M
Marc_Anthony
Guest
I just want to say that I looked at the link to the Skeptic’s Annotated Bible Refuted and while an excellent resource, Catholics should use prudence and judgement when reading it, as some conclusions reached in the book that I noticed in my cursory skim through it are not Catholic (for example, they conclude that faith alone saves, not faith and works). But it does a superb job of explaining how the discrepancies between the various books aren’t discrepancies at all. They go through the Resurrection Account and completely dismantle objections odue to discrepancies between the different Gospels.I would encourage you to research the matter more closely, as many of your stated beliefs are demonstrably false, particularly the influence of pagan religions on Christianity. I and others touched on this before, but that is an exploded hypothesis from the early 20th century that only sees currency with ignorant youths, many of them atheists. Most of the pagan parallels are totally fabricated, and I can recommend several books on this topic if you would like.
Hellenistic Jews from the 1st century were, well, very Jewish. They would not be any more superstitious than a Jew could be, which, if you know anything about Judaism, is quite critical of superstition, hence the skepticism of the Pharisees and other 1st century Jews about Jesus. In fact, it is one of the remarkable supporting arguments for Christianity that it is so utterly unique so as to have been impossible to emerge from a Jewish milieu. There is a lot of discussion to be had on this point.
I also touched on this before, but the Gospels are works of ancient historiography. It would be a mistake to judge them as modern historical works. Ancient historians arranged and documented history along very different criteria than modern historians. Today, it is understood that history is arranged chronologically, but back then, history could be arranged thematically, etc. and historians often chose to emphasize certain things over others. For this and other reasons, the small differences between the Gospel accounts presents no problem. And we could have whole other threads dedicated to their historical accuracy, textual fidelity, etc.
Good on you that you admire and try to follow Christ, but I think even you would agree, that you’re not REALLY following Christ, but you’re own abstraction of Christ. I really hope that you think about this more and give consideration to the fuller Christ presented in the Gospel and to the Church that he founded - the Catholic Church. I hope that you seek out smart people that you can talk to, perhaps get more information so that you can at least begin to consider if you are ready to next step in your fellowship with Christ.![]()