It's a small and tiresome point, but part of Claudius Caesar's name was actually Tiberius.
Is it plausible that caused confusion among those writers?
Except there was no "Herod king of the Jews" in Tiberius time.
It's a small and tiresome point, but part of Claudius Caesar's name was actually Tiberius.
Is it plausible that caused confusion among those writers?
Your one sentence post refers to you, "You are wasting your time if you expect anyone to take your nonsense seriously".
On the contrary, I've denied it and shown why I think it's not true. Never said by me. I gave my reasons for denying the Bethlehem story, and noted that the Gospels make him a resident of Galilee.
Exactly right! At last, we've got a point of intellectual contact! Now follow this with me, very carefully. Suppose there was a prophecy that said the anointed leader of the United States had to come from Hawaii. And an entirely mythical person was totally invented out of nothing by fabricators as fulfilling this prophecy. Now - this is the bit you have to follow very carefully; are you ready? - why would these fabricators also invent a story that the person lived in Chicago? That simply makes their fabricated story more complicated.Well, if the Gospels make him a resident of Galilee and also claimed he was born in Bethlehem what is your problem?
Obama the president was born in Hawaii but was a resident of Chicago.
Bethlehem as birthplace is not in Paul, not in Mark, not in John, not in the non-Pauline epistles, not in Revelation. It is found only in two contradictory forms in the later Synoptics. The NT is not a single unitary work created en bloc by nefarious fabricators. You think it was, so you are impressed by your own infinitely repeated arguments (I should really say unsupported assertions and disparaging comments) which depend on that false idea; but others are not, and they will not be swayed even if you utter them a million more times.In the NT, Jesus was a Myth--the Son of God, Creator and born in Bethlehem.
Your reasoning lacks logic.
I did not come to this forum to chill out. I came to expose the abundance of logical fallacies and lack of knowledge of those who argue that there was an historical Jesus of Nazareth WITHOUT a shred of evidence from antiquity.
Your one sentence post refers to you, "You are wasting your time if you expect anyone to take your nonsense seriously".
I disagree. His Mythical Jesus theory is but one of many. Whether his particular theory is convincing does not necessarily affect anything else.You're doing a fine job demolishing the MJ side.
That's not the problem, though. There was, in Matthew's opinion, a prophecy that the Messiah would come from Bethlehem. As usual with Mattie, when we go back to the Jewish scripture, we see some vague thing... Jesse and David come from there, supposedly, so any descendant would "come from there," too. Only in Matthew is there scholarly and physical support for Mattie's interpretation (Herod checks with his crack team of religious advisors, and of course, there is the indisputable sighting of the star sitting atop the very building in Bethlehem.)Exactly right! At last, we've got a point of intellectual contact! Now follow this with me, very carefully. Suppose there was a prophecy that said the anointed leader of the United States had to come from Hawaii. And an entirely mythical person was totally invented out of nothing by fabricators as fulfilling this prophecy. Now - this is the bit you have to follow very carefully; are you ready? - why would these fabricators also invent a story that the person lived in Chicago? That simply makes their fabricated story more complicated.
Even if he's not made up its a good reason, too. If that trio existed and were from Galilee and claimed to be disciples of the late Yeshua from Galilee, then the supposition that Yeshua was from Galilee is not outlandish.... Some of the Gospels may have been written to enhance the credentials of the inner trio of the James gang within the church, Peter, James and John. They are Galileans, reason enough for Jesus to be from Galilee. And if Jesus is made up ...
Agreed. My argument simply is that they had a better "messianic" motive for saying he was born in Bethlehem even if in fact he was born in Galilee, than vice versa.... then that's a great thing about make believe, four authors can make the same fictional character be from two different places, no sweat.
Or early founders did know them in the form in which Marcion presented them but did not refer to them until they were appropriately edited to meet the criteria of orthodoxy.1) Early founders didn't know of them because they weren't as popular as the later Orthodox formation ended up holding them as.
That's one group's version of the myth, representing one cultural tradition.
The legend of Jesus is quite varied across different cultures.
No it isn't.
I'm not the one who has been boasting of their own dishonesty in these threads.
That's you.
Brainache said:Don't expect serious responses from anyone. You have shown that you won't give considered replies to others, so others have given up even trying to communicate sensibly with you.
Your participation in this debate is superfluous. Carry on if you must, but you have already been defeated.
The other half of the Gospels either neglect the matter altogether or frankly accept that Jesus was Galiliean, plain and simple.
That's one group's version of the myth, representing one cultural tradition.
The legend of Jesus is quite varied across different cultures.
True, there is that option as well.Or early founders did know them in the form in which Marcion presented them but did not refer to them until they were appropriately edited to meet the criteria of orthodoxy.
No, it wasn't an indication of earlier texts, nor evidence for an historical Jesus.Do you know of any other earlier mention of "Jesus" as the messiah earlier than the writing of Paul and the gospel authors of the NT bible?
Or do all the mentions of Jesus actually stem, as far as we can honestly tell, from what was written in the bible?
Because a significant part of all this discussion and dispute, is that it appears there is actually no other earlier independent source on Jesus except for that NT bible itself.
My comment hadn't anything to do with an historical Jesus.Two sentences are not enough details.
What other versions of Jesus are there?
When and where did those version originate?
There is simply no known evidence of an actual Jesus as a human being in the 1st century pre 70 CE.
The earliest recovered evidence of Jesus stories is the 2nd century.
...
I think there is plenty to learn yet about this era's messianic traditions, and not just "Jesus", but the entire zeitgeist of the culture in this tradition during that time period between 1st c BCE to 1st c CE.

Rumor has it that there were several real-life Jews whom the Romans or Roman client-rulers dispatched, too. Some for posing not much threat at all. John the Baptist, for instance, if Josephus can be trusted. Did John have any disciples do you think?There were hundreds of Greek/Roman myths described with human characteristics in antiquity.
I sense you meant to type something else.Romulus was a Roman, pure a simple.
. . . (snip) . . . My argument that the entire Pauline Corpus is a forgery is based on the evidence.
1. The author of the short gMark did not acknowledge any apostle called James the Lord's brother and did not acknowledge the Pauline post-resurrection story about the visits by the resurrected Jesus to over 500 PEOPLE plus the disciples and Paul.
2. The authors of gMatthew did not acknowledge any apostle called James the Lord's brother and did not acknowledge the Pauline post-resurrection story about the visits by the resurrected Jesus to over 500 PEOPLE plus the disciples and Paul.
3. The author of Acts did not acknowledge any Pauline letter up to at least c 62 CE when Festus was procurator of Judea.
4. c 117-138 CE, Aristides did not acknowledge Paul as the one who evangelized the Roman Empire but credited the 12 disciples of Jesus.
5. c 138-161 CE, Justin Martyr did not acknowledge Paul as an evangelist but attributed the spreading of the Gospel to ILLITERATES from Jerusalem and that it was the Memoirs of the Apostles [the Gospel] that was used in the Churches.
6. c 180 CE--Celsus wrote nothing about Paul in True Discourse according to Origen in Against Celsus.
7. c 180 CE, Theophilus of Antioch wrote nothing of Paul and the Pauline Corpus in "To Autolycus"
8. c 180 CE, Athenagoras of Antioch wrote nothing of Paul and the Pauline Corpus in "A Plea to the Christians".
9. c 180 CE, Ireanaeus claimed that the Gospel, the Elders of the Church and the disciples TAUGHT in the Churches that Jesus was crucified when he was FIFTY years c 50 CE which means Paul and the Pauline Corpus was unknown c 180 CE.
10. In the 2nd -3rd century Minucius Felix wrote nothing of Paul and the Pauline Corpus in "Octavius".
11. In the 3rd-4th century, Arnobius wrote nothing of Paul and the Pauline Corpus in "Against the Heathen".
12. In the 2nd-4th century, in the Muratorian Canon it is claimed the Pauline letters were composed AFTER Revelation by John. . . . (snip) . . .