IanS,
Jesus never existed.
Jesus was just some benign artisan who was killed for some reason.
Jesus never existed, but some people like him existed and influenced the legends which would then become attributed to the name, "Jesus".
Which of these three does not damage the Chritian belief?
Afaik, few if any Christians believe any of those statements. But as long as they feel certain that nobody in authority ever says there is reason to doubt the existence of Jesus, then they can happily continue to decide for themselves what they believe about the miracles and about praying to God as part of "trinity" etc. Eg, the recent Archbishop of Canterbury Dr. Rowan Williams famously said in an interview that he does believe literally in the “virgin birth” and does believe Jesus had actually raised Lazarus from the dead. And just this weekend we have news that the Vatican has canonised two Popes with three objectively & evidentially confirmed miracles between them http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-27140646 , so Christians do feel perfectly at liberty to claim evidence for miracles etc.
But that Christian belief position comes under threat of course if it is admitted that those in authority begin to say Jesus may only ever have been a fictional figure after all and the evidence for anything more than that is extremely poor. That calls into question everything the bible says about God sending his Son and Christ rising from the dead and passing into heaven, etc. etc.
Also, why do we care what damages the Christian belief?
Well that is really a separate subject, and one which has precipitated mountains of personalised abuse and vitriol every time it's even so much as mentioned here. So I'd suggest starting another thread on that if you want peoples opinions.
But very briefly, - we care about it today (in a way that we certainly do not care about Pythagoras or any Trojan Wars), because Christianity has a very significant influence in the lives of millions of people and a direct influence on governments in the USA and throughout Europe. It has a voice influencing those governments, the most powerful and persuasive in the world, on issues such as taxation, education, science and medical research, foreign policy inc. military actions, etc. So the influence of Christianity, and it’s power to influence, is of direct importance to everyone.
