Poll

Did Jesus Exist?

Yes, he was the son of God34%34% - 105
Yes, he was a regular guy, but not the son of God10%10% - 31
Yes, he was a regular guy and God doesn't exist22%22% - 68
Not Enough Evidence to Prove or deny his Existence12%12% - 38
No, he's a myth, but God does exist0%0% - 0
No, he's a myth and God doesn't exist8%8% - 27
Jesus Christ, Another Religious Thread?11%11% - 34
Total: 303
Mekstizzle
WALKER
+3,611|6638|London, England
Oh for fuck sake.

When the first option is the winning one, you know the place has hit rock bottom. Or below that, Hell. (Christianity pun!)
DesertFox-
The very model of a modern major general
+794|6702|United States of America
In all actuality, I do not know. There is little evidence that I have witnessed to suggest otherwise, though.
topal63
. . .
+533|6735

OrangeHound wrote:

topal63 wrote:

OrangeHound wrote:

... one would have to experience a bit of delusion to deny that Jesus existed in history.
I guess I am deluded. You are so much more knowledgeable than I.

Hey gee me too!
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?pi … 3#p1317493
LOL - the entire list is evidence that no-one ever actually saw anyone...

1.) Hearasy after the fact... does not describe anyone; it only suggest 2nd hand knowledge of the existence of a cult; and is a potential forgery.
2.) Hearsay, after the fact, 2nd hand account, definite forgery (IMO).
3.) FALSE claim - the Talmud refers to a Jewish Name, not any specific Christ character.
4.) FASLE claim - Phlegon descirbes nothing, but a an astrological-event important to all Greek cults; an eclipse; no Jesus here.
5.) Same thing as 4 more or less.

(I have no reason or fact whatsoever to think Jesus ever existed).
I acknowledge that there is antagonism toward this subject, but it is not based upon rational evaluation applied by historians.  If one wishes to discount all historians of that period just because historians of that period disagree with one's contemporary opinion about a particular person then what grounds of debate exist?   What basis of historical evaluation are we left with?

Dismissing every record because one believes it to be "hearsay", "false claim", "forgery", etc. is just simply an amateur tactic.   If such opinion is introduced into historical records then nothing of history can be agreed upon, and all history devolves into pointless fiction.

Remember, I did not introduce a debate about the deity of Jesus ... just simply whether or not a particular historical figure existed.  All the criteria upon which historians validate the existence of an individual is satisfied by the historical records of the time period, and I'm not aware of any movement by historians which disagrees with the existence of a historical Jesus (even by the Christ opponents).

So, if anyone would like to sabotage the way that historians validate history ... then be prepared for all of history to be rewritten based upon contemporary agendas.
Well this deluded amateur does not resort to tactics (as you do).

You are beyond wrong. That is not at all how you arive at a historical account. Historical accounts are based upon corroboration - when facts & texts agree. And the historical documentation of today is not at all like the historical documentation of the past. You are operating under assumption and argumentation in the face of known facts.

But this argumentation for historicity (when evidence is missing) is a common apologetic tactic I am very familiar with (whether it be rationally deliberate or not).

(a.) Hearsay - is a definition - everyone knows it means - I did not witness that actually happening. Hearsay a hundred years later of a religious account does not equal a historical account.

(b.) After the fact - means exactly that. Well after it supposedly happened.

(c.) The examples you cited do not really describe a man. But the mere knowledge that a cult (or cult practices) existed. And the Josephus Text is not an original Text - it is a copy by the hand of a devout Christian. And if you knew what you were talking about - you would know that the Early Christian 1st - 2nd century  writings make no mention of this - so called  Josephus (Textural) evidence that Jesus existed.

I have read the entire works of Josephus and this style [the block of text] in question is clearly a later addition - forgey; by the hand of a Zealot Christian scribe (copyist).

Josephus Antiquities 18.3.3 - first quoted specifically by Eusebius in the fourth century - has come down to us as follows:
Now there was about this time Jesus, a wise man, if it be lawful to call him a man; for he was a doer of wonderful works, a teacher of such men as receive the truth with pleasure. He drew over to him both many of the Jews and many of the Gentiles. He was [the] Christ. And when Pilate, at the suggestion of the principal men amongst us, had condemned him to the cross, those that loved him at the first did not forsake him; for he appeared to them alive again the third day; as the divine prophets had foretold these and ten thousand other wonderful things concerning him. And the tribe of Christians, so named from him, are not extinct at this day.
Sounds exactly like what a Jew would write about Christainity (something he does not believe in) - right? Not.

This was inserted into a passage describing of another event.

P.S. OrangeHound wrote: "I acknowledge that there is antagonism toward this subject..." - umm, not really, unless your feeling that there is. I really don't care. I just happened to be on-line; and someone created a topic [thread] and then I posted some information in it (as I have read a considerable amount of material on that subject).

Last edited by topal63 (2007-07-10 12:05:22)

OrangeHound
Busy doing highfalutin adminy stuff ...
+1,335|6666|Washington DC

topal63 wrote:

OrangeHound wrote:

topal63 wrote:

OrangeHound wrote:

... one would have to experience a bit of delusion to deny that Jesus existed in history.
I guess I am deluded. You are so much more knowledgeable than I.

Hey gee me too!
http://forums.bf2s.com/viewtopic.php?pi … 3#p1317493

I acknowledge that there is antagonism toward this subject, but it is not based upon rational evaluation applied by historians.  If one wishes to discount all historians of that period just because historians of that period disagree with one's contemporary opinion about a particular person then what grounds of debate exist?   What basis of historical evaluation are we left with?

Dismissing every record because one believes it to be "hearsay", "false claim", "forgery", etc. is just simply an amateur tactic.   If such opinion is introduced into historical records then nothing of history can be agreed upon, and all history devolves into pointless fiction.

Remember, I did not introduce a debate about the deity of Jesus ... just simply whether or not a particular historical figure existed.  All the criteria upon which historians validate the existence of an individual is satisfied by the historical records of the time period, and I'm not aware of any movement by historians which disagrees with the existence of a historical Jesus (even by the Christ opponents).

So, if anyone would like to sabotage the way that historians validate history ... then be prepared for all of history to be rewritten based upon contemporary agendas.
Well this deluded amateur does not resort to tactics (as you do).

You are beyond wrong. That is not at all how you arive at a historical account. Historical accounts are based upon corroboration - when facts & texts agree. And the historical documentation of today is not at all like the historical documentation of the past. You are operating under assumption and argumentation in the face of known facts.

But this argumentation for historicity (when evidence is missing) is a common apologetic tactic I am very familiar with (whether it be rationally deliberate or not).

(a.) Hearsay - is a definition - everyone knows it means - I did not witness that actually happening. Hearsay a hundred years later of a religious account does not equal a historical account.

(b.) After the fact - means exactly that. Well after it supposedly happened.

(c.) The examples you cited do not really describe a man. But the mere knowledge that a cult (or cult practices) existed. And the Josephus Text is not an original Text - it is a copy by the hand of a devout Christian. And if you knew what you were talking about - you would know that the Early Christian writings make no mention of this - so called  Josephus (Textural) evidence that Jesus existed.

I have read the entire works of Josephus and this style [the block of text] in question is clearly a later addition - forgey; by the hand of a Zealot Christian scribe (copyist).
The problem with the terms of this debate, is that an advocate for Jesus is not allowed to use any "Christian-based" historical accounts since these are viewed as biased.  This would be like saying "prove the existence of the ancient Egyptian Pharaohs, but you can't use (a) Egyptian records or (b) Egyptian artifacts / cultural elements or (c) records produced by any source unless it is contemporary with the particular Pharaoh."

Historians, of course, are not biased with such ridiculous constraints.  I've given sufficient accounts based upon the highly limiting constraints ...

But, I tell you what ... let's take this out of non-historian hands for a moment.  Since we are considering a historical issue, then please give me a major movement of educated historians who specialize in ancient records and who deny the historical existence of Jesus.

Personally, I think debating the historical existence of Jesus avoids the real and more interesting debate (the existence of a Christ Messiah), but it is what it is ...
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6599|SE London

One of my favourites is the Jesus-Mithras link......

Odd that the myths about a pagan demi-god worshipped by the Romans should so closely resemble the myths surrounding Christ.
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6599|SE London

OrangeHound wrote:

Personally, I think debating the historical existence of Jesus avoids the real and more interesting debate (the existence of a Christ Messiah), but it is what it is ...
Well that's a stupid topic for debate if ever I saw one. The existence of Jesus as a man can be quite sensibly tackled as a debate. Whether or not Jesus was the son of God requires faith and faith can never be debated objectively.

It's essentially just the debate "Is Christianity right?" - which obviously Christians believe to be the case and non-Christians do not. The issue of whether Jesus was a real person is far more interesting, as is examination of the embellishments added to the story by the Romans.
suomalainen_äijä
Member
+64|6182
the priests just saw a dream about Jesus, God and stuff so they wrote bibles to get people's attention

as a result it brought sabotage and human sacrifaces
usmarine
Banned
+2,785|6779

Religion fails.  Religion topics fail.  Religion debates fail.

Anyone see a pattern?
topal63
. . .
+533|6735

OrangeHound wrote:

But, I tell you what ... let's take this out of non-historian hands for a moment.  Since we are considering a historical issue, then please give me a major movement of educated historians who specialize in ancient records and who deny the historical existence of Jesus.
I tell you what let's not. Let's stick with the evidence for a historical Jesus and look at all of it (any of it). I am willing - so far you have argumentation without evidence. Lets stick with the Josephus Text for now - which is clear forgery - how is the Eusebius version of Josephus's Antiquities - evidence for a historical Jesus.

You seem to wish to ignore the details - that you brought up.

Last edited by topal63 (2007-07-10 12:14:33)

Switch
Knee Deep In Clunge
+489|6480|Tyne & Wear, England
"Yes, he was a regular guy and God doesn't exist."

If Jesus had existed today instead, he would have been sent to a mental home pretty sharpish.
Somewhere, something incredible is waiting to be known.
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6572
Of course he existed. He was a political activist reformer of judaism who represented a peaceful movement to oust the Romans from Palestine. Nothing more, nothing less. His message was sound but he certainly wasn't supernatural. There is no such thing as God after all.

For a very interesting read try 'Jesus' by A.N. Wilson. He tries to piece together the historical truth about Jesus using what little contemporary evidence there is available including the Gnostic and Coptic gospels and the work of the historian Josephus who lived at the same time Jesus did.
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6572

KILLSWITCH wrote:

"Yes, he was a regular guy and God doesn't exist."

If Jesus had existed today instead, he would have been sent to a mental home pretty sharpish.
David Koresh? David Icke?
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6599|SE London

topal63 wrote:

OrangeHound wrote:

But, I tell you what ... let's take this out of non-historian hands for a moment.  Since we are considering a historical issue, then please give me a major movement of educated historians who specialize in ancient records and who deny the historical existence of Jesus.
I tell you what let's not. Let's stick with the evidence for a historical Jesus and look at all of it (any of it). I am willing - so far you have argumentation without evidence. Lets stick with the Josephus Text for now - which is clear forgery - how is the Eusebius version of Josephus's Antiquities - evidence for a historical Jesus.

You seem to wish to ignore the details - that you brought up.
I'm interested in them....


I know very little about the historicity of Jesus.

I thought it best to get all the proper facts here.



What I've always been interested in about early Christianity is the amount of pagan imagery invoved and the lack of resemblence to Judaism, which seems consistent with all the associated mythology being 'made up' by a pagan culture (the Romans).
KEN-JENNINGS
I am all that is MOD!
+2,973|6649|949

Bertster7 wrote:

What I've always been interested in about early Christianity is the amount of pagan imagery invoved and the lack of resemblence to Judaism, which seems consistent with all the associated mythology being 'made up' by a pagan culture (the Romans).
It (Christianity) is consistent with Pagan, Talmudic and ancient Greek Man-God myths born through astrology/astronomy.
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6599|SE London

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

Bertster7 wrote:

What I've always been interested in about early Christianity is the amount of pagan imagery invoved and the lack of resemblence to Judaism, which seems consistent with all the associated mythology being 'made up' by a pagan culture (the Romans).
It (Christianity) is consistent with Pagan, Talmudic and ancient Greek Man-God myths born through astrology/astronomy.
I know. I've done quite a lot of reading about all that stuff.
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6572

Bertster7 wrote:

What I've always been interested in about early Christianity is the amount of pagan imagery invoved and the lack of resemblence to Judaism, which seems consistent with all the associated mythology being 'made up' by a pagan culture (the Romans).
They had to meld it into existing religious practice otherwise it never would have washed with the locals.
topal63
. . .
+533|6735

CameronPoe wrote:

Of course he existed. He was a political activist reformer of judaism who represented a peaceful movement to oust the Romans from Palestine. Nothing more, nothing less. His message was sound but he certainly wasn't supernatural. There is no such thing as God after all.

For a very interesting read try 'Jesus' by A.N. Wilson. He tries to piece together the historical truth about Jesus using what little contemporary evidence there is available including the Gnostic and Coptic gospels and the work of the historian Josephus who lived at the same time Jesus did.
Here is perfect example of Jesus being what ever you believe him to be; is it a surprise that CameronPoe believes of Jesus as being "a political activist."

Last edited by topal63 (2007-07-10 12:35:31)

Silentkillr69
Member
+6|6195|Chicago
oh i think jesus is definentaly real. (just reminded me of a family guy episode). But Since i am a jew i will ahve to say he is not the son of god......and wtf is easter?
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6599|SE London

topal63 wrote:

CameronPoe wrote:

Of course he existed. He was a political activist reformer of judaism who represented a peaceful movement to oust the Romans from Palestine. Nothing more, nothing less. His message was sound but he certainly wasn't supernatural. There is no such thing as God after all.

For a very interesting read try 'Jesus' by A.N. Wilson. He tries to piece together the historical truth about Jesus using what little contemporary evidence there is available including the Gnostic and Coptic gospels and the work of the historian Josephus who lived at the same time Jesus did.
Here is perfect example of Jesus being what ever you believe him to be; is it a surprise that CameronPoe believes of Jesus as being "a political activist."
If Jesus did exist, which is the current opinion held by the vast majority of mainstream historians, he almost certainly was a political activist.

Early Christians are reported to have lived communally, with possesions shared by the collective. A very sociallist/communist start to a religion that soon became so entrenched in capitalist ideologies - very against the beliefs Jesus supposedly held. It is unlikely that the religious teachings of Jesus were very specific, otherwise there would have been little room for alteration by the Romans - and there was alteration, a lot of it.
usmarine
Banned
+2,785|6779

Why don't adults believe in Santa Claus?  Or the Easter Bunny?
CameronPoe
Member
+2,925|6572
There is no smoke without fire. A religion that deludes billions of people today was not founded on something completely and utterly baseless. It's like how dictators come to have their minions idolise them as Gods. A few generations after the dictator is dead people begin to actually believe he was a God ... and then several centuries down the line, with plenty of exaggeration and bullshit along the way, the 'religion' spreads like wildfire.
Smitty5613
Member
+46|6544|Middle of nowhere, California

sergeriver wrote:

Don't start a flaming war over this thread.
then u prolly might wanna close the thread....
Bertster7
Confused Pothead
+1,101|6599|SE London

usmarine2005 wrote:

Why don't adults believe in Santa Claus?  Or the Easter Bunny?
Because the Easter bunny is just some silly made up drivel based on pagan symbolism. Santa is a courrupted version of a real person, St Nicholas, who used to give out presents to poor people.

If you combine the two you get a great idea of what Christianity is all about, pagan symbols mixed with a character who did exist in history, but has changed beyond all recognition in myth.
topal63
. . .
+533|6735

Bertster7 wrote:

usmarine2005 wrote:

Why don't adults believe in Santa Claus?  Or the Easter Bunny?
Because the Easter bunny is just some silly made up drivel based on pagan symbolism. Santa is a courrupted version of a real person, St Nicholas, who used to give out presents to poor people.

If you combine the two you get a great idea of what Christianity is all about, pagan symbols mixed with a character who did exist in history, but has changed beyond all recognition in myth.
Exactly. The only things left are utter distortions - that is not my idea of a historical person.

If his name is not Jesus, but might be Yeshua, and all I know is a distortion, and most of the other parts conform to common mythical god-man dying stories, or conform to other sources (Jewish messianic thought; writings) - what do I really know about this unknown, face-less person? A historical reconstruction is not history.

What does it even mean to say - I believe a historical Jesus existed - but well, it really doesn't represent the reality of whoever that man was - "but he might have been like .... "

Last edited by topal63 (2007-07-10 13:09:52)

Smitty5613
Member
+46|6544|Middle of nowhere, California

Bertster7 wrote:

usmarine2005 wrote:

Why don't adults believe in Santa Claus?  Or the Easter Bunny?
Because the Easter bunny is just some silly made up drivel based on pagan symbolism. Santa is a courrupted version of a real person, St Nicholas, who used to give out presents to poor people.

If you combine the two you get a great idea of what Christianity is all about, pagan symbols mixed with a character who did exist in history, but has changed beyond all recognition in myth.
ok, lets see some proof of that then?

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