eight bits
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Sep 5, 2012
- Messages
- 1,580
Hans
At the risk of being mechanical, I'll just go down my list to make an answer to your question.
Creedal
(1) That he was an individual man.
(2) That he was born to a Jewish woman.
(3) That he was killed by the authority of Pontius Pilate.
OK on (1) and (2), but then so is Mortie, my next door neighbor. No on (3). That's what eliminates Mortie next door, too. Partial credit if you squint and say "some Romans were involved, sort of?" OK, half a point, moving on:
Gospel story points
(4) That he was a preacher for at least a few months full time.
(5) That he had some affiliation to John the Baptist (Josephus seems to think John was real).
(6) That he had disciples of his own, or shared some with John the Baptist.
(7) That some of those disciples survived him.
(8) That some of those survivng disciples preached John or Jesus in Judea at mid-century.
I saw that you claimed (7) in the other thread, if we overlook the difference between disciple and political supporter. OK, your guy needs the points.
Finally, linkage via Paul
(9) is no contest, because it concerns only Paul and the authenticity of his writings.
(10) Among Jesus' teachings was a restriction on remarriage after divorce.
Not that I know of on (10), but I'll entertain appeals. There was an 11th criterion that I endorsed before, and dropped, but to bring us up to 10, and give your guy a much-needed point:
(11) That Jesus' final custody followed soon after the defection of one or more disciples.
Well, if we let "disciple" be a code word for "political supporter," what are the odds that one or more of them didn't defect in timely fashion?
Final score: 4.5/10, where the lowest score possible for any Jewish man by birth is 2, and all of the remaining hits require an explanation about why they're hits.
I think not. Other views are possible.
The question is just how much a person can differ from the legend, and still count as the historical X. So if we had a time machine and IF it turned out that Alexander is indeed the best match ever, would you think he's close enough to count as the HJ or not? Just hypothetically and conditional of that big if, and all that.
At the risk of being mechanical, I'll just go down my list to make an answer to your question.
Creedal
(1) That he was an individual man.
(2) That he was born to a Jewish woman.
(3) That he was killed by the authority of Pontius Pilate.
OK on (1) and (2), but then so is Mortie, my next door neighbor. No on (3). That's what eliminates Mortie next door, too. Partial credit if you squint and say "some Romans were involved, sort of?" OK, half a point, moving on:
Gospel story points
(4) That he was a preacher for at least a few months full time.
(5) That he had some affiliation to John the Baptist (Josephus seems to think John was real).
(6) That he had disciples of his own, or shared some with John the Baptist.
(7) That some of those disciples survived him.
(8) That some of those survivng disciples preached John or Jesus in Judea at mid-century.
I saw that you claimed (7) in the other thread, if we overlook the difference between disciple and political supporter. OK, your guy needs the points.
Finally, linkage via Paul
(9) is no contest, because it concerns only Paul and the authenticity of his writings.
(10) Among Jesus' teachings was a restriction on remarriage after divorce.
Not that I know of on (10), but I'll entertain appeals. There was an 11th criterion that I endorsed before, and dropped, but to bring us up to 10, and give your guy a much-needed point:
(11) That Jesus' final custody followed soon after the defection of one or more disciples.
Well, if we let "disciple" be a code word for "political supporter," what are the odds that one or more of them didn't defect in timely fashion?
Final score: 4.5/10, where the lowest score possible for any Jewish man by birth is 2, and all of the remaining hits require an explanation about why they're hits.
I think not. Other views are possible.