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The Historical Reliability of the New Testament
RE: The Historical Reliability of the New Testament
(May 31, 2015 at 12:20 pm)Randy Carson Wrote:
(May 31, 2015 at 11:57 am)dyresand Wrote: You don't need to be a genius or have a degree from Oxford or even knight hood to know that the NT is bullshit. 
It's a great piece of literature but something no one should follow. The bible is fiction always has always will be.

You do realize that this is just an assertion, right?

Will you be making an argument in support of your claim?

Why should he? You haven't!
Thief and assassin for hire. Member in good standing of the Rogues Guild.
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RE: The Historical Reliability of the New Testament
Quote:Another fun fact about Tim O'Neill: like Jesus, he karate chopped some ass here,

Oh, yeah.... whatever happened to that idiot?  They come and go so quickly!
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RE: The Historical Reliability of the New Testament
(May 31, 2015 at 12:20 pm)Randy Carson Wrote:
(May 31, 2015 at 11:57 am)dyresand Wrote: You don't need to be a genius or have a degree from Oxford or even knight hood to know that the NT is bullshit. 
It's a great piece of literature but something no one should follow. The bible is fiction always has always will be.

You do realize that this is just an assertion, right?

Will you be making an argument in support of your claim?

A perfect example is revelations 21:9-17.  "As the Borg ship descends from the heavens."  A decent Sci-Fi story for some, though I prefer Star Trek.
You make people miserable and there's nothing they can do about it, just like god.
-- Homer Simpson

God has no place within these walls, just as facts have no place within organized religion.
-- Superintendent Chalmers

Science is like a blabbermouth who ruins a movie by telling you how it ends. There are some things we don't want to know. Important things.
-- Ned Flanders

Once something's been approved by the government, it's no longer immoral.
-- The Rev Lovejoy
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RE: The Historical Reliability of the New Testament
Yeah, I know all about Tim O'Neil. I have talked to him.

The first thing to note is that he argues for a historical Jesus, not a magical Jesus. I've never once denied there could be a pie and mash guy underneath all the story. So what?

He came in here and tried his best to convince us, and he got as far as Jesus having a brother called James who got executed, and that was about it. A few other mundane facts. He made some good points, and also overreached badly with fallacies aplenty.

So this is of no use to your argument since I already allowed you before the assumption that everything happened in the NT besides the supernatural stuff, including pie and mash Jesus.

Please don't conflate historical Jesus with magical Jesus.

And even if I allow your conclusion, why should I care if he came back to life? What's that supposed to prove? It's extremely unusual, sure. Spooky even! But...?

I have a very important question for you. Do you feel there is a chance you could be wrong? Could anything change your mind about this? If not, that is a dangerous state of mind about any subject.
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RE: The Historical Reliability of the New Testament
(May 31, 2015 at 12:20 pm)Randy Carson Wrote:
(May 31, 2015 at 11:57 am)dyresand Wrote: You don't need to be a genius or have a degree from Oxford or even knight hood to know that the NT is bullshit. 
It's a great piece of literature but something no one should follow. The bible is fiction always has always will be.

You do realize that this is just an assertion, right?

Will you be making an argument in support of your claim?

1. The jesus story is completely hearsay. How would the bible authors know of a jesus or the fact that he lived.
The other thing they got the cross wrong the cross itself is nothing special hell they even got that wrong.
[Image: crucifixion_romans1.jpg?w=640]What jesus would have actually been on.

The other thing no one knows the true birth date for jesus nor the day. And christ doesn't belong in christmas.
Pagan holiday to get your grove on and make babies. Its a fertility celebration if anything not to do with jc at all. 
Even more damming evidence against the bible is the spread of christianity. The other thing we are talking about
people who believed in magic their and your side has to prove that magic exists before you can prove a god exists.
Mary having birthed the son of god because god impregnated her seems legit... legitimately stupid. 
 
2. Creation story debunked i don't need to even go into that part. Google it youtube it search it up on yahoo. 

3. jesus coming back

2,000+ years later still no sign of him, well that's because he never existed.

3. jesus is no one special there was other jesus like figures before him in other mythologies. 

4.  god is good, no he isn't anyone that is completely rational would see that the fucker is bad. 

5. Archaeology really heavily disproves the bible. You need proof outside of the bible to prove that it is true. The bible itself has no basis in reality 
that is were religion fails and will continue to fail.

6. History. 

I'm not claiming anything reality proves you wrong and in general theists wrong. 
Atheism is a non-prophet organization join today. 


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RE: The Historical Reliability of the New Testament
(May 26, 2015 at 11:42 pm)DeistPaladin Wrote: He places the conception of Jesus during the time of Herod the Great, who died in 4 BCE. 

Wrong again. Herod the Great died in 1 BC. This will shown shortly.

Quote:And Mary carries Jesus in her womb until she must travel to Bethlehem due to a highly contrived plot device featuring an unlikely Roman requirement that everyone return to their home town for a census. Rome didn't gain control of Judea and perform this census (which in reality would have been a simple property owner count) until 6 CE, when Quirinius (Cyrenius) came to be governor of Syria.

I'll deal with your error regarding the census of Quirinius in a separate post because I'm eager to correct your errors regarding Luke and Matthew seen below.

Quote:So either the "great historian" Luke goofed up his knowledge of dates or perhaps a 10 year pregnancy is the norm for sons of gods? Well, maybe demigods take longer to bake in the oven. 

This is just the tip of the iceberg as far as historical problems go but that's a good start for now. I don't want to go on too long for fear of losing this post like I did the last one. 

Too bad Luke didn't consult with Matthew when both were writing their fan fics of Mark's story, else they might have gotten their elaborations straight. But you know how it is with a story that has multiple authors. Continuity gaffes creep in, don't they?

Only in the imaginations of some, Deist. Let's take a look at what Matthew tells us in detail, and then compare that to what Luke has to say, okay? I spent some time pulling this together this morning just for you from numerous articles by Jimmy Akin. Enjoy! 

(And I'm NOT going to hide my lengthy post, because Deist did not do so. He is the more experienced forum member, and I'm just following his example.)

Matthew tells us that Jesus was born during the reign of Herod the Great.

Matthew 2:1-2
Now when Jesus was born in Bethlehem of Judea in the days of Herod the king, behold, wise men from the East came to Jerusalem, saying, 2 “Where is he who has been born king of the Jews? For we have seen his star in the East, and have come to worship him.”

Logically, Jesus had to have been born before the death of Herod the Great.

In the late 1800’s, German scholar Emil Schurer claimed that Herod died in 4 BC. Thus, Jesus had to have been born no later than 4 BC.

Herod slaughtered all the newborns who were two years old and under.

Those newborns would have been born between 6 BC and 4 BC.

Therefore, Jesus may have been born as early as 6 BC – maybe earlier.

But is this correct? No. Schurer may have relied on Josephus who made errors in his reporting of the dates of key events. If Josephus is incorrect, how can we determine the accurate date for the death of Herod? By going back to the beginning of Herod’s reign.

When was Herod the Great appointed king?

Josephus offers two possibilities: 40 BC and 39 BC. These can’t both be right, but there are other sources that suggest 39 BC is the correct date: Roman historians Appian and Dio Cassius. Appian wrote a history of Roman civil wars which mentions the appointment of Herod. It is possible to compare those events with Dio Cassius’ Roman History to determine that key events contained in these two works including the appointment of Herod occurred in 39 BC.

How long was Herod’s reign?

We know that Herod reigned as king for 37 years. Therefore, in order to work out when Herod died, we simply add 37 years to the year of his appointment as king to arrive at a date of 1 BC.

When did Herod conquer Jerusalem?

Once again, Josephus offers two dates for Herod’s conquering of Jerusalem: 37 BC and 36 BC. He further tells us that Herod 34 years later. Since Josephus did not count partial years (Herod did not begin his reign on January 1, for example), this puts the death of Herod in either 2 BC (if he conquered Jerusalem in 37 BC) or 1 BC (if he conquered Jerusalem in 36 BC). Is there any way to determine which of these is correct? Yes.

Which lunar eclipse is the correct one?

Josephus recorded that Herod died between the occurrence of a lunar eclipse and Passover. Astronomers have confirmed that there was a partial lunar eclipse in 4 BC and a total lunar eclipse in 1 BC. Since 4 BC is not an option for the death of Herod based on the two previous points, the eclipse of 1 BC must be the one that Josephus is referencing.

When did Herod die?

Putting all of these facts together, we have:

• Reason to believe that Herod died in 1 BC based upon the date of his appointment and length of reign
• Reason to believe that he died in either 2 BC or 1 BC based upon his conquest of Jerusalem
• Reason to believe that he died in 1 BC based upon the lunar eclipse that occurred just prior to his death.

More specifically, Herod died sometime between January 10, 1 BC (the date of the eclipse) and April 10, 1 BC (the date of Passover that year).

So, Jesus was born as late as 1 BC?

There’s a bit more to consider. If Jesus was born before the death of Herod in 1 BC and before Herod’s slaughter of the infants up to the age of two years old, then working backward from 1 BC, Jesus could have been born as late as 3 BC. Add a year just to be conservative, and we would appear to arrive at date range of 4-3 BC for the birth of Jesus.

But we have to remember that Herod wanted to be sure of killing a rival to his throne, so he based his decision on which infants to kill upon a range of plus or minus some amount of time from the date he learned from the magi. For example, if the magi had told Herod that the star appeared one year earlier, Herod may have chosen to kill all the boys two years old and under – just to be safe from his perspective.

So, Jesus may have been born around 2 BC?

Let’s work backwards beginning with Herod’s death in 1 BC. Assume that Herod met the magi a year earlier. That would be 2 BC. Assume further that the magi told Herod that the birth had occurred a year earlier. That would be 3 BC. Upon hearing that news, Herod ordered the deaths of all boys two and under – putting Jesus’ likely birth date in the 2-4 BC range. However, Herod almost certainly over-estimated just to be sure of wiping out his rival, and that makes it more likely that the birth of Jesus occurred around 2-3 BC at the latest based upon the testimony of Matthew, Josephus and modern astronomy.

Is there additional evidence for this date?

Yes. And here I'll just quote Akin straight up since what he provides is concise enough.

"Luke records that Tiberius became emperor after Augustus died in August of A.D. 14. Roman historians (e.g., Tacitus, Suetonius), however, tended to skip part years and begin counting an emperor’s reign with the first January 1 after they took office. On that reckoning, the fifteenth year of Tiberius Caesar would correspond to what we call A.D. 29. (Remember, the 15th year is the time between the completion of the 14th year and the completion of the 15th year, the same way a child’s first year is the time between his birth and his first birthday.)

"Jesus’ ministry starts somewhat after John’s, but it doesn’t appear to be very long. Perhaps only a few weeks or months. If so, Jesus’ ministry also likely started in A.D. 29.

"That’s important, because Luke gives us a second clue: He says Jesus was “about thirty years of age” when he began his ministry (Lk 3:23). So, if you take A.D. 29 and back up thirty years, when does that land you? You might think in 1 B.C., but remember that there’s no Year Zero, so it would actually be 2 B.C. or the end of 3 B.C. if Luke was counting Tiberius’s reign from when he became emperor rather than from the next January 1. Thus, 2-3 B.C. is a reasonable estimate based on Luke’s reporting."

Significantly, using two completely different means of working out the dates, Matthew and Luke agree on the birth date of Jesus.

Which pretty much crushes the assertion made when you opined:  "Too bad Luke didn't consult with Matthew when both were writing their fan fics of Mark's story, else they might have gotten their elaborations straight."


The only one who doesn't seem to have his story straight is you.


Moving on...
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RE: The Historical Reliability of the New Testament
The fuckers can't even decide among themselves what the mean by "historical jesus," Rob.


Quote:Unfortunately the man in the centre of all this scholarly activity remains an enigma. Who was Jesus? Crossan claims he was a revolutionary peasant, to Burton Mack he was a “cynic-like sage” [NOTE], to Tom Wright he is a Jewish prophet and to Marcus Borg a charismatic preacher (and definitely not an eschatological prophet). As Luke Timothy Johnson says, all this variety could mean that “virtually any hypothesis can sustain itself” [NOTE] and even Crossan admits that the “stunning diversity is an academic embarrassment.”

http://www.bede.org.uk/methodologies.htm


"Jesus" is whatever anyone wants him to be.  And that makes him mythical.
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RE: The Historical Reliability of the New Testament
(May 31, 2015 at 1:24 pm)robvalue Wrote: Yeah, I know all about Tim O'Neil. I have talked to him.

The first thing to note is that he argues for a historical Jesus, not a magical Jesus. I've never once denied there could be a pie and mash guy underneath all the story. So what?

So what???

Rob, do you even read the crap some of your fellow forum members post? (I can understand if you don't - you aren't missing much.)

Just getting to the point where even atheists can and will admit that Jesus was a real person is a big deal.

And btw, you should consider that I'm not engaging in a one on one conversation with you here...I'm making a case that covers ALL arguments...so, if something I post does not seem to apply to you, well, it wasn't directed at you personally.

If we were in a pub sharing a couple of pints, my approach would be different.
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RE: The Historical Reliability of the New Testament
So...you aren't interested in why your presentation is unconvincing, eh?  Just gonna drive over that and keep at it?

Good luck, I guess. Just remember, you now share some culpability in my continued atheism.
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RE: The Historical Reliability of the New Testament
(May 31, 2015 at 1:44 pm)Rhythm Wrote: So...you aren't interested in why your presentation is unconvincing, eh?  Just gonna drive over that and keep at it?

Good luck, I guess.  Just remember, you now share some culpability in my continued atheism.

Ooh...now I feel guilty.  Rolleyes
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