Why have I got to be joking?
It is people who were once Fundies or Christians and still maintain faith and belief in the NT as a source of history who retain the same absolutist manner of thinking---either there was an HJ or nobody else existed--not even Alexander the Great.
You can't even understand the basic analogy. Your argument is that people made up mythology about Jesus, including that he walked on water, and that this is evidence that Jesus never existed. Yet the fact that people made up stories about historical figures like Alexander demonstrates that your argument is completely wrong. The examples of impossible events ascribed to the lives of known people like Alexander and Joseph Smith isn't meant to prove that Jesus existed, but rather to prove that your argument that he didn't is not valid. If you ever learn to think critically you will realize this.
And saying that an historical Jesus is the most likely available explanation for the origin of Christianity is not absolutist thinking. It is not a faith based idea because it is always open to revision should new evidence turn up.
It is most bizarre when supposed atheists, a minority , claim the "vast majority" of Scholars support the argument for HJ and do so without any supporting data.
Except that they
do have supporting data. But that data doesn't fit with your predetermined dogma that Jesus cannot have existed, so you simply deny it like a creationist ignoring the supporting data for abiogenesis.
And regarding Jesus as having been a rather ordinary, if unusually deluded, human being is in no way inconsistent with atheism. The fact that you keep trying to link the idea that Jesus existed as a completely non-supernatural human being to the religious beliefs held by modern Christians only serves to demonstrate that you refuse to even consider the former idea because you simply don't
want Jesus to have ever existed. You resent your former faith so much that you've decided that Jesus must not have existed in any form because this conclusion appeals to you emotionally. That is why we've commented that you seem to have abandoned your religious beliefs, but not your religious way of thinking.
HJers who now claim to be Ex-fundies and Ex-Christians and still use the Bible as a source of history for their multiple versions of a crucified criminal Jesus appear to have weak faith.
And there you go again, implying that the Bible must either be rejected as completely false, or accepted as completely true. That is a grossly ignorant thing to say. Secular scholars, whether they used to be Christians, never were Christians, or retain Christian beliefs but keep them separate from their scholarly work, don't make use of faith. They go where the evidence leads and keep open minds about new evidence.
Why have you isolated yourself from the fundies who helped to propagate the "good news" that Jesus did exist?
Because I no longer think that Jesus was a magical being sent to redeem people from their sins and bring everlasting life. Jesus was just as deluded as Vernon Wayne Howell or Jim Jones, and he can't listen to anyones prayers or intercede in their affairs because he's as dead as they come.
So what about you? What changed your mind?
After all Fundie and Christian Scholars are a part of the supposed "vast majority".
Do you have the data about Fundies and Christian Scholars?
Are the vast majority of HJers Fundies and Christians?
It is expected that Christian and Fundi Scholars support the HJ dogma.
You are the one who argues that the Jesus story is an embellishment but accept parts of it.
Yet you are disassociating yourself from the fundamentalists even though they fully agree with the parts you accept.
That's hysterical, dejudge. Even though I flat out said that I could see it coming from a mile off, you just left that part out and proceeded to do just what I'd said you'd do.
"I can see where this is going a mile off. But trying to discredit secular opinion that Jesus was just another deluded preacher by implying that this is the same as belief that he is God, is about as childishly silly as saying that someone who believes that a raccoon most likely tore into the trash cans over night is no different from someone who is certain that it was Bigfoot, simply because they both believe that an animal did it."
And there you go, doing exactly that.