Belz...
Fiend God
John Frum shoots the highlighted point down in flames.
I'm not sure that _one_ example is the be-all, end-all of the discussion.
John Frum shoots the highlighted point down in flames.
It only seems that way to you because your reading comprehension is so poor.
Seeing as I am an atheist who was once a believer, it is obvious to me that there are atheists who were once believers. In fact, there are many atheists on this forum who used to be religious believers of various sorts. You used to be a Christian too, yes?
Foster Zygote said:And you seem not to understand that superstitious beliefs evolve, and that when they are abandoned, it is usually because people have moved on to some other superstition.
Nowhere in any post of mine have I implied something even remotely like that. The fact that you've inferred it is more evidence of your dismal reading comprehension. What I am challenging is your ridiculous assertion that you can bring about the decisive collapse of Christianity by telling people that Jesus was a myth because he was "The Son of A God born Of a Ghost" or the like.
Foster Zygote said:We already have solid evidence that all gods are imaginary constructs. We even have a good model for explaining the origin of god beliefs in terms of evolutionary psychology. Yet these facts haven't brought about the collapse of theism, have they?
Jesus was an imaginary construct. Jesus was God Creator.
How can an imaginary construct be a god creator?
Your admittance that you were once a believer exposes your earlier claim as illogical.
No, dejudge, it doesn't. Because I never made that claim. It is only your extremely poor reasoning ability that led you to erroneously conclude that I was saying that Christians never give up their superstitious beliefs, when in reality, I was saying that the idea that Christianity will collapse if you can prove that Jesus never existed is ludicrous.
dejudge said:... Once a person realizes that the NT is really a compilation of fiction, forgeries and non-eyewitness accounts then they would de-convert.
Yes. But for someone to realize something, they have to actually acknowledge it.Your own de-conversion destroys your fallacy. Once a person realizes that the NT is really a compilation of fiction, forgeries and non-eyewitness accounts then they would de-convert.
Yes, that's what I said. Unless... Did you mean to put a question mark at the end of that?What?? You already have solid evidence that all gods are imaginary constructs.
Is this the first you've ever heard of reasons for rejecting, not just Christianity specifically, but theistic beliefs generically, other than claiming that jesus never existed?You knew that long ago.
Well he can't be both. So which is it?Jesus was an imaginary construct. Jesus was God Creator.
You invent your own ideas. You are incapable of repeating what I write.
I claimed that "Once a person realizes that the NT is really a compilation of fiction, forgeries and non-eyewitness accounts then they would de-convert".
You must have forgotten the posts are recorded.
dejudge said:
You are right that once someone realizes that Christianity is a mythological construct, that Jesus never rose from the dead, he wasn't God, never offered salvation from death, that there is no eternal reward or punishment... then he or she will simply stop believing.
And if Christ be not raised , your faith is vain; ye are yet in your sins.
That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved .
I'm not sure that _one_ example is the be-all, end-all of the discussion.
Therefore Paul never wrote anything in the first century, or preached to anyone, or ever travelled to Jerusalem or elsewhere, in your opinion - if he existed at all.People of antiquity would have known Paul was a monstrous liar if it is claimed he asked people of the Roman Empire to worship a Crucified Criminal as a God and claimed the Crucified Criminal abolished the Laws of the Jews for Remission of Sins after he was raised from the dead.
I recently read an interesting idea about Samaria and a person known as "the Taheb" (or something). Supposedly the "Messiah Ben Joseph", whose followers were killed by Pilate, many by crucifixion. This being one of the incidents which lead to Pilate being recalled to Rome for being too brutal (!).
If there is a conflation of characters in the Jesus traditions, this guy has to be one candidate IMO.
...I've got to go about my daily rounds now, but I found this page that goes with the Frontline documentary Apocalypse!. My bookmarks are a bit disorganized right now.
...Stripped of all the supernatural stuff everything else in the Gospel account is a nonsensical mess; the geography is a train wreck; the betrayal is non historical garbage and so are both the trials, the handling of the body after the crucifixion is similarly non historical as is the Romans response to reports of Jesus being up and around (Carrier had a field day with that one in one of his lectures)
Your own de-conversion destroys your fallacy.
John Frum is the one real world example that shows the more moderate Christ Mythers haven't been in tin foil hat land.
The story of Pilate's dismissal is in Josephus, Ant 18, 4, 1.You know I love white rabbits almost as much as you do, Brain-ache
Any sources to throw at me?
Pilate sent a cavalry unit to intercept them, and violence resulted. The ringleaders were captured and executed, but Josephus doesn't name them, or specify that they were crucified. Pilate was recalled to Rome following this incident, and disappears from recorded history.BUT the nation of the Samaritans did not escape without tumults. The man who excited them to it was one who thought lying a thing of little consequence, and who contrived every thing so that the multitude might be pleased; so he bid them to get together upon Mount Gerizzim, which is by them looked upon as the most holy of all mountains, and assured them, that when they were come thither, he would show them those sacred vessels which were laid under that place, because Moses put them there.
Dejudge, I'm going to say this as simply as a can because, obviously, I have to: I never said that people never give up their religion. Your pretense that I did is just more of you hearing only what you want to hear.Why did it take you so long to admit that I am right?
I told you already that your own de-conversion exposed your logical fallacy.
You really didn't think that through at all, did you?Now, it is for that very reason why HJ is not Plausible.
People of antiquity would have known Paul was a monstrous liar if it is claimed he asked people of the Roman Empire to worship a Crucified Criminal as a God and claimed the Crucified Criminal abolished the Laws of the Jews for Remission of Sins after he was raised from the dead.
The HJ story doesn't make sense.
The HJ story is absurd.
It is far more likely that the entire NT were late forgeries or false attribution starting in the 2nd century or later.
The Jesus story was BELIEVED to be true---Not known to be fiction.
An historical Jesus [a human Jesus] and authentic Pauline writings do not make sense.
1 Corinthians 15:17 KJV
Romans 10:9 KJV
The story of Pilate's dismissal is in Josephus, Ant 18, 4, 1. Pilate sent a cavalry unit to intercept them, and violence resulted. The ringleaders were captured and executed, but Josephus doesn't name them, or specify that they were crucified. Pilate was recalled to Rome following this incident, and disappears from recorded history.
Foster Zygote has solid evidence--- "all gods are imaginary constructs"?
Zeus was an imaginary construct.
Apollo was an imaginary construct.
The God of the Jews was an imaginary construct.
Jesus the Logos and God Creator was an imaginary construct.
You know I love white rabbits almost as much as you do, Brainache.
Any sources to throw at me?
Thanks for the link and thanks for letting me know I'm not the only one whose bookmarks have taken on a life of their own.
That's a problem I have with the stripped-down-to-bare-essentials HJ. Once you strip away the jive, what's left is ahistorical, to put it kindly.
Even those core teachings of Stone's. I'd love to know their point of origin. The problem with the core teachings is that depending on how you choose them, it seems to me you come up a different Jesus every time.
maximara, do you have a link for that particular lecture?