The basic question everyone seems to be asking is:
"Why do people believe the ethnocentric Middle Eastern Jewish religious fairy tale when there's no evidence any of it is truer than any other assorted ethnocentric religious fairy tale?"
It makes as much sense as a 16th Century Eskimo believing in Islam. The guy is a member of a different ethnic group who has absolutely no concept of what a 7th Century desert Arab experienced so why would he believe in the Arabian religious fairy tale?
So here we are in 2017 and people are believing in an ethnocentric Middle Eastern Jewish religious fairy tale thousands of year old when they have zero cultural ties to it. That's sort of insane. Why not believe in the ancient Egyptian religion from 3,000 years ago?
"Why do people believe the ethnocentric Middle Eastern Jewish religious fairy tale when there's no evidence any of it is truer than any other assorted ethnocentric religious fairy tale?"
It makes as much sense as a 16th Century Eskimo believing in Islam. The guy is a member of a different ethnic group who has absolutely no concept of what a 7th Century desert Arab experienced so why would he believe in the Arabian religious fairy tale?
So here we are in 2017 and people are believing in an ethnocentric Middle Eastern Jewish religious fairy tale thousands of year old when they have zero cultural ties to it. That's sort of insane. Why not believe in the ancient Egyptian religion from 3,000 years ago?