RE: The Case for the Resurrection of Jesus Christ (Part 1)
November 25, 2014 at 8:27 pm
(This post was last modified: November 25, 2014 at 8:32 pm by His_Majesty.)
(November 25, 2014 at 3:41 pm)Jenny A Wrote: Yes, but who, said George Washington was the first president? When did they say it? On what did they rely for their knowledge? Did they state it as a fact or as merely gossip or something others believe in? Did they have a reason to lie or exaggerate. Did others also say it, or is there just one person who said George Washington was the first president?
All of those questions are irrelevant, because the fact of the matter is when you look at ANY list of Presidents with the list being in sequence order, George Washington is first. Always. So lets not pretend as if this is not the case..second, I could easily play the role of a skeptic and doubt, question, and reject any evidence that you provide..because the fact of the matter is, no one that is alive today was there. All we have is written documents, hearsay, and rumours....even if it is "contemporary", well, how do we know those contemporary accounts weren't lying?
I mean, anyone can systematically reject anything, as even Bart Erhman pointed out...the question is, "Did the events probably happen" (regarding the existence of Jesus), and the vast majority of all scholars who use the same historical methods for Jesus case as they do in the case for anyone else in history...based on the evidence and these methods which are applied to the evidence, they conclude that Jesus' existence is more plausible than not.
(November 25, 2014 at 3:41 pm)Jenny A Wrote: Should all references to George Washington begin twenty years after his death and only refer to what a certain political party believed about him, we might wonder if he had ever lived or if he were merely a national myth.
As long as the references were from people that were actually there, then it wouldn't be a myth, now would it?
(November 25, 2014 at 3:41 pm)Jenny A Wrote: But, in the case of George Washington, many people and many documents attest to his presidency.
Yeah but I could question all documents if I wanted to put on my skeptic hat. Just asking one simple question: How do you know that the documents are contemporary? What would you do? Point to other documents? Well, how do yo know that those are valid??
(November 25, 2014 at 3:41 pm)Jenny A Wrote: There are not only contemporary writings about him, but also by him, and official documents carrying his signature.
There are contemporary sources, just not in the non-Christian realm. We have four Gospels, and we have the letters of Paul. That is contemporary...but I will get in to that in the other parts.
(November 25, 2014 at 3:41 pm)Jenny A Wrote: The references to George Washington are not only written by U.S. patriots but also by foreigners and not only by his proponents but by those few who opposed his government. And they include references to his military career, political career, children, and married life.
How do you know that those foreign sources weren't basing their narratives of George Washington on hearsay?
(November 25, 2014 at 3:41 pm)Jenny A Wrote: Now compare the cherry tree myth. The first mention of this rather odd tale in which a six year old George is naughty enough to cut down a cherry tree but truthful enough to admit it is in 1800, in a single book, published three years after the grown-up George's death by Parson Mason Weems.
Hey, I got one, too!! There is a mention of this rather odd but true tale in which a twelve year old Jesus and his parents traveling to Jerusalem for the Feast of Passover, and they eventually returned home, but they were unaware that they left Jesus behind in Jerusalem. So once they found out he was missing, they searched for him, and when they did not find him they eventually went back to Jerusalem and began a frantic search for him there. They eventually found him him in the temple courts, sitting among the teachers, listening to them and asking questions. His mother rebuked him and the twelve year old Jesus said "Why were you searching for me, didn't you know I had to be in my Father's house?". Luke (2:41-52)
See, I have my story, too
(November 25, 2014 at 3:41 pm)Jenny A Wrote: Biographies immediately following Weem's do not include the cherry tree. So, given the oddity of the story the vast majority of historians have dismissed it. I was all set to dismiss it too, but in looking I some more evidence.
Even the cherry tree story might be proven IF we look at who said what and when and what their sources were. Weems was both a contemporary and a friend of Washington's. Second, Weems didn't say that George chopped the tree down, he said that he barked it. We know that Weems lived near the Washingtons and had access to his friends, neighbors, and relatives. Weems says a cousin of George's told Weems the story, and yes George had nearby cousins of the appropriate age to know and tell such a story. On the other hand Weems said himself that he was writing his biography through a moral filter to educate other in morality so he might have embellished the story on accepted as true what another writer might not. Conclusion? Perhaps the cherry tree story is partially true. But it is certainly not true that Washington cut it down as so many grade school history texts have declared. http://carlanthonyonline.com/2012/02/20/...tree-tale/
Notice that in partially changing my mind about the cherry tree I paid attention to who said it, what he knew, and what he actually said. Given another witness, not interested in telling George Washington as a moral tale, and I'd believe the barking story absolutely.
Now in the case of Jesus, none of your references is to a contemporary of Jesus. None of them tells you what his sources are. All of the stories are obviously second hand. Three of them merely report what Christians believed. That, is much closer to the cherry tree and a long shot from the kind of proof backing George Washington's presidency.
Well, then you are basically saying that the Christians were lying. I mean, that is what is all boils down to. So, they falsely accused a well known Roman procucator of barking the orders for the execution of a man that never actually existed?
Now, the belief of the Resurrection itself goes back to within a few months after the cross (the very least)...now, you are telling me that the Christians would have been foolish enough to accuse Pilate of ordering Jesus' execution, while Pilate was still the prefect of Roman???
Makes no sense.
Oh, and let me also point out that when I read all of the accounts, I don't buy into the whole "they were only stating what the Christians believed" thing. They stated that Pilate crucified Jesus, not that the Christians simply BELIEVED that Pilate crucified Jesus.
(November 25, 2014 at 3:45 pm)Esquilax Wrote: "If I repeat the argument from popularity enough times, it'll stop being a fallacy!"
Right, because there aren't many arguments that most atheists that are in a particular field of study will agree with me on...and this is regarding a religous figure...so yeah, I will continue to point it out.
And I am doing so without saying or implying that just because they are on my side, it is true.