BusyTarpDuster2017 said:No, I have no doubt. I'm just interested in yours. I know it has nothing to do with your topic of God's existence, but as I already mentioned several times, I'm addressing something different. But look at it this way: perhaps the evidence to God's existence is through Jesus, and so what we're talking about is of central importance.BaylorJacket said:You seem really stuck on this historical Jesus thing - are you perhaps dealing with doubt yourself? The Historical Jesus potentially being myth has 0%, absolutely nothing, to do with why I de-converted from Christianity. It never even crossed my mind and seemed blasphemous.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:But that's what I'm trying to evaluate - your rational decision making process behind whether Jesus was a real historical figure or not. You lean that way, but you are not convinced. Given the overwhelming evidence we have in Paul for all the reasons I won't repeat again, I am curious as to what empirical evidence exists you've critically examined, that pulls you the other way. But you seem to be avoiding this.BaylorJacket said:LIB,MR BEARS said:
"I am a follower of Christ who believes in a higher being that created the universe."-Baylorjacket 4/19/22
Again, I ask the question, what has changed?
Why have you chosen differently than before?
Copying & pasting my response as I have already answered this:
"What has changed since then is I continued to pull on that thread, studied the Bible seriously, read numerous books on both sides of the argument, reflected & meditated on it, and eventually deconverted"
I collected the empirical evidence and made the (speaking for myself) most rational decision.
Nonetheless, I will do my best to answer your question so we can move on.
It's important to approach the question of whether Jesus was a real historical figure with an open mind and a willingness to critically evaluate the evidence available. Therefore, it's reasonable to approach the question of Jesus' existence with a degree of skepticism and a commitment to carefully evaluate all available evidence, including alternative theories and arguments. This includes taking into account potential biases and limitations in the sources of evidence, and understanding the historical and cultural context in which that evidence was produced.
While the writings of Paul are certainly an important source of information about the early Christian movement, they do not necessarily provide conclusive evidence for the historicity of Jesus. I listed out several criteria when evaluating historical texts earlier. If your goal is to gain knowledge of the early Christian movement, I feel confident Paul gives us one (of many) views into this. There were many, many early sects of Christianity that died out that paint an incredibly different picture of Jesus.
If your goal is to conclude the historicity of Jesus, it is impossible to come to that conclusion based on his writings. Paul did not know Jesus the man, nor does he pretend to. Paul has bias just like anyone else, and his claims are unprovable. Let's take for example his claim that he met the disciples. Scholars have long questioned the historicity of these claims and have suggested that they may have been exaggerated or even fabricated by Paul in order to bolster his own authority and credibility within the early Christian movement. Can we prove this either way? Nope.
Beyond Paul, the gospels are not historically reliable. They were written 3-6 decades after Jesus' supposed death by fluent, Greek, unnamed authors. They have numerous contradicting claims that lowers their credibility as painting an accurate and historically true story.
In summary, we have gospels written by anonymous authors filled with contradicting claims, and we have letters written by a man filled with unprovable claims as there is no corroborating evidence. I feel like me giving a ~70% chance Jesus existed is generous.
Everything you said about the gospels is defeatable, and has been defeated repeatedly on this forum, but let's do that another time. Let's narrow down your problem with Paul. Here's what it has come down to: You attack the credibility and reliability of the gospels because you say it's written by non-witnesses, from stories passed down orally, and that there's no name attached to them. But then I give Paul, who claims direct witness, as well as having direct contact with the disciples themselves, and whose writings we do know came from him. So now, your argument becomes "well, Paul may be lying". You see where this is going?
So, let's establish where you are at with your argument against Paul - essentially, you are saying that Paul is an unreliable source for the historicity of Jesus, because his claims can not be proven, that he may have lied. Is that correct? Wasn't Paul meeting the disciples mentioned in Acts, whose author was the "historian of first rank", and also mentioned by Peter in 2 Peter? If you answer anything, at least answer the first question in this paragraph.
Everything I have said has been "defeated", yet any serious scholar will admit the unknown authorship of the gospels and their contradictions. I am not making any claims of validity and truth in their message, simply pointing out the obvious.
Yes, Paul being a fallible human is absolutely 100% something we should consider when analyzing the texts. Paul makes magnificent claims, so I naturally would expect to have magnificent and corroborating evidence to back these claims up.