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Porknpie
Guest
No Skadi, a number of the books of the bible were written by people who knew Jesus (Gospel of John, Gospel Of Matthew and history has the Gospel of Mark written by Mark who was a scribe for St. Peter). In addition, Jesus appeared to St Paul (previous name was Saul) and Luke was a disciple of St Paul who himself was taught by the apostles.The bible as it pertains to Jesus and his miracles was firstly written by people who did not know Jesus.
Yes the Catholic Church discerned which books were inspired and inerrant as Christ said the Holy Spirit would lead the Church to all truth. Interesting though, that St. Peter calls St. Paul’s writings “inspired”.The books included in the bible were decided hundreds of years afterwards, again by people who weren’t there.
Yes, 11 of the 12 apostles were martyred. Only St John was not. They all did so because they believed Jesus was the Son of God and not simply a prophet. The believed Jesus was the Son of God…they went to their death for him…as they knew he rose from the grave and appeared to them for some 40 days after his resurrection. Interestingly Skadi, if one wants to disprove Christianity, find the body of Christ. No one, anywhere lays claim to his remains.Lastly, as Christians are apt to point out, early Christians including the apostles went to their deaths for Jesus.
Skadi, think this one through: they faked the resurrection and 11 of the 12 went to their deaths by martyrdom (including by lions, by hot tar). Also, 19 of the first 20 popes were martyred, which means St. Peter and St. Paul did a pretty good job convincing their descendants that Jesus was the Messiah. What incentive did they all have to that? Another thing…the 12 split up and preached the one same faith wherever they went…all without cell phones to make sure that they were all on the same page.These people were willing to do anything for him, and I believe that when Jesus didn’t return some of them plotted to fake a resurrection (or that someone died in Jesus’s place).
Agree, there are a lot of people in error…but your premise here does not support the conclusion below.Just as people today continue to cry that the rapture is approaching even after multiple failed predictions by their leaders,
You’ll have to find out who this was…it wasn’t 11 of the twelve apostles …nor was it the first 19 out of 20 popes. They were all martyred. No much to be gained when one is eaten by a lion or boiled in tar …or has one’s head removed.so to was the early church lead on by someone with something to gain from the rise of Christendom.
Yes, Tacitus was a Roman who hated the Christians. Christian hating Romans were pretty common in the late 1st century. Better to read the Gospels, including writings of St. Paul who were in Jerusalem at the time of Christ. Tacitus writes this in 116ad…Roman historians such as Tacitus, they are pretty secular, and record a prophet living in Judea who was put to death, and referred to y some as the king of the Jews.
“15.44.2. But, despite kindly influence, despite the leader’s generous handouts, despite appeasing the gods, the scandal did not subside, rather the blaze came to be believed to be an official act. So, in order to quash the rumour, Nero blamed it on, and applied the cruelest punishments to, those sinners, whom ordinary people call Christians, hating them for their shameful behaviour. 15.44.3. The originator of this name, Christ, was sentenced to torture by Procurator Pontius Pilate, during the reign of Tiberius, but although checked for a moment, the deadly cult erupted again, not just in Judea, the source of its evil, but even in Rome, where all the sins and scandals of the world gather and are glorified.”