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NowHereThis
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If the stories of the Old Testament are not true, would that undermine the basic narrative framework that Jesus would have been working in?. The answer appears to be yes. Even granting that Jesus did everything the Bible says he did, including appear to his disciples after they discovered the empty tomb, it would all mean something else (if Judaism wasn’t true) because the meaning his followers gave to those events was born out of the Jewish culture they lived in.
That seems like its a problem, because there are a lot of apologetic efforts made to defend the existence of a creator, and also to defend the reasonable probability of the resurrection. I haven’t seen anyone try to establish the historicity of the covenant between Abraham and God, and there are some real problems with the historicity of the exodus, among them the lack of archaeological remains (in a desert that would likely preserve such remains) to indicate a large movement of people out of Egypt through the Sinai consistent with the exodus.
So does Judaism have to be defended before Christianity can be defended, and if so, do you know of anyone who has made such efforts?
That seems like its a problem, because there are a lot of apologetic efforts made to defend the existence of a creator, and also to defend the reasonable probability of the resurrection. I haven’t seen anyone try to establish the historicity of the covenant between Abraham and God, and there are some real problems with the historicity of the exodus, among them the lack of archaeological remains (in a desert that would likely preserve such remains) to indicate a large movement of people out of Egypt through the Sinai consistent with the exodus.
So does Judaism have to be defended before Christianity can be defended, and if so, do you know of anyone who has made such efforts?