dejudge said:What are you saying? Where do you get your sayings from?
From the palm of your hands.
That's a new one! Fascinating.
The cremation of the HJ argument is a most fascinating experience.
dejudge said:What are you saying? Where do you get your sayings from?
From the palm of your hands.
That's a new one! Fascinating.
Please explain the basic logic of your argument. How is it that erroneous accounts written years later by people who were merely repeating and embellishing magical stories that they'd heard, prove that the subject of those stories could never have existed as a real, non-magical person?So what do you want me to do because of your failure to understand basic logic?
The fact that there was a religious movement based on accounts about the life of a Jewish rabbi. That these accounts, although filled with obvious myth, converge on a few common attributes that are not the least bit magical, nor even improbable. The fact that one of these early writers saw the need to reassure his readers that they should believe his interpretation of Jesus, even though it was contradicted by those who knew him. The fact that we have non-Christian references that appear to make an historical account of a relative or associate of Jesus.Where is the supporting evidence for the crucifixion of the dead obscurity?
The cremation of the HJ argument is a most fascinating experience.
I've already presented evidence. In fact, it was evidence that you tried to hide.If you had evidence from antiquity for your HJ hypothesis then you would stand a chance.
Come on, dejudge, tell us how the fact that the gospels were written anonymously and then attributed to certain writers generations later proves that no historical Jesus could have existed.You have nothing but fallacies and strawman arguments.
You keep saying what you imagine while we expose your lack of evidence from antiquity.
In the NT, Pilate was governor, Caiaphas was High Priest, Satan was the Devil, Gabriel was an Angel, Jesus was the Son of a Ghost that walked on the sea, transfigured, resurrected and ascended in a cloud.
What are you saying? Where do you get your sayings from?
From the palm of your hands.
I've already presented evidence. In fact, it was evidence that you tried to hide.
Foster Zygote said:Come on, dejudge, tell us how the fact that the gospels were written anonymously and then attributed to certain writers generations later proves that no historical Jesus could have existed.
Foster Zygote said:Scholars have been aware of this fact for a long time, yet they don't think that it eliminates the possibility of an historical Jesus. Are they just stupid compared to you?
Dejudge, can you not understand that the gospels and other accounts are not evidence that their portrayals of Jesus are true, but simply that people were telling stories about a preacher named Jesus, and that one very plausible reason for them to be telling stories about a preacher named Jesus is that there was a preacher named Jesus? Your error, made in complete ignorance of the historical method that you claim to be employing, is to think that the early Christian accounts have to be either 100% true, or 100% false. You think that for an historical Jesus to have existed, then everything written about him has to make logical sense, and that if it doesn't make logical sense, then it cannot be based on any real event. According to the arguments that you use, someone two millennia from now questioning whether Joseph Smith had ever existed would have to conclude that he was a myth because he was portrayed by Mormons as having spoken to God and an angel and translated golden plates using magic stones to write an historically impossible account of pre-Columbian America.Which evidence you presented? The Gospels?
In the Gospels, Jesus the Christ was well known in Galilee and Jerusalem, was born of a Ghost, the Son of God, the Logos, God Creator who walked on the sea, transfigured, resurrected, commissioned the disciples after death, and ascended to heaven in a cloud.
You presented the source for Myth Jesus--the Jesus of Faith.
We can come back to your errors later. Right now I'd like you to address my request: Tell us how the fact that the gospels were written anonymously and then attributed to certain writers generations later proves that no historical Jesus could have existed.You have no facts. You have no evidence that the Gospels were written before the 2nd century and then attributed to writers generations later.
No story of Jesus has been recovered and dated pre 70 CE.
You are incapable of proving anything historical about your dead obscure HJ whether or not the Gospels were written in the 1st or 2nd century.
So what? Why can't you walk away from this stupid argument? People can make up magical stories about people who actually lived. In order for you "argument" to be valid, then you must start with the premise that "People cannot make up magical stories about real people". I'm sure you can easily see how ludicrous that premise is.In the Gospels, Jesus was the Son of God and God Creator.
Tell us how you are going to prove than an historical Jesus is plausible when in the Gospels it was plausible that Jesus was the Son of God and God Creator who transfigured and resurrected after he walked on sea water.
Again, that's the same asinine argument based on the same preposterous premise. "People told myths about Jesus, therefor Jesus was a myth."Read Matthew 1.18--Jesus was born of a Ghost and a Virgin.
Read Mark 6.49--Jesus walked on the sea.
Read Mark 9.2--Jesus transfigured.
Read Mark 16.6--Jesus resurrected.
Read Luke 24. 51--the resurrected Jesus ascended.
Read John 1.1--Jesus was God Creator.
According to most scholars Mark was written between 65-70 CE, Matthew and Luke between 80-85, and John between 90-110.Tell us when the Gospels were written!!
First of all, it's Eisenman, with an 'n'. Second, you are just evading my question. You only know a tiny fragment of what New Testament scholars now, yet the great majority of them still think an historical Jesus was likely. Are they just stupid compared to you?Either you are attempting to mis-lead or you don't know that Scholars argue that Jesus was a figure of mythology.
Do you think that all Scholars are stupid enough to argue for an HJ when it is known the Gospels are historically unreliable, forgeries, not eyewitness accounts and filled with discrepancies?
Robert Eiseman, an historian, admits no-one has been able to solve the HJ question.
Richard Carrier and Earl Doherty argue that Jesus was most likely a figure of mythology.
Your un-evidence HJ argument has been debunked multiple times.
It is finished. The HJ argument has expired.
Where is the supporting evidence for the crucifixion of the dead obscurity?
The fact that there was a religious movement based on accounts about the life of a Jewish rabbi.
So the evidence to show Jesus existed, is that 1st century ignorant superstitious religious nut-cases believed it?
Not as silly as the MJ argument you present below. Thats really silly!Dear me. How much more silly can the HJ argument get.
So the evidence to show Jesus existed, is that 1st century ignorant superstitious religious nut-cases believed it?
That is supposed to be evidence of Jesus? The evidence of their religious belief is supposed to be evidence that the belief was true?
They also believed God was in skies. Is that evidence that God really was in the skies?
They believed they had often seen all manner of winged angels and demons. Is that evidence that those creatures commonly few around Jerusalem in the first century.
All you've done is provide examples of religious apologists. Those people aren't the same sort of "scholars" as the ones being referenced in this thread. Those people are accredited by seminary schools, not secular universities. They say that the gospels are eyewitness accounts because they want to validate their religious beliefs. Secular academic New Testament scholars all know that the gospels are not eyewitness accounts (they never even claim to be), but were written decades later by anonymous authors.
Again, I wasn't aware of anyone who debates this topic and who DIDN'T know that they are not firsthand accounts.
Dear me. How much more silly can the HJ argument get.
So the evidence to show Jesus existed, is that 1st century ignorant superstitious religious nut-cases believed it?
That is supposed to be evidence of Jesus? The evidence of their religious belief is supposed to be evidence that the belief was true?
They also believed God was in skies. Is that evidence that God really was in the skies?
They believed they had often seen all manner of winged angels and demons. Is that evidence that those creatures commonly few around Jerusalem in the first century.
Foster Zygote said:That these accounts, although filled with obvious myth, converge on a few common attributes that are not the least bit magical, nor even improbable. The fact that one of these early writers saw the need to reassure his readers that they should believe his interpretation of Jesus, even though it was contradicted by those who knew him. The fact that we have non-Christian references that appear to make an historical account of a relative or associate of Jesus.
That's just the barest, most general statement of the evidence. It isn't proof of the existence of Jesus, but it is evidence that a Jesus could well have existed at the very core of the events that led to the birth of Christianity.
But these religious apologists are HJers are they not?
You are attempting to poison the well by association.
There is nothing the least bit extraordinary about the idea that a deluded preacher got himself executed by the Romans and that his equally deluded followers refused to accept reality.
Then you need to read more be cause it was insanely easy to find examples of HJers who (if you take the position they are being honest) DON'T know that the Gospels are not firsthand accounts:
This is actually an example of poor research on your part. The quote you give, taken from page 177 of byford's book, is talking about how Serbian Orthodox clergy were quoting the Bible to justify controversial statements by Bishop Nikolaj Velimirović. He isn't saying anything about academic scholars thinking that the gospels are eyewitness accounts."In the above examples, speakers often quote the New Testament and refer to the authors of the Gospels as eyewitnesses who directly experienced the described events." (Jovan Byford 2008 Denial and Repression of Antisemitism pg 177)
Baukham is a seminarian. I fail to see what his religious opinions have to do with the state of secular scholarship."We can now see that the purpose of Papias in his comments on both Mark and Matthew is to explain why it is that, although both Gospels are based on eyewitness testimony..." Richard Bauckham 2007 The Testimony of the Beloved Disciple
"These four men [Refering to Mark, Matthew, Luke, and John]), three of them eyewitnesses, wrote of the life of that greatest Person who ever lived — Jesus Christ" (Kermit Zarley - 2001 The Gospels Interwoven: A Chronological Narrative of the Life of Jesus pg 17)
"Matthew was one of Jesus' disciples and therefore an eyewitness to the events he recorded." Mark Driscoll 2008 On the New Testament Page 57
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There are plenty of many more examples available but I think these prove my point.
None of that addresses my point. If someone wakes to find the trash cans overturned and trash spread all ever the place and says, "Probably raccoons", a lack of tracks or other direct evidence doesn't make the speculation on par with saying, "probably Bigfoot".No I am not. Again look at our "evidence":
1) Paul who wants to write about the Jesus in his head and doesn't give any historical framework regarding his Jesus in the seven letters that are supposedly his.
2) The Gospels written some time before 130 CE, maybe, as we only have single line quotes from Church Fathers until 180 when we get a mammoth quote dump and on every point we can check them against known history they fail spectacularly. And these are four of the some 30+ Gospels known to have existed.
3) Acts like the Gospels has many historical issues.
4) Tampered, unsourced, or obviously desperate to make a connection third party references.
So if the academic consensus supported the idea of an historic John Frum, you'd consider it likely? So why doesn't the academic consensus regarding the likelihood of an historic Jesus move you similarly?And there is nothing extraordinary about about a deluded Navy Serviceman preaching some wonky idea that God would bring the natives he is preaching to heaven on Earth in the form of cargo in the 1910s and his native followers took the idea and ran with it.
Yet I have to see any anthropologist support this idea regarding the John Frum cargo cult even though a letter written in 1949 suggests such a thing is possible.
Humpheries points out the problem in the youtube video The 'Jesus of history' -- Memory or Myth? ...basically the same one Price pointed out.
Dejudge, can you not understand that the gospels and other accounts are not evidence that their portrayals of Jesus are true, but simply that people were telling stories about a preacher named Jesus, and that one very plausible reason for them to be telling stories about a preacher named Jesus is that there was a preacher named Jesus?
Again there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the LORD, and Satan came also among them to present himself before the LORD.
Then you need to read it again, and the other similar passages giving "Son of God" as a title of the Davidic kings.It is just highly absurd to assume the Son of God was a man and to do so without a shred of corroborative evidence.
I can paste stuff too, dejudge, including "corroborative evidence" for my statements. More than you can do for your "NT is a late forgery" theory.Psalms 2:6 Yet have I set my king upon my holy hill of Zion. 7 I will declare the decree: the Lord hath said unto me, Thou art my Son; this day have I begotten thee. 8 Ask of me, and I shall give thee the heathen for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of the earth for thy possession.
Then you need to read it again, and the other similar passages giving "Son of God" as a title of the Davidic kings.
Craig B said:I can paste stuff too, dejudge, including "corroborative evidence" for my statements. More than you can do for your "NT is a late forgery" theory.
That's imbecilic! They can have the title Son of God without doing these things; that's my point.You need to read the Gospels again. Jesus the Son of God walked on the sea, transfigured, resurrected and ascended to heaven in a cloud.
Davidic Kings can't do those things with or without the Title of Son of God.
That's imbecilic! They can have the title Son of God without doing these things; that's my point.