False Prophet
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Tacitus, Josephus, and Pliny were not Xians, but they reported his existence. Rock inscriptions or contemporary pottery did not leave behind the name of Jesus.
Soz. I misread your opening and thought you were referring to my charge that the Bible is poor or flawed. OK, the 3 worst inconsistencies are:
A. The 4 different accounts of the resurrection
Mark says there were 2 Marys and Salome, 1 white man in shining garments, and the stone was already moved out of the way of the front of the tomb. There is also the issue that the original version of Mark ends with an empty tomb and the women being afraid. No resurrection is stated. Mark was supposed to be the first gospel written which makes tagged on endings about a resurrection highly suspect.
Luke says there were 2 Marys and Joanna and other women, 2 white men in shining garments, and the stone was already moved out of the way of the front of the tomb.
John only mentions Mary who then went to fetch Simon Peter, 2 angels present, and the stone was already moved out of the way of the front of the tomb.
Matthew says there were 2 Marys, then there is an Earthquake which the other gospel writers didn't consider important enough to mention, and then 1 angel sat on the stone.
I couldn't put them all together and make a sensible narrative.
B. The events surrounding the death of Judas in Matthew 27 and Acts 1- I've already asked the questions twice now. These highlight 2 inconsistencies.
C. Jesus changed a lot of the old law which he had presumably written in a previous incarnation as Yahweh? The OT says God is unchanging. The NT changes many aspects of the OT God's wishes. The OT and the NT are not talking about the same God as much as Christians try to stretch the truth.
Tacitus, Josephus, and Pliny were not Xians, but they reported his existence. Rock inscriptions or contemporary pottery did not leave behind the name of Jesus.
A. One of the disadvantages of the Christian origins is that so much happened all at once in an age when verbal accounts were the norm. There was no attempt to write anything for a couple years, partly due to the surge in followers a month later after the resurrection and partly due to persecution. Mark's was the first and terse and informal and shortest but the overall account set a structure which the doctor Luke found reliable enough to keep intact in a third version of things that was turned into a Roman administrator to defend Paul.
Re the end of Mark, the resurrection is declared before the fragment in question, 9-20. If it adds any realism to it, you might notice that
the women are told to go to Galilee (v8), but they are intercepted in the city before that. The text/account becomes alive when real things interpose like that.
You didn't usually establish any facts by reports of women in that culture. It is astonishing then that most of the first witnesses were female. (btw this explains some of the male disbelief that is recorded in each account).
Paul notes that there are many, many accounts of Jesus showing himself to followers after resurrection and at one of them there were about 500 people present. At that stage, Paul was a Judaizer. That meant he was on a mission against anything that would disrupt the domain of Judaism. I don't think he would get such an account wrong as a Judaizer only to dismiss it later as a Christian. Or forget to dismiss it!
C. (I won't be taking up Judas issues). God had declared that the Law was only a shadow or precursor to what was to come later. Actually the 10 commands are not unique to Judaism. Even the rest day. It is the dietary--ceremonial law that is unique. This is why on essential moral law the two testaments are consistent. This issue in the NT then has to do with the dismissal of the dietary--ceremonial stuff.
So why did God impose them on Israel? To mark them as his own in a region where there were a lot of fertility religions. There were many stark contrasts. The main thing was that the force of nature was not worshipped or 'appeased.' Instead a living, personal God was worshipped. He was above and over it all, while in Canaanite religion he was only a force, most active it the male who was sexually fertile the longest, proven annually at a shrine with a virgin he selected.
To this annual sexual practice we must add the unpleasant fact that the child born of that sexual encounter at the shrine was then burnt and the ashes mixed in a drink which would further the life of the fertile male leader and his crops and women.
Maybe now you can see why Abraham is something of a joke to these people; infertile (for a while); having doubts about himself so that he tries through a servant girl only to create trouble for himself; then when he does get an heir, God tells him to go incinerate him--he thought--only to have him stop before the act!
This made Abraham, whose fertility came back, and whose child was never burned and drunk, to be a legend all around the ancient area of Canaan (to be Israel) that the whole fertility cult was bogus. That there really was a living personal God and a higher standard of dignity and property. There would be conflict between them from that time on. Over time, Canaanite religion had more effect on Israel than Israel had on them.
Israel went into exile for it. When they came back they were very strict, as we see from Ezra and Nehemiah. They enforced the distinctions harshly. They were called the Pharush--the separated ones. AKA the Pharisees. But now the world had changed even more and the land was administered by many other cultures and peoples. So instead of a code as in the ancient time of Canaanite religion, Christ showed that God's act of sacrifice and love in his own life would be a guide toward love and care of one's neighbor. Most people regard this standard as the highest. They may even quote it even though they are not Christians.
Lastly, the early church still needed to decide how much of the Law needed to be continued to honor Christ in the new era of Roman and Hellenistic influences. It was resolved in a gathering found in Acts 15. Sexual immorality was out and a few things about food offered to other idols in the areas where many people were becoming Christians. But nothing close to the 609 dietary and ceremonial laws.
Nothing of what you write convinces me. Sorry.
Tacitus, Josephus, and Pliny were not Xians, but they reported his existence.
It depends what you bring to the table. I am open to suggestion and new ideas. I don't think the vast majority of Christians are. I used to believe I was filled with the Holy Spirit. But I engaged in critical thinking and the Bible made less and less sense.The point is that nothing that any of us writes is going to convince you Spectrox. Only the Holy Spirit writing on your heart is going to convince you.
The old adage of the gospel writers being like witnesses to a car accident. That old chestnut. Except they weren't because Luke copied a lot of stuff from Mark, almost word for word in places and Matthew is even worse plagiarising about 80% of Mark.But less you think a few "inconsistencies" makes something untrue, I would direct you to writers stories of true events, or witness testimonies in trials of actual events. There is virtually always inconsistencies. It is just the way the human memory and language imperfections results in refurnishing the facts. It is a well known phenomenon. Different people remember different details, and even the same person will relate different details on different occasions.
You left out the seemingly "conflicting" stories of Paul's conversion in the Acts - three varying stories. Different details come out each time a story gets related - even when it they are from the same person. That doesn't mean the events never actually happened.
If for nothing else Christ should be believed because His teachings are the way to true happiness. That happiness comes from happy relationships which come from loving relationships, which come from giving of ourselves. I have found there is no other way to true happiness.
Good luck in your search...
Peace to you
That's true. But then, they also didn't have direct experience of his existence. They must have been getting their information from somewhere else.
Sorry that you feel the need to bow out. Maybe my questions were just too challenging? I accept your good wishes in the spirit they are given. I'm glad you've found peace and love. Knowing what I now know, I couldn't possibly find those in the Bible. Although I do have a measure of peace and lots of love already. And I created them.
Good to see that we've solved that Jesus was real. Now the problem seems to be whether slavery was.
Have we! Which Jesus, the one of Paul or the one of Nazareth? The one of Nazareth was known as Yeshua ben Yoseph. The one of Paul was called Jesus Christ. Which one was the real one? The one of Nazareth was born of Joseph and Mary and the one of Paul was born according to the details added later by the gospel of Matthew in Mat. 1:18. Anyway, which one was real?
I don't really feel the need to bow out, but it is fairly evident to me that you demand proof. God is not a God of proofs. He is a God of revelation. People that demand proof cannot find God. There are plenty of evidences. If you want to see how prophecy in the Bible works together, read anything in my signature that still works. (some of my threads got deleted.)
Cheers
The presence of Jesus buttresses our faith in him regardless of the murkiness of the human records about him. He raised up a form of himself from the dead.
Have we! Which Jesus, the one of Paul or the one of Nazareth? The one of Nazareth was known as Yeshua ben Yoseph. The one of Paul was called Jesus Christ. Which one was the real one? The one of Nazareth was born of Joseph and Mary and the one of Paul was born according to the details added later by the gospel of Matthew in Mat. 1:18. Anyway, which one was real?
What is your opinion? Was there a historical Jesus? If so who was he? If not what evidence do you have that Jesus wasn't real. Keep the discussion civil. I look forward to reading your posts.
Hello all,
Reviving this thread instead of creating my own, of which I may do with some future research projects, but this one on "Did Jesus exist as an actual historical person; how can we establish that, and what are the implications if he did or not for believers or the world at large?" - these are interesting and important questions.
My current opinion is open, but leaning currently towards a mythicist perspective more along a gnostic-theosophic theology (philosophically speaking), since one can draw meaning from the Christ-story, the symbolic/allegorical teaching therein, as it relates by analogy to the soul's transformation and journey towards union and perfection in the Spirit. (since all life is transformational, and further mirrored in the cycles of nature, via death, birth and rebirth).
For many years and holding now, I've been a true spiritualist at heart, so 'God' as Spirit is at the foundation of my theology and world-view,..... eclectic, progressive and universal, having roots in the ancient wisdom teaching, esoteric science, perennial philosophy. One Ocean, many rivers. One Sun, many rays.
This post and video here, reflect my current more skeptical agnostic research into the 'historicity of Jesus' issue, and since I'm almost finished with Ralph Lataster's book ('Jesus did not exist - a debate among atheists'), with a foreward by Richard Carrier, I'll be giving a book-review and summary soon - so far Ralph has done a great job in his critiques and observations, while being rather generous towards the historical Jesus view, but seeing more evidence and probability of the mythical Christ perspective, as he and Carrier give ample and comprehensive reasons for concluding this based on criteria and historical methodology more proficiently applied in this area.
Little historical evidence for Jesus exists outside of the NT itself, so much is a self-proclaiming affair, a literary creation and narrative written for a particular culture, community, faith-group, specially tailored.
WHAT IF you pursue the latest scholarship that is making the mythicist view of Jesus more probable and acceptable, and discover that more evidence supports a mythical or celestial Jesus figure being first that later got historicized and made into a physical flesh and blood Jesus on earth (depicted in the gospels), in which belief that he was an actual person incarnated on earth began, later becoming the dominant belief mixed in various Christ-figure motifs. It could be that the story itself, as a parable carries with it its own force and value, variously interpreted, whether or not a physical Jesus existed, or if the gospel version of Jesus is largely fictional, it still becomes a matter of 'faith' in any supernatural aspect of the person or story, still subjectively interpreted. While this may be the case, we can tackle some particulars already shared here along the lines of historical evidence in the first 2 centuries for starters.
I'll be taking a more skeptical, objective agnostic view, for discussion sake, not caring IF a historical Jesus existed or not, while accepting the potential value and meaning of the MYTH of Jesus historicized in time. Its all relative anyways, and complicated on an epistemological level anyways, as if anything could be proved, beyond personal belief, rationale, logic, personal preference or subjective religious experience.
Excellent group video chat on the issue -
Jesus called the way has levels of conscience awareness, child, adolescent, adult, depending on how fragmented they have become alone the way will determine how Jesus is being perceived from the dominating fragment, be it child, adolescent, or father, without all working as one unit the way is perverted into appearances, labels, religious factions, scientific limitations, etc.....that hide the way of Life.
The consensus of historical scholars say YES.