I was imagining that if the Church were truly being guided by 1 person, that there would be much less confusion. I'm not aware of any human ruler in history whose followers were so confused about what he wanted while he was still alive.
2. Early Christians were willing to die for their belief in the content of the New Testament — Brendan Golledge
1. There are historical elements to the testimony in the New Testament — Brendan Golledge
2. Early Christians were willing to die for their belief in the content of the New Testament — Brendan Golledge
"In 1997, William Ryan, Walter Pitman, Petko Dimitrov, and their colleagues first published the Black Sea deluge hypothesis. They proposed that a catastrophic inflow of Mediterranean seawater into the Black Sea freshwater lake occurred around 7600 years ago, c. 5600 BC" — Brendan Golledge
nonchristian sources agree on some of the main points, such as that Jesus was crucified — Brendan Golledge
From the late 1800s to the latter half of the 20th century biblical scholars "knew" there had been a Council of Jamnia in the late first century where the Hebrew canon was fixed in response to Christianity. Now this is a theory embraced by virtually no one. But the rise and fall of such theories has little to do with new evidence, and more with arguments over the same old evidence, which gain currency. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Paul's letters are widely taken to be the earliest Christian sources though, which makes the temporal argument seem a bit off. Luke is coming significantly later, perhaps after John, and in any event Luke taken with Acts shows Jesus as quite divine. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If it's entirely fabricated, then why is it universally accepted that Jesus was baptized and crucified? — Brendan Golledge
Good point. I certainly agree. Breadnan used the word "universally", as if everyone on the planet was a Christian! Well, Christianity, even if it is the largest religion in the world --it forms about 30% of the major religious groups-- it is far from being "universal".If it's entirely fabricated, then why is it universally accepted that Jesus was baptized and crucified?
— Brendan Golledge
I disagree when you state that the crucifixion and baptism of Jesus Christ is 'universally' accepted. This is not true and this is even the cause of why the Christian religion (and other religions) split apart into different factions. — javi2541997
Certainly not. And I would add that even if one accepts Jesus crucifixion as an historical event, his resurrection is quite a controversial if not a fake story --outside Christianity-- without which Christianity, at least as we know it, would not exist. It would be much better if it were built based on and around the human side of Jesus, as a teacher, as is the case with Buddhism.So, no. It is not universally accepted that Jesus was crucified. :smile: — javi2541997
Breadnan used the word "universally", as if everyone on the planet was a Christian! Well, Christianity, even if it is the largest religion in the world --it forms about 30% — Alkis Piskas
Certainly not. And I would add that even if one accepts Jesus crucifixion as an historical event, his resurrection is quite a controversial if not a fake story — Alkis Piskas
It would be much better if it were built based on and around the human side of Jesus, as a teacher, as is the case with Buddhism. — Alkis Piskas
then why is it universally accepted that Jesus was baptized and crucified? — Brendan Golledge
If it's religious fiction, then why did the disciples die for it? — Brendan Golledge
There is no reliable evidence of disciples being tortured to death for their beliefs about Jesus. There was sporadic persecution by Rome for Christian's failures to give tribute to the state gods, and Nero used Christians as scapegoats for fires.The disciples knew that they were going to be persecuted, and apparently, most of them were tortured to death. — Brendan Golledge
What eyewitness testimony? The earliest Gospel was written ~5 decades after Jesus death by educated Greek speakers outside Palestine, not by his illiterate, Aramaic speaking disciples. There were stories being ciculated orally, some probably based on actual anecdotal accounts, but with legendary elements added. Also bear in mind the Gospels are not independent accounts: Matthew & Luke were largely copied from Mark and a source of alleged sayings of Jesus'.On the Reliability of Eye-Witness Testimony: — Brendan Golledge
Jesus seems to have had a reputation for faith healing and exorcisms. That does not entail actual miracles.Possible Explanation of Some Miracles — Brendan Golledge
even then it would still seem that most of the earliest sources have clear references to the divinity of Christ. — Count Timothy von Icarus
What the Apostles thought before they wrote anything is of course pure supposition. — Count Timothy von Icarus
People arguing with me that Jesus is like Spiderman or Harry Potter are just not familiar with the research that has been done on this subject.
So yes, among people who actually know what they are talking about, it's universally accepted that Jesus at least existed and was crucified. — Brendan Golledge
The wikipedia page on the Historicity of Jesus says — Brendan Golledge
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