davefoc
Philosopher
...
My brain hurts...
I can completely relate. The process of learning almost anything involves getting a few reliable data points into your mind to serve as a foundation for the rest of the new found information.
The process of learning about the possibility of an HJ rarely involves reliable data points. Mostly one learns about a particular theory, decorates it with a few new facts only to come to realize that the new theory was built on a foundation of mush and the potentially factual information that you've decorated the new theory with might be just more unjustified speculation by somebody with a particular point of view or not, because while almost nothing is provably correct with regard to this, almost nothing is provably false with regard to this as well.
I am afraid my views have come to line up with Hans Munsterman's about all this, even if they aren't as well informed as his. We know so little about the period of Christian history around the time of the hypothetical HJ, that we don't even know enough to make valid guesses about the probability of any particular theory being correct.
I'll hang my hat on the notion that I find Paul's writings to be plausible, even while admitting that the guy at Jesusneverexisted.com makes a pretty good case that they are improbable to the point of probably being just made up stuff.
And if I go with Paul's writings are plausible then the existence of a Jesus oriented Jewish Jerusalem sect that we know nothing about seems plausible and I can imagine that there might have been an HJ.
I can also imagine that some of the people participating in this thread that find something that rings true to them in the Gospels might be right. For me, there is too much chaff in them to try to figure out where the wheat is. They are the writings of a Greek speaking, probably gentile group that was just making stuff up and whether anything true happened to leak in is anybody's guess as far as I'm concerned.