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Stays up all night worrying about if there really is a dog.
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Thalassamania:I start from no assumption, it's a simple calculus:
1) Within the historical community you need two contemporaneous cross references to establish that someone existed.
2) There are no such cross references for Jesus (or for his brother, I'm told).
Conclusion: As far as impartial historians are concerned, Jesus is in the realm of folk tale, myth, legend, etc., but not history.
H2Andy:in the end, we all decide what we will believe
it's our responsibility, and it's our call to make
i think this has been a great discussion, imho
MikeFerrara:Peter, John and Matthew.
MikeFerrara:I enjoy the topic even though I've spent so much time on it that I should have spent working. LOL
There is no creditable claim that any of them wrote until many years after Jesus alleged death, resurrection, etc.MikeFerrara:Peter, John and Matthew.
I just did, and my goodness they dont know if the translation was brother or cousin, theres augment about as to if James was Marys son or the son of Joseph by a different wife (and thus an elder brother), and on and on, confusion and error ad infinitum.MikeFerrara:I'd have to go back and look to see what the specific documents are but I think the existance of James as well as his "trial" and execution are pretty well documented and are generally accepted. They are accepted even to the point of some alleging that the acount of the death of Stephen in acts is a rewrite of the execution of James.
No, its the assumed fact, given the lack of proper evidence, of those historians who are not afraid to play by the rules. Any historian who says otherwise is making a special exception for this case. In fact, David Noel Freeman (the General Editor of the Anchor Bible Series and many other works) posits in Bible Review magazine, Dec. 1993, p.34: "We have to accept somewhat looser standards. In the legal profession, to convict the defendant of a crime, you need proof beyond a reasonable doubt. In civil cases, a preponderance of the evidence is sufficient. When dealing with the Bible or any ancient source, we have to loosen up a little; otherwise, we can't really say anything."MikeFerrara:I don't believe that this is the position of all historians. I'm not sure what we are considering as a historian here but there are many many articles and books written on the general topic by people who sign their name with lots of letters (cridentials) in front of it.
Beats the heck out of me. It seems to me that the ball should be in the archeologists court at this point, but then look at how they screwed up with the claims to have found James ossuary, which turned out to be a fraud. Biblical Scholar always struck me as one of those fabulous oxymorons.MikeFerrara:If it were a simple matter of a lack of documentation to prove that Jesus ever existed, I don't think any one could write much of an article let alone a book. As a historical matter, if that were really the case, I can't see a historian (scholar) devoting much more than a foot note to the subject in an article or book mostly devoted to some other subject. As it is, there are "scholars" who go to great lengths to present cases for a Jesus other than the Biblical Jesus. Some argue for no Jesus at all, others for one that lived a hundred years earlier and was somebody completely different, some for a Jewish Jesus whos words Paul changed around after James died, to...you name it.
Thalassamania:
I just did, and my goodness they dont know if the translation was brother or cousin, theres augment about as to if James was Marys son or the son of Joseph by a different wife (and thus an elder brother), and on and on, confusion and error ad infinitum.