Right. It evolved over centuries. |
Based on what happened within a few decades. The word “evolve” doesn’t do justice to a process that builds painstakingly and in excruciating detail on the past. But you knew that. |
An eyewitness of Jesus wrote a biography of Jesus in a book that we have today. If you regardless doubt he existed, and if you doubt the genuineness of the book, well, in Jesus's words, "they have eyes but cannot see." Personally, I am descended from the first group to be called Christians in Antioch, Syria. Acts 11:26 - "it was in Antioch that the disciples were first called Christians." We still exist today - Syrian Antiochian Christians. It's not imaginary or make believe. We have an Antiochian church locally here too. |
Nuance shuance. Jesus Christ existed, and the scholars and academics accept the evidence. pp repeating repeatedly “the evidence isn’t very good!” is distasteful. The evidence is fine for the scholars and academics. If it’s not good enough for some fringe rando, they can complain daily/monthly/yearly that they don’t accept it…but that doesn’t amount to a hill of beans. If you personally don’t accept the evidence, you are a fringe loony. Case closed. We all agree, right? Yes, of course we do. It’s settled. Christ was a real man who walked the earth. We all agree. Thread over. |
Unlike many modern-day religions such as Christanity, the narrative or story of the Greek myths was usually not written down*. And because of this, it’s transmission relied on the oral tradition- that is being passed on through word of mouth. Greek mythology, quite literally, was spread by word of mouth between different city-states (poleis) and was therefore likely to be mixed or conflated with other local stories until it blossomed into the fully developed stories we know today. In contrast, the texts of Christianity were written down at a very early stage in the development of the religion, mainly to maintain the consistency of the narrative throughout the different geographical areas where the religion spread. Thus, unlike the myths of the Greeks, the New Testament is quite a precise recollection of the life of Jesus and his followers because it was written by people who were actually there or who had a direct connection to those who were there- the Evangelists and the authors of the epistles (St. Paul etc.). Christianity was spread by followers of Jesus trying to sway people to adopt the religion either by preaching from a written, standardised text. Ultimately it spread quickly and people genuinely believed in it enough to practise it even though it was illegal. It was only in 313 AD after Emperor Constantine issued the Edict of Rome that it was legalised and ultimately, 10 years later it became the official religion of the Great Roman Empire. The Greek Empire collapsed in 146 BC, although quiet echoes of its religion still reverberate to this day. These echoes may be limited to media, product names, fiction books, etc. from my research. In stark contrast the Christian family of religions have much greater influence on our society, although waning in the Western world. Throughout the middle ages and up until the modern era, most people's lives, in Europe anyway, revolved around Christianity. As we all know there are many major gods in Greek mythology and they all control a different aspect of life. This makes Greek mythology a polytheistic religion (it has multiple gods). Greeks would communicate with their gods in temples, praying to them. They would also give sacrifices to the gods, or sometimes even throw entire festivals to honour them. All of this was to try to please the gods so they would not get angry and seek revenge against the humans. On the other hand, Christianity only has one God, making it monotheistic. Albeit, Christianity has multiple saints, who are patrons of different aspects of life, it is important to note that these saints do not control as much as they act as intercessors between man and God. Christians pray to a specific saint to ask God to help them with a particular problem. In Christianity, the written text of the New Testament, centres on the life and works of Jesus Christ, who is God made man and as such represents the earthly form of the same montheisiastic God.. Another difference between the two religions is that the Greek gods had flaws that made them more similar to humans. They had tempers and they often held grudges. This made the followers of the religion not want to be like them but, instead learn from them and their shortcomings, frequently through fear. In contrast to the flawed gods of Greek mythology, Jesus is portrayed as a man who is to be aspired to, more so than the Greek portrayal of a god; who the audience learns from, rather than listens to. Most religions these days use their buildings as places to congregate and worship their god(s); a centre for prayer and learning about thor religion. This includes Christianity. Church is a place to go to practise your beliefs and reaffirm your connection with God. Greek temples however were not used in this way. They were meant to serve as a house for the statue of the god that was kept in there, or to the Greeks, symbolically, the actual god. The Greek creation myth goes roughly like this: Gaea and Uranus — primordial beings that mysteriously appeared out of nothing — didn’t create the world so much as become the world. Gaea became the earth, and Uranus became the sky. Gaea and Uranus’s grandchild, Zeus, carried on “creating” by divvying up the portions of the world among his five siblings and the children they eventually had. In stark contrast to Gaea and Uranus, there was never a point where God didn’t exist; He always was and always will be. Additionally, He didn’t rely on anyone else to create the world. He simply spoke, and it happened, and it was all very good. In the myths, the Greek gods were absolutely awful to mortals. Zeus only cared about mortals if they were young and pretty. Hera only interacted with mortals when Zeus cheated on her with them. Athena turned a skilled weaver into the first-ever spider just because the weaver was a little cocky. Apollo murdered the mortal hunter Orion with a scorpion because he was jealous of how much time Orion and Artemis were spending together. God, on the other hand, is completely invested in our lives and doesn’t toy with our fates for His own amusement. Instead, He loves us and stays with us from the moment He puts us together in the womb to the moment we die and join Him in Heaven. Museums are chock-full of statues and carvings of the Greek gods. Those statues were made to draw attention to the power and might of the Greek pantheon. And since the Greeks’ main objective in life was to avoid angering the gods, you basically couldn’t walk ten steps without seeing the idol of some god or other. The fundamental problem with idols is the mindset behind them: The assumption that a human can or should capture even a small part of a deity’s greatness with a lump of metal, stone, or wood. God and Paul make it very clear that the Lord is more real and bigger and better than even the most beautiful, intricate statue of Zeus or Aphrodite could be. He lives, breathes, moves, loves, and acts, all of which idols and the gods they represent could never hope to do because they are lifeless and false. The mindset of the Greek gods is a rather bleak and hopeless one: The gods themselves are amoral, selfish, prideful beings who either ignore mortals or wreak havoc on their lives to punish minor offenses. Worshiping such fickle gods leads to a life dominated by the fear of angering some deity or other. God brought His son back from the dead so that humanity could be released from that fear. Because Jesus died for us, rose again, and invited us all to believe in Him, we have a way out. And that’s what Paul offers to the Athenians: A Savior who loves and rescues them the way their gods would never deign to, even if they were real. https://www.christianity.com/wiki/bible/why-did-paul-compare-christianity-to-greek-mythology.html?amp=1 |
You also have reading comprehension issues, or happen to be a lawyer. |
OK fine. And there is no evidence of his divinity. Thread REALLY over. |
This thread was never about that; it was about his historical being. |
Nope. If people didn't believe he was divine, there would be no thread at all. No evidence of his divinity. |
You lost the debate and had to admit Christ was a real man who walked the earth and his story is in the Bible. Each person can have an opinion on his divinity; on his historical being, they cannot. Create another thread for that. |
Lies. Wrong. And a dose of stupid as a bonus. Never claimed the man named Jesus didn't exist, so didn't lose any debate. Fully accept scholarship that he likely did exist. Fully understand there is ZERO EVIDENCE OF HIS DIVINITY, and that no one would care about the former question if you accept the latter. |
Or....I have basic reading comprehension skills. OP asked some questions. OP did not deny his existence. |
Again, no primary sources so you have no evidence of how much "the story" changed within the first few hundred years. Obviously over that much time and with various translations/filters, it evolved. |
The eyewitness did not write the biography. Someone later in history wrote it. I believe that you and your church exist. I believe there are Christians in Antioch. There is evidence for that. |
+1 The man likely existed. His divinity isn't based on evidence - just "faith" in the supernatural. |