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Nailed: Ten Christian Myths that show Jesus never existed

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dejudge

You forgot that in the story Jesus IDENTIFIED himself as the sea water walker and then CLIMBED into the very boat with the disciples.
You mean, having established that it's a ghost story, the author narrates what the boys saw from their point of view without repeatedly saying "And then they thought they saw..." That's called good writing.

Again, you forget what you just wrote. In the story the three disciples did NOT transfigure.
Nor did anybody else. Mark uses the passive voice in 9:2 (he was tranfigured, metemorphōthē).

http://biblehub.com/interlinear/mark/9.htm


zugzwang

The failure of the Jesus mission is an interesting example of Christian engineering, I think.
Yes, but the Christian in question seems to be Paul, and he seems to have worked it out from Jewish scripture, based on his own awesomeness as a Jewish interpreter of those scriptures.

But as I said, you can argue for a very clever piece of fictional writing - the hero fails, but with one bound, he is free!
Or, cleverer still, Jesus does what he has to do to become the Messiah. After all, many desirable, exclusive situations have their humiliating initiations.

Thank you, sir, may I have another?

And then you're a god.
 
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What is it about wanting to be punished or rewarded for having been born?

Where, in the vast universe, does there seem to be any indication that everything is based on a reward/punishment model, I mean besides in the minds of humans.

But, I must ask.

Why do some humans need to believe in a punishment, or reward, for living?
 
You have got to be joking.

In gMark, the author specifically made his character state that he was the Christ and the Son of the Blessed.

If everybody was the son of God then it would have been totally irrelevant for the author to ONLY identify his character as the Son of God.

Plus, it is virtually impossible to use gMark to argue that Jesus was a man when he did things that was not humanly possible.
The joke (of the sad sort) is that you choose to remain so willfully ignorant of the fact that, in Judaism, being a messiah or a son of God did not mean being divine. Like a religious fundamentalist, you simply close your mind to anything that doesn't support the conclusion that you are emotionally fixated on.

The Markan Jesus walked on the sea and transfigured. Mark 6.49 and Mark 9.2

The specific gravity [SG], biology and anatomy of the human body do not allow for walking on the sea and transfiguration.

The Markan Jesus was figure of mythology.

HJ, the assumed obscure crucified Jewish criminal is not a plausible assumption for the start of the Jesus cult.
Yes, Mark made up the part about Jesus walking on water. But then Callisthenes made up the part about the sea prostrating itself before Alexander in reverence. Do the exaggerations about Alexander prove that he cannot have existed?
 
If there was an HJ why is the Quest for an HJ still on-going?

It would appear to me that what we have here are Quest deniers.

There is NO HJ. No HJ has ever been found.

It is time HJers finally understand that their propaganda has been exposed.

They are in the THIRD Quest for an HJ. The first and second quest produced nothing.

The quest for an historical Jesus is still going on because there is always hope that new evidence will come to light that will either support or undermine the hypothesis.
 
dejudge said:
If there was an HJ why is the Quest for an HJ still on-going?

It would appear to me that what we have here are Quest deniers.

There is NO HJ. No HJ has ever been found.

It is time HJers finally understand that their propaganda has been exposed.

They are in the THIRD Quest for an HJ. The first and second quest produced nothing.

The quest for an historical Jesus is still going on because there is always hope that new evidence will come to light that will either support or undermine the hypothesis.

Exactly!! The Quest for an HJ was Faith based from the start--NO evidence has been seen.

Hebrews 11:1 KJV
Now faith is the substance of things hoped for , the evidence of things not seen .

HJ is coming SOON--HJ will soon be found--Have Faith.

But, but.....How long must we wait?
 
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Exactly!! The Quest for an HJ was Faith based from the start--NO evidence has been seen.
Yeah, no evidence. No reason at all to think that an historical Jesus is a likely explanation for the origin of Christianity. That's how we all know that the vast majority of academic New Testament scholars are just a bunch of idiots, and that you are the most important scholar in the history of Christian textual criticism. You really are the smartest guy in the room dejudge. Who else could have figured out that, "Nobody in antiquity is going to worship an obscure dead Jew instead of Zeus and Apollo and the God of the Jews"?

Hebrews 11:1 KJV

HJ is coming SOON--HJ will soon be found--Have Faith.

But, but.....How long must we wait?
No one has said that proof of an historical Jesus will be found soon. That's just you flailing at strawmen again because you are either unable or unwilling to comprehend the arguments actually being presented. In fact, scholars think it highly unlikely that we'll ever find any such proof, simply due to the obscurity of Jesus in his lifetime, and the unlikelihood that any such proof would survive two millennia, much less past the First Jewish-Roman War.
 
davefoc

Well, the argument(s) put forward by Geza Vermes and other scholars of Judaism, is that Jesus is a good fit to the charismatic and apocalyptic Jewish preachers who were around in the first century. Of course, there is the usual problem here - that I am not an expert on first century Judaism, so they might be wrong!

But Vermes describes the healing, exorcisms and preaching carried out by Jesus, and argues that these conform with the charismatic activities described in the intertestamental and rabbinic literature.

Granted, this doesn't necessarily mean that a Jewish sect is being portrayed, but that boils down to semantics. If you follow the Vermes argument, Jesus is a recognizable Jewish figure, rather like Honi and Hanina. Vermes also argues that this kind of charismatic figure was particularly prevalent in Galilee, where an unsophisticated kind of religion was practised.

But Vermes has also been criticized, as getting his chronology wrong, so that for example, Honi and Hanina could be seen as influenced by Christianity.

And of course, a good fit doesn't rule out a fictitious figure.

Thanks for the response zugzwang. One of the clues about the origin of Christianity is that the transition from Judaism to Christianity seems to have happened very rapidly. A lot of writing about the origins of Christianity assumes that there was a transition and the articles talk about a period when it is difficult to distinguish Christianity from Judaism.

Maybe this assumption is flawed. Maybe the Jewish Jesus sect didn't morph into Christianity, maybe an existing gentile sect just transitioned into Christianity and the contribution of the Jewish Jesus sect was that it provided the name of a prominent individual in their sect to the nascent Christian religion.

I suspect that something like this is what happened and that the discussion of a transition period is flawed. Some reasons I think this might be possible:
1. The transition period seems to be very short and the evidence for this transition period is very sketchy.
2. The beliefs of any plausible Jewish Jesus sect were likely to be very different than the Christian sect that followed. It is easy to imagine that the early Christians could impart all sorts of supernatural qualities on Jesus because he wasn't around. If he'd been around people would have noticed right away that he wasn't walking on water, curing blind people, etc.
3. Paul's letters are confusing on this. It seems like Christian sects exist before he gets going. A simple explanation for the confusion is that the sects existed before Paul started his proselytizing and that what he is talking about is a gentile sect that preexisted the hypothetical HJ and that had already begun the transition to Christianity by the time Paul is out and about.

If Christianity arose something like this, then the actual existence of the HJ is less important to the founding of Christianity and as such it seems like the possibility that he existed is smaller.

ETA: I followed up a bit on Geza Vermes. Have you read his book on Jesus? I wonder if the book is just educated speculation about what a real historical Jesus might have been like. My sense of it is that most of the people who participate in these threads already have a notion of what a real Jewish sect leader might have been like and that is very different, of course, than the Christian Jesus. Perhaps Vermes might have refined the view of what an HJ might have been like but does whatever he had to say about that add additional support for an HJ?
 
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... And when you say this "Meanwhile you accuse anyone who disagrees with you, of lacking honesty, and impute to them the motive of seeking to sustain Christianity", what I actually said was this -

“ Why would anyone say they believed in Jesus on such complete lack of evidence? That would be highly illogical and lacking objective honesty. There is simply no good reason to believe it.”

Yes, that's what you said

Yes it is indeed exactly what I had said!


I am saying that it is not being objectively honest with yourself if you claim to believe Jesus existed


That's not what you said. You didn't write "with yourself". Anyway it's crazy. Honest with myself when I claim to believe ... ? nonsense. You're having a laugh.



I did not need to previously write “with yourself” - look at what I actually wrote (which you yet again, for the umpteenth time, conveniently omitted to actually quote at all … you must have tried that ruse at least a dozen times now). Here is what I had actually written quoted verbatim -

The fact of the matter about that, is not that (as you just said) we therefore conclude strongly that Jesus did not exist or that it is extremely unlikely he could have existed ... what we conclude from that total lack of any reliable or credible evidence, is that there is really no genuine evidence that the Jesus stories were anything more than superstitious religious legend. Why would anyone say they believed in Jesus on such complete lack of evidence? That would be highly illogical and lacking objective honesty. There is simply no good reason to believe it.


What that says is that I am replying specifically to a point made earlier by Davefoc, and emphasising to him that since there actually is really no reliable or credible evidence of Jesus in the gospel writing (for all the reasons so very clearly explained in full reply to him, as well as many times before in this thread), that it would, on that basis of no credible evidence, be “highly illogical and lacking objective honesty“ when on that basis "There is simply no good reason to believe it” for anyone in general to conclude that such non-evidence is a basis for positive belief in a human Jesus. And that is not only what that sentence very clearly says, but it is also something you should in all honesty admit if you were not in a state of denial and delusion about the non-existent evidence.



… when there is actually (as I just clearly explained), actually no evidence of Jesus presented in the biblical writing, but only evidence of peoples highly unreliable and non-credible beliefs in a figure none of them ever knew in any way at all.


"No evidence", "only evidence of non-credible beliefs" etc etc, just as I stated.


It was not YOU who stated that . It was me that stated it right from the beginning of all these three most recent threads, and in fact also in all the previous posts that I have ever written on this subject on this forum (and before that also on RDF and RatSkep) - it was not YOU who stated there is no genuine reliable or credible evidence of Jesus, for all the reasons I have so painstaking explained a hundred times in microscopic detail, it was me who explained that, not you!


And as far as this comment from you is concerned “… and impute to them the motive of seeking to sustain Christianity”, what I actually said is that those who originally created and have since maintained the idea of a HJ “appear” to have done that as a “fig leaf” to maintain at least some semblance of Christian belief in Jesus from biblical writing which was by say c.1800-1900 being exposed as simply no longer believable in what it says about Jesus, and not by any measure reliable or credible in what it’s anonymous authors said about a messiah that none of them ever knew and for whom they provided no evidence beyond their religious beliefs in earlier messianic legend.


Stripped of verbiage, you're conceding my point, that you do impute to me a motive of seeking to sustain Christianity: for the words

.
maintain at least some semblance of Christian belief in Jesus .


mean exactly the same as the words I wrote, albeit shrouded in your usual verbosity.


No. I just explained the difference to you. Look again very carefully at what I actually wrote, here it is verbatim -

And beyond that I think he takes the view that the biblical figure is actually the only description we ever had for Jesus …. any other proposed Jesus, called a HJ, is absolutely not a figure that was ever described by anyone at the time, and it appears to be just an un-evidenced uncorroborated modern invention created simply in order to maintain a “fig leaf” position for Christianity by saying that he might at least have existed albeit not at all as described in the bible.


Firstly notice that I am talking there about what I think dejudge has stated as his position throughout this thread. Not necessarily my own position, but saying in specific reply to davefoc what I understand to be dejudge’s position on that point.

And what I say there about my impression of what dejudge has repeatedly emphasised, is that the HJ argument appears to have been deliberately created by people such as bible-scholars, theologians and Christian leaders themselves sometime around say 1800 (I suggested that sort of date in the earlier sentences), without any form of supporting evidence at all for anyone ever claiming to see or know any HJ, and seemingly therefore from that sort of date as a “fig leaf” attempt at maintaining the credibility of Christianity and Christian belief in Jesus even though by that date science was progressively showing that the immediately earlier belief which had stretched back to biblical times and which had always staunchly claimed that Jesus was indeed just exactly as described in the bible with the miracles etc all being believed as literal fact. The sentence is talking about how that idea of HJ appears to have been invented around 200 years ago (or whenever) specifically to counter the growing realisation (from science) that the biblical accounts must actually be untrue.




You have no evidence of anyone knowing a HJ, do you? And what you offer in the bible as evidence, is only evidence of peoples religious beliefs, isn’t it? .



I have stated this dozens of times, but since you won't consider any evidence except these two points, and since I have answered repeatedly that the evidence is not of that type, I can see no means of progressing further in this matter. Where I disagree with you is whether there is any other valid evidence. But you will not even read what I have to say about that, so your continued stressing of these points is both abusive and intentionally abusive. For what's its worth, the answer is again, yes, we have no personal acquaintance of Jesus who has left us a contemporary memoir, as the gospels were not written by such persons. People's religious beliefs are in themselves evidence. Though not at all conclusive evidence, of course. But if we had no knowledge of belief in Jesus, we would have no knowledge of even the name and the stories, true or false, not so? Whether the gospels contain any traces of contemporary sources is an interesting question, to others, though not to you, alas.



What I declined to read from you, after we had all already read literally what must be 500 pages of these various threads without any of the promised “evidence” ever being produced, was something you were claming as evidence from the bible. I told you there very specifically that if it was from the bible, then I was not interested in reading yet more absurd nonsense like that the 100th time, for the very clearly and frankly unarguable reason that the biblical writing is not, and never could be, reliable and credible evidence for it’s anonymous hearsay authors who never knew Jesus, having any evidence of their own ever to produce for Jesus.

If you have now changed that story to say your evidence comes not from that hopelessly discredited biblical writing of the gospels and Paul’s letters, as you now appear to suggest in the highlight, then instead of doing what you did before (and what indeed someone else just invited me to do a few page back) and just provide me with various links telling me to read all sorts of religious clap-trap, which I am not inclined to waste even more time on, then just name the non-biblical source that you are relying upon for what you just called “other valid evidence” … because if you mean writing from the likes of Tacitus and Josephus then that is, if anything, as has been explained countless times already, even more laughably absurd than the bible as evidence of either of those authors personally having any evidence at all which they can give about witnessing anything whatsoever to do with Jesus.
 
He is well known from other sources. He was Lucius Annaeus Seneca's brother, and committed suicide along with him. He was Consul in the year 55. Important person. See http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/224447/Junius-Gallio.
That was a reference to Gallio, mentioned in Acts, and also in non-scriptural sources, with a date consistent with the conventional chronology of Paul, who interacted with Gallio as governor in Corinth.

Here's another item in Acts that is probably connected with a datable event, mentioned outside the NT.
18:1 After these things Paul departed from Athens, and came to Corinth; 2 and found a certain Jew named Aquila, born in Pontus, lately come from Italy, with his wife Priscilla; (because that Claudius had commanded all Jews to depart from Rome) and came unto them.
The Claudian expulsion is of course referred to by Suetonius, as the occasion when disturbances were instigated by "Chrestus", following which the Jews were expelled from the city. The date of this expulsion (c 49-50) fits the conventional Pauline chronology too.
 
Why did it take 100 years, or so, for people to take note of a guy who could walk on water, raise the dead or heal your sickness.

Look at the mobs who go to fake faith healers now. If only it was true. We'd all be getting cured.

Most people I know don't look forword to death. Every mother lovin' son of a whosit would have been keeping Jesus busy from dusk until dawn!

Cure me cure me!

Hell, the books by the people who were cured, or raised from dead, would have been worth a small fortune.

Oh yeah, I don't think the general populus, in that part of the world, at that time could read or write.

Still, why wait so long to write about it?

Doesn't really make sense.
 
Why did it take 100 years, or so, for people to take note of a guy who could walk on water, raise the dead or heal your sickness.
Nobody here is suggesting that Jesus could do these things. The evidence is that Paul wrote much earlier than 100 years after Jesus' activities, and that the gospels were written in the later first (the Synoptics) and early second century (John).
Look at the mobs who go to fake faith healers now. If only it was true. We'd all be getting cured.

Most people I know don't look forword to death. Every mother lovin' son of a whosit would have been keeping Jesus busy from dusk until dawn!

Cure me cure me!

Hell, the books by the people who were cured, or raised from dead, would have been worth a small fortune.

Oh yeah, I don't think the general populus, in that part of the world, at that time could read or write.

Still, why wait so long to write about it?

Doesn't really make sense.
I must say the same thing about your words, that I have quoted above.
 
Nobody here is suggesting that Jesus could do these things. The evidence is that Paul wrote much earlier than 100 years after Jesus' activities, and that the gospels were written in the later first (the Synoptics) and early second century (John). I must say the same thing about your words, that I have quoted above.

Whoop-de-doo.
 
Whoop-de-doo-doo.

You could probably say that about a lot of things in Ancient History that make no difference one way or the other these days.

But you have to admit, that Mythical or not, "Jesus" has had a fairly big impact on "Western Culture" for a few years now...

Some people want to get to the bottom of the rabbit hole.

Some people worked their whole lives on Troy or the Battle of Thermopylae. Whoopdedoo!
 
I say, this stuff is catching, isn't it?

Ancient history - whoop-de-duddle-doo.

History - whoop-de-duddle-double-doo.

Human knowledge - whoop-de-duddle-double-diddle-doo.

Why bother with anything, let's all just whoop-de-duddle-diddle-daddle-doo!
 
Why did it take 100 years, or so, for people to take note of a guy who could walk on water, raise the dead or heal your sickness.

Look at the mobs who go to fake faith healers now. If only it was true. We'd all be getting cured.

Most people I know don't look forword to death. Every mother lovin' son of a whosit would have been keeping Jesus busy from dusk until dawn!

Cure me cure me!

Hell, the books by the people who were cured, or raised from dead, would have been worth a small fortune.

Oh yeah, I don't think the general populus, in that part of the world, at that time could read or write.

Still, why wait so long to write about it?

Doesn't really make sense.

Who said anyone wrote only 100 years later ?
 
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