RE: The Case for the Resurrection of Jesus Christ (Part 1)
December 3, 2014 at 12:22 am
(This post was last modified: December 3, 2014 at 12:44 am by His_Majesty.)
(December 2, 2014 at 4:51 pm)Jenny A Wrote: With the exception of your trip to Seattle, all of those are events that were reported contemporaneously. IF those events had not been discussed at the time and now, years later one or two guys started talking about it, it would lend much credence would we give to the events? Not much if we're bright.
Now now now Jenny, don't try to change it now. You were SPECIFICALLY talking about whether it is more likely than not that someone would remember something 20 years later...now you are changing it back to the contemporary realm.
(December 2, 2014 at 4:51 pm)Jenny A Wrote: And the fact that people have vivid memories about the past does not make those memories anywhere near as accurate as they were at the time. If you think they are, you just aren't thinking.
It depends on how significant the memory is...I don't remember the first candy bar I ever bought...but I damn sure remember my first bike. See how that works?? The candy bar isn't significant, but the bike is.
And besides, creeds were formulated to be easy to remember.
(December 2, 2014 at 4:51 pm)Jenny A Wrote: And there was considerable literacy. Probably about 1 to 2 percent. Given the phenomenon described, you'd expect some writing at the time. The events described in the Gospels are huge. Philo of Alexandria(13-20BC-54AD) was there and writing about the Jews. But he didn't mention Jesus in The age of Pilate or any of his other books. But he was there. http://www.jesusneverexisted.com/philo.html
Bullshit. What contemporary evidence do you have that Philo of Alexandria existed? Remember, your logic is that in order for someone to exist, someone that lived during the time had to write about him...after all, that is the same crap you are pulling with Jesus...so give me the names of people that can validate Philo's existence...someone that lived during his time, to have met him and wrote about him? Give me a name of anyone that WROTE about him during his life? And how do we know that he actually wrote anything that is contributed to him?
(December 2, 2014 at 4:51 pm)Jenny A Wrote: Now you are being ever more childish. The question is not whether someone like a newspaper reporter would follow Jesus around writing down what he said (this is why if he did exist we can be quite certain that the Gospels don't accurately record what he said). The question is why no historian, letter writer of note, temple scribe, new and educated convert, or anyone else even mentioned his existence in writing for 20 years.
Well, give me a list of historians that were living at that particular time, in that particular location. You mentioned Philo of Alexandria, but you would also have to use independent CONTEMPORARY sources that would validate him as well. So go ahead...you seem to be good at doing research...so that is something for you to do.
And what is even more hilarious is that you gave the link to http://www.jesusneverexisted.com/philo.html, and in that link, the author is citing Josephus' work which mentions Philo, but Josephus was not a contemporary to Philo...Josephus was around 13 at the time of Philo's death...yet Josephus' work is being used as a source for Philo's life??? So where did Josephus get his information from regarding Philo when he WROTE his Antiquities , which is the same book he used when he mentioned Jesus, which you reject because Jospehus never met Jesus...but when he mentions Philo, whom he also never met...that is ok??

The biggest double freakin' standard I've ever witnessed.
(December 2, 2014 at 4:51 pm)Jenny A Wrote: Again, that's foolish. It matters very much. Particularly when it isn't even written down by those eyewitnesses, just by folks who might have discussed it with them.
How do you know that the Apostle's Matthew and John didn't write the Gospels that bears their names?
(December 2, 2014 at 4:51 pm)Jenny A Wrote: And then waited 20 years to write it down? That's a big problem.
It is a problem for YOU. Who are you to tell someone when to write something down? You are not the "write it down" police. And again, he was writing to the Church in Corinth, which means that Christianity had already spread from Jerusalem to Corinth, which is about 1890 miles http://www.distancebetweencities.net/jer...ia_greece/
And this was WITHOUT the Gospels....so no wonder Christianity took off even further after that.
(December 2, 2014 at 4:51 pm)Jenny A Wrote: Mormonism for example is pretty unbelievable as is, but imagine who much more unbelievable if Smith waited twenty years to write down what was in the golden tablets.
Jenny, regardless of how you think it should have gone, it is still the world's largest religion. So again, what you are proposing SHOULD have happened just wasn't needed.
It is like a music artist going platinum just by selling cd's from the trunk...with no radio promotion...no music videos...no magazine covers or articles...and STILL going platinum...it is rather amazing.
Christianity didn't need any of that special treatment, because as long as God was behind the wheel, it was gonna happen regardless of what anyone thought, said, or did.
(December 2, 2014 at 4:51 pm)Jenny A Wrote: The Jesus in Paul is decidedly unfleshly and ethereal, so no I don't.
According to Acts...fleshly.
(December 2, 2014 at 4:51 pm)Jenny A Wrote: Sorry, a man talking after death is an extraordinary claim requiring extraordinary evidence.
I feel that inanimate matter coming to life is also a extraordinary claim.
(December 2, 2014 at 4:51 pm)Jenny A Wrote: It can hardly be taken for evidence of the resurrected man's life if the "witness" never knew the man when he was alive.
Well, Paul said that he appeared to Peter and the other apostles, and they knew him when he was alive...but that doesn't count tho, right? Or are you gonna move the goal post again?
And not that it matters whether or not Paul knew Jesus anyway...as God can appear to anyone he wants to whether the person knows him or not.
Third, Paul may have not known Jesus, but he certainly knew OF Jesus, which is actually better than knowing him...I would rather someone know OF me that know me...because if they know OF me, then that would mean word got out about me...and I find that...BETTER.
(December 2, 2014 at 4:51 pm)Jenny A Wrote: Read his post.
Read mines.
(December 2, 2014 at 6:32 pm)abaris Wrote:(December 2, 2014 at 6:28 pm)pocaracas Wrote: But still, it would be nice to carry on with the conversation...
Would be nice to move on to part two. I'm eager to weather the upcoming bullshit Tsunami.
Hey, it would be nice...but to be honest, I thought part 1 would have been the most uncontroversial of all four...if it is this much CRAP over part 1, then the rest is gonna REALLY be hell...but I don't mind it...I was built for it!!
Kinda reminds me of an old army cadence...
"Pain (pain) in my back...I don't care...I LIKE IT THERE!!!"
Pain (pain) in my leg...I don't care....I LIKE IT THERE!!!"
(December 2, 2014 at 11:24 pm)Pickup_shonuff Wrote: If I choose to ignore 50+ pages of debate... (assuring you that facts, such as 2+2=4, are demonstrable, and that your faith, by definition, is not).
...Which seems to be something you've quite adeptly perfected.
Huh?