Jesus' Historicity

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Anonymous wrote:Remember how turbulent the world of First-Century Judea was. This was a time of immense political tension and foreign occupation, leading to widespread Jewish apocalypticism, the belief that God would soon intervene dramatically to destroy evil forces, restore Israel, and establish His eternal Kingdom. There was also widespread discontent with the Jerusalem Temple establishment. This resulted in many competing Jewish sects at the time.

In addition, esoteric mystery cults were common in the wider Greco-Roman world. These groups offered a personal religious experience, often promising salvation or a blessed afterlife, which was distinct from the public, state-sponsored worship of the time. Within esoteric groups, members were often initiated into various levels of secret knowledge (Gnosis). Groups like the community at Qumran (associated with the Dead Sea Scrolls), had rigid hierarchical structures and specific titles for their leadership ("the Teacher of Righteousness," "Sons of Light," etc.).

At this time, it was also remarkably common for individuals to claim authority within a religion based on direct divine revelations or visions rather than inherited lineage or institutional appointment. Within the context of Jewish apocalyptic movements and the surrounding Greco-Roman mystery cults, personal charismatic experience was a powerful credential, often seen as a direct calling from God that superseded traditional structures. This emphasis on immediate spiritual insight facilitated a dynamic religious landscape where new leaders and sects could emerge rapidly, each validated by the claim of a unique and personal encounter with the divine.

Within all this context, the first “Christians” were a small group started in the Jewish capital, Jerusalem. They were devout Jews who adhered strictly to the Mosaic Law. These early “Jewish Christians” viewed themselves as the true remnant of Israel, called to a higher standard of holiness and adherence to the Torah.

These Jewish Christians were also an esoteric mystery cult, featuring secret teachings, hidden rituals, and an initiation process for members. A "brother" of the Lord might be a title reserved for those who had reached the highest level of understanding of the Christ, differentiating them from ordinary believers.

Within this community, one of their key leaders was James, referred to as "James the Just" (or James the Righteous) in early extra-canonical Christian sources (like Hegesippus, preserved in Eusebius's Church History). These sources describe him as an ascetic who never cut his hair, drank no wine, and spent so much time praying in the Temple that his knees became calloused like a camel's. This rigorous lifestyle and commitment to poverty provided a compelling model of piety that attracted like-minded Jews seeking a purer form of religious observance.

James, as a "pillar" (Galatians 2:9), was the top earthly authority, and his unique title reflected that supreme status. James’s authority (see previous point on authority through revelation) was reinforced by a visionary experience (mentioned briefly by Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:7) that validated his role as the movement’s head. His title, “the Lord’s brother,” has sparked centuries of debate. In Koine Greek, adelphos (“brother”) could mean biological sibling, close relative, or spiritual kin. Many scholars argue that Paul used it as an honorific title, marking James as the primary leader of the sect, not necessarily a blood relative of Jesus. This interpretation aligns with the movement’s hierarchical structure, where titles signified levels of esoteric knowledge and authority.

Simultaneously, there was a Hellenistic Jew named Paul who was proselytizing throughout the Roman Empire. Paul was also a visionary mystic whose faith centered on a savior figure named "Christ" or "Jesus.” ***(Conveniently, the name Jesus is the English transliteration of the Greek name Iēsous (Ἰησοῦς), which is itself a transliteration of the Aramaic name Yeshua (ישוע). This was a common name among Jews in the First Century. The name's etymological meaning is significant, as it summarizes the core theological message of the New Testament: "YHWH is salvation" or "The Lord saves".)***

Paul’s Christ was revealed to him through spiritual visions (again, see point on authority through revelation) and scriptural interpretation (e.g., from Isaiah or the Book of Wisdom). Paul’s "Gospel" does not discuss a historical ministry in Palestine, but about a pre-existent divine being who died in the heavens to redeem humanity.

Paul also claimed authority through his dramatic vision on the road to Damascus which helped to propel him into the early leadership. Paul’s version was revolutionary - salvation by faith alone, apart from the works of the Law. For Paul, distinctions like “Jew nor Greek” were erased in Christ, creating a universal faith accessible to all. His theology centered on a cosmic savior, revealed through scripture and mystical experience. This message resonated with Gentiles across the Roman Empire, making Paul’s version of Christianity far more adaptable and expansive than James’s.

Another early leader, Peter (Cephas), was the movement’s spokesperson. His authority, like James’s and Paul’s, rested on mystical experiences interpreted as encounters with the risen Christ. Peter’s role was primarily as “apostle to the Jews,” but he also acted as a diplomat, navigating the growing rift between James’s law-observant faction and Paul’s radical, law-free mission. James insisted that “faith without works is dead,” emphasizing ethical action as the fruit of genuine belief. Paul countered that justification came “by faith, not by works,” defining works as ritual observances like circumcision. This resulted in the Incident at Antioch, where Paul rebuked Peter for withdrawing from Gentile fellowship under pressure from James’s delegates. Later theologians harmonized these views, but it shows the diversity and conflict within the earliest Christian movement.

James’s martyrdom around 62 CE and the catastrophic destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE decapitated the mother church. The Jerusalem based Jewish-Christian center dissolved, and Paul’s Gentile-friendly, portable theology became dominant. Christianity’s survival and global spread owe more to Paul’s universal vision than to James’s original, historically Jewish rooted form.

As the movement expanded, the Gospel writers faced a challenge of how to give their heavenly savior an earthly biography. Thus, they crafted narratives rich in symbolism and prophecy, weaving Old Testament motifs with Greco-Roman literary tropes. Luke’s census story and Matthew’s Star of Bethlehem and Massacre of the Innocents are prime examples of dramatic plot devices with no historical basis, designed to fulfill messianic prophecies and elevate Jesus as a new Moses-like figure. It is clear that these narratives are later literary creations, not part of the original tradition centered on visions and eschatological urgency.

The historical bedrock of Christianity begins not with a Galilean preacher, but with a visionary sect led by James the Just in Jerusalem. Its strict Jewish ethos and apocalyptic fervor shaped the earliest community. Yet, it was Paul’s radical reinterpretation, a faith unbound by the Law, centered on a cosmic Christ, that ensured Christianity’s survival and growth. The Gospels, written generations later, retrofitted this mystical savior with an earthly life, creating the Jesus of history as we know him today, a figure born as much from literary imagination as from historical memory.


No, that description is not considered accurate by mainstream historians of early Christianity.
But: It does reflect a minority, mythicist-leaning interpretation (associated with writers like Burton Mack, Earl Doherty, and Richard Carrier). Most scholars-across secular, Jewish, Christian, and atheist backgrounds-reject the idea that Jesus began as a purely heavenly being invented later.

What Mainstream Scholars Agree On
(Think: Paula Fredriksen, Bart Ehrman, James Dunn, E.P. Sanders, Dale Allison, John Meier, Géza Vermes)

1. Jesus was a real apocalyptic Jewish preacher from Galilee.

There is overwhelming consensus-shared by religious and nonreligious historians-that:
-A historical Jesus existed
-He preached in Galilee
-He gathered tollowers
-He was executed by Pontius Pilate around 30 CE

This conclusion rests on multiple independent textual streams (Mark, Q material, Paul's references to Jesus' family, Josephus, etc.).

The claim that Christianity began only with a visionary sect and only later created an earthly Jesus is not accepted by specialists in the field.

2. The Infancy Narratives are theological, not historical.

This is partially correct.

Scholars overwhelmingly agree that:
1 Luke’s census as described did not historically occur.
-Matthew's Star of Bethlehem is not a historical astronomical event.

The Massacre of the Innocents is not supported by evidence outside Matthew
These narratives are understood as literary/ theological constructions designed to:
-Tie Jesus to Davidic lineage
-Fulfill scriptural motifs
-Present Jesus as a "new Moses" or new
Israel

So yes, this part aligns with mainstream scholarship.

But it does not imply the entire life of Jesus was invented.

3. Paul's theology is innovative.

Mainstream scholars agree that Paul:
-Emphasized faith in Christ over adherence to the full Mosaic Law
-Presented Jesus in cosmic, exalted terms
-Played a major role in spreading Christianity among Gentiles

But this is NOT understood as "Paul invented
Christianity."

Rather: he reinterpreted an already existing movement following a real, earthly Jesus.

—>What the Excerpt Claims That Is Not Accepted by Historians

1. "The earliest movement followed a heavenly savior with no earthly life."
This is mythicist theory, not mainstream scholarship.
Paul:

-Mentions Jesus' birth ("born of a woman,"Gal 4:4)
-Mentions his Jewish identity
-Mentions brothers (James, "the brother of the Lord," Gal 1:19)
-Refers to his earthly teachings
- Refers to the Last Supper tradition
-Refers to his crucifixion under earthly powers


2. "The Gospels retrofitted a fictional biography onto a cosmic Christ."

Scholars see it differently:
-The Gospels shape memory through theology and storytelling
-But they do not invent Jesus wholesale
-They reflect real traditions, expanded and interpreted
-Think: not biography vs. fiction, but memory shaped by theology, like ancient biographies of other figures.

3. "The historical bedrock is James the Just's visionary sect."

James was an important early leader.

But there's no evidence he founded a religion around visions of a heavenly Christ.

Instead:
—>James leads the Jerusalem church after Jesus' death
——>He sees himself preserving Jesus' teachings within a Jewish framework
———>Paul's letters indicate continuity with Jesus' earthly ministry, not invention of a mythic Christ

What Historians Do Think the Gospels Are

The best model is:
1. Jesus existed as a real preacher.
2. Early followers experienced visions of him after his death
(very similar to how ancient Jewish apocalyptic groups understood martyrdom and vindication).
3. Traditions about him circulated orally for decades.
4. The Gospel writers shaped those traditions into theological narratives, adding symbolic material (infancy stories, miracle patterns, scriptural fulfillment).

This view explains:
A. Both the mythic/symbolic layers
B. And the historical core beneath them
without requiring Jesus to be invented wholesale.


Again, cut through the historicist dogma and apply some rigorous skepticism to the so-called evidence. You keep asserting the same points as scholarly consensus while omitting key details or presenting contested interpretations as fact. Those same scholars do debate the deep methodological flaws in mainstream scholarship.

The "consensus" is often a circular argument within a field heavily populated by people of faith, who have a vested interest in a historical figure.

The claim of overwhelming consensus is true only within the bubble of biblical studies. This consensus often relies on a minimal-facts argument that assumes a historical core without sufficient skeptical scrutiny of the sources.

There are no independent textual streams. The Gospels are heavily interdependent and were written decades after the alleged events, reflecting theological agendas, not unbiased historical records. Matthew and Luke used Mark, meaning they are not independent confirmation of Mark's claims. They are derivations and edits of Mark consistent with different communities’ viewpoints and different interpretations over the course of time. Also, Q is pure speculation. There is no proof it existed.

No one said Paul invented Christianity. His primary contribution was the divide between his “belief only” approach versus James’ “works based” approach. Paul's letters conspicuously lack details of an earthly ministry, which is precisely the problem for historicists.

If Jesus had been a famous earthly preacher, Paul would likely have mentioned these things to add authority to his message. Where are the references to Jesus’ most important speech, the Sermon on the Mount? How would Paul be completely unaware or not mention it given how important it is to Christianity? In fact, Paul never mentions any of Jesus’ parables or teachings. As a leader in the early movement responsible for spreading the gospel throughout the Roman Empire, he was completely unaware of these core aspects? Would they not have provided more support for the message he was trying to spread? It is clear that there was no oral tradition that kept the memory of such events and sayings since they had not been created yet.

Paul's emphasis on a cosmic, exalted Christ suggests the initial movement was focused on a spiritual savior known through revelation and scripture, not memory of a living man. Paul was a Roman citizen with a Hellenistic worldview, and he integrated Jesus into a "dying and rising god" mythotype common in the ancient world, where suffering and triumph over death were core themes.

As noted several times now by other posts, the non-Christian sources are highly suspect. These are not settled facts as you continue to try to claim.

At least you admit that the Infancy Narratives are fiction. This demonstrates that early Christians were perfectly willing and able to invent entire biographical narratives about Jesus when it suited their theological needs. Once we establish the authors are willing to create fiction, we must rigorously question every other claim using the same high standard of evidence.

The model that best explains all the evidence is the one that posits a mythical origin for Jesus. The consensus view requires special pleading and a willingness to ignore rigorous criticism.


I'll add to this portion. Paul's silence is one of the most difficult hurdles for the historicist position. Paul is constantly arguing with his churches about ethics, marriage, divorce, and food. Yet, he never quotes Jesus. For example, Paul argues about whether to pay taxes (Romans 13), he doesn't say, "As Jesus said, 'Render unto Caesar.'" Another, Paul discusses divorce (1 Cor 7), he says "I, not the Lord," then provides his own opinion, rather than quoting the famous Jesus-teaching on divorce found in the Gospels.

Paul doesn't quote parables or teachings because they weren't invented yet.


So, whether or not a guy named Jesus existed is not the issue. The issue is : Is he the son of God? And the answer is no, unless you believe in God, of course, and that he had a son. Lots of people were taught that. Some of them never believed it and others stopped believing after they got older. Some people still believe it, even though we have so much more scientific knowledge that we had then.


Umm... No.

The entire point of THIS thread is that very question - did a guy named Jesus actually exist. Please follow along if you want to comment.


How delusional do you have to be to think that anyone cares about what anonymous posters on a regional mommy website think about the historicity of Jesus Christ?

Do you think scholars and academics and university professors are all watching and reading this thread? And after an atheist/anti-theist posts a recycled skeptic position here, they are furiously texting each other, saying omg, that anonymous guy has a great point none of us have ever thought about before?

Followed by furious scholarly work. And then: hey, that anonymous post on dcum was right? Jesus never existed.

Yeah, the answers to if God exists and Jesus was a real man are both decided right here. The rest of the world will believe what anon dcumers decide.


You obviously care enough to make a post and comment. 🤔

Its a forum for discussing different ideas and sharing them.

Why are you here?


People here aren’t expressing “different” ideas.

They are pushing fringe theories as the real truth and outright ignoring serious scholarship.

People are stating that non-religious scholarship is religious dogma.

People are openly declaring because they personally don’t believe in a God or gods, that no God or gods exist.

How does that discuss and share different ideas? It’s openly stating without embarrassment that your opinion about the most debated subject in the world is the only one that matters.

It’s arrogant and the opposite of discourse, discussion, debate, or “sharing ideas.”

You should be embarrassed to defend such crass behavior.


You are on a website which exists for people to share their ideas, opinions, perspectives, and experiences. That is exactly what is going on in this thread. You are free to make counter arguments. Others are free to rebut yours. That's how discussions go.

There's nothing embarrassing about it.

Are you embarrassed that there does not appear to be a lot of posters supporting or defending your views? Did you learn something that was embarrassing to you?


The vast majority of historians and scholars, both religious and secular, agree that Jesus of Nazareth was a real historical person, a Jewish man who lived in 1st-century Galilee, was baptized by John the Baptist, and was crucified under Pontius Pilate. While supernatural claims in the Gospels are debated, non-Christian Roman and Jewish sources (like Tacitus and Josephus) confirm his existence, execution, and the early movement of his followers, corroborating details in the New Testament.

Those are not my personal views; they are the views of the majority of religious and secular historians and scholars.

Nobody on this thread is telling people they must be a Christian or believe Jesus is the son of God.

There are plenty of people declaring that because they personally don’t believe in God, that God doesn’t exist.

Why should I be embarrassed that people in this thread are embracing the fringe theory that is discredited and likened to believing the earth is flat, or that the moon landing took place in a Hollywood sound stage? That’s their choice to embrace fringe conspiracy theories that aren’t based on reality.

No, I didn’t learn anything from anonymous posters without degrees or experience in the field of ancient history that believe that actual historians and scholars are wrong.

The idea that Jesus is a myth (mythicism) is a fringe theory rejected by most scholars; the mainstream view is that Jesus was a real historical figure, a Galilean Jew crucified by the Romans, supported by early Christian writings (like Paul's letters) and non-Christian sources (like Josephus, Tacitus).


Why mythicism is considered fringe

Vague Similarities: Critics argue the alleged parallels to other myths are vague, strained, or non-existent (e.g., Mithras wasn't resurrected).

Scholarly Rejection: The Christ myth theory has been largely dismissed by academia for over a century, despite increased popularity online.

Focus on "Proof": Mythicists often demand a level of proof not applied to other ancient figures, while ignoring strong indirect evidence for Jesus's existence, say proponents of his historicity.

A bunch of people online believe each other, vs real historians. If you think your online sources are better than academics and scholarship, that’s your choice. Just now that the people who are experts don’t believe what your anonymous online sources push.

Your fringe theories have been rejected by academia and scholarship for over 100 years, btw.

If you want to go up against the experts, lmk what your degree/s are in, how long you have been active as a scholar or academic, and where you get your information from. People can at least know then who they are believing and listening to.


It doesn't matter if Jesus was mythical or real -- he was not God.
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:Why is atheism a fact and believing in God not a fact? Both are just opinions.
Is there proof there is no God? Tangible proof? Archaeological proof?

Also yapping about "angels"' is a red herring. Not all believers in God or the Christ take the Bible literally as fundamentalists. Not all are evangelicals. Not all are snake handlers either.


My point is atheists posting seem to overgeneralize and treat believers as homogeneous. And mock us all because some of us believe certain things.

One question I have is how do atheists cope with fear and uncertainty? I take comfort in affirmjng Divine Order in my life: wholeness, harmony, wisdom, abundance and peace. What if anything does an atheist do?


I know only one Jew who believes in God. They used to be a Christian. They converted. All the other jews I know tell me that they don't believe any of it.

This is exactly the reason why I think some people are believers - they are generally fearful and are uncomfortable with uncertainty. So they blindly accept fantastical stories that makes them feel better.


Are any atheists fearful? What do they do?

Or does the Atheist Handbook say fear comes from believing in God and without that, no need to be afraid?


Following on, to avoid further distractions to Jesus topic is there a link you can give that explains Atheism for Dummies? TIA.


Atheists don't believe in god(s). The end.


+1. And it's important for people to remember that there is a VERY big difference between not believing in a god and saying that an atheist KNOWS or even believes there IS NO GOD. We don't claim to know there is no god. We just don't believe in one. A PP said there is no difference between saying there is a god and an atheist saying there is no god. There is a very big difference.


Atheists don't really know that there is no GOd, just as religious people don't really know that there IS a god. I, however, an atheist - will often say that there is no God. I don't believe in God.


Believers don't all support organized religion in the form of churches, denominations, crazy TV charlatans, cults, whatever. I don't.


Good for you! I bet you think that you're going to live forever in heaven, though, right?



I bet you think every believer thinks heaven is an actual place.
I bet you think every believer thinks that an afterlife is up in the sky.
I bet you think that believers are Christians.



You mean to say that you don't think heaven exists? That it's not up in the sky? that Christians don't believe in God?


Do try to read carefully. Jews believe in God. Jews aren't Christians.


I know only one Jew who believes in God. They used to be a Christian. They converted. All the other jews I know tell me that they don't believe any of it.


BS Jews absolutely believe in God. They do not believe in Jesus as any type of God.

Go back to the hole you climbed out of idiot.

Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:Why is atheism a fact and believing in God not a fact? Both are just opinions.
Is there proof there is no God? Tangible proof? Archaeological proof?

Also yapping about "angels"' is a red herring. Not all believers in God or the Christ take the Bible literally as fundamentalists. Not all are evangelicals. Not all are snake handlers either.


My point is atheists posting seem to overgeneralize and treat believers as homogeneous. And mock us all because some of us believe certain things.

One question I have is how do atheists cope with fear and uncertainty? I take comfort in affirmjng Divine Order in my life: wholeness, harmony, wisdom, abundance and peace. What if anything does an atheist do?


I know only one Jew who believes in God. They used to be a Christian. They converted. All the other jews I know tell me that they don't believe any of it.

This is exactly the reason why I think some people are believers - they are generally fearful and are uncomfortable with uncertainty. So they blindly accept fantastical stories that makes them feel better.


Are any atheists fearful? What do they do?

Or does the Atheist Handbook say fear comes from believing in God and without that, no need to be afraid?


Following on, to avoid further distractions to Jesus topic is there a link you can give that explains Atheism for Dummies? TIA.


Atheists don't believe in god(s). The end.


+1. And it's important for people to remember that there is a VERY big difference between not believing in a god and saying that an atheist KNOWS or even believes there IS NO GOD. We don't claim to know there is no god. We just don't believe in one. A PP said there is no difference between saying there is a god and an atheist saying there is no god. There is a very big difference.


Atheists don't really know that there is no GOd, just as religious people don't really know that there IS a god. I, however, an atheist - will often say that there is no God. I don't believe in God.


Believers don't all support organized religion in the form of churches, denominations, crazy TV charlatans, cults, whatever. I don't.


Good for you! I bet you think that you're going to live forever in heaven, though, right?



I bet you think every believer thinks heaven is an actual place.
I bet you think every believer thinks that an afterlife is up in the sky.
I bet you think that believers are Christians.



You mean to say that you don't think heaven exists? That it's not up in the sky? that Christians don't believe in God?


Do try to read carefully. Jews believe in God. Jews aren't Christians.


I know only one Jew who believes in God. They used to be a Christian. They converted. All the other jews I know tell me that they don't believe any of it.


BS Jews absolutely believe in God. They do not believe in Jesus as any type of God.

Go back to the hole you climbed out of idiot.



PP is relating their personal experience. It's uncalled for to tell them to go back to the hole they climbed out of, or to call them an idiot.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is atheism a fact and believing in God not a fact? Both are just opinions.
Is there proof there is no God? Tangible proof? Archaeological proof?

Also yapping about "angels"' is a red herring. Not all believers in God or the Christ take the Bible literally as fundamentalists. Not all are evangelicals. Not all are snake handlers either.


My point is atheists posting seem to overgeneralize and treat believers as homogeneous. And mock us all because some of us believe certain things.

One question I have is how do atheists cope with fear and uncertainty? I take comfort in affirmjng Divine Order in my life: wholeness, harmony, wisdom, abundance and peace. What if anything does an atheist do?


I know only one Jew who believes in God. They used to be a Christian. They converted. All the other jews I know tell me that they don't believe any of it.

This is exactly the reason why I think some people are believers - they are generally fearful and are uncomfortable with uncertainty. So they blindly accept fantastical stories that makes them feel better.


Are any atheists fearful? What do they do?

Or does the Atheist Handbook say fear comes from believing in God and without that, no need to be afraid?


Following on, to avoid further distractions to Jesus topic is there a link you can give that explains Atheism for Dummies? TIA.


Atheists don't believe in god(s). The end.


+1. And it's important for people to remember that there is a VERY big difference between not believing in a god and saying that an atheist KNOWS or even believes there IS NO GOD. We don't claim to know there is no god. We just don't believe in one. A PP said there is no difference between saying there is a god and an atheist saying there is no god. There is a very big difference.


Atheists don't really know that there is no GOd, just as religious people don't really know that there IS a god. I, however, an atheist - will often say that there is no God. I don't believe in God.


Believers don't all support organized religion in the form of churches, denominations, crazy TV charlatans, cults, whatever. I don't.


Good for you! I bet you think that you're going to live forever in heaven, though, right?



I bet you think every believer thinks heaven is an actual place.
I bet you think every believer thinks that an afterlife is up in the sky.
I bet you think that believers are Christians.



You mean to say that you don't think heaven exists? That it's not up in the sky? that Christians don't believe in God?


Do try to read carefully. Jews believe in God. Jews aren't Christians.


I know only one Jew who believes in God. They used to be a Christian. They converted. All the other jews I know tell me that they don't believe any of it.


BS Jews absolutely believe in God. They do not believe in Jesus as any type of God.

Go back to the hole you climbed out of idiot.



PP is relating their personal experience. It's uncalled for to tell them to go back to the hole they climbed out of, or to call them an idiot.


PP generalized from there one off personal experience to refute a different PP pointing out not all believers are Christian. That PP is either sadly unaware about religions or just being contentious
Anonymous
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Anonymous wrote:Remember how turbulent the world of First-Century Judea was. This was a time of immense political tension and foreign occupation, leading to widespread Jewish apocalypticism, the belief that God would soon intervene dramatically to destroy evil forces, restore Israel, and establish His eternal Kingdom. There was also widespread discontent with the Jerusalem Temple establishment. This resulted in many competing Jewish sects at the time.

In addition, esoteric mystery cults were common in the wider Greco-Roman world. These groups offered a personal religious experience, often promising salvation or a blessed afterlife, which was distinct from the public, state-sponsored worship of the time. Within esoteric groups, members were often initiated into various levels of secret knowledge (Gnosis). Groups like the community at Qumran (associated with the Dead Sea Scrolls), had rigid hierarchical structures and specific titles for their leadership ("the Teacher of Righteousness," "Sons of Light," etc.).

At this time, it was also remarkably common for individuals to claim authority within a religion based on direct divine revelations or visions rather than inherited lineage or institutional appointment. Within the context of Jewish apocalyptic movements and the surrounding Greco-Roman mystery cults, personal charismatic experience was a powerful credential, often seen as a direct calling from God that superseded traditional structures. This emphasis on immediate spiritual insight facilitated a dynamic religious landscape where new leaders and sects could emerge rapidly, each validated by the claim of a unique and personal encounter with the divine.

Within all this context, the first “Christians” were a small group started in the Jewish capital, Jerusalem. They were devout Jews who adhered strictly to the Mosaic Law. These early “Jewish Christians” viewed themselves as the true remnant of Israel, called to a higher standard of holiness and adherence to the Torah.

These Jewish Christians were also an esoteric mystery cult, featuring secret teachings, hidden rituals, and an initiation process for members. A "brother" of the Lord might be a title reserved for those who had reached the highest level of understanding of the Christ, differentiating them from ordinary believers.

Within this community, one of their key leaders was James, referred to as "James the Just" (or James the Righteous) in early extra-canonical Christian sources (like Hegesippus, preserved in Eusebius's Church History). These sources describe him as an ascetic who never cut his hair, drank no wine, and spent so much time praying in the Temple that his knees became calloused like a camel's. This rigorous lifestyle and commitment to poverty provided a compelling model of piety that attracted like-minded Jews seeking a purer form of religious observance.

James, as a "pillar" (Galatians 2:9), was the top earthly authority, and his unique title reflected that supreme status. James’s authority (see previous point on authority through revelation) was reinforced by a visionary experience (mentioned briefly by Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:7) that validated his role as the movement’s head. His title, “the Lord’s brother,” has sparked centuries of debate. In Koine Greek, adelphos (“brother”) could mean biological sibling, close relative, or spiritual kin. Many scholars argue that Paul used it as an honorific title, marking James as the primary leader of the sect, not necessarily a blood relative of Jesus. This interpretation aligns with the movement’s hierarchical structure, where titles signified levels of esoteric knowledge and authority.

Simultaneously, there was a Hellenistic Jew named Paul who was proselytizing throughout the Roman Empire. Paul was also a visionary mystic whose faith centered on a savior figure named "Christ" or "Jesus.” ***(Conveniently, the name Jesus is the English transliteration of the Greek name Iēsous (Ἰησοῦς), which is itself a transliteration of the Aramaic name Yeshua (ישוע). This was a common name among Jews in the First Century. The name's etymological meaning is significant, as it summarizes the core theological message of the New Testament: "YHWH is salvation" or "The Lord saves".)***

Paul’s Christ was revealed to him through spiritual visions (again, see point on authority through revelation) and scriptural interpretation (e.g., from Isaiah or the Book of Wisdom). Paul’s "Gospel" does not discuss a historical ministry in Palestine, but about a pre-existent divine being who died in the heavens to redeem humanity.

Paul also claimed authority through his dramatic vision on the road to Damascus which helped to propel him into the early leadership. Paul’s version was revolutionary - salvation by faith alone, apart from the works of the Law. For Paul, distinctions like “Jew nor Greek” were erased in Christ, creating a universal faith accessible to all. His theology centered on a cosmic savior, revealed through scripture and mystical experience. This message resonated with Gentiles across the Roman Empire, making Paul’s version of Christianity far more adaptable and expansive than James’s.

Another early leader, Peter (Cephas), was the movement’s spokesperson. His authority, like James’s and Paul’s, rested on mystical experiences interpreted as encounters with the risen Christ. Peter’s role was primarily as “apostle to the Jews,” but he also acted as a diplomat, navigating the growing rift between James’s law-observant faction and Paul’s radical, law-free mission. James insisted that “faith without works is dead,” emphasizing ethical action as the fruit of genuine belief. Paul countered that justification came “by faith, not by works,” defining works as ritual observances like circumcision. This resulted in the Incident at Antioch, where Paul rebuked Peter for withdrawing from Gentile fellowship under pressure from James’s delegates. Later theologians harmonized these views, but it shows the diversity and conflict within the earliest Christian movement.

James’s martyrdom around 62 CE and the catastrophic destruction of Jerusalem in 70 CE decapitated the mother church. The Jerusalem based Jewish-Christian center dissolved, and Paul’s Gentile-friendly, portable theology became dominant. Christianity’s survival and global spread owe more to Paul’s universal vision than to James’s original, historically Jewish rooted form.

As the movement expanded, the Gospel writers faced a challenge of how to give their heavenly savior an earthly biography. Thus, they crafted narratives rich in symbolism and prophecy, weaving Old Testament motifs with Greco-Roman literary tropes. Luke’s census story and Matthew’s Star of Bethlehem and Massacre of the Innocents are prime examples of dramatic plot devices with no historical basis, designed to fulfill messianic prophecies and elevate Jesus as a new Moses-like figure. It is clear that these narratives are later literary creations, not part of the original tradition centered on visions and eschatological urgency.

The historical bedrock of Christianity begins not with a Galilean preacher, but with a visionary sect led by James the Just in Jerusalem. Its strict Jewish ethos and apocalyptic fervor shaped the earliest community. Yet, it was Paul’s radical reinterpretation, a faith unbound by the Law, centered on a cosmic Christ, that ensured Christianity’s survival and growth. The Gospels, written generations later, retrofitted this mystical savior with an earthly life, creating the Jesus of history as we know him today, a figure born as much from literary imagination as from historical memory.


No, that description is not considered accurate by mainstream historians of early Christianity.
But: It does reflect a minority, mythicist-leaning interpretation (associated with writers like Burton Mack, Earl Doherty, and Richard Carrier). Most scholars-across secular, Jewish, Christian, and atheist backgrounds-reject the idea that Jesus began as a purely heavenly being invented later.

What Mainstream Scholars Agree On
(Think: Paula Fredriksen, Bart Ehrman, James Dunn, E.P. Sanders, Dale Allison, John Meier, Géza Vermes)

1. Jesus was a real apocalyptic Jewish preacher from Galilee.

There is overwhelming consensus-shared by religious and nonreligious historians-that:
-A historical Jesus existed
-He preached in Galilee
-He gathered tollowers
-He was executed by Pontius Pilate around 30 CE

This conclusion rests on multiple independent textual streams (Mark, Q material, Paul's references to Jesus' family, Josephus, etc.).

The claim that Christianity began only with a visionary sect and only later created an earthly Jesus is not accepted by specialists in the field.

2. The Infancy Narratives are theological, not historical.

This is partially correct.

Scholars overwhelmingly agree that:
1 Luke’s census as described did not historically occur.
-Matthew's Star of Bethlehem is not a historical astronomical event.

The Massacre of the Innocents is not supported by evidence outside Matthew
These narratives are understood as literary/ theological constructions designed to:
-Tie Jesus to Davidic lineage
-Fulfill scriptural motifs
-Present Jesus as a "new Moses" or new
Israel

So yes, this part aligns with mainstream scholarship.

But it does not imply the entire life of Jesus was invented.

3. Paul's theology is innovative.

Mainstream scholars agree that Paul:
-Emphasized faith in Christ over adherence to the full Mosaic Law
-Presented Jesus in cosmic, exalted terms
-Played a major role in spreading Christianity among Gentiles

But this is NOT understood as "Paul invented
Christianity."

Rather: he reinterpreted an already existing movement following a real, earthly Jesus.

—>What the Excerpt Claims That Is Not Accepted by Historians

1. "The earliest movement followed a heavenly savior with no earthly life."
This is mythicist theory, not mainstream scholarship.
Paul:

-Mentions Jesus' birth ("born of a woman,"Gal 4:4)
-Mentions his Jewish identity
-Mentions brothers (James, "the brother of the Lord," Gal 1:19)
-Refers to his earthly teachings
- Refers to the Last Supper tradition
-Refers to his crucifixion under earthly powers


2. "The Gospels retrofitted a fictional biography onto a cosmic Christ."

Scholars see it differently:
-The Gospels shape memory through theology and storytelling
-But they do not invent Jesus wholesale
-They reflect real traditions, expanded and interpreted
-Think: not biography vs. fiction, but memory shaped by theology, like ancient biographies of other figures.

3. "The historical bedrock is James the Just's visionary sect."

James was an important early leader.

But there's no evidence he founded a religion around visions of a heavenly Christ.

Instead:
—>James leads the Jerusalem church after Jesus' death
——>He sees himself preserving Jesus' teachings within a Jewish framework
———>Paul's letters indicate continuity with Jesus' earthly ministry, not invention of a mythic Christ

What Historians Do Think the Gospels Are

The best model is:
1. Jesus existed as a real preacher.
2. Early followers experienced visions of him after his death
(very similar to how ancient Jewish apocalyptic groups understood martyrdom and vindication).
3. Traditions about him circulated orally for decades.
4. The Gospel writers shaped those traditions into theological narratives, adding symbolic material (infancy stories, miracle patterns, scriptural fulfillment).

This view explains:
A. Both the mythic/symbolic layers
B. And the historical core beneath them
without requiring Jesus to be invented wholesale.


Again, cut through the historicist dogma and apply some rigorous skepticism to the so-called evidence. You keep asserting the same points as scholarly consensus while omitting key details or presenting contested interpretations as fact. Those same scholars do debate the deep methodological flaws in mainstream scholarship.

The "consensus" is often a circular argument within a field heavily populated by people of faith, who have a vested interest in a historical figure.

The claim of overwhelming consensus is true only within the bubble of biblical studies. This consensus often relies on a minimal-facts argument that assumes a historical core without sufficient skeptical scrutiny of the sources.

There are no independent textual streams. The Gospels are heavily interdependent and were written decades after the alleged events, reflecting theological agendas, not unbiased historical records. Matthew and Luke used Mark, meaning they are not independent confirmation of Mark's claims. They are derivations and edits of Mark consistent with different communities’ viewpoints and different interpretations over the course of time. Also, Q is pure speculation. There is no proof it existed.

No one said Paul invented Christianity. His primary contribution was the divide between his “belief only” approach versus James’ “works based” approach. Paul's letters conspicuously lack details of an earthly ministry, which is precisely the problem for historicists.

If Jesus had been a famous earthly preacher, Paul would likely have mentioned these things to add authority to his message. Where are the references to Jesus’ most important speech, the Sermon on the Mount? How would Paul be completely unaware or not mention it given how important it is to Christianity? In fact, Paul never mentions any of Jesus’ parables or teachings. As a leader in the early movement responsible for spreading the gospel throughout the Roman Empire, he was completely unaware of these core aspects? Would they not have provided more support for the message he was trying to spread? It is clear that there was no oral tradition that kept the memory of such events and sayings since they had not been created yet.

Paul's emphasis on a cosmic, exalted Christ suggests the initial movement was focused on a spiritual savior known through revelation and scripture, not memory of a living man. Paul was a Roman citizen with a Hellenistic worldview, and he integrated Jesus into a "dying and rising god" mythotype common in the ancient world, where suffering and triumph over death were core themes.

As noted several times now by other posts, the non-Christian sources are highly suspect. These are not settled facts as you continue to try to claim.

At least you admit that the Infancy Narratives are fiction. This demonstrates that early Christians were perfectly willing and able to invent entire biographical narratives about Jesus when it suited their theological needs. Once we establish the authors are willing to create fiction, we must rigorously question every other claim using the same high standard of evidence.

The model that best explains all the evidence is the one that posits a mythical origin for Jesus. The consensus view requires special pleading and a willingness to ignore rigorous criticism.


I'll add to this portion. Paul's silence is one of the most difficult hurdles for the historicist position. Paul is constantly arguing with his churches about ethics, marriage, divorce, and food. Yet, he never quotes Jesus. For example, Paul argues about whether to pay taxes (Romans 13), he doesn't say, "As Jesus said, 'Render unto Caesar.'" Another, Paul discusses divorce (1 Cor 7), he says "I, not the Lord," then provides his own opinion, rather than quoting the famous Jesus-teaching on divorce found in the Gospels.

Paul doesn't quote parables or teachings because they weren't invented yet.


So, whether or not a guy named Jesus existed is not the issue. The issue is : Is he the son of God? And the answer is no, unless you believe in God, of course, and that he had a son. Lots of people were taught that. Some of them never believed it and others stopped believing after they got older. Some people still believe it, even though we have so much more scientific knowledge that we had then.


Umm... No.

The entire point of THIS thread is that very question - did a guy named Jesus actually exist. Please follow along if you want to comment.


How delusional do you have to be to think that anyone cares about what anonymous posters on a regional mommy website think about the historicity of Jesus Christ?

Do you think scholars and academics and university professors are all watching and reading this thread? And after an atheist/anti-theist posts a recycled skeptic position here, they are furiously texting each other, saying omg, that anonymous guy has a great point none of us have ever thought about before?

Followed by furious scholarly work. And then: hey, that anonymous post on dcum was right? Jesus never existed.

Yeah, the answers to if God exists and Jesus was a real man are both decided right here. The rest of the world will believe what anon dcumers decide.


You obviously care enough to make a post and comment. 🤔

Its a forum for discussing different ideas and sharing them.

Why are you here?


People here aren’t expressing “different” ideas.

They are pushing fringe theories as the real truth and outright ignoring serious scholarship.

People are stating that non-religious scholarship is religious dogma.

People are openly declaring because they personally don’t believe in a God or gods, that no God or gods exist.

How does that discuss and share different ideas? It’s openly stating without embarrassment that your opinion about the most debated subject in the world is the only one that matters.

It’s arrogant and the opposite of discourse, discussion, debate, or “sharing ideas.”

You should be embarrassed to defend such crass behavior.


You are on a website which exists for people to share their ideas, opinions, perspectives, and experiences. That is exactly what is going on in this thread. You are free to make counter arguments. Others are free to rebut yours. That's how discussions go.

There's nothing embarrassing about it.

Are you embarrassed that there does not appear to be a lot of posters supporting or defending your views? Did you learn something that was embarrassing to you?


The vast majority of historians and scholars, both religious and secular, agree that Jesus of Nazareth was a real historical person, a Jewish man who lived in 1st-century Galilee, was baptized by John the Baptist, and was crucified under Pontius Pilate. While supernatural claims in the Gospels are debated, non-Christian Roman and Jewish sources (like Tacitus and Josephus) confirm his existence, execution, and the early movement of his followers, corroborating details in the New Testament.

Those are not my personal views; they are the views of the majority of religious and secular historians and scholars.

Nobody on this thread is telling people they must be a Christian or believe Jesus is the son of God.

There are plenty of people declaring that because they personally don’t believe in God, that God doesn’t exist.

Why should I be embarrassed that people in this thread are embracing the fringe theory that is discredited and likened to believing the earth is flat, or that the moon landing took place in a Hollywood sound stage? That’s their choice to embrace fringe conspiracy theories that aren’t based on reality.

No, I didn’t learn anything from anonymous posters without degrees or experience in the field of ancient history that believe that actual historians and scholars are wrong.

The idea that Jesus is a myth (mythicism) is a fringe theory rejected by most scholars; the mainstream view is that Jesus was a real historical figure, a Galilean Jew crucified by the Romans, supported by early Christian writings (like Paul's letters) and non-Christian sources (like Josephus, Tacitus).


Why mythicism is considered fringe

Vague Similarities: Critics argue the alleged parallels to other myths are vague, strained, or non-existent (e.g., Mithras wasn't resurrected).

Scholarly Rejection: The Christ myth theory has been largely dismissed by academia for over a century, despite increased popularity online.

Focus on "Proof": Mythicists often demand a level of proof not applied to other ancient figures, while ignoring strong indirect evidence for Jesus's existence, say proponents of his historicity.

A bunch of people online believe each other, vs real historians. If you think your online sources are better than academics and scholarship, that’s your choice. Just now that the people who are experts don’t believe what your anonymous online sources push.

Your fringe theories have been rejected by academia and scholarship for over 100 years, btw.

If you want to go up against the experts, lmk what your degree/s are in, how long you have been active as a scholar or academic, and where you get your information from. People can at least know then who they are believing and listening to.


"While supernatural claims in the Gospels are debated, non-Christian Roman and Jewish sources (like Tacitus and Josephus) confirm his existence, execution, and the early movement of his followers, corroborating details in the New Testament.

The idea that Jesus is a myth (mythicism) is a fringe theory rejected by most scholars; the mainstream view is that Jesus was a real historical figure, a Galilean Jew crucified by the Romans, supported by early Christian writings (like Paul's letters) and non-Christian sources (like Josephus, Tacitus)."


TLDR claim: Jesus was real due to "early Christian writings (like Paul's letters) and non-Christian sources (like Josephus, Tacitus)."

These have been thoroughly countered in prior posts. I assume the "embarrassment" came when the foundation of your claim crumbled.
Anonymous
I hear that the Lock Ness Monster is God. He isn't real, though.
Anonymous
Re-upping to see if our historicity defender will actually come back and engage in a real discussion and not cower away in other threads and make claims without the full context of the arguments.

If you think your position is true, why be afraid to engage?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Re-upping to see if our historicity defender will actually come back and engage in a real discussion and not cower away in other threads and make claims without the full context of the arguments.

If you think your position is true, why be afraid to engage?


Write a scholarly paper if you think the mainstream view of secular historians is wrong.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Re-upping to see if our historicity defender will actually come back and engage in a real discussion and not cower away in other threads and make claims without the full context of the arguments.

If you think your position is true, why be afraid to engage?


Write a scholarly paper if you think the mainstream view of secular historians is wrong.


They're not all secular historians, and the arguments have already been well laid out.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Re-upping to see if our historicity defender will actually come back and engage in a real discussion and not cower away in other threads and make claims without the full context of the arguments.

If you think your position is true, why be afraid to engage?


Write a scholarly paper if you think the mainstream view of secular historians is wrong.


Which “secular historians”? Are you the PP who doesn’t know what secular means?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Historians judge the historicity of any ancient figure (whether Jesus, Socrates, Hannibal, or an obscure rebel leader) using a consistent set of methodological tools and criteria. They do not require archaeological evidence, statues, or coins. Instead, they work with the evidence that actually survives from antiquity—almost all of it textual—and apply the following principles:

1. Multiple, Independent Attestation
The more independent sources that mention the person (especially if they are from different perspectives or hostile to each other), the stronger the case for historicity. Example for Jesus: At least 8–10 independent sources within ~100 years (Pauline letters, Mark, Q-source, Matthew, Luke-Acts, John, Hebrews, Josephus [2×], Tacitus, possibly Pliny the Younger/Suetonius). That is far more than for almost any other 1st-century Palestinian Jew.

2. Criterion of Embarrassment
Details that would have been inconvenient or embarrassing to the author are unlikely to be invented. Examples: Jesus baptized by John (implying subordination), crucified by Romans (a shameful death), denied by his disciples, family thinking he was crazy (Mark 3:21), etc.

3. Criterion of Dissimilarity (or Double Dissimilarity)
Sayings or actions that don’t easily fit either later Christian theology or contemporary Judaism are unlikely to be invented by the church.
Examples: “Render to Caesar…”, prohibition of divorce, associating with tax collectors and sinners, etc.

4. Coherence with Known Historical Context
Does the figure fit what we independently know about the time, place, language, culture, politics, and archaeology? Jesus fits 1st-century Galilean Judaism under Roman rule almost perfectly (Aramaic speaker, debates Torah, apocalyptic prophet, conflict with Pharisees and Temple authorities, executed under Pilate, etc.).

5. Principle of Analogy
Does the story resemble known patterns of human behavior and historical events?
Itinerant charismatic prophets who attract followers, clash with authorities, and get executed were extremely common in 1st-century Judea (Theudas, the Egyptian prophet, John the Baptist, etc.).

6. Early Dating of Sources
The closer the source is to the person’s lifetime, the better. Paul (writing 48–60 CE) already knows of Jesus’ crucifixion, brother James, and several disciples by name — within 15–30 years of the events. Mark ~70 CE, less than one lifetime later.

7. Hostile or Non-Christian Corroboration
Confirmation from sources that have no reason to be sympathetic. Josephus (Jewish, non-Christian) twice mentions Jesus (one passage partially corrupted, but core is accepted by almost all scholars). Tacitus (Roman pagan, hostile to Christians) in 115 CE confirms Jesus was executed under Pontius Pilate.

8. Effects and Rapid Spread (the “Big Bang” argument)
A historical figure often leaves a disproportionate “explosion” of evidence shortly after their death. Within 20–30 years a movement in Jesus’ name had spread from rural Galilee to Jerusalem, Antioch, Damascus, Corinth, Rome — with thousands of followers willing to die for the claim he had risen. That kind of rapid, explosive growth almost never happens around a purely mythical figure.

Alexander the Great: the earliest sources we have after his death is approximately 300 years. We have several independent sources and of course cities, coins, and statues of Alex. Historians are certain he existed.

Socrates: earliest sources are 10–40 years after his death (Plato, Xenophon, Aristophanes). We have 4+ independent sources for Socrates. We have zero archeological evidence. Historians are certain he existed.

Hannibal: earliest sources after his death are 50-150 years. We have 2-3 independent sources, zero direct archaeological evidence, and historians are certain he existed.

Pontius Pilate: earliest sources after his death are 30-60 years, (Philo, Josephus, Gospels, Tacitus) and 4 independent sources. We have one piece of archaeological evidence found in 1961, and historians are certain he existed.

Jesus of Nazareth: earliest sources after his death, 15-40 years. 8-10+ independent sources, no archaeological evidence, and his historicity in near universal among historians and scholars.


Virtually every professional historian (Christian, Jewish, atheist, agnostic) who studies the period accepts that Jesus existed. The very few who argue otherwise (the “Jesus mythicist” position) are generally not ancient historians and are treated like flat-earthers or Holocaust deniers within the academy.

In short: historians are not surprised we have no coins, statues, or inscriptions of Jesus. They are impressed we have as much early, diverse, and contextual evidence as we do for a 1st-century Galilean peasant preacher. By normal historical standards, the evidence for his existence is actually quite strong.

Why is dcum a hotbed of non-ancient historians espousing what is considered Holocaust denier levels of skepticism on this topic?

If you are reading this thread, just know that the people who are demanding delusional levels of proof for JC are really delusional. I don’t mean that as an insult; they just don’t know how professional historians and scholars work.

If you think that the only people who can objectively study the life of Jesus Christ are atheists raised in a sterile, religion free environment, I don’t want to sound like I am attacking anyone, but you are really wrong and ignorant about not only the historicity of JC, but the world of academia and scholarship. It’s really a disheartening thread, so many people are posting the most inaccurate and misleading information.


It’s interesting that you write about methodological principles while simultaneously failing to apply them rigorously to the evidence for Jesus. The mainstream consensus is built upon weak foundations and special pleading. The key error here is the assumption that the "normal historical standards" you cite actually favor a historical Jesus when applied with proper skepticism.

You argue that historians use consistent tools. This is true. The problem is that when these tools are applied without the underlying assumption that "Jesus must have existed," the evidence evaporates. Mainstream scholars typically fail to account for the unique nature of early Christian literature, which is inherently theological, allegorical, and rooted in scriptural interpretation, not historical biography.

Your “8–10 independent" sources within 100 years” is a profound misunderstanding of source dependencies. The Gospels are not independent. Mark influenced Matthew and Luke (the Synoptic Problem). John is a separate tradition but deeply theological. The "Q-source" is a hypothesis, not a physical document, and may be a collection of sayings used by Matthew and Luke. Grouping them as independent sources is fallacious. We have perhaps two or three lines of Christian tradition: Pauline, Markan, and Johannine.

Paul is crucial because he is early. But, his silence on earthly details is deafening. Paul never mentions any details that require an earthly, recent Jesus. He mentions a crucifixion, a burial, a resurrection, all details found in the scriptures and revealed through prophecy or visionary experience, within a celestial framework. He mentions a "brother James," which is an ecclesiastical title, not necessarily a biological relationship. Paul is excellent evidence for a celestial Jesus cult, but terrible evidence for a historical one.

Tacitus/Josephus - As discussed previously, Tacitus reflects Christian belief, not Roman records of an event fifty years prior. The Josephus passages are universally acknowledged to have Christian interpolations. The minimal historical core scholars try to salvage from them is guesswork, not robust evidence. The original Josephus likely said nothing about Jesus.

For Socrates, Plato and Xenophon are writing philosophical dialogues about a teacher they knew personally in living memory, not anonymous, post-resurrection propaganda written 40-70 years later by anonymous authors in different countries. The comparison is entirely fallacious.

As noted before, the criterion of embarrassment, assume the authors were writing history rather than theology or allegory. The alleged embarrassments served a specific literary or theological purpose for the original Markan. The dissimilar sayings often disappear in later gospels or are highly ambiguous, making them weak historical indicators.

The claim that Jesus "fits perfectly" is circular reasoning. The "1st-century Galilean Judaism under Roman rule" construct is largely derived from the Gospels themselves, supplemented by Josephus. Its creating a context from these sources, then using that context to validate the sources. This is poor methodology.

Your “Big Bang” argument - This is the weakest argument of all. A "mythical" figure cannot generate rapid growth? For example, the Cult of Asclepius rapidly spread across the Mediterranean with thousands of followers who believed they were healed by a divine figure. The ancient world was littered with mystery cults centered on celestial, saving gods who were believed to have existed in a mythic past and appeared in visions. Early Christianity spread because it offered attractive theological answers = salvation from sin plus reward of an afterlife. Witness how many people still buy the idea today. The idea spread, the narrative followed.

Please stop with your ad hominem attempts to link mythicism with holocaust deniers and flat earthers. That is not engaging in an honest debate.

The vast majority of scholars in the field were trained within institutions that presuppose Jesus' historicity. Biblical scholarship grew out of theology departments. To question the existence of the founder of the religion you are studying is often career suicide or intellectually disqualifying within the field. It is a consensus based on tradition, not necessarily a consensus that survives a truly neutral, external investigation.

Professional ancient historians, when they bother to look at the specific source problems of the Gospels and Paul with the same skepticism they apply to Romulus or Dionysus, often find the evidence much weaker than you suggest.

The evidence for Jesus is strong only if you desperately want it to be. By normal, rigorous historical standards applied without bias, the evidence is astonishingly weak.


+1. Well said and argued.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Re-upping to see if our historicity defender will actually come back and engage in a real discussion and not cower away in other threads and make claims without the full context of the arguments.

If you think your position is true, why be afraid to engage?


Write a scholarly paper if you think the mainstream view of secular historians is wrong.


Which “secular historians”? Are you the PP who doesn’t know what secular means?


No, it's the PP who knows when the person who's responding to them is trying to be insulting.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
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Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Why is atheism a fact and believing in God not a fact? Both are just opinions.
Is there proof there is no God? Tangible proof? Archaeological proof?

Also yapping about "angels"' is a red herring. Not all believers in God or the Christ take the Bible literally as fundamentalists. Not all are evangelicals. Not all are snake handlers either.


My point is atheists posting seem to overgeneralize and treat believers as homogeneous. And mock us all because some of us believe certain things.

One question I have is how do atheists cope with fear and uncertainty? I take comfort in affirmjng Divine Order in my life: wholeness, harmony, wisdom, abundance and peace. What if anything does an atheist do?


I know only one Jew who believes in God. They used to be a Christian. They converted. All the other jews I know tell me that they don't believe any of it.

This is exactly the reason why I think some people are believers - they are generally fearful and are uncomfortable with uncertainty. So they blindly accept fantastical stories that makes them feel better.


Are any atheists fearful? What do they do?

Or does the Atheist Handbook say fear comes from believing in God and without that, no need to be afraid?


Following on, to avoid further distractions to Jesus topic is there a link you can give that explains Atheism for Dummies? TIA.


Atheists don't believe in god(s). The end.


+1. And it's important for people to remember that there is a VERY big difference between not believing in a god and saying that an atheist KNOWS or even believes there IS NO GOD. We don't claim to know there is no god. We just don't believe in one. A PP said there is no difference between saying there is a god and an atheist saying there is no god. There is a very big difference.


Atheists don't really know that there is no GOd, just as religious people don't really know that there IS a god. I, however, an atheist - will often say that there is no God. I don't believe in God.


Believers don't all support organized religion in the form of churches, denominations, crazy TV charlatans, cults, whatever. I don't.


Good for you! I bet you think that you're going to live forever in heaven, though, right?



I bet you think every believer thinks heaven is an actual place.
I bet you think every believer thinks that an afterlife is up in the sky.
I bet you think that believers are Christians.



You mean to say that you don't think heaven exists? That it's not up in the sky? that Christians don't believe in God?


Do try to read carefully. Jews believe in God. Jews aren't Christians.


I know only one Jew who believes in God. They used to be a Christian. They converted. All the other jews I know tell me that they don't believe any of it.


BS Jews absolutely believe in God. They do not believe in Jesus as any type of God.

Go back to the hole you climbed out of idiot.



Some Jews believe in God. Some don't
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:With his alleged birthday coming up, let's discuss the person that is being celebrated. Present your information and argument for Jesus, fact or fiction.


Jesus was made up -- not of whole cloth, because a messiah was predicted. But those were the olden days, before modern science and running water and a bunch of stuff that we now take for granted.

Kids can't imagine life without the internet. Neither can I! Remember those old movies where people would wait impatiently for the mailman to come?


No he was not made up. His existence and the words he spoke have been proven. What is likely made up is that he was the son of God. Probably not. Then again, how did such an extraordinary person come to have such extraordinary advice on how to be a good person?

In any event he was an amazing man and if we all followed his teachings the world would be a better place.



except the ones that are not "amazing". Like family division, the belief we are all born damaged and sinners needing his blood for forgiveness, eternal punishment, renouncing all of your money to follow him....we could do without those. We can definitely be good humans without this person.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:So where did the religion come from. A bunch of people started writing stories about stuff supposedly happening in the past and they all collaborated on common themes?
How did they decide on what those were, making it all up from scratch?
And being willing to die for it to lend credence? Props to them.



The same way stories were written about Zeus and Thor. Jesus just had a VERY good marketing team. With all of the research into the development of Christianity, this is the conclusion I have come to. And because of the power of indoctrination, it really isn't hard to start that ball rolling in the right direction. One generation of people being "forced" or coerced in some way to teach/believe the doctrine is all it takes to change history and end up where we are today...with so many people completely convinced that this is all real.
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