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Nailed: Ten Christian Myths that show Jesus never existed

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You are dishonestly attempting to hide your errors. Eiseman points out the historical Jesus hypothesis is not certain, yet he is still of the opinion that such a person most likely existed.

You are dishonestly attempting to hide what Robert Eiseman said.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayU8uKFtxgU

He stated that the question of an historical Jesus is very controversial and has not been solved by any-one involved in it.

You do not understand the difference between an opinion and evidence.

An opinion is not evidence of anything.
 
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And you don't understand "very controversial"... fixating on your final opinion as THE opinion.
It ain't.
 
You are dishonestly attempting to hide what Robert Eiseman said.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ayU8uKFtxgU

He stated that the question of an historical Jesus is very controversial and has not been solved by any-one involved in it.

You do not understand the difference between an opinion and evidence.

An opinion is not evidence of anything.

Dejudge, yes or no, does Eisenman think that Jesus was a myth cooked up during the second century?

Now back to the other issue: You claimed that Christianity was invented during the 2nd Century, so I asked you who the Christians being tormented by Nero were. You ignored the question several times until you posted a link to a Wikipedia article. You've omitted quite a bit of other text from that article that clearly indicates that not only is the reference generally considered authentic by scholars, but quite a bit of information making it quite clear that early on, Christians were known interchangeably as both "Chrestians" and "Christians". You even ignored the part about how the Codex Sinaiticus from the 4th Century has the word spelled "Chrestianoi".

You've claimed that you are doing history. Yet you have either just coincidentally stumbled upon a bit of text in the middle of a page that you only read enough of to think it would support your argument and never bothering to read the rest of the article, which indicates very sloppy research standards, or you deliberately ignored and omitted the parts that show your argument to be wrong, which indicates that you are doing the opposite of history, because historians follow all the available evidence where it leads, whereas you are starting with a desired conclusion and attempting to force the evidence to lead to it.
 
You claimed that Christianity was invented during the 2nd Century, so I asked you who the Christians being tormented by Nero were. You ignored the question several times until you posted a link to a Wikipedia article.


You've omitted quite a bit of other text from that article that clearly indicates that not only is the reference generally considered authentic by scholars, but quite a bit of information making it quite clear that early on, Christians were known interchangeably as both "Chrestians" and "Christians". You even ignored the part about how the Codex Sinaiticus from the 4th Century has the word spelled "Chrestianoi".

You've claimed that you are doing history. Yet you have either just coincidentally stumbled upon a bit of text in the middle of a page that you only read enough of to think it would support your argument and never bothering to read the rest of the article, which indicates very sloppy research standards, or you deliberately ignored and omitted the parts that show your argument to be wrong, which indicates that you are doing the opposite of history, because historians follow all the available evidence where it leads, whereas you are starting with a desired conclusion and attempting to force the evidence to lead to it.

You have no evidence from antiquity for your obscure man and is just making baseless accusations.

It is clear that you are engaged in futility.

You are wasting time.

You ignore the evidence for myth Jesus in the hundreds of NT manuscripts, Codices and apologetic writings yet conviniently accuse others of ignoring some flawed baseless opinion.

Your very claim that Jesus was a man means that you ignored the birth narratives in the NT, the claim that Jesus was God Creator, that he walked on the sea, transfigured, resurrected, commissioned the disciples after the resurrection and ascended in a cloud.
 
As I have stated before, I simply don't accept that there is such a thing as "the Bible" that can uniformly be characterised in the terms you use; and the value to scholars of this compilation of ancient writings is not in any way dependent on their acceptance of its being "reliable or credible". I have argued this point in detail; and I note that you have no response but vehement assertion of your own (unsound, it seems to me) notions on the topic.

You are right. IanS and Dejudge have a basic problem: they don't distinguish between using a text as a source of historical analysis and using a text as a reliable historical record. It is a common misconception in this debate. Obviously the Gospels are not reliable historical chronicles but are a source of information for historical analysis.
 
I started looking up more on that persecution of Christians by Nero and found some oddities along the way.
Nero's Great Fire and his accusation of the Christians and subsequent savage persecution seem indisputable, but there indications it wasn't quite as Tacitus' reportedly claimed.

"Tacitus was a fierce critic of Nero, and modern scholars have questioned the reliability of his account of this notorious Roman Emperor; but the following passage from his Annals is famous because it is one of the first mentions in a non-Christian source of Christianity. In 64 CE Rome underwent a catastrophic fire, which some believed had been set at the orders of the emperor himself. Tacitus claims that Nero tried to shift the blame to the unpopular Christians, though other sources indicate that their persecution may have been unconnected to the fire. It is not clear exactly why many Romans so detested the new believers, though Christians were often confused with Jews, who were accused of being rebellious (with some reason, since the Jews of Judaea more than once created insurrections against the Roman provincial government) and lazy (since they rested on the Sabbath). Scandalous rumors about obscene Christian rituals circulated at an early date, and we know that they were accused of disloyalty because of their refusal to perform the token ritual acknowledging the divine status of the Emperor, viewed by most citizens as little different from a modern flag salute. If Tacitus shows sympathy for them, it is because he detests Nero more. Whatever their exact cause this early persecution and later ones made a profound impact on the Christian Church, and bequeathed a legacy of colorful tales of martyred saints who were celebrated in story, song, and art for the next two millenia, long after the Church had triumphed over its opponents."

http://public.wsu.edu/~brians/world_civ/worldcivreader/world_civ_reader_1/tacitus.html

"The fire under Nero could not have been as extensive as Tacitus’ passage, and popular imagination, would have it. Historical and archaeological evidence somewhat diminishes the importance of Nero’s fire. His fire destroyed, at most, a tenth of the city. The important temples like that of Juppiter Captiolinus and Apollo, along with the major public buildings, private mansions and tenements survived. As did the Circus Maximus in the district where the fire started, which was in use nine months later. It had slight damage to the wooden upper story and stairs, but no major damage to the stonework. Nero’s recently completed palace was the major victim of the fire. He lost the most.



The Capitol and surrounding buildings survived to be burnt in the battle between the forces of Vitellius and Vespasian in December of 69 CE. The more serious fire, which burnt the Campus Martius and many major public buildings in the centre of Rome, happened in 80 CE, when Titus was emperor. The Christians were not blamed for this one.



According to Tacitus, alone, Nero blamed the Christians for the fire in Rome. Annals, XV. This passage is not referred to in any other pagan, nor Christian writings until 400 CE. The Fantastic details of the sufferings of the Christians - dressed in animal hides and torn apart by dogs, crucified, and used as human torches - fits the pornographic masochistic obsession of the early Church. The sordid details of flesh torn and blood copiously shed is repulsive to the modern mind. For some reason the early Church wallowed in graphic descriptions of virgins violated and gored to death by bulls, old men crucified suffering horrific tortures and not to mention the over-fed lions of the Colosseum. By the way, the Romans did not feed their lions exclusively on Christians, any old mal-content would do; and more often did."

http://carrington-arts.com/cliff/Nero.htm

"Josephus, [41-100] He was in Rome, for over a year, from the first part of 64, [Life, 3]. The fire happened in July, but, he fails to mention it at all. Josephus’ attitude to Nero was such that he would have mentioned it in the passage in the Jewish War XX. vii. 2-3. Instead he takes other biased historians to task, “some of whom have departed from the truth of the facts, out of favour,... while others, out of hatred to him, have so impudently raved against him with their lies.”



Surely, out of some kind of consideration for his home city, Jerusalem, which was burnt to the ground, he would have made a comparison with the Capital of the world being burnt?"

http://carrington-arts.com/cliff/Nero.htm


"Tacitus, [55-117] Annals XV. 37 - 41 Nero’s fire started 19 July 64 CE. This is the famous passage which mentions Nero’s fire and his persecution of the Christians to disguise his own guilt. It is only in this passage that the fire and the Christians were connected. Other pagan writers mention the fire, in passing, but not the Christian persecution. Christians writers mention the Persecution, but, do not connect them with the fire.



Tacitus has an account of terrible damage: “Of Rome’s fourteen districts only four remained intact. Three were leveled to the ground. The other seven were reduced to a few scorched and mangled ruins.” However, the only other account we have, an interpolation in a forged Christian letter from Seneca to Paul: “A hundred and thirty-two houses and four blocks have been burnt in six days; the seventh brought a pause.” This account turns out to mean about a tenth of the city was burnt. Rome contained about 1,700 private houses and 47,000 apartment blocks.



Tacitus is the only writer to connect the fire with the Christians. Nero was blamed, both at the time and in all other subsequent writers on the fire, and supposedly blamed the Christians for arson. He then condemned “large numbers” of them to be crucified and torched during the night. This must have been a big affair and there must have been “large numbers” of so-called Christians.



In his earlier ‘Histories’ Tacitus has a different attitude. The person in charge of persecutions in Rome was the City Prefect, Police Chief of Rome. Under Nero this was a man described by Tacitus in his ‘Histories’ bk. 3, #65, #75 - “His gentle character made him hate bloodshed and killing... His honesty and fair-mindedness are beyond question.” Flavius Sabinus, brother of Vespasian, was City Prefect of Rome from 56-69, covering the Neronian period of the disputed persecutions! Would a man of this character do the things described in the ‘Annals’ and Sulpicius?"

ibid.

I've spoilered the longer quotations for space.
Apparently there's evidence Tacitus greatly exaggerated the extent of that Great Fire and reason to question the truth of the horrific persecution of the hapless chrestians, who may well have been Jews, not Christians, after all.

Also it would appear there's no mention of Nero's persecution by early church writers, which is curious, isn't it?

Admittedly, Cliff Carrington is a fringe writer.
But as a question for the better informed, just how far out is he on this?
 
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You are right. IanS and Dejudge have a basic problem: they don't distinguish between using a text as a source of historical analysis and using a text as a reliable historical record. It is a common misconception in this debate. Obviously the Gospels are not reliable historical chronicles but are a source of information for historical analysis.

Nicely put. It's a conflation which is actually a denial of historical method, and the substitution of it by something else, which is super-skeptical. In fact, historians can use anything as a useful source - recipes, love-letters, diaries, poetry, novels - without claiming that they are historical records. See my ancient reference to Jane Austen's mention of baseball in one of her novels. This has interested historians of sport, although more research has to be done. But - aaagh - it's in a novel, which is made up!
 
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Nicely put. It's a conflation which is actually a denial of historical method, and the substitution of it by something else, which is super-skeptical. In fact, historians can use anything as a useful source - recipes, love-letters, diaries, poetry, novels - without claiming that they are historical records. See my ancient reference to Jane Austen's mention of baseball in one of her novels. This has interested historians of sport, although more research has to be done. But - aaagh - it's in a novel, which is made up!

Of course the hilited bit is quite inarguable, zugzwang.
However, such sources would be considered as useful within a context of archeological findings and/or material remains of the period.
I think the difficulty may be the methodology used for sifting what may be considered historical data from the NT seems to be used without any context whatsoever, correct me if I'm wrong .
 
Of course the hilited bit is quite inarguable, zugzwang.
However, such sources would be considered as useful within a context of archeological findings and/or material remains of the period.
I think the difficulty may be the methodology used for sifting what may be considered historical data from the NT seems to be used without any context whatsoever, correct me if I'm wrong .

Yes, ideally historians need archaeology, coins, inscriptions, and so on. But ancient historians face a lack of those; so what are they to do? I suppose they could throw their hands up, and conclude that historical research is therefore impossible, except for the main men, e.g. Caesar.

Your point about 'without any context' is a case in point, since scholars of Judaism seem to be arguing that there is a context of first century charismatic and apocalyptic preaching and 'wonder-working'. Of course, this doesn't 'prove' HJ, and super-skeptics might argue that Jesus is not a Jew.
 
There is already plenty of solid evidence that proves evangelical churches wrong about many of their central beliefs, and they are thriving.

Yes, and if you debate with them, you will find examples of dishonesty all over the place in their arguments. You can point out the dishonesty until you are blue in the face, but they tend to carry on unperturbed. See for example their arguments about witnesses to the resurrection - complete hogwash in other contexts - but they stick to it like glue, and it seems to attract some people in fact.
 
Yes, ideally historians need archaeology, coins, inscriptions, and so on. But ancient historians face a lack of those; so what are they to do? I suppose they could throw their hands up, and conclude that historical research is therefore impossible, except for the main men, e.g. Caesar.

Your point about 'without any context' is a case in point, since scholars of Judaism seem to be arguing that there is a context of first century charismatic and apocalyptic preaching and 'wonder-working'. Of course, this doesn't 'prove' HJ, and super-skeptics might argue that Jesus is not a Jew.


Actually, ancient historians have a wealth of material evidence for the Roman period, which is what's under discussion, isn't it?

And where there's NO archeological or material evidence, ancient historians are* very careful to draw limits around their speculations about a particular period.

"Your point about 'without any context' is a case in point, since scholars of Judaism seem to be arguing that there is a context of first century charismatic and apocalyptic preaching and 'wonder-working'. Of course, this doesn't 'prove' HJ, and super-skeptics might argue that Jesus is not a Jew."

Roman society in general at this time provides a context of "first century charismatic and apocalyptic preaching and 'wonder-working'", as Richard Carrier points out in Kooks and Quacks of the Roman Empire: A Look into the World of the Gospels (1997). In fact we could even say all ages provide a context of "charismatic and apocalyptic preaching and 'wonder-working'" and not be far off the mark.

One thing that I find to be a red flag in treating the documents of the NT as of historical value is that whenever they're compared to facts, either geographical or historical, they're almost 100% wrong.
Obviously SOME details are accurate, but not enough to be very convincing of much to warrant using them as sources of historical value, IMO.





* or should be
 
pakeha

But surely one question in relation to the NT, from the point of view of HJ, is whether or not it (the NT, or parts of it) seems to give an accurate picture of Jewish sectarian and charismatic preaching and wonder-working. Scholars like Vermes seem to argue that it's a good fit. But as I said, the skeptical reply might be that Jesus is not really portrayed as a Jew at all, and is a mish-mash of various 'celestial' figures or traits. Or the skeptic might say, OK, there is some evidence of typical Jewish preaching and miracle-working - but this does not establish that Jesus historically existed; he might be a typological or archetypal figure.

That is not the only question of course, since we also have to explain how this Jewish figure is transformed into the more Hellenistic one of a god-man, who is the Logos. In other words, is there a plausible trajectory from a historic Jewish preacher to the purported Logos?
 
I started looking up more on that persecution of Christians by Nero and found some oddities along the way.
There doesn't seem to be any contemporary notice of Nero's repression of Christians on the occasion of the Great Fire. This suggests that the repression was more general, of scapegoats for the fire, and that if Christians were included they were few in number, their sect was still obscure - considered as a kind of Judaism - and they were not the only victims. Subsequent emperors at all events paid no attention to them for some time, until they became numerous and significant.

So it's most probable that Tacitus obtained his information from Christian informants who invented or exaggerated the role of their community in the Fire affair.
 
I do not know what you mean by 'hearsay'. In legal terms it means a second hand testimony. Ancient History is often based on analysis of second-hand texts which in many cases are anonymous, seudoepigraphics or of doubtful authorship. I insist: critical analysis. If you do not recognize that we have no more to discuss.




David, the entire problem here is that you were simply wrong to say that all of history would collapse if we ruled things out of consideration on the basis that all we had as “evidence” was anonymous hearsay with no other supporting evidence at all.

That is wrong. That would not rule out all of ancient history. It would not rule out events such as your example of Thermopylae.

And the reason is (as I already explained several times above), because contrary to what you were saying, it is in fact not the case that genuine academic university historians claim that such events really happened on the basis of anonymous hearsay evidence alone … far less do they claim such things on the basis of the sort of anonymous hearsay which we have for Jesus, where it is actually a chain of multiple anonymous hearsay sources known only from the writing of much later religiously devoted self-serving copyists, claiming constant untrue fiction on every page, and where those fictional beliefs are known to have been copied from what the authors thought was divine religious prophecy in their ancient religious books from centuries before!

No sane academic, in any field, could possibly claim that we should believe anything on that sort of “evidence”. And I’m quite sure they do not make any such claims about Thermopylae either.

So it’s quite untrue for anyone to say that sort of ancient history would all collapse.

The problem with the Jesus case, perhaps uniquely in all of ancient history (except of course for other similar religious beliefs), is that it’s practitioners, who are bible-studies scholars, mostly in the devoutly Christian USA, such as Bart Ehrman and all his colleagues (such as Dominic Crossan) of whom he says "almost every properly trained scholar on the planet agrees", do say that such evidence is good enough not merely to say they think Jesus existed, but as I have pointed out here numerous times, they say it is a matter of undisputed “certainty”.

And this is a case where the claimed “evidence” of Jesus comes entirely from the biblical writing (there is no independent external non-Christian writing which does not, as far as anyone can honestly tell, rely on what had already been written in gospels), and where the gospel writing is -

1. Entirely anonymous, from writers who never knew Jesus at all
2. Where those gospel writers were recounting stories from yet earlier anonymous people who also did not know Jesus,
3. Where the earlier anonymous people were said to have believed that even earlier people had been disciples of Jesus and knew what he had said and done.
4. But where none of those people ever confirmed a single thing that was said in any gospel
5. Where not one person ever wrote anything about Jesus during his lifetime
6. Where even for a century or more after Jesus was thought to have died (ie c.30AD) almost no historians even mentioned his existence at all
7. Where the few such as Tacitus and Josephus who did mention anything about Jesus, only mentioned him in passing in a couple of very brief sentences.
8. Where those authors such as Tacitus and Josephus were not even born at the time and could not possibly have ever known what Jesus did, except through even more hearsay from unnamed unknown sources.
9. Where even that quite hopeless anonymous hearsay supposedly mentioned by Tacitus and Josephus etc., is only known in copies written 1000 years later by Christian religious copyists themselves.
10. Where the only primary source ever known, i.e. the biblical writing, is so hopelessly unreliable and non-credible that it claimed completely untrue fiction about Jesus on virtually every page.
11. Where all of the biblical writers, inc. Paul, repeatedly stressed that they had obtained their Jesus beliefs by interpreting what they believed to have been prophecy written centuries before in the OT.
12. Where authors like Randel Helms have written in detail with entire books showing exactly where, how and why those gospel authors took their Jesus stories from specific passages in the books of the OT.
13. Where even that anonymous gospel hearsay, and the letters attributed to Paul, all reporting impossible supernatural fiction, and all very clearly obtaining their messiah beliefs from what they thought was the divine certainty of their OT, even that is not known from any of the original writers, but again only known from self-interested Christian religious copyists writing from about the 4th-6th century onwards (i.e. for relatively complete forms with substantially readable detail).
14. Where all of that Christian copying, whether it’s copies of Josephus and Tacitus etc., or copies of earlier gospels etc., is known even to the most devout bible-scholars and theologians, to have suffered from frequent “interpolations”, i.e. alterations, additions and deletions of what was originally written, wherever the later copyists and their masters wished to change things according to their changing beliefs.


Hearsay sources like that, i.e. 1 to 14 above, are not only totally inadmissible in the case of Jesus, as they would be in any legal case, but they are most definitely not used in other areas of ancient history such as Thermopylae, to conclude on that sort of anonymous hearsay devotional writing alone, that any event like Thermopylae was actually a real fact, or even probably a real fact … that sort of utterly useless fatally flawed “evidence” is not remotely good enough to conclude anything at all about any claimed historical events or figures.

And just to repeat, in case you have lost the drift of this - that is why we, in this thread, most certainly should be using the same sort of evidential considerations that have been universally established in law, and rejecting anonymous hearsay of that sort as reliable and/or credible in any measure at all. It needs something vastly better than that before you can even begin to describe it as “evidence” … and that means “evidence” of what is actually being claimed, not “evidence” of something else entirely (such as merely being evidence that people often wrote about quite absurd superstitious religious beliefs).
 
... And just to repeat, in case you have lost the drift of this - that is why we, in this thread, most certainly should be using the same sort of evidential considerations that have been universally established in law
No. The purpose of legal proceedings in which these evidential rules are appropriate is very different from the function of historical study or the analysis of texts. If historians were to be imprisoned, fined or executed for expounding theories later shown to be incorrect, these "evidential considerations" might be required, but they are not, so the considerations are not either.
 
Thanks for the reply, zugzwang.

pakeha

But surely one question in relation to the NT, from the point of view of HJ, is whether or not it (the NT, or parts of it) seems to give an accurate picture of Jewish sectarian and charismatic preaching and wonder-working. Scholars like Vermes seem to argue that it's a good fit. But as I said, the skeptical reply might be that Jesus is not really portrayed as a Jew at all, and is a mish-mash of various 'celestial' figures or traits. Or the skeptic might say, OK, there is some evidence of typical Jewish preaching and miracle-working - but this does not establish that Jesus historically existed; he might be a typological or archetypal figure.

Not just a skeptic, but anyone with a nodding familiarity with novellas from the 1s century, or even Jane Austin's immortal prose.
Remember the Prince Regent's comment when been shown around Lyme Regis?



That is not the only question of course, since we also have to explain how this Jewish figure is transformed into the more Hellenistic one of a god-man, who is the Logos. In other words, is there a plausible trajectory from a historic Jewish preacher to the purported Logos?

That's an intriguing question, though it seems to me an entirely different kettle of fish altogether, zugzwang.
For the moment, simply deciding what elements of the documents of the NT have historical value is still up in the air, IMO.
 
There doesn't seem to be any contemporary notice of Nero's repression of Christians on the occasion of the Great Fire. This suggests that the repression was more general, of scapegoats for the fire, and that if Christians were included they were few in number, their sect was still obscure - considered as a kind of Judaism - and they were not the only victims. Subsequent emperors at all events paid no attention to them for some time, until they became numerous and significant.

So it's most probable that Tacitus obtained his information from Christian informants who invented or exaggerated the role of their community in the Fire affair.

That's my conclusion as well, Craig B.
 
Thanks for the reply, zugzwang.



Not just a skeptic, but anyone with a nodding familiarity with novellas from the 1s century, or even Jane Austin's immortal prose.
Remember the Prince Regent's comment when been shown around Lyme Regis?





That's an intriguing question, though it seems to me an entirely different kettle of fish altogether, zugzwang.
For the moment, simply deciding what elements of the documents of the NT have historical value is still up in the air, IMO.

I'm sniffing at your 'historical value' since it might blur the useful distinction between a historical record, and a historical source. This was the conflation which I commented on first, since it elides the differences between something which is history, and something which is useful to history. Going back to 'Beowulf', it's obviously not history, since the hero kills monsters and dragons; but it might be useful as a source for historians, for example, with regard to how great mead-halls were constructed.
 
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