OK, IanS.
I don't think the two of us will arrive at an agreement for evaluation of the case.
You seem to approach the matter from how much it matters to Christian culture today, whereas I see no reason to concern over how much it matters to Christianity today in regards to factors regarding the historicity of any given figure in there.
I don't care what any religion holds when looking at what we have historically or not.
As I say (i.e. just agreed with someone earlier), people don’t usually have an abrupt change of mind in the middle of a thread on a subject like this. So I’m not really trying to persuade you (or anyone else) to what I am saying here. So we can perfectly amicably agree-to-disagree. However, just to explain a bit further …
… I am not interested in what bible studies scholars, theologians and Christian writers in general believe about Jesus. And as is probably obvious, I don’t have a great deal of respect for that as an academic university research field. I have probably explained before several times why I take that view, but if you think that’s a terrible thing, then please do keep in mind that many sceptics in all of these HJ threads, inc. similar massive threads on other forums such as RationalSkepticism and the Richard Dawkins Forum, as well as many authors of published books (see more below), have also been extremely critical of Bible Studies academia for reasons touched upon as follows …
… to understand much more about this I would strongly recommend that you get a copy of the book by Hector Avalos (The End of Bible Studies). Avalos is a professor of biblical studies at Iowa State Univ. Unusually, although Avalos was from childhood an extremely active evangelical preacher, even preaching creationism in public etc., he actually lost his faith and became an atheist whilst studying for what at the time he intended to be qualifications leading to a lectureship in Bible studies. Nevertheless he entered the academic Bible Scholarship profession as intended, and has for many years taught and researched the subject despite his atheist view.
But what Avalos explains very eloquently in his book, is how and why he has found from inside the profession, that the entire academic structure of Bible studies and related religious study fields, is very closely connected with support for Christian Theocracy and Theology as part of it’s historic role, and where it’s current day practitioners (i.e. university academics such as himself, Bart Ehrman, Dominic Crossan and all the rest of them) continue to use quite fallacious and flawed methods of research and continue to claim entirely false conclusions about how safe and reliable their opinions and results are in concluding that bible studies is relevant or valuable to us at all in the 21st century, let alone the fallacious reasoning and flawed methodology being used in the case of Jesus historicity.
Do try to read that book if you can (get it as an inter-Library loan, if you don’t want to pay for a copy). It’s written in careful academic style, and has almost 1000 proper academic references, i.e. many of them not to books or articles, but directly to research papers in the academic journals.
OK, so that is the first point, namely - biblical studies is not the same sort of truly independent expert subject area that we find for most other non-religious academic fields (e.g. in science, or geography, or music, or indeed mainstream history). And its’ flaws and deficiencies render it by no means safe as an area of proper “appeal to authority” in the way that you might be perfectly justified with something like physics or economics or art or almost any other non-religious field.
That is perhaps the most basic reason - i.e. the deeply flawed and often quite bogus nature, of the practices, methods, conclusions and motives for many “authorities” within academic bible studies - why I would say to you that it’s a mistake if you think we should be more concerned and more respectful of studying NT-Biblical issues such as the historicity of Jesus for it’s own academic sake of claimed discovery (as if it were a neutral scientific-type of research), rather than what I have just been putting to you as reasons of it’s impact and relevance for the lives of millions of people today via its support for Christianity and continued religious Christian belief.
And just as a final point on that - if anyone thinks the above (and the last previous sentence in particular) is some sort of grudge against bible studies and Christianity, that is NOT the point I am making or pursuing. What I am pointing out, is for example -
- why do you think it is that Bart Ehrman can write saying “almost all properly trained scholars on the planet” agree with his view of Jesus, when he says repeatedly that the evidence from the bible is sufficient to conclude that Jesus “certainly, definitely” did exist? And just to be clear, although in a profession with at a rough guess, maybe 10,000 or more bibles studies scholars of various types, we must of course find some who would disagree with Ehrman about the strength of his expression of “certainty”, of all those bible scholars mentioned in the these HJ threads, every single one of them has afaik said that they
do agree with Ehrman that Jesus definitely did exist. Now, how in the world can anyone looking objectively at the biblical material as their “evidence”, possibly conclude that book/evidence is sufficient even to think Jesus
might have been real, let alone write numerous books stating as an absolute fact that the evidence shows he was a certainty? The point is - there is a huge credibility gap there between the certainty of these bible studies academics and what the actual evidence shows and what most people in threads like this have long-since correctly realised for themselves about how appalling weak that evidence actually is and how appallingly weak and misguided are the arguments of scholars like Ehrman when they claim that the best evidence is for example that Paul met the actual brother of Jesus, hence Jesus must have existed!
OK, this is becoming quite a long reply/commentary, so I’ll stop there without going through the various other points. But bottom line is … (1) get a copy of Avalos’s book, because that will show you a very different view of the validity of bible studies as an academic field, and (2) this is one field of academia (perhaps the only field) where the appeal to authority is a huge mistake.