GwJ
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Can you stop quoting your ridiculous 'proof' now that it's been covered Nicholas?
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Everyone has a bias of some sort. However, the question is if you can look at the evidence objectively and see where it leads.Well, you dismissed the whole Jesus Seminar with a claim of "they're biased". Note that you are biased, and so is the guy who wrote this book.
By the way, I appreciate you coming back to address my huge post.The original Christians were trying to spread their religion.
Ok mega post time.
Not in the same form as originally written? Look, this backing is excellent by ANY historical standard, and if you want to claim that the gospels were modified somewhere in between, you're going to have to back it up with more than "Well, it could have happened." Well, we could be in the matrix, but nobody believes that.In the same form as those manuscripts, yes. Not necessarily in the same form that they were originally written, or in the same form as what actually happened. I don't see how you can claim that 350AD or even 150AD is long before anyone could have done any "meddling".
Alright, let me deal with the most popular false gospel, the gospel of Thomas.Remember also that there are other gospels that the church decided not to include in the Bible, so they may have picked out the ones that fit their agenda the most.
It's by an atheist journalist going to the top Christian historical experts, and intervewing them about Christianity. At the end he decided the evidence was compelling, and converted to Christianity himself.Case for Christ is not by a historical expert. It's by a Christian apologist, and it's about him interviewing Christian apologists.
I don't think so. He's saying that Jesus was called the Christ, not that Jesus WAS the Christ. It's the difference between saying "Hitler was called a glorious leader" (which he was, by Nazi Germany), and saying "Hitler was a glorious leader".This Josephus quote is highly disputed as well, particularly because it doesn't make sense for him to say "Jesus, who was called the Christ". Josephus never converted to Christianity, so that puts the authorship of this line in doubt.
Could you be more specific? I've never heard of this.They have a copy of Bishop Origen writings where he quotes the above passage and it does not talk about Jesus the way it does (and it's known to be a very early quote of the passage).
I have a challenge for you, Ballin. Name the timegap you would find acceptable. Then name so much as ONE ancient instance where that timegap has actually happened.Blame oral tradition and all that, but when your followers are writing your story DECADES later there's a pretty good chance that it isn't the truth.
That's hardly unusual for ancient writings, so what's your point?This was written like 100 years after the fact.
Well, basically Jesus was executed for claiming to be God and insulting the Pharisees. However, they couldn't execute him without going to the Romans at first, and they didn't think their religious claims would impress Pilate, so they wrapped it up in a phony political charge, and just pressured Pilate until he gave in. As for more evidence, you have several independent historical sources, not to mention the testimony of the early church. What more do you want?I'm going to need more backing for "immense persecution". If I remember right, it's not that Jesus was executed for religious reasons, but for starting a movement in general, a sort of "disturbing the peace". Christians may have been persecuted for this reason, but I'm going to need some evidence that Christians in particular were persecuted for being Christian.
Well, Christians converted new people (despite the persecution) faster than the Romans could murder them. Also, the persecutions only got intensified into mass murder once Nero came into the picture (I think about 60 AD), so it had put down some roots by then. (They were still there before, but mainly from the Jewish government, which a bit weaker.)If this is really the case, how is it that the religion spread at all? Obviously not all Christians were crucified, and since they were actively spreading their religion it's not like they were all hiding under rocks.
That would be like Hitler writing a history of the Jews.You'd think too if Christianity were so important that maybe some people from the other side would write about it? Of course, winners write the histories (literally in this case).
If he was just a prophet, why deify him at all? That was one of the huge things that offended other groups. (In fact, it was the main reason that he was killed!) I mean, if they just went "Hey look, Jesus was a prophet, let's follow his teachings", I doubt they'd have come under any persecution whatsoever, and they'd still have gotten a nice Jewish movement going.Only if you accept the testimony of the gospels. It's entirely possible that he was deified later.
Again, if you're going to set the burden of proof this high, I'd like to see an ancient writing where it's been followed.And again, there were no contemporary historical references to Jesus. No eyewitness accounts, besides supposed ones given by his followers trying to spread a religion.
They're all in the secondary details, and have explanations, which is a bit of evidence that they didn't make it up. (Think about it: If you're going to all this effort to invent a religion, aren't you at least going to get your story straight with your co-authors?) The primary details (miracles, death and resurrection, opposition from Pharisees, etc.) are unchallenged.Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. Also, don't forget about the contradictions in the gospels (which I assume we will get to in a moment).
EDIT: looks like we didn't
Hardly a nobody, ballin. If someone came in and healed the sick and paralyzed in your hometown, wouldn't you sit up and take notice? Besides, if you're going to make that claim, you should back it up and give ancient examples with better historical backing.Anyway, I highly doubt that Jesus's lifetime has better historical backing than most. Remember that he was initially a nobody and only became important after his death, when his followers spread their religion. This makes it much more difficult to say that we have backing for the events of his life.
My point is that the religion came under intense persecution some 30 years later.This can't have happened to all Christians, or the religion would not have survived.
This was also written well after the events of Jesus' life (and after the gospels were written), so by this time Christians had much more of a foothold.
The Romans in particular wouldn't have cared about Christians the same way that we don't care about random cults. Only once they became powerful (i.e. once the story of Jesus had spread) would they be considered a threat.
Not by historical standards.Do you bother refuting every claim from all the cults in the world? By the time that Christianity was a significant threat, Jesus had been gone for a long time.
Well, the knowledge of Alexander the Great was passed on for HUNDREDS of years. Many of the miracles did occur in front of eyewitnesses, and if someone wrote briefly about it, why would we assume the document survived? If you were a later Christian copyist, would you copy down "Dear diary, someone fed 5000 people with just a few loaves of bread today!" over some important historical writing or the gospels themselves?The Talmud was written well after the fact as well, and of course would be influenced by the stories of Jesus that were going around. Unless you think the Jews passed on for HUNDREDS of years knowledge that Jesus didn't actually commit any miracles. Remember too that most of the miracles didn't occur in front of tons of eyewitnesses (and even the ones that did, you'd think that someone would have written about them, right? Not one person that could write felt the need to write "whoa some guy fed like 4000 people with a loaf of bread today". Not even his own followers did this until DECADES later).
A house divided against itself cannot stand. If Jesus was a magician with some demonic powers, why on earth would he have been casting out demons? It makes NO sense whatsoever.Not to mention, how would you even know that the Jews are wrong here? How would you know that Jesus was not just a magician even if the miracles were true? You couldn't really prove it...
Regarding that "contradiction", whether the others heard the voice or not is really a background detail. It's like whether Alexander the Great preferred javelin throwing or the discus as his favorite sport. Nobody cares. Also, there's an explanation. Perhaps like in the NIV translation, they heard the voice but didn't understand it.Paul's conversion is doubted by many. For one, the main story of his conversion has contradictions in it:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversion_of_Paul_the_Apostle#Differences_between_the_accounts
Why WOULDN'T his enemies bother to expose him, even just verbally? There's no response to such stuff in the early Christian writings, and we have loads of those.Also, again, maybe his enemies didn't bother to expose him, or maybe that's been lost in time.
As a Pharisee, he would have known all the arguments against Jesus, and have been familiar with the evidence. So, are you claiming that he as a Pharisee took an objective look at the evidence, and decided that the Christians are right and Jesus is the Messiah?Plus him seeing Jesus and converting can be explained by the usual process of conversion. He got convinced Jesus was the Messiah, just like many others who wanted to see the Messiah come. It's also possible that he initially persecuted Christians that he saw because he saw them as a cult, but then got convinced when he met the leader.
History is studied under the assumption that people are not compulsive liars, else we'd know very little about it! If you want to claim someone's a liar, you're supposed to show why. [/QUOTE]One of the best ways to write this sort of propaganda and convince others is to claim that you were unenlightened and became enlightened (ahem, like Leo Strobel).
If I ever write a religion, I'm going to sell myself as a leader, a right-hand man to the central figure, not a bumbling idiot.Plus they are trying to sell Jesus as being perfect, not themselves.
That seems to be your fallback rebuttal for everything. Does it automatically mean we should assume they're lying?They were trying to spread their religion.
Because they claim miracles, but lack evidence to back it up.Why would you doubt Greek Mythology, or Islam, or anything?
Perfect? No. Highly trustworthy? Indeed. Although I believe that there are explanations for these "contradictions" you present, they're all about background details, and even if there are a few minor mistakes in the gospels, that hardly invalidates the central message.Also the gospels contradict each other and get historical facts wrong. It's therefore highly unlikely that they were perfect accounts of what happened.
I'd have to investigate them further to give you a qualified opinion.Also what's your opinion of Mormans? They were persecuted, and plenty of them died for the cause, and they were not even 200 years ago so they have better historical backing.
Key word here: Significant. Can you call stuff like "Rabbits chewing the cud" significant? And I'd bet money that nobody's bothered to comb through Alexander the Great's biographies looking for tiny contradictions like the ones in your list. I'm sure if he had thousands of people out to deny his existence then there'd be boatloads of contradictions plaguing him.The point about contradictions is that it casts doubt on the story. If these people were actually there and could confirm these things, they wouldn't gethistorical details wrong or have significant contradictions. Getting details wrong or inconsistent is a sign that the stories were based on prevailing myths at the time (so the authors had to just "fill in the details"). For example, biographies of Alexander the Great, written 400 years after his reign, have nowhere near the number of inconsistencies that the Bible does.
Deifying someone who died shamefully doesn't make sense. Being mortal and able to die isn't something people naturally associate with an all-powerful God, you know? Not to mention, why lie at all? That just makes you lose a ton of credibility, especially if you're going to reference miracles and other events that can easily be checked! Why not just push the cause of Jesus as a great moral teacher? You'd get a lot less argument from other people, little to no risk of persecution, and overall just better odds of success.Okay I'm just going to give a brief summary. Jesus was a religious leader who started a movement and got killed by the Romans for "disturbing the peace". His followers then deified him and tried to get more people to follow their new religion.
Having an incentive to exaggerate doesn't mean they lied about it. For crying out loud, I have an incentive to exaggerate (and so do you!), are you going to consider me a liar?30-40 years after the fact (Jesus died circa 30AD and the Gospels were written in the 60s at the earliest, while most scholars place the earliest of them at 70AD or later), some of them finally wrote about him, and because they wanted to convert more people, they had an incentive to exaggerate
The testimony of the early church is unanimous in that the gospels were written by the people they're named after. Additionally, misremembering shouldn't have been a problem. The disciples didn't write the gospels entirely from memory, they could have easily gone to the places where the miracles happened to refresh their memories, or asked other people who were there.(not to mention even misremembering ... and this assumes that the gospels really were written by eyewitnesses, which is disputed).
I don't think so. For legend and myths about Jesus to have spread to that extent would require a century AT MINIMUM (which, interestingly enough, is when the false gospels start popping up.) For crying out loud, eyewitnesses to Jesus's teachings and deeds would have still been alive (not everyone, perhaps, but you're not telling me the entire population of Judea died out in 30 years) at the time the gospels were written.Exaggerations and myths about Jesus probably spread even earlier than that.