Anonymous wrote:I like the Buddha tooAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like quite a bit of what is attributed to him. Love, kindness, compassion, helping the sick and poor, welcoming the stranger, forgiveness, living a simpler life serving others ……
Sounds a lot like the Buddha to me. But they were both so long ago, who knows?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[twitter]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Link?
Don't hold your breath waiting.
And Ehrman undermines his own argument by stating something as true, when it is not in fact true. Not every scholar believes in a historical Jesus, and there are plenty of scholars now that have made well-reasoned arguments to the contrary. Ehrman also acknowledges there is not evidence, and then he makes his own specious speculation.
Exactly. No evidence. Just stories.
“Just stories” is exactly how we know almost every non-emperor figure from antiquity.
-Socrates: no contemporary documents, only “stories” from Plato and Xenophon 10–40 years later.
-Hannibal: no Carthaginian records survive, only “stories” from Roman enemies 50–150 years later.
-Apollonius of Tyana: miracle-working philosopher, one primary biography written 150 years after his death. Nobody in classics or ancient history calls these people “mythical” on that basis.
Jesus has more and earlier attestation than most 1st-century Jews.
-Within 20–30 years: multiple letters from Paul (undisputed: Romans, 1–2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, Philemon) that casually mention Jesus was born as a human, of a woman, descended from David, had a brother named James (whom Paul met), taught specific things, was crucified under Roman authority.
-Within 40–60 years: Mark’s gospel (used by Matthew and Luke).
-Within 60–80 years: a Jewish historian (Josephus) twice mentions Jesus and his brother James. That timeline beats almost every comparable figure from the Roman provinces.
The “stories” contain details early Christians had no reason to invent and every reason to suppress (historians call this the criterion of embarrassment):
-Jesus baptized by John (implies he was John’s subordinate and needed repentance).
-Denied by his own disciples.
- Crucified (a shameful, cursed death in both Roman and Jewish eyes).
-Family thought he was crazy (Mark 3:21). People making up a hero do not write these things.
Independent, hostile sources confirm the basic outline
-Josephus (Jewish, ~93 CE): Jesus executed by Pilate, brother named James, followers still exist.
-Tacitus (Roman, ~116 CE): “Christus” executed under Pontius Pilate in Judea, source of the Christian movement. These are not Christians repeating their own stories; these are outsiders who had zero interest in promoting Christianity.
A real movement exploded in Jerusalem within months of the supposed events Thousands of Jews suddenly start worshipping a crucified criminal as the Messiah — in the same city where he was publicly executed. That doesn’t happen with a purely mythical figure. It requires a real, recent, traumatic event that needs explaining.
So no, it’s not “no evidence, just stories.”
It’s multiple, early, independent sources — some hostile — that align on a core set of facts, using the exact same kinds of evidence historians use for everyone else in antiquity.
If you reject that evidence for Jesus, you has to reject the existence of Socrates, Hannibal, Boudicca, Arminius, and dozens of other ancient figures on the exact same grounds. And literally no professional historian does that.
That’s the problem with the “no evidence, just stories” line. It’s not skepticism. It’s a double standard.
And what evidence is there for God? You know, Jesus's Dad.
Anonymous wrote:I don't care if an ancient a guy named Jesus existed or not. He was certainly not the son of God, because there is no God.
I like the Buddha tooAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like quite a bit of what is attributed to him. Love, kindness, compassion, helping the sick and poor, welcoming the stranger, forgiveness, living a simpler life serving others ……
Sounds a lot like the Buddha to me. But they were both so long ago, who knows?
Anonymous wrote:[twitter]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Link?
Don't hold your breath waiting.
And Ehrman undermines his own argument by stating something as true, when it is not in fact true. Not every scholar believes in a historical Jesus, and there are plenty of scholars now that have made well-reasoned arguments to the contrary. Ehrman also acknowledges there is not evidence, and then he makes his own specious speculation.
Exactly. No evidence. Just stories.
“Just stories” is exactly how we know almost every non-emperor figure from antiquity.
-Socrates: no contemporary documents, only “stories” from Plato and Xenophon 10–40 years later.
-Hannibal: no Carthaginian records survive, only “stories” from Roman enemies 50–150 years later.
-Apollonius of Tyana: miracle-working philosopher, one primary biography written 150 years after his death. Nobody in classics or ancient history calls these people “mythical” on that basis.
Jesus has more and earlier attestation than most 1st-century Jews.
-Within 20–30 years: multiple letters from Paul (undisputed: Romans, 1–2 Corinthians, Galatians, Philippians, 1 Thessalonians, Philemon) that casually mention Jesus was born as a human, of a woman, descended from David, had a brother named James (whom Paul met), taught specific things, was crucified under Roman authority.
-Within 40–60 years: Mark’s gospel (used by Matthew and Luke).
-Within 60–80 years: a Jewish historian (Josephus) twice mentions Jesus and his brother James. That timeline beats almost every comparable figure from the Roman provinces.
The “stories” contain details early Christians had no reason to invent and every reason to suppress (historians call this the criterion of embarrassment):
-Jesus baptized by John (implies he was John’s subordinate and needed repentance).
-Denied by his own disciples.
- Crucified (a shameful, cursed death in both Roman and Jewish eyes).
-Family thought he was crazy (Mark 3:21). People making up a hero do not write these things.
Independent, hostile sources confirm the basic outline
-Josephus (Jewish, ~93 CE): Jesus executed by Pilate, brother named James, followers still exist.
-Tacitus (Roman, ~116 CE): “Christus” executed under Pontius Pilate in Judea, source of the Christian movement. These are not Christians repeating their own stories; these are outsiders who had zero interest in promoting Christianity.
A real movement exploded in Jerusalem within months of the supposed events Thousands of Jews suddenly start worshipping a crucified criminal as the Messiah — in the same city where he was publicly executed. That doesn’t happen with a purely mythical figure. It requires a real, recent, traumatic event that needs explaining.
So no, it’s not “no evidence, just stories.”
It’s multiple, early, independent sources — some hostile — that align on a core set of facts, using the exact same kinds of evidence historians use for everyone else in antiquity.
If you reject that evidence for Jesus, you has to reject the existence of Socrates, Hannibal, Boudicca, Arminius, and dozens of other ancient figures on the exact same grounds. And literally no professional historian does that.
That’s the problem with the “no evidence, just stories” line. It’s not skepticism. It’s a double standard.
Anonymous wrote:I don't care if an ancient a guy named Jesus existed or not. He was certainly not the son of God, because there is no God.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a number of non-religious documents that confirm Jesus existed in addition to his followers writings. It is unlikely they colluded to create a fictional character.
They document the stories about him and/or his followers, but aren’t written by contemporaries with first-hand knowledge.
+1. Well written.
There is zero surviving non-biblical contemporary evidence for a historical Jesus.
Overwhelming Consensus (≈95–99% of relevant experts)
Virtually all professional historians, biblical scholars, and classicists who specialize in the relevant period (whether Christian, Jewish, atheist, agnostic, or otherwise) accept that a historical Jesus existed, was born around 4–6 BCE, was baptized by John the Baptist, gathered followers, taught in Galilee, and was crucified under Pontius Pilate around 30–33 CE.
They think he most likely existed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Link?
Don't hold your breath waiting.
And Ehrman undermines his own argument by stating something as true, when it is not in fact true. Not every scholar believes in a historical Jesus, and there are plenty of scholars now that have made well-reasoned arguments to the contrary. Ehrman also acknowledges there is not evidence, and then he makes his own specious speculation.
Exactly. No evidence. Just stories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
Link?
Don't hold your breath waiting.
And Ehrman undermines his own argument by stating something as true, when it is not in fact true. Not every scholar believes in a historical Jesus, and there are plenty of scholars now that have made well-reasoned arguments to the contrary. Ehrman also acknowledges there is not evidence, and then he makes his own specious speculation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a number of non-religious documents that confirm Jesus existed in addition to his followers writings. It is unlikely they colluded to create a fictional character.
They document the stories about him and/or his followers, but aren’t written by contemporaries with first-hand knowledge.
+1. Well written.
There is zero surviving non-biblical contemporary evidence for a historical Jesus.
Overwhelming Consensus (≈95–99% of relevant experts)
Virtually all professional historians, biblical scholars, and classicists who specialize in the relevant period (whether Christian, Jewish, atheist, agnostic, or otherwise) accept that a historical Jesus existed, was born around 4–6 BCE, was baptized by John the Baptist, gathered followers, taught in Galilee, and was crucified under Pontius Pilate around 30–33 CE.
They think he most likely existed.
Virtually all professional historians, biblical scholars, and classicists who specialize in the relevant period (whether Christian, Jewish, atheist, agnostic, or otherwise) accept that a historical Jesus existed, was born around 4–6 BCE, was baptized by John the Baptist, gathered followers, taught in Galilee, and was crucified under Pontius Pilate around 30–33 CE.
Are you a professional historian, biblical scholar, or classicist who specializes in the relevant period?
If not, why are you speaking for them?
Among tenured or professionally employed professors of biblical studies, classics, or ancient history at major universities, the number who openly support mythicism is effectively zero. Even strong critics of traditional Christianity (e.g., Bart Ehrman, Hector Avalos [deceased], Zeba Crook) consider mythicism historically untenable.
Obviously all of the Bible “scholars” believe he existed.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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 would be disgusted by MAGA
Jesus was a socialist
The Gospels were written long after Jesus's death and are unreliable, contradictory, and heavily influenced by theological agendas rather than historical accuracy
Some theories suggest that the Jesus story was created by combining elements from various pre-Christian pagan mystery cults, such as Mithras and Osiris
Add in the well known story about the fabled founder of Rome, Romulus (especially in a Roman controlled province). Both the narratives of Jesus and Romulus feature a hero of divine parentage (Mars/God the Father), whose infancy is imperiled by a jealous ruler (Amulius/Herod) but who is saved and raised in humble circumstances. Both feature tales of prophesied death as part of a divine plan, after death their bodies disappear, and they are then seen after death. They both ascend to heaven.
There are at least fourteen independent sources for the historicity of Jesus from multiple authors within a century of the crucifixion of Jesus[21] such as the letters of Paul (contemporary of Jesus who personally knew eyewitnesses since the mid 30s AD),[note 5][note 6][22] the gospels (as biographies on historical people similar Xenophon’s Memoirs of Socrates),[23] and non-Christian sources such as Josephus (Jewish historian and commander in Galilee)[24] and Tacitus (Roman historian and Senator).[25][26] Multiple independent sources affirm that Jesus actually had family.[22][27]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus
Tacitus is hearsay and is not evidence for a historical Jesus. Josephus = one is an interpolation (not evidence for a historical Jesus) and the other is an outright forgery added by later Christians.
Paul speaks of a cosmic Jesus, not a historical one. It's also telling that none of the information from the community he is responding to has survived the later orthodox Christian scrubbing they did of any information that they considered heretical.
The gospels are not eyewitness accounts, nor are they based on any oral history.
There goes all your contemporary sources.
Add in that Philo is completely silent on Jesus (or Christianity altogether = a small sect that had no relevance).
Next?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Paul is writing 20 years after Jesus’s death — extremely early by ancient-history standards.
Paul says explicitly that he:
• Met James, the brother of the Lord
• Met Peter
• Joined the movement that already existed shortly after the crucifixion
Historians ask:
How is there a movement centered around a non-existent person within a single generation, led by his “brother”?
Mythicists try to argue that “brother” meant “spiritual brother,” but this collapses because:
• Paul uses the term differently elsewhere
• It appears specifically in a context of identifying a biological family connection
This alone is one of mythicism’s biggest fatal blows.
Historians look for multiple independent attestations — stories that come from different lines of tradition.
For Jesus we have:
• Paul (independent of the Gospels)
• Mark (earliest Gospel)
• Q-like material (sayings source used by Matthew/Luke)
• M material and L material (unique to Matthew and Luke)
• Josephus
• Tacitus
• Early rabbinic traditions
These sources disagree on plenty — which proves they didn’t all copy each other.
But they agree that:
• Jesus was a real Jewish preacher
• He had followers
• He was executed by Roman authority
When multiple hostile or indifferent sources confirm a person existed, historians treat it as strong evidence.
Ancient writers rarely invent things that weaken their own case.
For Jesus:
• Being executed as a criminal is not something early Christians would invent.
• His family not fully believing in him early on.
• His baptism by John (implies inferiority).
These are embarrassing, meaning historically likely.
A mythic figure normally has:
• Glorious birth narrative
• Death in battle
• Triumph
Jesus has:
• Obscure origins
• A humiliating execution
That’s the opposite of typical myth creation.
If Jesus never existed, why did a Jewish sect form instantly around the belief that he was the Messiah?
Mythic heroes usually develop over centuries (e.g., Hercules, Romulus).
But Jesus’s movement exploded:
• In Jerusalem, where he supposedly lived
• Within a few years of his death
Movements based on nonexistent people don’t spring up immediately among people who supposedly knew them.
Here’s the harsh academic truth:
Mythicism fails the basic rules of ancient historical method.
Historians ask:
• What is the simplest explanation that fits the evidence?
• Does this explanation require extra assumptions?
Mythicism requires:
• Reinterpreting Paul unusually
• Dismissing all embarrassing material
• Suggesting coordinated literary invention without motive
• Ignoring how Jewish messianic movements actually worked
It becomes more complicated than simply accepting that a preacher lived and was executed.
When Carrier and Price present mythicist arguments, historians from:
• Princeton
• Yale
• Harvard
• Brown
• Cambridge
• Oxford
…all say the same thing:
“This isn’t how ancient history works.”
Mythicism relies on special pleading, hyper-skepticism, and reading texts against normal linguistic/historical usage.
That’s why scholars in the field consider it fringe.
Tacitus (Roman historian) writes about:
• “Christus” who was “executed under Pontius Pilate”
• The origin of the movement in Judea
Tacitus hated Christians.
He had no reason to repeat Christian myths — he got his information from Roman archives or non-Christian sources.
Josephus (Jewish historian) also mentions Jesus twice.
Even removing Christian edits, the core reference remains widely accepted.
Hostile witnesses rarely treat fictional characters as real recent people.
Bart Ehrman (agnostic/atheist):
“There is no serious historian who doubts Jesus existed.”
Paula Fredriksen (Jewish, non-Christian):
“I don’t know any full professor of ancient history who doubts his existence.”
Maurice Casey (agnostic):
“Mythicism is an embarrassment to real scholarship.”
Michael Grant (secular classical historian):
“The denial of Jesus’s existence is not tenable.”
When even scholars opposed to Christian theology uphold his existence, that’s telling.
Modern mythicism arose from:
• 19th-century anti-Christian activism
• Non-scholarly writers
• People pushing sociopolitical agendas
It didn’t come out of universities or trained historians.
That origin matters.
Why Scholars Reject Mythicism
Because it requires ignoring:
• Early eyewitness-proximate sources
• Embarrassing historical details
• Hostile sources referencing Jesus
• Historical method
• How ancient movements form
…and instead replacing them with a complex conspiracy-like theory without evidence.
The simplest, strongest-supported conclusion is:
A Jewish preacher named Jesus lived and was executed.
Everything else Christians claim is a separate debate — miracles, theology, divinity — but the man himself?
For historians, that part is not controversial.
We have stories about him and/or his followers, but none are written by non-religious contemporaries with first-hand knowledge.