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Existence of Jesus
#91
RE: Existence of Jesus
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: As I say, I am not an expert on this subject, but my first point of reference on most things is wikipedia, which I regard as reasonably reliable. If the article in question is inaccurate to your knowledge, you are free to point out where.

It's a general comment on Wikipedia ... it's a useful starting point but I do not consider it a valid reference site.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Do you agree that in light of the information supplied in the cited article, "fake" is misleadingly strong? I think it is, because it creates the impression that the entire idea that Josephus mentioned Jesus is a bogus one.

The primary passage is regarded by many (most I am given to understand) as a later interpolation (an insertion to meet some kind of agenda), it was not written by Josephus so no, I think "fake" is an entirely apt description.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Well I have not maintained that Josephus was an eyewitness to Jesus. It remains the case that he was writing within a few decades of the supposed death of Jesus.

Do you realise how your phraseology distorts the relative time frames of Jesus Christ and Josephus? It wasn't merely that he wrote within a few decades of Jesus Christ, he was born AFTER Jesus Christ was dead!!!!!!

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: I also have Josephus at home, in English, but only on the Jewish War. But I see no reason to doubt that the quoted passage is in the extant edition of Josephus.

You have A Josephus text at home but the relevant text is "Antiquities".

You don't see a reason to doubt? This, despite the fact that you admit to being no expert and despite the fact that there remains to verifiable evidence to support the existence of Jesus Christ and significant amounts of missing evidence given that he was the apparent phenomenon he is claimed to have been. That, along with the evident similarities between the Christian myths and pre-existing mythologies gives me plenty of reason to doubt that the man was real.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: First let me say that I have no doubt that if a passage about Jesus existed in Josephus, the above is not a fully faithful rendition of it. It is preposterous that Josephus, a non-Christian with a strong Hellenistic sensibility, would have made some of the statements here. But this does not rule out that Josephus, who was after all writing a history of the Jews and a defense of their religion, did treat Jesus in a passage moderately similar to this one.

Of course it does not rule it out but the available evidence indicates the relevant passages were interpolations ... Josephus simply did not appear to write in that way. Now I have actually read the cited quote, in context, and it is almost immediately apparent that there is a significant change of style so I'm afraid I am inclined to believe this is exactly what many historians say it was, a later interpolation (a fake).

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: If you read the cited article, you will see that a reasonable case can be made for that, and which it appears that many scholars accept. For example, it is widely proposed that Josephus said, "Jesus is believed to be the Christ" and the emphasized words were left out by the scribe.

Mark, let us put this to bed once and for all shall we? I am well enough read in this area to debate you on the subject ... please DO NOT tell me what to read and what not to read, debate me on what I write.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Secondly if you read the cited article, you will see that it is now commonly agreed that the passage quoted, in Greek, does indeed conform both to the style and word choice customary to Josephus. Thus if it is a complete forgery, it is not a clumsy one that violates the style and use of words of the author, but a skillful one.

No, I may see that someone claims it is so, I am not able to verify that fact and neither are you ... in addition the kind of style referred to would go beyond language translation.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Well, it is not of no matter. The point about Origen is that he, writing 160 years after Josephus, declares that Josephus did not accept the divinity of Jesus. This would be a rather strange thing to say if Origen had not read something about Jesus in Josephus.

You seem awfully intent on proving there was actually a real man at the root of the legend ... why?

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Well I am no expert so I can't judge this passage. Is the Antiquities lost in the original Greek? But in any case, it would seem to require a more thoroughgoing discussion of Jesus than this to cause Origen to conclude that Josephus rejected the divinity of Jesus.

The passage from my book at home does in fact use the words, "the brother of Jesus, who was called Christ, who was called James..." and that, as earlier stated, raises again the spectre of interpolation.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Further we can't be entirely sure that the "Jesus" referred to here is Jesus of Nazareth. Joshua was a common name at the time.

It says, "who was called Christ", so I think we probably can assume that is what the passage (genuine or not) refers to.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Well I emphasize that this part of my argument is not at all about Josephus. I have a number of histories of Rome on my bookshelf, and each one of them that deals with this period and part of the world at some point discusses the historical Jesus as a charismatic man who either actually or most probably existed. No reference of mine avers that he did not exist. So I will maintain what I say in the first sentence above.

It's a shame that the available Roman records don't reflect your confidence isn't it? Histories are written later, not at the time and I'd guess that the history books you have were written much, much later.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Yes exactly, others maintain that it was altered. There is indeed a paraphrase of Josephus in the classical literature, which I quoted in English from the wikipedia article, which sounds very much like the disputed passage but which is free of Christian belief. There is a fair degree of supposition that paraphrase was based on an early edition of Josephus in which the disputed passage had not yet been modified.

Selective much? The simple fact is that we CANNOT be sure there was ever a real person at the root of the Christian myth and other available evidence implies strongly that there was no such person.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: But in any case, while I think it likely that Josephus did mention Jesus in something pretty well resembling the paraphrase, I don't consider this to be the main basis of the historicity of Jesus. You have in the first place the Gospels, which purport to be accounts of this man's life. They are sufficiently consistent to suggest that such a person may have existed, and they appear to be based on prior written accounts. Granted they report absurd miracles, but that is not ground for dismissing the report of a man's existence and the broad outlines of his conduct.

And I think you WANT Josephus to support your view and have based your interpretation with that in mind.

Ignoring the fact that the gospels were only named Mathew, Mark, Luke & John in the latter half of the second century & that the gospels of Luke and Matthew conflict in such key areas as genealogy it appears that the gospels of Luke & Matthew are largely copies of Mark and that Mark (the earliest of the 4) came largely to be between 70 & 90CE. It is also interesting that much of the important stuff for Christians (appearances of Jesus after his supposed resurrection) were added later.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: More importantly, the formation of a religious movement around a charismatic preacher is hardly an uncommon occurrence in history. Amy Temple McPherson; Joseph Smith; and many others are modern examples. On the other hand, you will search modern history in vain where any such a movement, ostensibly inspired by a charismatic preacher, arose without the actual existence of the preacher in question.

Modern History? So what? We're talking about the time of the classical mystery religions here where god-like creatures, resurrections, virgin births and crucifixions were common place and the primary figures were accepted to be spiritual and not real.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: chatpilot rather strangely said that many ancient religions were based on imaginary human beings. There is of course very little evidence that Budda, for example, ever existed, but there is very scant reason to assert that he did not. Confucious is rather certain to have existed, I believe. This is not to assert that every mythical human being taken up as a demi-god by any religion necessarily existed; only that chatpilot's case that ancient religion is typically founded on the preaching of a non-existent preacher is quite weak.

And Chatpilot was right ... it was that kind of time and the only way I can really responds to your "scant reason" assertion is say that there is scant reason to believe there is a teapot orbiting the sun between Earth and Mars; Would you believe such a claim that it is real?

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: At the end of the day, we do not know for certain whether the actual Joshua bar Joseph, mortal and charismatic preacher of something-or-other in Judea around 40 C.E. existed or not. But the preponderance of likelihood, which is really all that historians have to work with in such cases, is that he did. I concede that there is some possibility that he did not.

Whilst conceding the actual existence of Jesus Christ as a possibility, I simply do not believe it to be anywhere near as likely as you do and recognise that a myth does not require a literal central character to grow.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: You know if you look at chatpilot's posts along this entire thread, and I have, they really reek with anti-Christian animus. Now as atheists I think it is quite fine if we debate Christians and even try to convert them to our point of view. Nor is it necessary that we respect their religion, which is an absurdity. But I think we drift off into la-la land when we allow our disputes with Christianty to cloud our judgement on questions of historical fact. My atheism has a lot to do with my desire to look directly at the world and see it for what it is. That includes human history.

I don't agree with your assessment of Chatpilot's posts, I think he was absolutely on the mark and that it is you that has lost objectivity.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Oh and lastly, there is not "an incredible lack of hard confirmatory evidence" of Jesus' existence. There is a lack, but it is hardly incredible given that Jesus was a rather unimportant person to the only people at the time who were keeping systematic records, and further given that almost all the records that they kept have been lost to history anyway. How much "hard confirmatory evidence" exists of anyone in the First Century?

Then why believe he existed at all?

Kyu
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Reply
#92
RE: Existence of Jesus
(March 12, 2009 at 10:35 am)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 10:13 am)chatpilot Wrote: Most of these arguments regarding the secular evidence of the existence of Jesus such as Josephus etc. Have been proven to be inserted at a later time and not by the original author.This argument is old and outdated and is not even worth my time debating it all over again it's a pretty tired and boring subject to go over it again.I suggest you do your own independent research and familiarize yourselves with the subject matter.I refuse to get into this same old tired argument of Jesus being mentioned in Josephus etc.

Dunno about "proven" but yeah a lot of historians seem to suspect that.

Also, aren't most of these theistic arguments a bit dated anyway?

Kyu

Is there a document that says that Jesus existed, from the supposed time when he lived? I have never heared of such document.

The gospels in the bible are written a long time after his supposed death. So no evidence there. You have to find an historian or author that wrote something about Jesus while he lived. But such document have I never heared of.
Reply
#93
RE: Existence of Jesus
(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: As I say, I am not an expert on this subject, but my first point of reference on most things is wikipedia, which I regard as reasonably reliable. If the article in question is inaccurate to your knowledge, you are free to point out where.

It's a general comment on Wikipedia ... it's a useful starting point but I do not consider it a valid reference site.

(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Do you agree that in light of the information supplied in the cited article, "fake" is misleadingly strong? I think it is, because it creates the impression that the entire idea that Josephus mentioned Jesus is a bogus one.

The primary passage is regarded by many (most I am given to understand) as a later interpolation (an insertion to meet some kind of agenda), it was not written by Josephus so no, I think "fake" is an entirely apt description.
While I will concede that wikipedia is not the very best reference, it is by far the most convenient for a discussion such as this, and it is generally regarded as relatively trustworthy.

You have persistently refused to do me the courtesy of of actually reading the article in question, which would take about 20 minutes. As I have pointed out, it supports not with certainty, but with some degree of likelihood, that the original editions of Josephus contained a passage moderately similar to the disputed one found in later editions, but not containing any expressions of Christian belief; that in direct contradiction of your repeated assertions, the disputed passage does indeed conform to Josephus style and word choice, and so is far from a clumsy forgery; and that there exists in classical literature, by one Agapius, an Arabic Christian writer, a paraphrase of what appears to be an early edition of Josephus. The paraphrased passage is worth quoting again for the benefit of others who may read this thread:

"At this time there was a wise man who was called Jesus, and his conduct was good, and he was known to be virtuous. And many people from among the Jews and the other nations became his disciples. Pilate condemned him to be crucified and to die. And those who had become his disciples did not abandon their loyalty to him. They reported that he had appeared to them three days after his crucifixion, and that he was alive. Accordingly they believed that he was the Messiah, concerning whom the Prophets have recounted wonders"

Now there is some degree of likelihood that Josephus in his original form said something rather like this, particularly since this does somewhat parallel the disputed passage in the extant edition of Josephus. Needless to say, the paraphrase expresses no Christian belief; it merely reports what others believe. It would hardly be surprising if Josephus, writing a book about Jewish culture and religion, would choose to include such a report.

Perhaps you will be good enough to reveal the authority with which you dismiss the entire wikipedia piece with a wave of your hand; you have not so far chosen to confront it in any convincing way; but for the time being I will assume that, like me, you are a mere student of these matters and lack the authority to judge the merit of what appears to be the scholarly work of others.

Objective persons who come here and read this puzzling dispute will have to judge which is more worthy of credit, your sweeping assertions or what appears to be a scholarly discussion on wikipedia. In contrast to you, I do not set myself up as an expert, but merely point to the sources that I have available.

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Well I have not maintained that Josephus was an eyewitness to Jesus. It remains the case that he was writing within a few decades of the supposed death of Jesus.

Do you realise how your phraseology distorts the relative time frames of Jesus Christ and Josephus? It wasn't merely that he wrote within a few decades of Jesus Christ, he was born AFTER Jesus Christ was dead!!!!!!
It appears that you fail to understand the significance of a possible report of Jesus in Josephus. The point is not that Josephus was a direct witness to anything. It is merely that he would have based his report upon some combination of written documents of the day, his own life as a well-educated Judean, and his communications with other Jews. A possible reference to Jesus in Josephus would show that this supposed person was not only reputed to exist but was culturally significant among Jews at a time when he was more or less insignificant to Romans.

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: I also have Josephus at home, in English, but only on the Jewish War. But I see no reason to doubt that the quoted passage is in the extant edition of Josephus.

You have A Josephus text at home but the relevant text is "Antiquities".
I was making conversation, just to show that I found Josephus interesting before our conversation began. Neither your English translation of the Antiquities nor my totally unrelated English translation of The Jewish War establishes either of us as any authority, nor sheds any light at all upon this thread.

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote: You don't see a reason to doubt? This, despite the fact that you admit to being no expert and despite the fact that there remains [n]o verifiable evidence to support the existence of Jesus Christ and significant amounts of missing evidence given that he was the apparent phenomenon he is claimed to have been. That, along with the evident similarities between the Christian myths and pre-existing mythologies gives me plenty of reason to doubt that the man was real.
Of course I see reason to doubt. I have already said that there is some possibility that Jesus the man did not exist. But I think that you and others here fundamentally misunderstand what sort of "verifiable" evidence would be likely to exist of such a man living in Judea in the early First Century. Leaving aside Josephus, we do have the Gospels, which have a certain consistency and which appear to be based on earlier written accounts. (If you had bothered to read the wikipedia piece you would have seen that Luke resembles in certain places the disputed passage in Josephus, which would suggest a common source). So it is not the case that there is an utter lack of evidence of the man, Jesus.

There are not "significant amounts of missing evidence." There is only some evidence, but one has to understand that there is miniscule likelihood of discovering any evidence at all of anything that happened in the First Century that was not of major significance at the time to the Roman Empire.

Yes, I admit that I am not expert. But are you claiming to be an expert, and if so, upon what basis?

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: First let me say that I have no doubt that if a passage about Jesus existed in Josephus, the above is not a fully faithful rendition of it. It is preposterous that Josephus, a non-Christian with a strong Hellenistic sensibility, would have made some of the statements here. But this does not rule out that Josephus, who was after all writing a history of the Jews and a defense of their religion, did treat Jesus in a passage moderately similar to this one.

Of course it does not rule it out but the available evidence indicates the relevant passages were interpolations ... Josephus simply did not appear to write in that way. Now I have actually read the cited quote, in context, and it is almost immediately apparent that there is a significant change of style so I'm afraid I am inclined to believe this is exactly what many historians say it was, a later interpolation (a fake).
What, are you an expert in textual analysis? You have a doctorate in classical Greek? You read it in the Greek? I'm afraid I must doubt your personal expertise.

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: If you read the cited article, you will see that a reasonable case can be made for that, and which it appears that many scholars accept. For example, it is widely proposed that Josephus said, "Jesus is believed to be the Christ" and the emphasized words were left out by the scribe.

Mark, let us put this to bed once and for all shall we? I am well enough read in this area to debate you on the subject ... please DO NOT tell me what to read and what not to read, debate me on what I write.
We are discussing a matter of fact, not of opinion. Why is unreasonable to ask you to read what a appears to be a scholarly discussion that I would like to adduce here as evidence?

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Secondly if you read the cited article, you will see that it is now commonly agreed that the passage quoted, in Greek, does indeed conform both to the style and word choice customary to Josephus. Thus if it is a complete forgery, it is not a clumsy one that violates the style and use of words of the author, but a skillful one.

No, I may see that someone claims it is so, I am not able to verify that fact and neither are you ... in addition the kind of style referred to would go beyond language translation.
Neither I nor you has the expertise to question this independent and apparently scholarly source, so it is to be dismissed out of hand?

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Well, it is not of no matter. The point about Origen is that he, writing 160 years after Josephus, declares that Josephus did not accept the divinity of Jesus. This would be a rather strange thing to say if Origen had not read something about Jesus in Josephus.

You seem awfully intent on proving there was actually a real man at the root of the legend ... why?
I have an interest in history and in ascertaining the truth about it. I am not "awfully intent", I merely maintain that the balance of likelihood, which is all that can be mustered in most aspects of the history of the classical period, is that Jesus the man existed.

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Well I am no expert so I can't judge this passage. Is the Antiquities lost in the original Greek? But in any case, it would seem to require a more thoroughgoing discussion of Jesus than this to cause Origen to conclude that Josephus rejected the divinity of Jesus.

The passage from my book at home does in fact use the words, "the brother of Jesus, who was called Christ, who was called James..." and that, as earlier stated, raises again the spectre of interpolation.
The passage in your book at home is an English translation, but in any case I have already conceded that I do not doubt that the disputed passage if translated into English is substantially what you have quote. What, for heaven's sake, do you think your book at home says about any of this?

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Further we can't be entirely sure that the "Jesus" referred to here is Jesus of Nazareth. Joshua was a common name at the time.

It says, "who was called Christ", so I think we probably can assume that is what the passage (genuine or not) refers to.

Well if that is true, then there does appear to be a reference to Jesus in Josephus, doesn't there?

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Well I emphasize that this part of my argument is not at all about Josephus. I have a number of histories of Rome on my bookshelf, and each one of them that deals with this period and part of the world at some point discusses the historical Jesus as a charismatic man who either actually or most probably existed. No reference of mine avers that he did not exist. So I will maintain what I say in the first sentence above.

It's a shame that the available Roman records don't reflect your confidence isn't it? Histories are written later, not at the time and I'd guess that the history books you have were written much, much later.
There are no available Roman records and there is no plausible expectation that there would be any. My view is that the balance of likelihood is that such a man existed is based on the accounts that do exist, chiefly the Gospels but possibly Josephus; on the utter absence of any report from the First Century that the alleged preacher at the center of the Christian religion did not exist (many Jews would have been happy to see Christianity go away); and on the implausibility that a religion would originate as late as the First Century and purport to be founded on the teachings of an actual preacher, who nevertheless did not exist. This latter being supported by the complete absence in modern history of any similar example, and by the abundance of cases to the contrary.

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Yes exactly, others maintain that it was altered. There is indeed a paraphrase of Josephus in the classical literature, which I quoted in English from the wikipedia article, which sounds very much like the disputed passage but which is free of Christian belief. There is a fair degree of supposition that paraphrase was based on an early edition of Josephus in which the disputed passage had not yet been modified.

Selective much? The simple fact is that we CANNOT be sure there was ever a real person at the root of the Christian myth and other available evidence implies strongly that there was no such person.
You do not answer my point about the paraphrase, but merely assert what is to be proved. While I agree that we cannot be sure, I have yet to see any evidence that "implies strongly that there was no such person." What evidence would that be?

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: But in any case, while I think it likely that Josephus did mention Jesus in something pretty well resembling the paraphrase, I don't consider this to be the main basis of the historicity of Jesus. You have in the first place the Gospels, which purport to be accounts of this man's life. They are sufficiently consistent to suggest that such a person may have existed, and they appear to be based on prior written accounts. Granted they report absurd miracles, but that is not ground for dismissing the report of a man's existence and the broad outlines of his conduct.

And I think you WANT Josephus to support your view and have based your interpretation with that in mind.
Well what I want is to discuss the evidence objectively. My degree of wanting or not wanting to make a particular case is manifestly irrelevant to the merits of my arguments. In other words, let us discuss the facts.

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote: Ignoring the fact that the gospels were only named Mathew, Mark, Luke & John in the latter half of the second century & that the gospels of Luke and Matthew conflict in such key areas as genealogy it appears that the gospels of Luke & Matthew are largely copies of Mark and that Mark (the earliest of the 4) came largely to be between 70 & 90CE. It is also interesting that much of the important stuff for Christians (appearances of Jesus after his supposed resurrection) were added later.

Yes, yes; but the fact remains that the Gospels do constitute reports, probably based on earlier sources, of the man Jesus. And it is equally apparent that a great many people at the time are purported to have seen this man.

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: More importantly, the formation of a religious movement around a charismatic preacher is hardly an uncommon occurrence in history. Amy Temple McPherson; Joseph Smith; and many others are modern examples. On the other hand, you will search modern history in vain where any such a movement, ostensibly inspired by a charismatic preacher, arose without the actual existence of the preacher in question.

Modern History? So what? We're talking about the time of the classical mystery religions here where god-like creatures, resurrections, virgin births and crucifixions were common place and the primary figures were accepted to be spiritual and not real.
Yes and Joseph Smith alleged that he had received a heaven-sent book from the angel Moroni, which report his followers fully credited. And Amy McPherson claimed that the Lord regularly appeared to here, and spoke to her, and this too was credited. My point is that there are many recorded examples of charismatic preachers starting religions and even being credited with miracles, but no reports of preacher-inspired religions where the preacher in question did not, in fact, exist.

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: chatpilot rather strangely said that many ancient religions were based on imaginary human beings. There is of course very little evidence that Budda, for example, ever existed, but there is very scant reason to assert that he did not. Confucious is rather certain to have existed, I believe. This is not to assert that every mythical human being taken up as a demi-god by any religion necessarily existed; only that chatpilot's case that ancient religion is typically founded on the preaching of a non-existent preacher is quite weak.

And Chatpilot was right ... it was that kind of time and the only way I can really responds to your "scant reason" assertion is say that there is scant reason to believe there is a teapot orbiting the sun between Earth and Mars; Would you believe such a claim that it is real?
My point was that there are examples of ancient religions founded on the preachings of actual people, e.g. Confucius and possibly Budda.

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: At the end of the day, we do not know for certain whether the actual Joshua bar Joseph, mortal and charismatic preacher of something-or-other in Judea around 40 C.E. existed or not. But the preponderance of likelihood, which is really all that historians have to work with in such cases, is that he did. I concede that there is some possibility that he did not.

Whilst conceding the actual existence of Jesus Christ as a possibility, I simply do not believe it to be anywhere near as likely as you do and recognise that a myth does not require a literal central character to grow.

The latter point I will concede, but it is equally true that a myth can grow around a real man. Further, while a great many myths arose from very distant antiquity, I am not aware of any that arose as late as the First Century, unless it be this single one.

I suggest you read Chapter 16, "The Jews, Jesus and Paul" of Michael Grant's History of Rome. Grant is very well known and a very mainstream classical scholar. He addresses many of your concerns about the Gospels, and fully takes Jesus to be an actual, historical figure. I could cite other examples, such as Dudley's The Romans. But it is a fact that classical scholarship essentially does not doubt that Jesus was a real man.

(March 12, 2009 at 4:50 pm)Kyuuketsuki Wrote:
(March 12, 2009 at 12:51 pm)Mark Wrote: Oh and lastly, there is not "an incredible lack of hard confirmatory evidence" of Jesus' existence. There is a lack, but it is hardly incredible given that Jesus was a rather unimportant person to the only people at the time who were keeping systematic records, and further given that almost all the records that they kept have been lost to history anyway. How much "hard confirmatory evidence" exists of anyone in the First Century?

Then why believe he existed at all?
Because the community of classical scholars accepts it, and because the balance of likelihood in view of the available facts, in my understanding, supports it.
Reply
#94
RE: Existence of Jesus
wikipedia is not the best source for information on the historical Jesus google The Jesus Puzzle he covers most of the subject matter on his website about the secular evidence for the existence of Jesus.
There is nothing people will not maintain when they are slaves to superstition

http://chatpilot-godisamyth.blogspot.com/

Reply
#95
RE: Existence of Jesus
(March 13, 2009 at 9:18 am)Giff Wrote: Is there a document that says that Jesus existed, from the supposed time when he lived? I have never heared of such document.

The gospels in the bible are written a long time after his supposed death. So no evidence there. You have to find an historian or author that wrote something about Jesus while he lived. But such document have I never heared of.

Considering the state of the written record from the early First Century, it really would be quite extraordinary if a contemporary report of any particular preacher in any particular corner of the Roman Empire had come down to modern times. So little has come down of anything, you see?

If the only question were whether such a report existed, there would be no debate. But in matters relating to the classical period, these questions can only be adjudged by asking, "What is most consistent with all the facts currently available?" What, for instance, is more consistent with the reports that we have about Jesus and the rest of our understanding of the world at that time and subsequent to then, that a preacher from Nazareth named Joshua existed, or that he did not? Certainty is something that you will not find in this or any similar question, so what is left is the balance of likelihood.
(March 13, 2009 at 11:08 am)chatpilot Wrote: wikipedia is not the best source for information on the historical Jesus google The Jesus Puzzle he covers most of the subject matter on his website about the secular evidence for the existence of Jesus.

Well I really think that the best information of all concerning the historicity of Jesus lies in the scholarship of this time and place in history. It happens to be the case that a substantial majority of historians of this period do take the position that there did exist this particular Jewish preacher. See for example History of Rome by Michael Grant, Chapter 16.

I visited "the Jesus puzzle" and I must say it looks much more like the ravings of an autodidact than a product of serious scholarship. At least wikipedia purports to be scholarly. For one thing, this Doherty fellow seems to have the idea that the New Testiment constitutes a coherent whole from which the truth can somehow be extracted via textual analysis. But it is not a coherent or consistent whole, and of course it is extensively self-contradictory.

Here http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Grant_(author) for instance, is Michael Grant's biography, though he is merely one of many well-regarded historians who took Jesus as an actual, historic figure. Who is Earl Doherty, and where does he teach?
Reply
#96
RE: Existence of Jesus
(January 11, 2009 at 8:43 pm)WWLD Wrote: Are there any atheist here that believe Jesus did not exist?

I think he existed, but I just don't believe he was born of a virgin, that his father was god, and I believe that his miracles are myths.

I just want to see if any atheists believe that he was never even a real person.

The historical existence of Jesus as well as of other biblical figures is a matter for historyans but is of little interest for atheism because Jesus being the son of God whose existence is denied by us, is implicitly denied.
I have read recently a report in a news paper where the author knowing well the hebrew language emmits a theory of how Jesus became the son of god.
I'm presenting it here as a historic curiosity ,nothing to do with atheism
but nevertheless interesting.

In hebrew as well in other semitic languages as arameic which was spoken in Judeea in the time of Jesus the word son is expressed as "ben"
in hebrew, or "bar "in arameic.
In the time of Jesus the population of Judeea spoke actually a mix of languages with preponderence for Greek and Arameic.Hebrew was the religious language of the Jews spoken by the upper classes and known sparsely by common people,who knew from it mainly expressions linked to their religion

Now, the same expression put as a prefix to a certain substantive accentuates it's meaning.For instance the word man is translated "adam"
( yes the same adam from the bible) but "ben adam" means a MAN e.g. a man in his whole complexity ,generally in a positive way.
It is a feature typical only for semitical languages.

It is possible that Jesus living in a period of turmoil which preceded the destruction of Judeea by the Romans 70 years after his birth was at the beginning a preacher and a healer who succeeded to attract followers
and disciples.At a certain point of his career he began to perform deeds which were perceived as miracles possible only for God.
His followers might have begun to see him as God himself which means in hebrew "El".
May be that people enchanted by his miracles begun to call him "Ben El" which would have meant the true the mighty God himself.
Literally translated "Ben El" means also the son of God.

So when the Gospel was written first by Mathew and later by other appostles at approximately 70 years after Jesus' death ,Judeea being
already destroyed by the Romans the double meaning of the word "Ben El" was lost so it was translated from hebrew to greek in his basic meaning as "son of God" and was incorporated as such in the christian faith.

Tha hystory of christianity knows that 300 years after the birth of Jesus when christianity was officialy accepted by the emperor Constantinus ,the matter of Christ beig the son of God or God himself brought the faith on the brink of a deep schisma,which as explained above was a possible result of an inaccurate translation of original hebrew texts or oral tales.
Reply
#97
RE: Existence of Jesus
(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: While I will concede that wikipedia is not the very best reference, it is by far the most convenient for a discussion such as this, and it is generally regarded as relatively trustworthy.

I disagree for reasons already stated!

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: Now there is some degree of likelihood that Josephus in his original form said something rather like this, particularly since this does somewhat parallel the disputed passage in the extant edition of Josephus. Needless to say, the paraphrase expresses no Christian belief; it merely reports what others believe. It would hardly be surprising if Josephus, writing a book about Jewish culture and religion, would choose to include such a report.

No, and do you want to know why? If you read the section concerned (and I'm talking more than the chapter concerned) you will not only realise that it has a completely different style (which is why I referred to the "Wish you were here" comment by an historian friend or my best friend) you will also note that it reads FAR better without the interpolated passage ... so, if it's OK by you, I'm just going to carry on believing it is a FAKE because that's EXACTLY what it appears to be.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: Perhaps you will be good enough to reveal the authority with which you dismiss the entire wikipedia piece with a wave of your hand; you have not so far chosen to confront it in any convincing way; but for the time being I will assume that, like me, you are a mere student of these matters and lack the authority to judge the merit of what appears to be the scholarly work of others.

I don't "dismiss" Wiki, I simply accept it for what it is ... a user subscribed database of documents with insufficient control over its content to be trusted. Yes they have improved this recently but there remain questions about the way it is edited, indeed one of the primary administrators was found to have edited out negative comments concerning something he was intimately associated with. Nevertheless it remains a useful starting point in anything one wishes to research ... it simply cannot be regarded as in any fashion authoritative.

Another little story about Wiki for you, hearsay I admit ... there was a debate between Gordon Brown & David Cameron and they disagreed about something or other and the debate ended as debates do. Immediately after some bright Tory runs along to Wiki and edits the article in favour of Cameron (despite the fact that Brown was actually right) in the full knowledge that the press, gullible as they are, will run to Wiki and lap it up ... and it worked. Oh it was edited back the following day but by then the damage was done!

You see the problem with Wiki is simple, it ISN'T an encyclopaedia, it a sort of debating forum. When issues arte no contentious it's fine, it can maybe be relied upon but when they are (such as the historicity of Jesus) it can't, it isn't that sort of resource. Now I'm done with arguing with you whether I should or should not read your damned link ... as it happens I only read kinks from trusted sources and you are most definitely not one of those. You want to put your Wiki argument fine, do so, but you do so in your own words and on this forum.

Sources? I have a number of sources including Earl Doherty, Gandy & Freke, Zindler, Remsberg and others.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: Objective persons who come here and read this puzzling dispute will have to judge which is more worthy of credit, your sweeping assertions or what appears to be a scholarly discussion on wikipedia. In contrast to you, I do not set myself up as an expert, but merely point to the sources that I have available.

As to whether it is a "scholarly discussion" (see above) is debatable but I would expect nothing less.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: It appears that you fail to understand the significance of a possible report of Jesus in Josephus. The point is not that Josephus was a direct witness to anything. It is merely that he would have based his report upon some combination of written documents of the day, his own life as a well-educated Judean, and his communications with other Jews. A possible reference to Jesus in Josephus would show that this supposed person was not only reputed to exist but was culturally significant among Jews at a time when he was more or less insignificant to Romans.

IMO your problem with me is that I fail to agree with your repeated insistences that it is more reasonable to believe there was a Jesus Christ than not ... given the flimsy nature of the evidence supporting his physical existence am I not allowed to believe something different from you?

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: I was making conversation, just to show that I found Josephus interesting before our conversation began. Neither your English translation of the Antiquities nor my totally unrelated English translation of The Jewish War establishes either of us as any authority, nor sheds any light at all upon this thread.

I'm not interested in "making conversation" ... I am interested in debating your assertions with regard to the existence of Jesus Christ.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: Of course I see reason to doubt. I have already said that there is some possibility that Jesus the man did not exist. But I think that you and others here fundamentally misunderstand what sort of "verifiable" evidence would be likely to exist of such a man living in Judea in the early First Century. Leaving aside Josephus, we do have the Gospels, which have a certain consistency and which appear to be based on earlier written accounts. (If you had bothered to read the wikipedia piece you would have seen that Luke resembles in certain places the disputed passage in Josephus, which would suggest a common source). So it is not the case that there is an utter lack of evidence of the man, Jesus.

I don't think either Chatpilot or I have misunderstood the nature of evidence at all (though I recognise that historical evidence is somewhat weaker in nature than scientific) but let's role with that ... what is verifiable evidence?

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: There are not "significant amounts of missing evidence." There is only some evidence, but one has to understand that there is miniscule likelihood of discovering any evidence at all of anything that happened in the First Century that was not of major significance at the time to the Roman Empire.

Given that your claim is that there was a literal Jesus Christ (a physical man) at the root of the Christian myth I would argue that it is entirely reasonable to argue, in context, that there are significant missing evidences (though in truth I was probably being a little poetic in my choice of phraseology)

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: Yes, I admit that I am not expert. But are you claiming to be an expert, and if so, upon what basis?

No, just someone with an opinion evaluating the available evidence just as you are.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: What, are you an expert in textual analysis? You have a doctorate in classical Greek? You read it in the Greek? I'm afraid I must doubt your personal expertise.

And no worse than you it seems.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: We are discussing a matter of fact, not of opinion. Why is unreasonable to ask you to read what a appears to be a scholarly discussion that I would like to adduce here as evidence?

See above.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: Neither I nor you has the expertise to question this independent and apparently scholarly source, so it is to be dismissed out of hand?

See above.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: I have an interest in history and in ascertaining the truth about it. I am not "awfully intent", I merely maintain that the balance of likelihood, which is all that can be mustered in most aspects of the history of the classical period, is that Jesus the man existed.

And I disagree.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: The passage in your book at home is an English translation, but in any case I have already conceded that I do not doubt that the disputed passage if translated into English is substantially what you have quote. What, for heaven's sake, do you think your book at home says about any of this?

We've discussed this already ... I do not see the need to do so again. Given that there is no verifiable evidence or direct eye-witness accounts in support of the existence of Jesus Christ my opinion stands, AT THE VERY LEAST, as being as valid as yours.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: Well if that is true, then there does appear to be a reference to Jesus in Josephus, doesn't there?

Which (if referring to the first passage) appears to be an interpolation and (if the second) may well be.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: There are no available Roman records and there is no plausible expectation that there would be any. My view that the balance of likelihood is that such a man existed is based on the accounts that do exist, chiefly the Gospels but possibly Josephus; on the utter absence of any report from the First Century that the alleged preacher at the center of the Christian religion did not exist (many Jews would have been happy to see Christianity go away); and on the implausibility that a religion would originate as late as the First Century and purport to be founded on the teachings of an actual preacher, who nevertheless did not exist. This latter being supported by the complete absence in modern history of any similar example, and by the abundance of cases to the contrary.

Fair enough, but there are indirect references to them, indeed it is argued that the writings of Tacitus (another major Christian "evidence" for the existence of Christ) concerning Jesus Christ are written in a way that indicate he was not writing from the Roman records of the time.

I am aware of what your supposedly "balanced" view is and I have made it clear that I consider neither you or Wiki authoritative on the subject.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: There are no available Roman records and there is no plausible expectation that there would be any. My view that the balance of likelihood is that such a man existed is based on the accounts that do exist, chiefly the Gospels but possibly Josephus; on the utter absence of any report from the First Century that the alleged preacher at the center of the Christian religion did not exist (many Jews would have been happy to see Christianity go away); and on the implausibility that a religion would originate as late as the First Century and purport to be founded on the teachings of an actual preacher, who nevertheless did not exist. This latter being supported by the complete absence in modern history of any similar example, and by the abundance of cases to the contrary.

There are indirect references to them, indeed it is argued that the writings of Tacitus (another major Christian "evidence" for the existence of Christ) concerning Jesus Christ are written in a way that indicate he was not writing from the Roman records of the time.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: You do not answer my point about the paraphrase, but merely assert what is to be proved. While I agree that we cannot be sure, I have yet to see any evidence that "implies strongly that there was no such person." What evidence would that be?

I fail to see why I should continually repeat my argument so, see above and previous posts.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: Well what I want is to discuss the evidence objectively. My degree of wanting or not wanting to make a particular case is manifestly irrelevant to the merits of my arguments. In other words, let us discuss the facts.

I think the last thing you want is objectivity; I think you have already made up your mind. I remain unsure why that is.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: Yes, yes; but the fact remains that the Gospels do constitute reports, probably based on earlier sources, of the man Jesus. And it is equally apparent that a great many people at the time are purported to have seen this man.

Possibly, possibly not and I am inclined towards the latter for reason already stated.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: Yes and Joseph Smith alleged that he had received a heaven-sent book from the angel Moroni, which report his followers fully credited. And Amy McPherson claimed that the Lord regularly appeared to here, and spoke to her, and this too was credited. My point is that there are many recorded examples of charismatic preachers starting religions and even being credited with miracles, but no reports of preacher-inspired religions where the preacher in question did not, in fact, exist.

Again so what? Comparative religions of the time were replete with similar claims; there are few serious claims that they had real people at their root.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: My point was that there are examples of ancient religions founded on the preachings of actual people, e.g. Confucius and possibly Budda.

The teachings of Buddha & Confucius may well have impacted on the mystery religions of the time and thus upon Christianity ... I don't know enough about that to be sure. What I am sure of is that just because these religions had real people at their root does not mean that others did.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: The latter point I will concede, but it is equally true that a myth can grow around a real man. Further, while a great many myths arose from very distant antiquity, I am not aware of any that arose as late as the First Century, unless it be this single one.

It's possible that the Holy Roman Church's practice of destroying anything to do with other religions (pre or during) had an impact.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: I suggest you read Chapter 16, "The Jews, Jesus and Paul" of Michael Grant's History of Rome. Grant is very well known and a very mainstream classical scholar. He addresses many of your concerns about the Gospels, and fully takes Jesus to be an actual, historical figure. I could cite other examples, such as Dudley's The Romans. But it is a fact that classical scholarship essentially does not doubt that Jesus was a real man.

Thank you but I will read the books I want to read, namely those suggested by others I consider to be more objective.

(March 13, 2009 at 9:26 am)Mark Wrote: Because the community of classical scholars accepts it, and because the balance of likelihood in view of the available facts, in my understanding, supports it.

Maybe historians who believe or suspect that Jesus did not exist are in the minority (though I would like to see evidence to back up that claim and I strongly suspect that that is not true of non-theologically biased historians) but saying that most historians think there is is problematic because things change, views of history change and it is worth remembering that at one point in time EVERYONE (at least in Western civilisation) believed in a literal creation and earlier still EVERYONE believed in a flat Earth. In essence you are using the fallacious argument from numbers.

The other stuff you already know I disagree with.

Kyu
Angry Atheism
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Reply
#98
RE: Existence of Jesus
There is no evidence of the existence of Jesus outside of the gospels.And in my opinion the gospels are not a reliable source of information since I think that Jesus is a fabricated myth perpetuated by the church.The so called secular documents that mention Jesus are few and far between and when they do mention him it's after the fact in most cases and very brief there is nothing extraordinary stated about him.Also,most scholars believe that those documents in which Jesus is mentioned are later additions to the original documents beleived to have been put there by someone other than the original author of the documents.

If anyone is interested in learning about the secular documents regarding the existence of Jesus Earl Doherty's site is great for this and breaks it down nicely,here is the link:

http://www.jesuspuzzle.com/
There is nothing people will not maintain when they are slaves to superstition

http://chatpilot-godisamyth.blogspot.com/

Reply
#99
RE: Existence of Jesus
(March 14, 2009 at 10:47 am)chatpilot Wrote: There is no evidence of the existence of Jesus outside of the gospels.And in my opinion the gospels are not a reliable source of information since I think that Jesus is a fabricated myth perpetuated by the church.The so called secular documents that mention Jesus are few and far between and when they do mention him it's after the fact in most cases and very brief there is nothing extraordinary stated about him.Also,most scholars believe that those documents in which Jesus is mentioned are later additions to the original documents beleived to have been put there by someone other than the original author of the documents.

If anyone is interested in learning about the secular documents regarding the existence of Jesus Earl Doherty's site is great for this and breaks it down nicely,here is the link:

http://www.jesuspuzzle.com/

The jesuspuzzle I read seems to be written in a much modern-historical style with an abundance of quotations,but finaly I remained no less puzzled than at the beginning.
What puzzled me always about the Gospel was the language of original hebrew or greek or arameic writings.The final official language must have been greek but the problem is that if there were original texts such as the quoted Q source, then analyzing the language of them would have the possibility of shedding much light on their history.
The names of Jesus,of Maria ,of Mathew and of others are most certainly translation of Old testament names indicating in my opinion that the events took place in Judeea at a period characterised by the decay of the Hasmonean dinasty when Helenism took over of the lifes of common people which brought to conversion of names from Hebrew to Greek. Helenism brought perhaps well being to the Jews but it eroded their ancient religion practices,among it perhaps the most sacred practice of circumcision. The roman conquest of Judeea at 60 B.C might have also plunged the Jews in the seeking of new Saviours against the mythical Messiah who had failed them.
In conclusion what I'm saying is that a differential study of hebrew/arameic/greek languages of the ancient texts of the Gospel is necessary ,without it a deep understanding of what really happened is practically impossible.In the jesuspuzzle work I have not seen any sign of such an approach.
In my previous reply I have presented as an example the misunderstanding of the translation between the word "ben=son " and it's possible missinterpretations.
Reply
RE: Existence of Jesus
I have always said that the bible is a document that aside from all the contradictory stories and considering that it was written quite a few years from the alleged crucifixion of Christ that it also suffers from being lost in translation.Also,there is not one first hand account of the story of Jesus included in the New Testament these are all written by people who most likely never even met Jesus.Regarding the Q gospel there is not one single copy of it in existence today it was pieced together by scholars comparing and noting the similarities in some of the stories as told in the gospels and pointing to them having a single source.

In fact none of the entire N.T. is an original copy what we have are copies of copies.I believe the myth of Christ is an oral tradition that was passed on and then set to writing years later to preserve it.And considering that this tale of Jesus has been told so many times in so many different cultures that it was nothing more than plagiarized myth.
There is nothing people will not maintain when they are slaves to superstition

http://chatpilot-godisamyth.blogspot.com/

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