And I believe differently. Unless we have evidence, this probably won’t ever be resolved.
Oh, there
is evidence. You just refuse to acknowledge its existence.
No, we don’t. We have a biased source, Paul, claiming there are hundreds of eyewitnesses. None of these eyewitnesses left any documents.
Wrong. We have documents from:
New Testament Authors (who were eyewitnesses or hearers of eyewitnesses)
Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Peter, Paul, James and Jude.
Early Church Fathers (who recorded what they heard the apostles teach)
Clement, Ignatius, Papius, Polycarp
And don’t forget Irenaeus who was Polycarp’s student and learned from him what the Apostle John had taught.
Non-Biblical Authors (who recorded their own accounts of various related events)
Thallus, Josephus, Mara bar Serapion, Pliny the Younger, Tacitus, Seutonius, Lucian of Samosota, Sextus Julius Africanus, and passages from The Talmud.
Finally, you seem to miss the point. Paul, writing to the believers in Corinth, challenged his readers to verify what he wrote with those who were still alive. Is this the kind of thing one writes when it would be relatively easy to call his bluff? After all, the Jews in Corinth would have traveled to and from Jerusalem throughout the year to attend various feasts at the Temple…and Jews coming from Israel would have brought news of all that was happening back home.
And since Paul’s challenge was put into writing and copies circulated among all the churches, the likelihood of someone somewhere calling him out for lying increased exponentially…unless he was telling the truth, of course. But no one did because the witnesses Paul is referring to did exist.
This is false. The belief in a resurrection and the coming of the Messiah was widespread. Josephus and Celsus both note there were a lot of false messiah’s wandering around at the time. Josephus notes in “The War of the Jews” that an Egyptian claimed to be a prophet and led a revolt. The Egyptian also features in Acts 21:38, when Paul is asked if he is the Egyptian. The Christian apologist Origen also acknowledged this fact.
You misunderstand my point. Sure, the Jews anticipated a messiah, and many false messiahs had appeared and faded. My point was that Jesus did not meet expectations, either. He did not free Israel from the Roman occupation, and He was “cursed” because he was hung on a tree. Even Judas Iscariot seems to have betrayed Jesus in an attempt to force Jesus’ hand…but this did not turn out as Judas had hoped.
No, you should do homework. This census never happened. And please use a more credible source than the internet. New testament scholars for example.
The gospel of John clearly makes Jesus into a god, which is less apparent in the synoptic gospels which came earlier.
First, my original point was to deny your assertion that gJohn was “too late”. John was young at the time of Jesus’ ministry and wrote his gospel in his old age. You have not refuted this point.
Second, the synoptics contain clear pointers to the divinity of Jesus. This article describes fifteen of these in the earliest Gospel by Mark:
reasonsforgod.org/2013/06/does-the-gospel-of-mark-claim-that-jesus-is-god/
Even if Jesus was God, then that still wouldn’t prove his teachings were moral.
So, it is your position that God can be immoral?
I know. And I love the irony that science has pushed back religion so much.
And I love the irony that science seems to confirm the creation of the universe via the Big Bang Theory.
But so far, I don’t see that science has proven that God does not exist.
Did you read that on the internet too? Because my late uncle was a theologian and I spoke with him and his friends from university about these matters. Not a single one of them believed that the gospels were eyewitness accounts. I prefer to believe people who have studies these matters.
I’m sorry that your uncle and his colleagues were liberals. However, the tide has turned, and the overwhelming consensus among scholars today is that the gospels were written by eyewitnesses or those who had access to them.
That is right. In fact, no one can. The ‘method’ of revelation fails, because, as Hume says, revelation is revelation to the first person only and for everyone else it’s hearsay.
Well, using this line of reasoning, unless you are personally going to repeat every scientific experiment in your own personal laboratory, you’re going to have to accept what someone says about the experiments that they have conducted.
But I have not spoken of revelation. I spoke of history, and we have both multiple attestation as well as enemy attestation which indication that the gospels are accurate accounts of the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus.