an empty tomb. They find the tomb unexpectedly disturbed (the entryway is open), with an unidentified living man inside. He explains his presence with a wagon load, and tells them to get lost. They get lost. The End. There is neither manuscript witness nor any compelling "literary" reason to think that there ever was more than that to the original Gospel.

Your statement is a fallacy. Why can't you even repeat what is found in the short version of gMark?

The unidentified character did not tell the visitors to the burial site to get lost.

They were told that Jesus was resurrected and that they should go and tell the disciples that he was raised from the dead and that they should meet him in Galilee as Jesus himself told them before.


Mark 16-----5 Entering the tomb, they saw a young man sitting at the right, wearing a white robe ; and they were amazed. 6 And he said to them, "Do not be amazed ; you are looking for Jesus the Nazarene, who has been crucified. He has risen ; He is not here ; behold, here is the place where they laid Him. 7 "But go, tell His disciples and Peter, 'He is going ahead of you to Galilee ; there you will see Him, just as He told you.'


eight bits said:
(You find that abrupt? No problem, Paul, already in circulation, picked up the story from there. This is Butch and Sundance, The Early Years; if you want a shootout in Bolivia, that's a different movie.)

Your statement is not logical and without a shred of evidence. You are merely making stuff up.

The character called Saul/Paul could not have produced his Epistles before the stories of Jesus were known and circulated in the Roman Empire.

There is no corroborative non-apologetic evidence anywhere for any Jewish Pharisee who preached that a dead and resurrected man of the seed of David was equal to God, the Savior of all mankind and that even the Roman Emperors should bow to the name of the dead and resurrected Jesus.

In the NT itself, there is NO corroborative statement that any Pauline letters were composed before c 62 CE when Festus was procurator of Judea.
 
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... The character called Saul/Paul could not have produced his Epistles before the stories of Jesus were known and circulated in the Roman Empire.
Circulated to small numbers of followers in a few cities, mostly in the East. This could have been done very quickly indeed. There is no evidence they were known to the general public.
 
Thank you for summarizing. That makes quoting easier.

I consider point 2 irrelevant for our discussion. It concerns the reliability of modern exegesis. I am not exegete and you neither, I suppose. Let us focus on arguments if you like.
On point 1: You make a difference between historical narrative in Antiquity and religious or mythical narrative. I had done some remark also: I think the difference implies we must to be more sceptical with mythical accounts. But this does not imply that we have to reject a priori all mythical narrative as irrelevant for the historical studies. Some interesting remarks about archaic societies have been extracted from mythical poems. Yes, there is a difference between general features of a society and particular events. Evidence about particular events, both in historical and mythical accounts, is more unsecure. In general, we must weigh the points to favour and counter. And yes, the mythical nature of a text is a counter point. I agree with you in that. The gospel stories about how Jesus confused the Pharisees or charmed the crowd are highly suspected to be hagiographic invention. The same objection is valid for passages about fulfilment of the Old Testament and so on. But in some points of the narrative there is something that squeaks. These discordances reveal items that escape to the intentional construct and refer to data that are resistant to harmonization of theological outlook. These are the cases of the failure in prophecy about imminence of God Kingdom, observance of the Law or the death on the cross, for example. This latter case refers to a difficult subject for the early Christians that points to an event against which they have to fight and painstakingly deform. Obviously an indication is not evidence in strong sense, but also matters.

Yes. I'm interested in your opinion about this concrete point. Thanks.




OK, well I’m happy to address your final question. But firstly, point 2 was, and is, extremely and directly relevant here. So before answering anything else, you really must try to understand why that point-2 was so important. Here’s why (regarding Point 2) -

- it was claimed that there are other historical cases just like Jesus, where other figures in ancient history are believed by historians to be real, even though there is little or no evidence for their existence. And therefore it is claimed we should accept Jesus in the same way.

But any such other cases are emphatically NOT like that of Jesus. And such comparison is completely BOGUS.

To again spell out why that is -

- firstly, if you are talking about non-religious figures such as ancient philosophers, or ancient rulers, then the academics who have written about and researched those individuals, generally are genuine “Historians” working in mainstream university secular history departments.

Whereas in contrast, the people being repeatedly described here as “historians” who write about Jesus, are in fact not “historians” of that same academic sort at all. They are actually bible-studies scholars. And that has been demonstrated over-&-over again in these threads, where for example every time that any so called “historian” has been named here, such as Bart Ehrman, Dominic Crossan, John Huddleston, Elaine Pagels, Bruce Metzger, EP Sanders, about 150 participants in a Jesus historicity conference-project that one poster here raised along with about 20 named critics of that conference project inc. none other than William Lane-Craig (!), every single time those people have been named, I have taken the trouble to check their academic qualifications, their background in religious beliefs, and their actual teaching posts in various institutions, and for every single one of them their qualifications are almost entirely in religious studies and never in mainstream non-religious history, their backgrounds are almost always steeped in fundamentalist religious beliefs, and they are invariably teaching from specifically religious departments and not from any mainstream secular university history departments. So those named individuals are most definitely NOT “Historians” … they are a mixture of bible studies scholars, theologians, and Christian theist writers in general.

Second point - although it may be true that genuine non-religious historians have identified some figures in ancient history as being supported by little or no evidence, and yet they still think they were probably real, in those cases it really does not matter if the named individual, say philosopher-X, was actually real or not, because such people are NOT famous or vitally important for their reality, instead they are famous/important for some non-supernatural theories of philosophy associated with their name. So whether this person X was actually real, and whether he was actually the person who first produced that particular philosophical theory, does not really matter … what matters in that case is that certainly some philosopher like Mr X did once produce that particular theory around that approximate time in antiquity. So what is vital in such cases is the philosophical theory or discovery (eg Pythagoras Theorem or Archimedes Principle), not whether the person of that name really existed and really was the one entirely responsible for the theory or discovery.

Also on that same point of a philosopher-X who may be barely supported by any real evidence - a crucial factor is that nobody outside a tiny group of academics who specialise in the history of that particular philosopher, is interested at all in whether that person X really did or did not exist. His existence is virtually completely irrelevant to anyone alive today. What is said to be relevant about X, is only that today we are still interested in a philosophical theory or discovery associated with that persons name. But nobody is going waste any time arguing much over whether X actually existed, because it’s totally irrelevant!

The Jesus case is the entire and total opposite of philosopher X. Jesus is like philosopher X only in so far as having virtually no actual evidence of his existence. But completely unlike X, Jesus is NOT known for some entirely non-supernatural theory. Jesus is known ONLY as a miraculous supernatural messiah of Yahweh, who was described 2000 years ago ONLY by religious preaching in the bible (and described nowhere else at all), and who’s very existence has since become the entire basis of what is now a worldwide Christian church influencing all manner of government laws all across the world.

That is why we DO ask for proper convincing evidence of Jesus, whereas we don’t care whether philosopher X is known from any evidence or not.

And just to add to that - the other point about any other figure X, is that they are NOT known for any claimed miracles they are supposed ever have done, and NOT known for any supposed supernatural deeds. They are known entirely and completely for the perfectly normal non-supernatural things associated with their name. Whether that is a philosophical theory such as stoicism or sarcasm, or where is a mathematical relation such a Pythagoras Theorem or Archimedes Principle etc. or whether indeed it’s the ruling actions of people like Roman Emperors known for sending their troops into all sorts of battles, for which we have museums all over the world stacked full of the irrefutable evidence of those military campaigns.

That is utterly and completely the very opposite of Jesus! Jesus is NOT known for any such normal non-supernatural deeds at all. Jesus is known ONLY for the supernatural and entirely fictional deeds claimed in the religious preaching which was grouped together to form the NT bible.

So when you try to compare Jesus to any poorly evidenced figure X in history, that comparison is wholly and completely BOGUS. There is no genuine comparison at all. And in fact as I emphasised before, that very act of trying to claim any such comparison is a well known and very common tactic employed by Christian apologists in virtually every dispute about the existence of Jesus, and where it should be obvious to any educated honestly objective person here that those apologists are trying a piece of pure unadulterated deceit when attempting to fool people with that dishonest argument.

Now, I am happy to answer the other question. But we really do have to get the above crystal clear first - there is absolutely no comparison at all between any other poorly evidenced figure X and the case of Jesus.

And if you disagree with that, then you need produce any other such hypothetic person X, who like Jesus is believed to be real, on the basis that they are known only as supernatural figures with not a shred of any supporting evidence, and known only from the anonymous writing of uneducated religious fanatics none of whom ever knew this person at all … who else in all history is like that? … and which other such person is even remotely as important and therefore as requiring of serious investigation as Jesus has become in the basis of worldwide Christianity and it's power & influence across governments and world affairs everywhere today? Who are these other poorly evidenced persons X who are even remotely anything like that?
 
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The reason why Biblical Studies and ancient history occupy different university departments is largely historical: they were originally two different disciplines. Ancient history hasn't had to pick up the Bible so much because there are already people who specialize in it. It's just division of labour.

Those who study ancient Greek and Roman texts in their historical context are called classicists, yet many of them write excellent history too and nobody derides them for it. Ancient historians look more at cultures, economic and social factors, and so on, but also have to look at texts. And Biblical scholars are more like classicists in that they focus on texts (the Bible and associated literature) but also need to know a lot about the historical context, which means they use the methodology of ancient history.

There is lots of utter rubbish talked about the Bible, mainly (though not exclusively) from Christian sources. In the 'academic' world these would be the tiny sectarian 'universities' in the US, or Bible Colleges. However, these are not the 'academics' we are talking about when we mention Biblical scholars, such as those you list. Mainstream Biblical scholars who populate the halls of proper and ancient universities, including Oxbridge and the Ivy League, use methodology which is the same as that of the classicists and ancient historians. Their focus is a different text but their methods are the same. And, to repeat it yet again, many of them aren't Christians at all. There are lots of Jews in Biblical studies, and in my view some of the most exciting work on the NT and early Christianity is coming from young Jewish scholars today (Mark Nanos, Daniel Boyarin, to mention two). Others, like Bart Ehrenreich, are atheist or agnostic. And those who are Christian tend to be of liberal mind. I'm a Christian, but I'm not offended by mythicism on the grounds of my faith (if it was so weak as to fail at challenge I'd hardly hang out on these boards), but on the grounds of my training as a historian. And yes, I did train in another historical discipline before switching to Biblical studies.

One challenge: it's easy to find contact details for academic ancient historians and classicists. Just pick a top world university and go to the website for that department. Then email a handful and ask them whether they think the HJ existed. I absolutely guarantee that you will find that they have no time at all for mythicism.
 
dejudge

Why can't you even repeat what is found in the short version of gMark?
I'm not into repeating the same things over and over.

The unidentified character did not tell the visitors to the burial site to get lost.
In American English, what the man told the women to do was to get lost. It means to absent onself without delay.

We seem to be in agreement that the scene depicts a man speaking vague nonsense about why the body isn't in the tomb, while deftly avoiding the question of why he is. You can read whatever you like into what the man says, but Mark doesn't interpret it for you.

Your statement is not logical and without a shred of evidence. You are merely making stuff up.
Perhaps it's contagious.
 
The reason why Biblical Studies and ancient history occupy different university departments is largely historical: they were originally two different disciplines. Ancient history hasn't had to pick up the Bible so much because there are already people who specialize in it. It's just division of labour.

Those who study ancient Greek and Roman texts in their historical context are called classicists, yet many of them write excellent history too and nobody derides them for it. Ancient historians look more at cultures, economic and social factors, and so on, but also have to look at texts. And Biblical scholars are more like classicists in that they focus on texts (the Bible and associated literature) but also need to know a lot about the historical context, which means they use the methodology of ancient history.

There is lots of utter rubbish talked about the Bible, mainly (though not exclusively) from Christian sources. In the 'academic' world these would be the tiny sectarian 'universities' in the US, or Bible Colleges. However, these are not the 'academics' we are talking about when we mention Biblical scholars, such as those you list. Mainstream Biblical scholars who populate the halls of proper and ancient universities, including Oxbridge and the Ivy League, use methodology which is the same as that of the classicists and ancient historians. Their focus is a different text but their methods are the same. And, to repeat it yet again, many of them aren't Christians at all. There are lots of Jews in Biblical studies, and in my view some of the most exciting work on the NT and early Christianity is coming from young Jewish scholars today (Mark Nanos, Daniel Boyarin, to mention two). Others, like Bart Ehrenreich, are atheist or agnostic. And those who are Christian tend to be of liberal mind. I'm a Christian, but I'm not offended by mythicism on the grounds of my faith (if it was so weak as to fail at challenge I'd hardly hang out on these boards), but on the grounds of my training as a historian. And yes, I did train in another historical discipline before switching to Biblical studies.

One challenge: it's easy to find contact details for academic ancient historians and classicists. Just pick a top world university and go to the website for that department. Then email a handful and ask them whether they think the HJ existed. I absolutely guarantee that you will find that they have no time at all for mythicism.




What proportion of these so-called academic expert scholars, have all or almost all their qualifications in biblical studies of various sorts vs. how many are qualified only in genuine secular history? Do you know?

Because so far in these HJ threads, every single one that has been named, has turned out to be a bible-studies academic, and not a secular mainstream historian who just happens at some stage to have researched and written about Christianity and the NT bible.

If you ask most people whether or not they think Jesus existed, even most atheists, they will instantly agree that he surely must have existed, because they are unaware of how poor the actual evidence is. Myself, until I started to read what various sceptics had pointed out on the old RDF forum 6 years ago, I had always assumed that Jesus was known to be real as matter of undisputed certainty. It had never occurred to me that he might have been fictional, because in all Christian countries people grow up with the church presenting Jesus as certain fact with never any doubt or discussion at all.

I expect most secular historians, and almost all other univ academics (as I indeed I was until 12 years ago), simply take it for granted that Jesus obviously existed. Outside of forums like this, and outside of the relatively few people who read serious sceptic books by authors like G.A. Wells, Alvar Ellegard, Randel Helms, very few people (whether religious or not) are aware that there is any debate at all about the existence of Jesus ... they assume that the evidence of his existence must be overwhelming, because that is the impression that the Christian church always gives in any Christian country ... whereas in fact, as everyone can see from these HJ threads (whatever else you believe about the existence of Jesus), the actual evidence of his existence is virtually zero ... in fact, absolutely no credible genuine evidence at all!

I have said before that in a subject like this, where in the USA alone there must be at a rough guess 10,000 or more academics teaching bible studies in various sorts of academic institutes, it would be statistically almost impossible not to find that some were indeed genuine historians with real qualifications in mainstream history. And if it comes to that, in the USA, as we know, a huge proportion of people classed as scientists still claim to believe in a literal creator God … and only when you get to the very top echelons of hard-core physics, chemistry, maths and biology in the USA, do you suddenly find that percentage dropping to about 93% of top US scientists in the National Academy of Sciences who do NOT believe in a literal God. If you took that same poll in a less religious nation like the UK, then I expect you would find even more than 93% of the top scientists saying they did not believe in a literal intelligent god/creator.

So you have to contend with that particular unfortunate fact, that in the USA especially, religious belief is absolutely ingrained even in otherwise well educated academics, and in fact even amongst many US scientists. So it’s not surprising that in strongly Christian religious countries (the USA in particular, but also historically Roman Catholic nations in Europe, such as Italy), many academics do automatically assume that there must surely be vast evidence of Jesus … because, like I was, they are pre-disposed to believe that by the fact that the national Christian Church presents that view without ever any dissenting voices being heard at all.

But what has been repeatedly and overwhelmingly shown in these threads, is that all the most well known authors named here as experts “proving” that the expert evidential analysis shows Jesus did in the words of Bart Ehrman “certainly exist”, all of those most prominent “HISTORIANS”, have turned out NOT to be historians at all, and have ALL turned out to be most definitely bible-studies scholars teaching in religious departments, and in almost every case with a personal background of one-time very devout religious faith. That is a fact. And it’s been shown in this thread beyond all dispute for each of those well known “historians” named here as examples of “expert academics”.

The bottom line fact of this matter, is that there is simply no good evidence of Jesus. And unlike other cases in ancient history, where the individuals are no relevance to anyone at all today, Jesus is incredibly important as the entire foundational basis of the worldwide Christian church and all it’s enormous influence. And figure as important as that most certainly does require pretty good solid evidence at least to show that he even existed at all (if not showing that any claim about him was ever true as far as what he was ever said to have done).
 
One challenge: it's easy to find contact details for academic ancient historians and classicists. Just pick a top world university and go to the website for that department. Then email a handful and ask them whether they think the HJ existed. I absolutely guarantee that you will find that they have no time at all for mythicism.

This is the sort of rhetorical propaganda that is being spread on these forums and threads hoping that people would believe the question of an HJ is settled.

There is no evidence for an HJ of Nazareth so claiming people have no time for mythicism is completely irrelevant.

We know why people have no time to present evidence for HJ of Nazareth. There never was a time when they had evidence.
 
This is the sort of rhetorical propaganda that is being spread on these forums and threads hoping that people would believe the question of an HJ is settled.
According to your arguments, it is settled. In your favour, of course.

There is no evidence for an HJ of Nazareth so claiming people have no time for mythicism is completely irrelevant.
OTOH, nor have you demonstrated that there was never a crazed jewish preacher who others later mythologised.

We know why people have no time to present evidence for HJ of Nazareth. There never was a time when they had evidence.
Nor have you been able to present and evidence against a crackpot, itinerant jewish preacher whose life was hijacked into Christian mythology, yet we know plenty of those existed at the time.
 
The reason why Biblical Studies and ancient history occupy different university departments is largely historical: they were originally two different disciplines. Ancient history hasn't had to pick up the Bible so much because there are already people who specialize in it. It's just division of labour.

Those who study ancient Greek and Roman texts in their historical context are called classicists, yet many of them write excellent history too and nobody derides them for it. Ancient historians look more at cultures, economic and social factors, and so on, but also have to look at texts. And Biblical scholars are more like classicists in that they focus on texts (the Bible and associated literature) but also need to know a lot about the historical context, which means they use the methodology of ancient history.

There is lots of utter rubbish talked about the Bible, mainly (though not exclusively) from Christian sources. In the 'academic' world these would be the tiny sectarian 'universities' in the US, or Bible Colleges. However, these are not the 'academics' we are talking about when we mention Biblical scholars, such as those you list. Mainstream Biblical scholars who populate the halls of proper and ancient universities, including Oxbridge and the Ivy League, use methodology which is the same as that of the classicists and ancient historians. Their focus is a different text but their methods are the same. And, to repeat it yet again, many of them aren't Christians at all. There are lots of Jews in Biblical studies, and in my view some of the most exciting work on the NT and early Christianity is coming from young Jewish scholars today (Mark Nanos, Daniel Boyarin, to mention two). Others, like Bart Ehrenreich, are atheist or agnostic. And those who are Christian tend to be of liberal mind. I'm a Christian, but I'm not offended by mythicism on the grounds of my faith (if it was so weak as to fail at challenge I'd hardly hang out on these boards), but on the grounds of my training as a historian. And yes, I did train in another historical discipline before switching to Biblical studies.

One challenge: it's easy to find contact details for academic ancient historians and classicists. Just pick a top world university and go to the website for that department. Then email a handful and ask them whether they think the HJ existed. I absolutely guarantee that you will find that they have no time at all for mythicism.

Your claim, your burden.
 
What proportion of physicists have qualifications in biology? You're poisoning the well by asserting that there is a 'mainstream, secular' version of history and Biblical Studies lies outside this. Biblical Studies *is* mainstream, secular history in that it uses precisely the same models as other ancient historical disciplines such as classics and seeks after the truth, just as they do. It isn't a particular, religiously-biased case.

Why don't ancient historians publish translations and critical analyses of Plato's writings? It must be because they don't think Plato existed, or think the Republic is a load of rubbish that isn't worth bothering with, right? No, it's because this isn't their field. They let the Classicists do that. Then if they are working on Plato from a historian's (rather than a textual scholar or Classicist) perspective they might well find the Classicist's work comes in rather handy. Similarly, ancient historians don't publish translations or analyses of Biblical texts because it isn't their field. They leave that up to the Biblical scholars. Then, if they happen to be working on, say, the history of the Ancient Near East in the 7th century BCE they might well find Biblical scholars' analyses of the exilic literature to be helpful. Similarly, Biblical scholars rely on ancient historians for knowledge of, for instance, economic or social factors of the period when the Biblical books were written. Specialists in, say, first-century Palestine might sit in an ancient history or a Biblical Studies department, depending on their emphasis and how that university precisely organises itself. There is certainly interchange between the two. And whichever department they find themselves in, the Bible will be an important source text for them.

Robin Lane Fox is one example: a bona fide ancient historian, Fellow of New College Oxford, he not only uses the Bible as an important source text in his work but was so interested in it he even wrote a book about it (Unauthorized Version: Truth and Fiction in the Bible) in which he tries to get at the history behind the Biblical stories. In it he demolishes the historical case for, for instance, the census at Jesus's birth, which comes as absolutely no surprise to anyone who's been paying attention in Biblical Studies for the past two centuries or so. But he certainly thinks there was a historical Jesus and discusses him at great length. Lane Fox is an atheist.
 
Your claim, your burden.

I respectfully disagree. I'm not the one claiming that Biblical scholars are all biased Christian apologists and 'real, secular mainstream' ancient historians would agree that the HJ is fiction.
 
I have read all of tsig's contributions to the debate. It took about two minutes.

You seem to be pretty quick on the draw there too, sunshine.

I haven't done anything to provoke you.

Unlike tsig who constantly lies and cherry picks in these threads, apparently as deliberate provocation.

It can't be honest debate at this point.

Sorry.
I'm quick on the draw? What do you mean by that?

It's patently clear that dejudge has stated many times that he believes that Jesus is an invented character -- a myth.

tsig has never once stated that position. tsig has said numerous times that we don't know one way or another. I'm now going to make a guess and say that tsig usually asks the HJers for evidence because the null hypothesis is that "Jesus did not exist" and which it simply takes evidence to overcome the null. According to many people, there really isn't enough evidence to say "Jesus existed".

It's absurd for you to claim that they are making the same or similar statements.

Sorry.

As far as honest debate goes, there's plenty of dishonesty on "your side" as well. Maybe you'd get farther by policing "your side" rather than "the other side" and the debate can continue more politely.

Sorry.
 
You're being sarcastic, I take it.
No, I'm not. What is in my posting history that would make you think this? It's an honest question and I'd like an honest response.

My point in asking the question is that there seems to be evidence of these other Jesuses existing outside of the bible while there is none about Jesus.

Kapyong laid out a good while back now about a bunch of preacher nobodies that were written by historians and other authors of the time which implies that it is certainly conceivable that Jesus would have been written about in a similar fashion as well.

I certainly can be wrong about this and have no problem admitting such.
 
OTOH, nor have you demonstrated that there was never a crazed jewish preacher who others later mythologised.

You have not demonstrated that Jesus was not a figure of mythology and you have no evidence for an HJ of Nazareth.

Some of the evidence that Jesus was a figure of mythology has been pointed out to you multiple times.

I will show you again.

1. Matthew 1:18 NAS ------Now the birth of Jesus Christ was as follows : when His mother Mary had been betrothed to Joseph, before they came together she was found to be with child by the Holy Spirit.

2. Mark 6:48 NAS ----- at about the fourth watch of the night He came to them, walking on the sea ; and He intended to pass by them.

3. Mark 9:2 NAS -----Six days later, Jesus took with Him Peter and James and John, and brought them up on a high mountain by themselves . And He was transfigured before them.

4. Mark 16:6 NAS ----"Do not be amazed ; you are looking for Jesus the Nazarene, who has been crucified. He has risen ; He is not here ; behold, here is the place where they laid Him

5. Acts 1:9 NAS ----And after He had said these things, He was lifted up while they were looking on, and a cloud received Him out of their sight.

6. 1 Corinthians 15:45 NAS ----So also it is written, "The first MAN, Adam, BECAME A LIVING SOUL." The last Adam became a life-giving spirit.
 
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I respectfully disagree. I'm not the one claiming that Biblical scholars are all biased Christian apologists and 'real, secular mainstream' ancient historians would agree that the HJ is fiction.

The original claim was that there was a Consensus of opinion among Historians that an HJ existed. When names were produced they proved to be Christian theologians not Historians so the original claim is still not proved. Then you took up the claim.



(caps in the original)
 
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