Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even Bart Ehrman says: "Paul knew Jesus' brother, James, and he knew his closest disciple, Peter, and he tells us that he did," Ehrman says. "If Jesus didn't exist, you would think his brother would know about it, so I think Paul is probably pretty good evidence that Jesus at least existed."
https://www.npr.org/2012/04/01/149462376/did-jesus-exist-a-historian-makes-his-case
Ehrman also says this: But how can you make a convincing case if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information. https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Bumping because pp with a page of irrelevant basic stats links is obviously trolling really hard to get away from it.
One of the best arguments for Jesus’ existence—from a leading atheist.
"Paul is probably pretty good evidence"
"They each have heard about ... which heard about him from their own sources"
Bumping my response:
"probably pretty good evidence" is not definitive. Not 100%.
So none of the "sources" were eyewitnesses. They only "knew" thirdhand information, at best.
Again, Paul knew two crucial eye witnesses, Jesus’ brother and one of the most important disciples.
In the second link, Ehrman’s very first sentence is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset-if-the-mythicists-were-right-that-jesus-never-existed/
Ehrman is a theologist trying to get press.
What do the independent historians (not theologists) say?
Goalposts moved. Unsuccessfully.
Paul knowing James and Peter IS historical evidence. The linguistic evidence Ehrman and others cite IS historical evidence.
If we wanted to discuss the theology around Jesus, then we'd consult a theologist.
We are discussing the historicity. What is the consensus from independent historians? Are they 100% certain he existed?
Just because you didn't understand the assignment doesn't mean the goalposts were moved.
So Bart telling you that thousand of scholars—read: independent historians and theologians—believe Jesus existed isn’t good enough for you. Instead you just want to string this out forever playing 20 questions and issuing childish demands for more and more cites. Got it.
Which ones? Why do you blindly believe that this guy says?
I have yet to see a single citation for an independent historian who is 100% certain.
Sigh. Dozens of independent scholars who agree Jesus existed can be found in the Sources section here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus . Have a blast.
What will you guys try to quibble about next? What word (“scholar”) or definition (“probability”)?
Or, you could just accept that Jesus existed and find something better than trolling to do with your time.
Probability is probability. Not open to interpretations not matter how much you want to believe alternate definitions.
At one point, didn't we all agree that he "most likely" existed?
Don’t you all remember when we agreed on “most likely”. Those were the days.
So you’re nostalgic for a past when 2-3 atheists agreed on “most likely” in face of a vast scholarly consensus that says “definitely”?
You think DCUM decides this?
Hahahahahahaha
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even Bart Ehrman says: "Paul knew Jesus' brother, James, and he knew his closest disciple, Peter, and he tells us that he did," Ehrman says. "If Jesus didn't exist, you would think his brother would know about it, so I think Paul is probably pretty good evidence that Jesus at least existed."
https://www.npr.org/2012/04/01/149462376/did-jesus-exist-a-historian-makes-his-case
Ehrman also says this: But how can you make a convincing case if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information. https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Bumping because pp with a page of irrelevant basic stats links is obviously trolling really hard to get away from it.
One of the best arguments for Jesus’ existence—from a leading atheist.
"Paul is probably pretty good evidence"
"They each have heard about ... which heard about him from their own sources"
Bumping my response:
"probably pretty good evidence" is not definitive. Not 100%.
So none of the "sources" were eyewitnesses. They only "knew" thirdhand information, at best.
Again, Paul knew two crucial eye witnesses, Jesus’ brother and one of the most important disciples.
In the second link, Ehrman’s very first sentence is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset-if-the-mythicists-were-right-that-jesus-never-existed/
Ehrman is a theologist trying to get press.
What do the independent historians (not theologists) say?
Goalposts moved. Unsuccessfully.
Paul knowing James and Peter IS historical evidence. The linguistic evidence Ehrman and others cite IS historical evidence.
If we wanted to discuss the theology around Jesus, then we'd consult a theologist.
We are discussing the historicity. What is the consensus from independent historians? Are they 100% certain he existed?
Just because you didn't understand the assignment doesn't mean the goalposts were moved.
So Bart telling you that thousand of scholars—read: independent historians and theologians—believe Jesus existed isn’t good enough for you. Instead you just want to string this out forever playing 20 questions and issuing childish demands for more and more cites. Got it.
Translation: pp doesn’t like that even Bart the leading atheist says the scholarly concensus is on 100% that Jesus existed. So instead they want to quibble about who is a “scholar” and issue endless demands for more and more evidence.
Should be pretty easy to line up those independent/unbiased opinions. If there is a consensus that he 100% existed.
Maybe not so easy after all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even Bart Ehrman says: "Paul knew Jesus' brother, James, and he knew his closest disciple, Peter, and he tells us that he did," Ehrman says. "If Jesus didn't exist, you would think his brother would know about it, so I think Paul is probably pretty good evidence that Jesus at least existed."
https://www.npr.org/2012/04/01/149462376/did-jesus-exist-a-historian-makes-his-case
Ehrman also says this: But how can you make a convincing case if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information. https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Bumping because pp with a page of irrelevant basic stats links is obviously trolling really hard to get away from it.
One of the best arguments for Jesus’ existence—from a leading atheist.
"Paul is probably pretty good evidence"
"They each have heard about ... which heard about him from their own sources"
Bumping my response:
"probably pretty good evidence" is not definitive. Not 100%.
So none of the "sources" were eyewitnesses. They only "knew" thirdhand information, at best.
Again, Paul knew two crucial eye witnesses, Jesus’ brother and one of the most important disciples.
In the second link, Ehrman’s very first sentence is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset-if-the-mythicists-were-right-that-jesus-never-existed/
Ehrman is a theologist trying to get press.
What do the independent historians (not theologists) say?
Goalposts moved. Unsuccessfully.
Paul knowing James and Peter IS historical evidence. The linguistic evidence Ehrman and others cite IS historical evidence.
If we wanted to discuss the theology around Jesus, then we'd consult a theologist.
We are discussing the historicity. What is the consensus from independent historians? Are they 100% certain he existed?
Just because you didn't understand the assignment doesn't mean the goalposts were moved.
So Bart telling you that thousand of scholars—read: independent historians and theologians—believe Jesus existed isn’t good enough for you. Instead you just want to string this out forever playing 20 questions and issuing childish demands for more and more cites. Got it.
Which ones? Why do you blindly believe that this guy says?
I have yet to see a single citation for an independent historian who is 100% certain.
Sigh. Dozens of independent scholars who agree Jesus existed can be found in the Sources section here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus . Have a blast.
What will you guys try to quibble about next? What word (“scholar”) or definition (“probability”)?
Or, you could just accept that Jesus existed and find something better than trolling to do with your time.
Probability is probability. Not open to interpretations not matter how much you want to believe alternate definitions.
At one point, didn't we all agree that he "most likely" existed?
Don’t you all remember when we agreed on “most likely”. Those were the days.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even Bart Ehrman says: "Paul knew Jesus' brother, James, and he knew his closest disciple, Peter, and he tells us that he did," Ehrman says. "If Jesus didn't exist, you would think his brother would know about it, so I think Paul is probably pretty good evidence that Jesus at least existed."
https://www.npr.org/2012/04/01/149462376/did-jesus-exist-a-historian-makes-his-case
Ehrman also says this: But how can you make a convincing case if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information. https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Bumping because pp with a page of irrelevant basic stats links is obviously trolling really hard to get away from it.
One of the best arguments for Jesus’ existence—from a leading atheist.
"Paul is probably pretty good evidence"
"They each have heard about ... which heard about him from their own sources"
Bumping my response:
"probably pretty good evidence" is not definitive. Not 100%.
So none of the "sources" were eyewitnesses. They only "knew" thirdhand information, at best.
Again, Paul knew two crucial eye witnesses, Jesus’ brother and one of the most important disciples.
In the second link, Ehrman’s very first sentence is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset-if-the-mythicists-were-right-that-jesus-never-existed/
Ehrman is a theologist trying to get press.
What do the independent historians (not theologists) say?
Goalposts moved. Unsuccessfully.
Paul knowing James and Peter IS historical evidence. The linguistic evidence Ehrman and others cite IS historical evidence.
If we wanted to discuss the theology around Jesus, then we'd consult a theologist.
We are discussing the historicity. What is the consensus from independent historians? Are they 100% certain he existed?
Just because you didn't understand the assignment doesn't mean the goalposts were moved.
So Bart telling you that thousand of scholars—read: independent historians and theologians—believe Jesus existed isn’t good enough for you. Instead you just want to string this out forever playing 20 questions and issuing childish demands for more and more cites. Got it.
Translation: pp doesn’t like that even Bart the leading atheist says the scholarly concensus is on 100% that Jesus existed. So instead they want to quibble about who is a “scholar” and issue endless demands for more and more evidence.
Should be pretty easy to line up those independent/unbiased opinions. If there is a consensus that he 100% existed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Here’s Bart:
Jesus existed. In yesterday’s post, I began to show how Jesus is the best attested Palestinian Jew of the first century if we look only at external evidence.
But how can you make a convincing case [that someone made up Jesus] if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information.
That must mean that there were hundreds of people at the least who were talking about the man Jesus. One of them was the apostle Paul, who was talking about Jesus by at least the year 32 CE, that is, two years after the date of Jesus’ death.
Paul, as I will point out, actually knew, personally, Jesus’ own brother James and his closest disciples Peter and John. That’s [by itself] more or less a death knell for the Mythicist position, as some of them admit.
(Still Bart talking) Short story: we are not talking about a Bart Ehrman Jesus figure invented in the year 60. There was widespread information about Jesus from the years after his death. Otherwise, you can’t explain all the literary evidence (dozens of independent sources), some of it based on Aramaic traditions of Jesus’ homeland.
People hearing about Jesus is not proof that he lived.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even Bart Ehrman says: "Paul knew Jesus' brother, James, and he knew his closest disciple, Peter, and he tells us that he did," Ehrman says. "If Jesus didn't exist, you would think his brother would know about it, so I think Paul is probably pretty good evidence that Jesus at least existed."
https://www.npr.org/2012/04/01/149462376/did-jesus-exist-a-historian-makes-his-case
Ehrman also says this: But how can you make a convincing case if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information. https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Bumping because pp with a page of irrelevant basic stats links is obviously trolling really hard to get away from it.
One of the best arguments for Jesus’ existence—from a leading atheist.
"Paul is probably pretty good evidence"
"They each have heard about ... which heard about him from their own sources"
Bumping my response:
"probably pretty good evidence" is not definitive. Not 100%.
So none of the "sources" were eyewitnesses. They only "knew" thirdhand information, at best.
Again, Paul knew two crucial eye witnesses, Jesus’ brother and one of the most important disciples.
In the second link, Ehrman’s very first sentence is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset-if-the-mythicists-were-right-that-jesus-never-existed/
Ehrman is a theologist trying to get press.
What do the independent historians (not theologists) say?
Goalposts moved. Unsuccessfully.
Paul knowing James and Peter IS historical evidence. The linguistic evidence Ehrman and others cite IS historical evidence.
If we wanted to discuss the theology around Jesus, then we'd consult a theologist.
We are discussing the historicity. What is the consensus from independent historians? Are they 100% certain he existed?
Just because you didn't understand the assignment doesn't mean the goalposts were moved.
So Bart telling you that thousand of scholars—read: independent historians and theologians—believe Jesus existed isn’t good enough for you. Instead you just want to string this out forever playing 20 questions and issuing childish demands for more and more cites. Got it.
Which ones? Why do you blindly believe that this guy says?
I have yet to see a single citation for an independent historian who is 100% certain.
Sigh. Dozens of independent scholars who agree Jesus existed can be found in the Sources section here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus . Have a blast.
What will you guys try to quibble about next? What word (“scholar”) or definition (“probability”)?
Or, you could just accept that Jesus existed and find something better than trolling to do with your time.
Probability is probability. Not open to interpretations not matter how much you want to believe alternate definitions.
At one point, didn't we all agree that he "most likely" existed?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Here’s Bart:
Jesus existed. In yesterday’s post, I began to show how Jesus is the best attested Palestinian Jew of the first century if we look only at external evidence.
But how can you make a convincing case [that someone made up Jesus] if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information.
That must mean that there were hundreds of people at the least who were talking about the man Jesus. One of them was the apostle Paul, who was talking about Jesus by at least the year 32 CE, that is, two years after the date of Jesus’ death.
Paul, as I will point out, actually knew, personally, Jesus’ own brother James and his closest disciples Peter and John. That’s [by itself] more or less a death knell for the Mythicist position, as some of them admit.
(Still Bart talking) Short story: we are not talking about a Bart Ehrman Jesus figure invented in the year 60. There was widespread information about Jesus from the years after his death. Otherwise, you can’t explain all the literary evidence (dozens of independent sources), some of it based on Aramaic traditions of Jesus’ homeland.
If we're taking scripture at its word, then are we drawing a line somewhere when historical evidence refutes it? Or are we just taking scripture as fact because enough people in scripture said it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So it's settled then:
- It is likely a man named Jesus existed
- There is zero evidence of his divinity
Now the thread is genuinely over, unless someone - explicitly and with evidence - disputes the above.
A man named Jesus existed. It's not likely. It's certain until someone can find contradictory evidence to prove otherwise.
Uh. That’s not how it works.
He most likely lived.
He definitely wasn’t supernatural.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even Bart Ehrman says: "Paul knew Jesus' brother, James, and he knew his closest disciple, Peter, and he tells us that he did," Ehrman says. "If Jesus didn't exist, you would think his brother would know about it, so I think Paul is probably pretty good evidence that Jesus at least existed."
https://www.npr.org/2012/04/01/149462376/did-jesus-exist-a-historian-makes-his-case
Ehrman also says this: But how can you make a convincing case if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information. https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Bumping because pp with a page of irrelevant basic stats links is obviously trolling really hard to get away from it.
One of the best arguments for Jesus’ existence—from a leading atheist.
Prove it.
"Paul is probably pretty good evidence"
"They each have heard about ... which heard about him from their own sources"
Bumping my response:
"probably pretty good evidence" is not definitive. Not 100%.
So none of the "sources" were eyewitnesses. They only "knew" thirdhand information, at best.
Again, Paul knew two crucial eye witnesses, Jesus’ brother and one of the most important disciples.
In the second link, Ehrman’s very first sentence is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset-if-the-mythicists-were-right-that-jesus-never-existed/
Ehrman is a theologist trying to get press.
What do the independent historians (not theologists) say?
Bart E is an ATHEIST
No scholars or academics in the western world who are teaching or publishing doubt the historicity of Jesus Christ.
He's a theologist. He happens to not believe in the supernatural aspects of Jesus, but he's not a trained historian.
Which independent/unbiased scholars say "100% certain"?
So you chose to ignore the post right above yours that gave scholars’ names. Cute. I’ll repost it for you.
Dozens of independent scholars who agree Jesus existed can be found in the Sources section here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus . Have a blast.
What will you guys try to quibble about next? What word (“scholar”) or definition (“probability”)?
Or, you could just accept that Jesus existed and find something better than trolling to do with your time.
Did you notice the time stamps?
More bs. Nobody cares if the time stamps are several decades old. Independent scholarship is independent scholarship.
I meant the timestamps of the posts. They were posted at the same time.
Somebody uploaded posts at the same time? Who cares?
You still lost the argument about the vast scholarly concensus that Jesus existed.
I fully agree that thousands of theologists believe he existed. If you had evidence of thousands of unbiased, independent "scholars" then you might have something.
Anyway, no one can say with 100% certainty because we don't have decent sources. Contemporary, first-hand, unbiased sources.
You keep trying to redefine “scholars” as being somehow exclusively “theologians.” We see you.
Paul knowing Jesus’ brother James and Jesus’ disciple Peter, and writing about them, is pretty darn decent. As Ehrman says, James would have told Paul if he didn’t have a brother called Jesus.
Plus Ehrman and others cite 30 other sources and a lot of linguistic evidence for Jesus’ existence.
But hey, if you want to join the extreme fringe of “foolish” deniers and die on the hill of not having CNN cameras trained on Jesus, then you do you. Maybe make yourself a tinfoil hat too?
“probably pretty good evidence” - so convincing.
He was using the gospels as a source.
You keep fixating on this single Ehrman quote and ignoring these:
Ehrman’s very first sentence in this blog is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset...ight-that-jesus-never-existed/
What are you afraid of? How’s that tinfoil hat coming along? Or are you just trolling?
Thousands of theologists believe he existed? Shocker!
You’re not winning any arguments with transparent lies about “scholars” being the same thing as “theologians.”
They are theologists by training. Not historians.
Prove it. Prove that the word “scholars” doesn’t include historians. Prove you know what Bart meant by “scholars.” You were given multiple links at that Wikipedia link, so you should have no trouble checking them out.
I did check them out. That’s how I know they are theologists.
Liar
Anonymous wrote:https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Here’s Bart:
Jesus existed. In yesterday’s post, I began to show how Jesus is the best attested Palestinian Jew of the first century if we look only at external evidence.
But how can you make a convincing case [that someone made up Jesus] if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information.
That must mean that there were hundreds of people at the least who were talking about the man Jesus. One of them was the apostle Paul, who was talking about Jesus by at least the year 32 CE, that is, two years after the date of Jesus’ death.
Paul, as I will point out, actually knew, personally, Jesus’ own brother James and his closest disciples Peter and John. That’s [by itself] more or less a death knell for the Mythicist position, as some of them admit.
(Still Bart talking) Short story: we are not talking about a Bart Ehrman Jesus figure invented in the year 60. There was widespread information about Jesus from the years after his death. Otherwise, you can’t explain all the literary evidence (dozens of independent sources), some of it based on Aramaic traditions of Jesus’ homeland.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even Bart Ehrman says: "Paul knew Jesus' brother, James, and he knew his closest disciple, Peter, and he tells us that he did," Ehrman says. "If Jesus didn't exist, you would think his brother would know about it, so I think Paul is probably pretty good evidence that Jesus at least existed."
https://www.npr.org/2012/04/01/149462376/did-jesus-exist-a-historian-makes-his-case
Ehrman also says this: But how can you make a convincing case if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information. https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Bumping because pp with a page of irrelevant basic stats links is obviously trolling really hard to get away from it.
One of the best arguments for Jesus’ existence—from a leading atheist.
"Paul is probably pretty good evidence"
"They each have heard about ... which heard about him from their own sources"
Bumping my response:
"probably pretty good evidence" is not definitive. Not 100%.
So none of the "sources" were eyewitnesses. They only "knew" thirdhand information, at best.
Again, Paul knew two crucial eye witnesses, Jesus’ brother and one of the most important disciples.
In the second link, Ehrman’s very first sentence is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset-if-the-mythicists-were-right-that-jesus-never-existed/
Ehrman is a theologist trying to get press.
What do the independent historians (not theologists) say?
Bart E is an ATHEIST
No scholars or academics in the western world who are teaching or publishing doubt the historicity of Jesus Christ.
He's a theologist. He happens to not believe in the supernatural aspects of Jesus, but he's not a trained historian.
Which independent/unbiased scholars say "100% certain"?
So you chose to ignore the post right above yours that gave scholars’ names. Cute. I’ll repost it for you.
Dozens of independent scholars who agree Jesus existed can be found in the Sources section here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus . Have a blast.
What will you guys try to quibble about next? What word (“scholar”) or definition (“probability”)?
Or, you could just accept that Jesus existed and find something better than trolling to do with your time.
Did you notice the time stamps?
More bs. Nobody cares if the time stamps are several decades old. Independent scholarship is independent scholarship.
I meant the timestamps of the posts. They were posted at the same time.
Somebody uploaded posts at the same time? Who cares?
You still lost the argument about the vast scholarly concensus that Jesus existed.
I fully agree that thousands of theologists believe he existed. If you had evidence of thousands of unbiased, independent "scholars" then you might have something.
Anyway, no one can say with 100% certainty because we don't have decent sources. Contemporary, first-hand, unbiased sources.
You keep trying to redefine “scholars” as being somehow exclusively “theologians.” We see you.
Paul knowing Jesus’ brother James and Jesus’ disciple Peter, and writing about them, is pretty darn decent. As Ehrman says, James would have told Paul if he didn’t have a brother called Jesus.
Plus Ehrman and others cite 30 other sources and a lot of linguistic evidence for Jesus’ existence.
But hey, if you want to join the extreme fringe of “foolish” deniers and die on the hill of not having CNN cameras trained on Jesus, then you do you. Maybe make yourself a tinfoil hat too?
“probably pretty good evidence” - so convincing.
He was using the gospels as a source.
You keep fixating on this single Ehrman quote and ignoring these:
Ehrman’s very first sentence in this blog is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset...ight-that-jesus-never-existed/
What are you afraid of? How’s that tinfoil hat coming along? Or are you just trolling?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even Bart Ehrman says: "Paul knew Jesus' brother, James, and he knew his closest disciple, Peter, and he tells us that he did," Ehrman says. "If Jesus didn't exist, you would think his brother would know about it, so I think Paul is probably pretty good evidence that Jesus at least existed."
https://www.npr.org/2012/04/01/149462376/did-jesus-exist-a-historian-makes-his-case
Ehrman also says this: But how can you make a convincing case if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information. https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Bumping because pp with a page of irrelevant basic stats links is obviously trolling really hard to get away from it.
One of the best arguments for Jesus’ existence—from a leading atheist.
Prove it.
"Paul is probably pretty good evidence"
"They each have heard about ... which heard about him from their own sources"
Bumping my response:
"probably pretty good evidence" is not definitive. Not 100%.
So none of the "sources" were eyewitnesses. They only "knew" thirdhand information, at best.
Again, Paul knew two crucial eye witnesses, Jesus’ brother and one of the most important disciples.
In the second link, Ehrman’s very first sentence is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset-if-the-mythicists-were-right-that-jesus-never-existed/
Ehrman is a theologist trying to get press.
What do the independent historians (not theologists) say?
Bart E is an ATHEIST
No scholars or academics in the western world who are teaching or publishing doubt the historicity of Jesus Christ.
He's a theologist. He happens to not believe in the supernatural aspects of Jesus, but he's not a trained historian.
Which independent/unbiased scholars say "100% certain"?
So you chose to ignore the post right above yours that gave scholars’ names. Cute. I’ll repost it for you.
Dozens of independent scholars who agree Jesus existed can be found in the Sources section here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus . Have a blast.
What will you guys try to quibble about next? What word (“scholar”) or definition (“probability”)?
Or, you could just accept that Jesus existed and find something better than trolling to do with your time.
Did you notice the time stamps?
More bs. Nobody cares if the time stamps are several decades old. Independent scholarship is independent scholarship.
I meant the timestamps of the posts. They were posted at the same time.
Somebody uploaded posts at the same time? Who cares?
You still lost the argument about the vast scholarly concensus that Jesus existed.
I fully agree that thousands of theologists believe he existed. If you had evidence of thousands of unbiased, independent "scholars" then you might have something.
Anyway, no one can say with 100% certainty because we don't have decent sources. Contemporary, first-hand, unbiased sources.
You keep trying to redefine “scholars” as being somehow exclusively “theologians.” We see you.
Paul knowing Jesus’ brother James and Jesus’ disciple Peter, and writing about them, is pretty darn decent. As Ehrman says, James would have told Paul if he didn’t have a brother called Jesus.
Plus Ehrman and others cite 30 other sources and a lot of linguistic evidence for Jesus’ existence.
But hey, if you want to join the extreme fringe of “foolish” deniers and die on the hill of not having CNN cameras trained on Jesus, then you do you. Maybe make yourself a tinfoil hat too?
“probably pretty good evidence” - so convincing.
He was using the gospels as a source.
You keep fixating on this single Ehrman quote and ignoring these:
Ehrman’s very first sentence in this blog is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset...ight-that-jesus-never-existed/
What are you afraid of? How’s that tinfoil hat coming along? Or are you just trolling?
Thousands of theologists believe he existed? Shocker!
You’re not winning any arguments with transparent lies about “scholars” being the same thing as “theologians.”
They are theologists by training. Not historians.
Prove it. Prove that the word “scholars” doesn’t include historians. Prove you know what Bart meant by “scholars.” You were given multiple links at that Wikipedia link, so you should have no trouble checking them out.
I did check them out. That’s how I know they are theologists.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So it's settled then:
- It is likely a man named Jesus existed
- There is zero evidence of his divinity
Now the thread is genuinely over, unless someone - explicitly and with evidence - disputes the above.
Hahahahahahahaha.
Not ”it is likely.” That goes against the vast consensus among scholars (historians and theologians) that Jesus existed. As the sainted Bart says, only 1-2 scholars out of 2,000-3,000 maintain that Jesus didn’t exist. How’s your tinfoil hat coming along?
It’s adorable you think that a handful of DCUM randos can settle the issue of Jesus’ historicity in a way that flies in the face of the work of thousands of actual scholars.
NP. What is the point of arguing "likely" vs. "certainty"?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Even Bart Ehrman says: "Paul knew Jesus' brother, James, and he knew his closest disciple, Peter, and he tells us that he did," Ehrman says. "If Jesus didn't exist, you would think his brother would know about it, so I think Paul is probably pretty good evidence that Jesus at least existed."
https://www.npr.org/2012/04/01/149462376/did-jesus-exist-a-historian-makes-his-case
Ehrman also says this: But how can you make a convincing case if we’re talking about thirty or so independent sources that know there was a man Jesus? These sources are not all living in the same village someplace so they are egging each other on. They didn’t compare notes. They are independent of one another and are scattered throughout the Mediterranean. They each have heard about the man Jesus from their own sources of information, which heard about him from their own sources of information. https://ehrmanblog.org/gospel-evidence-that-jesus-existed/
Bumping because pp with a page of irrelevant basic stats links is obviously trolling really hard to get away from it.
One of the best arguments for Jesus’ existence—from a leading atheist.
Prove it.
"Paul is probably pretty good evidence"
"They each have heard about ... which heard about him from their own sources"
Bumping my response:
"probably pretty good evidence" is not definitive. Not 100%.
So none of the "sources" were eyewitnesses. They only "knew" thirdhand information, at best.
Again, Paul knew two crucial eye witnesses, Jesus’ brother and one of the most important disciples.
In the second link, Ehrman’s very first sentence is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset-if-the-mythicists-were-right-that-jesus-never-existed/
Ehrman is a theologist trying to get press.
What do the independent historians (not theologists) say?
Bart E is an ATHEIST
No scholars or academics in the western world who are teaching or publishing doubt the historicity of Jesus Christ.
He's a theologist. He happens to not believe in the supernatural aspects of Jesus, but he's not a trained historian.
Which independent/unbiased scholars say "100% certain"?
So you chose to ignore the post right above yours that gave scholars’ names. Cute. I’ll repost it for you.
Dozens of independent scholars who agree Jesus existed can be found in the Sources section here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus . Have a blast.
What will you guys try to quibble about next? What word (“scholar”) or definition (“probability”)?
Or, you could just accept that Jesus existed and find something better than trolling to do with your time.
Did you notice the time stamps?
More bs. Nobody cares if the time stamps are several decades old. Independent scholarship is independent scholarship.
I meant the timestamps of the posts. They were posted at the same time.
Somebody uploaded posts at the same time? Who cares?
You still lost the argument about the vast scholarly concensus that Jesus existed.
I fully agree that thousands of theologists believe he existed. If you had evidence of thousands of unbiased, independent "scholars" then you might have something.
Anyway, no one can say with 100% certainty because we don't have decent sources. Contemporary, first-hand, unbiased sources.
You keep trying to redefine “scholars” as being somehow exclusively “theologians.” We see you.
Paul knowing Jesus’ brother James and Jesus’ disciple Peter, and writing about them, is pretty darn decent. As Ehrman says, James would have told Paul if he didn’t have a brother called Jesus.
Plus Ehrman and others cite 30 other sources and a lot of linguistic evidence for Jesus’ existence.
But hey, if you want to join the extreme fringe of “foolish” deniers and die on the hill of not having CNN cameras trained on Jesus, then you do you. Maybe make yourself a tinfoil hat too?
“probably pretty good evidence” - so convincing.
He was using the gospels as a source.
You keep fixating on this single Ehrman quote and ignoring these:
Ehrman’s very first sentence in this blog is simply “Jesus existed.” He goes on to cite 30 sources and also some linguistic evidence.
Ehrman also says this: “I decided that the vast majority of scholars (all but one or two, out of many thousands) are absolutely right. Jesus did exist.” https://ehrmanblog.org/would-i-be-personally-upset...ight-that-jesus-never-existed/
What are you afraid of? How’s that tinfoil hat coming along? Or are you just trolling?
Thousands of theologists believe he existed? Shocker!
You’re not winning any arguments with transparent lies about “scholars” being the same thing as “theologians.”
They are theologists by training. Not historians.
Prove it. Prove that the word “scholars” doesn’t include historians. Prove you know what Bart meant by “scholars.” You were given multiple links at that Wikipedia link, so you should have no trouble checking them out.