I have never offered such as you are referring to.
I have commented on the evidences provided by both sides.
Dejudge's evidence, however, has more issues to me than other folks' presentations.
I was talking about people here in general who think Jesus was probably real (eg with figures like 60:40 being stated). I did not mean that “you” yourself take that position (that’s why I began above by saying “if you believe that Jesus was real….“). I don’t know if you do believe he was real or not … but “if you believe that, then ….. etc. as per my previous post above).
What I am pointing out is that dejudge and others here have tried to explain that if “you” (ie anyone in general) take the view that Jesus was probably real, then they can only be getting that belief from what was written in the bible … because as far we know, all other writing about Jesus was almost certainly taken from earlier Christian beliefs of the time as first written about in any way that we know of, in the bible.
There are multitudes of accounts where we only have one source (the Bible is not a singular source, however) to work from (most of Egypt, or Hittites for example), and we work from those sources as best as we can - full well understanding that what they are providing are entirely bias and often exaggerated.
This does not prevent us from inferring some basic history or (more reliably) anthropology from these texts.
It is not odd to carefully consider the texts which discuss Jesus; biblical and otherwise.
But those historical “accounts” which you refer to, are not purely from books of religious preaching like the bible, are they? Which other stories of ancient history are known only from a written source like the bible where anonymous authors told impossible stories of the supernatural from yet more anonymous sources, not one of which ever claimed to have met the person (eg Jesus), and where many of the stories are now known to have been copied from an OT of yet more unsubstantiated superstitious beliefs written many centuries before? Which other figures in all of history are known only from religious writing like that, and where those figures are nevertheless almost universally agreed by historians to be real figures?
I might, however, think the entire matter is overly fixated upon, but I don't think it is errant.
I don’t know what that sentence means. But the reason Jesus is important is that the entire basis of modern day Christianity, with all of it’s worldwide belief and influence, depends upon it.
Last edited: