Written by God?

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Antigone
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Written by God?

Post #1

Post by Antigone »

Many times I hear Christians say the bible was "written by God." But not all Christians believe this, they believe one of two things instead: it was 'inspired' by God, or it was written by human hands and God had nothing to do with it. I often wonder how such a wide range of views about a religion's sacred text can be held. Its almost as if some people are compromizing so they can continue to be Christian.

Since there is such a wide range of views there must be a reason for it, maybe the Christian's stronge belief that God wrote the bible isn't in the bible; threrfor there is no bases for why they believe this??

This is a two part qeustion:
What is the basis of the belief that God wrote the bible (or inspired it and the very 'fact' he inspired it still means it is all true and NOT wronge in ay respect)? And what would be the 'proof' that God didn't write the bible? (For example, IF you believe the bible is inerrant because God wrote or inspired the bible, what would need to happen or what would you need to see in order to not believe that anymore?)

I look forward to the discussion and debate! 8-[
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Post #21

Post by Goat »

Metacrock wrote:
goat wrote:Then, of course, a very good case can be made that Luke took a lot of his history directly from Antiquities, which was published in 93 c.e.
that has been disproven. See the Jospheus homepage. (both used common source in the "L" source which is what makes it sound like it's written by the same guy).
I am sure that whole 'Empty tomb' story was around. However, the vast majority of cruxified people didn't get buried at all, and a 'hole in the ground' doesn't mean anybody was buried there to begin with.

(1) yes, they did get burried. The question is how? Most of them probably wound up in common graves, but it was very much a taboo to leave a body up past sun set. They had to have a buriel.
No, it was a JEWISH taboo to leave a body up past sun set. Part of the punishment the Romans did was a defilement of the body. Typically , the body was left to decay on the cross, and therefore was not preserved.

(2) Ray Browns spends several chapters in Death of the Messiah showing that they had to bury Jesus quickly to prevent profaning the passover. That increases the likelyhood that rather than wait for a boat load of corpses to put in a common grave, Jo of A offered his ready made family tomb.
Except, of course, in the typical crucifiction, the bodies were not buried. The Romans were very unconcerned with 'profaning' the passover.
(3) Christians chose that site to venerate in the frist century. They knew it was the right site because when the Romans tried to profane it by building a temple of venus over it, they used that to makr the site. Constantine found a tmeple venus under it and modern archeologists have found it as well. That marks the location it has to be the one.
Well, anybody can point to a hole in the ground, and claim it was a grave. Doesn't make it so. If I recall, there are at least 3 or 4 different mangers in bethelham that claim to be Jesus's birth place too.
(4) It was not just a whole in the ground. Archaeologists know a grave when they see one. it was a grave. there's no reason why the ealry christians would pick out an arbitray grave of someone they didn't know and say "this is Chrsit's tomb" and venerate it.
Hey, you are going to have to do better than that. Do you have any more substantional evidence that tradition, and 'archelogists know a grave'. I bet that
there was not an archelogical examinatoin of that.. since the hole is right smack
underneath a church. I might be wrong, but you can link me to an archelogical article on it if there is one. Claims and asserstions are meaningless, unless backed up by better evidence than just claims.




[quote[
Frankly, I don't give a good gahoot what you claim that Edersheim to have shown
at all.

I know. you don't care about facts, evdidence, truth, or anything. that's the hallmark of a true Jesus myther. My little world of pretense is all matters.
[/quote]

I do care about facts, I don't care about unsupported claims. Anytime I have seen where you get your information from, it doesn't represent what you say it does.
And, I did look at jospehusus home page, and after looking at both sides of the story, I would have to say that it is a very logical conclusion. You can whine and complain about it being 'disproven' all you want, but I think it is a pretty strong case myself. I have not seen a counter to the evidence that I have found anywhere near convincing.

you are just dening the evidence for no good reason. they guy did a study on every word and deterined that there is no pledergism. The theory that they both used L makes sense and explains it. you just don't know what youa re talkinga bout and sense you don't care what's true anyway why should anyone even listen to you?
I notice people claim that 'something has been disproven' because they give an opinion about it, but never the less, their opinion does not address the evidence.
In case you haven't noticed, there is a difference between an asserstion and evidence.


the study of the word usage demosntrates there is no copy.
On the contrary, the claim was not that it was a copy, but it was a resource. If you are going to 'disprove' something, at least try to disprove what the claim was, rather than a strawman of it.

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Post #22

Post by Metacrock »

stuart shepherd wrote:I hope you don't mind if I interrupt.
The gospels are anonymous. The names were added later. Matt, Mark, etc didn't put their names on the gospels. It is hard to believe something that is anonymous.

I don't believe that Mark wrote Mark or Matt wrote Matt, but that doesn't have to be the case for them to be eye witnesses. The idea that you can't trust an anayonous writting is a modern concept it's silly and illogical.


Paul just had heat stroke on the way to Damascus. He hallucinated that he saw Jesus. Paul has no witnesses that Jesus talked to him. He changed the religion of the Jews and created Christianity. You have to wonder why he thought that he had the authority to do away with the Sabbath, Circumcision, the Holidays,etc.


there's no proof what Paul saw, but that's not the point. Paul is not evidence for Early Christaintiy just becuase of his experinces, but because of what he tells us about the contact he had with Peter, James, and others who knew Jesus.


The Gospels were written after 70CE because they tell about the destruction of Jerusalem.Big clue at Matt 28:15
wrong, they do not. They anticipate the destructino of the temple, but as I arleady said the Jews expected that anyway. At the time those passages were writen the temple was not destoryed.

Mark had to be written before 70 because Matt is parodied in the Talmud from a passage that is known to date to AD 72. Thus Matt had to exist by at least 70 and since Mat copied Mark, Mark had to have existed ealier.





If a tomb is empty do you assume the former inhabitant was resurrected or someone moved the body?

No the point. the early Christians marked that tomb from the beginnig. From very early on they said "this is the tomb." they would not do that with a myth, espeicially not before he myth is written.


Jesus never showed himself to anyone but his followers after his resurrection.
He failed to show himself to his evil and adulterous generation or to the high priest.

Stuart Shepherd

fallacy, he walked openly through the streets of Bethany for anyone to see

Goose

Post #23

Post by Goose »

stuart shepherd wrote:
I hope you don't mind if I interrupt.
Not all. And welcome!
The gospels are anonymous. The names were added later. Matt, Mark, etc didn't put their names on the gospels. It is hard to believe something that is anonymous.
You're assumption here is that those that did give names to the Gospels were either mistaken or lieing. For me to believe this, I'm going to need some substantial evidence. I believe they are as they are. Can you provide some evidence as to why they might be mistaken about the authors?
Paul just had heat stroke on the way to Damascus. He hallucinated that he saw Jesus. Paul has no witnesses that Jesus talked to him. He changed the religion of the Jews and created Christianity. You have to wonder why he thought that he had the authority to do away with the Sabbath, Circumcision, the Holidays,etc.
I realize again this is your opinion. Do have any evidence to support it?

Heat stroke doesn't generally cause an individual to turn from persecuting a particular group of people into wanting to join that group and become one of the persecuted. Heat stroke is temporary and doesn't usually cause long term effects.
The Gospels were written after 70CE because they tell about the destruction of Jerusalem.Big clue at Matt 28:15
Going to need a little more than that I think. Maybe you could walk us through how this relates to the destruction of Jerusalem. Here is Matthew 28:15

15 So the soldiers took the money and did as they were instructed. And this story has been widely circulated among the Jews to this very day. (NIV)

Do you have any other evidence? Because I could give a case that the synoptics were written before 70AD by working back from Acts.
If a tomb is empty do you assume the former inhabitant was resurrected or someone moved the body?
You are assuming that there would be sufficient motive to pull such a feat. Do you have any evidence that someone did move the body? Do you know who? Or when they did it?
Jesus never showed himself to anyone but his followers after his resurrection.
He failed to show himself to his evil and adulterous generation or to the high priest.
Why would He? Why would this be necessary? Because you think it would be?

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Post #24

Post by Metacrock »

goat wrote:
Metacrock wrote:
goat wrote:Then, of course, a very good case can be made that Luke took a lot of his history directly from Antiquities, which was published in 93 c.e.
Meta:that has been disproven. See the Jospheus homepage. (both used common source in the "L" source which is what makes it sound like it's written by the same guy).
goat:I am sure that whole 'Empty tomb' story was around. However, the vast majority of cruxified people didn't get buried at all, and a 'hole in the ground' doesn't mean anybody was buried there to begin with.

(1) yes, they did get burried. The question is how? Most of them probably wound up in common graves, but it was very much a taboo to leave a body up past sun set. They had to have a buriel.
No, it was a JEWISH taboo to leave a body up past sun set. Part of the punishment the Romans did was a defilement of the body. Typically , the body was left to decay on the cross, and therefore was not preserved
.



you are wrong again. you really need to read Brown. Romans had a big practice of responding local religious customs Josephus tells how he got two freinds off corsses with that sun set thing and saved the life of one of them. So they did respect that custom and would have cooperated.


(2) Ray Browns spends several chapters in Death of the Messiah showing that they had to bury Jesus quickly to prevent profaning the passover. That increases the likelyhood that rather than wait for a boat load of corpses to put in a common grave, Jo of A offered his ready made family tomb.
Except, of course, in the typical crucifiction, the bodies were not buried. The Romans were very unconcerned with 'profaning' the pass
over.


you are quite wrong. read. try studying for a change instead of blabbering your opion in ignorance. Brown is a scholar you are not. I taek his word.

(3) Christians chose that site to venerate in the frist century. They knew it was the right site because when the Romans tried to profane it by building a temple of venus over it, they used that to makr the site. Constantine found a tmeple venus under it and modern archeologists have found it as well. That marks the location it has to be the one.
Well, anybody can point to a hole in the ground, and claim it was a grave. Doesn't make it so. If I recall, there are at least 3 or 4 different mangers in bethelham that claim to be Jesus's birth place too.

yes why? Doherty says the concete writting of Jesus' history was only begiing in th late frist century. If the Jesus myther's are right then by ;AD 70 most christians would not know Jesus was suppossed to have a tomb on earth. why would they just suddenly pick out a hole and say "this was his tomb?"

but it is not just a hole. get some knkowlege ignorant one. there are tombs around it it is known to be a cemetary stupid!


Meta:(4) It was not just a hole in the ground. Archaeologists know a grave when they see one. it was a grave. there's no reason why the ealry christians would pick out an arbitray grave of someone they didn't know and say "this is Chrsit's tomb" and venerate it.


Hey, you are going to have to do better than that. Do you have any more substantional evidence that tradition, and 'archelogists know a grave'.
you don't think archaeologists know when they see a grave? what a foolish assumption. how ridiculous do you wish to appear? first of all, we know it 's grave because not just a hole. It's a hollowed cave like stcuture with a big rock in front of it. know how else we know!?? It's a cemintary! It has other corposes in other graves all around it.


I bet that
there was not an archelogical examinatoin of that.. since the hole is right smack
underneath a church.

I just bet your are about that! it was excavated by Virgilio Corbo in 1968 (he was the major NT archaeologist) and by Biddle and Biddle in the 1990s. It's had several examinations and they've proven every detail including the temple of Venus..

I might be wrong, but you can link me to an archelogical article on it if there is one. Claims and asserstions are meaningless, unless backed up by better evidence than just claims.
http://www.doxa.ws/Jesus_pages/Resurrec ... _yes2.html


[quote[
Frankly, I don't give a good gahoot what you claim that Edersheim to have shown
at all.
Meta:I know. you don't care about facts, evdidence, truth, or anything. that's the hallmark of a true Jesus myther. My little world of pretense is all matters.
I do care about facts, I don't care about unsupported claims. Anytime I have seen where you get your information from, it doesn't represent what you say it does
.

You have no right to even say that. I am theonly one on this board who documents anything. I never claims without supprotign them with gobs of evidence. How soon you peopel forget, don't thoughts stay in your head? Remember the hsitorical Jesus thead the rehemes and rehemes of evidence I posted every time?

when I do post links you don't read them.
And, I did look at jospehusus home page, and after looking at both sides of the story, I would have to say that it is a very logical conclusion. You can whine and complain about it being 'disproven' all you want, but I think it is a pretty strong case myself. I have not seen a counter to the evidence that I have found anywhere near convincing.
Meta:you are just dening the evidence for no good reason. they guy did a study on every word and deterined that there is no pledergism. The theory that they both used L makes sense and explains it. you just don't know what youa re talkinga bout and sense you don't care what's true anyway why should anyone even listen to you?

I notice people claim that 'something has been disproven' because they give an opinion about it, but never the less, their opinion does not address the evidence.
In case you haven't noticed, there is a difference between an asserstion and evidence.

the study of the word usage demosntrates there is no copy.
On the contrary, the claim was not that it was a copy, but it was a resource. If you are going to 'disprove' something, at least try to disprove what the claim was, rather than a strawman of it.

no nonononon little one. YOUR claim, try to focuss now pay attention,YOUR CLaim was that Luke copied Jospehus, get it? so the answer is the both copied someone else someoen ealryer get it? do you understand now?

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Post #25

Post by MrWhy »

Goose wrote: 1. There is good evidence to show the Bible is not simply a book of myths. There is a very good degree of accurate historicity in the Bible. There is also a high degree of spiritual wisdom and truth combined with prophecies fulfilled. Despite the diverse nature of writers, topics, geography, literary styles, and lengthy spans of time over which it was written there are significant commonalities in the core of the Bible despite the apparent inconsistencies in secondary and fringe details.

Why does accurate historicity lend credibility to the Bible? Revelation from a god is not necessary for a person to tell or write stories. Accurate or not, the only accounts that would require god revelation are those that could not have been known otherwise. An example of history that only a god could know would be some specific detail about early earth history that is confirmed by current geological or paleontology.

Verifying the accuracy of any ancient story is a challenge. Accepting any historical account as accurate usually requires corroboration by other witnesses. This depends on how extraordinary the account is. Accounts of trivial events may not warrant much skeptical energy, but as the accounts go up the extraordinary and significant scale, then more corroboration should be necessary. Corroboration from the same source, group, or book is not very reliable. For significant, extraordinary claims, we should require corroboration from multiple sources that are uninvolved eyewitness observers. How much evidence would we need to confirm the story about a recent resurrection of a person that's been dead for days? It's much more evidence than can be gleaned from an ancient scripture. Too much opportunity for error during translation, creativity during interpretation, and editing of what to include and delete.

Whether you call it spiritual or not, wisdom and truth is also not evidence that a god was involved in the Bible. People alone can originate these.

Fulfilled prophecies in the Bible cannot be validated, so they also are not evidence of revelation. Claims that do not qualify as prophesy:
1. Claims of prophecies and scientific facts in scripture that don’t have enough detail to permit verification. Broad general statements are not useful.
2. Scripture verse that result in long debates about when it was written and by whom. Complex date and interval calculation. If the message is not clear and simple it is not reliable.
3. Where creative interpretation is necessary to match the prophecy with any current event or knowledge. If multiple interpretations are easily derived then the prophecy has little credibility.
4. A prophecy written after the event occurred is not a prophecy.
5. A prophecy date that has not arrived (future dated) is not a prophecy.
6. Simple testimony about miracles are not evidence of divine revelation because people can, and do create stories about miracles.
7. Scripture verse that supports other verse is not prophecy verification.
8. Accounts of miracles that are not corroborated by written history from objective eyewitnesses who were not involved in the religion.

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Post #26

Post by Metacrock »

MrWhy wrote:
Goose wrote: 1. There is good evidence to show the Bible is not simply a book of myths. There is a very good degree of accurate historicity in the Bible. There is also a high degree of spiritual wisdom and truth combined with prophecies fulfilled. Despite the diverse nature of writers, topics, geography, literary styles, and lengthy spans of time over which it was written there are significant commonalities in the core of the Bible despite the apparent inconsistencies in secondary and fringe details.
Why does accurate historicity lend credibility to the Bible? Revelation from a god is not necessary for a person to tell or write stories. Accurate or not, the only accounts that would require god revelation are those that could not have been known otherwise. An example of history that only a god could know would be some specific detail about early earth history that is confirmed by current geological or paleontology.



that's why my view of inspriatino embodies a diversity of sources. To me the Bible is a collection of works that demonstrate the nature of divine/human encoutners, not a memo from the big cheese upstairs. Althoug part of that diversity includes verbal plenary inspiriation in some sources.

The most important historical element for Christianty comes into play around the curcification and resurrection. Since Christian theology centers upon those aspects we want to know that they really happened. And also to a lesser exent upon the moral teachings, we want to know that what is recorded of Jesus' teachers are really what he said. But that's a seperate issue form inspiration.




Verifying the accuracy of any ancient story is a challenge. Accepting any historical account as accurate usually requires corroboration by other witnesses. This depends on how extraordinary the account is. Accounts of trivial events may not warrant much skeptical energy, but as the accounts go up the extraordinary and significant scale, then more corroboration should be necessary.
Right! I agree with you there. I think tht's one of the mistakes atheits make is in thinking that it's all about the mircles, so they try to focuss on disproving them or proving that they can't be proven. For me the mircles are only garnish, they are not the focus or the point of any of it.


Corroboration from the same source, group, or book is not very reliable. For significant, extraordinary claims, we should require corroboration from multiple sources that are uninvolved eyewitness observers.

Yes, except there is an important aspect to the idea of internal consistancy.


How much evidence would we need to confirm the story about a recent resurrection of a person that's been dead for days? It's much more evidence than can be gleaned from an ancient scripture. Too much opportunity for error during translation, creativity during interpretation, and editing of what to include and delete.

the bible is not a monolyth but a collection of sources. The four gospels are not one independent source but four sources that back each other up. The Pauline works and othe epistles also add some to the crorboration.


Whether you call it spiritual or not, wisdom and truth is also not evidence that a god was involved in the Bible. People alone can originate these.

true, but then we should also discuss the whole cooncpet of needing proof. why isn't the effects upon people's lives the point of religion? why does it have to be proven historically at all?


Fulfilled prophecies in the Bible cannot be validated, so they also are not evidence of revelation. Claims that do not qualify as prophesy:
1. Claims of prophecies and scientific facts in scripture that don’t have enough detail to permit verification. Broad general statements are not useful.
partly true, but partly a fallacy. you are making the fallacious assumption again that the Bible coutns as one big source. So Jesus being named Jesus in fulfillment of Zak 4 is a verified fulfillment it is not form one source but five different soruces. Zak plus the four gospels.


2. Scripture verse that result in long debates about when it was written and by whom. Complex date and interval calculation. If the message is not clear and simple it is not reliable.


IF it is importnat when it was written and by whom then textual criticism furshines these answers. I think one area in which skpetics are extremly ignorant and need tons of education is the area of textual cirticism, its' scientific basis and what it can do.


3. Where creative interpretation is necessary to match the prophecy with any current event or knowledge. If multiple interpretations are easily derived then the prophecy has little credibility.

at least 18 of them are stairght forward. but I never argue fulfillmetns as proof of anything. I agree that this is cheap apologetics. I only aruge it when the issue comes up that Jesus didn't fufill any messianich claims.


4. A prophecy written after the event occurred is not a prophecy.

yes but show me an example of this
5. A prophecy date that has not arrived (future dated) is not a prophecy
.

of course it is a prophesy but one that hasn't been fufilled.

6. Simple testimony about miracles are not evidence of divine revelation because people can, and do create stories about miracles.

no one thinks it is and no one cares. this is the worng end of the stick. Mircles are not they point of christianty, they are garnish.
7. Scripture verse that supports other verse is not prophecy verification.


it could be just depends, give me an example
8. Accounts of miracles that are not corroborated by written history from objective eyewitnesses who were not involved in the religion.
Resurrection argumens are derived from the artifacts of the text. not merely from the direct statements of the text.

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Post #27

Post by Goat »

Metacrock wrote:
stuart shepherd wrote:I hope you don't mind if I interrupt.
The gospels are anonymous. The names were added later. Matt, Mark, etc didn't put their names on the gospels. It is hard to believe something that is anonymous.

I don't believe that Mark wrote Mark or Matt wrote Matt, but that doesn't have to be the case for them to be eye witnesses. The idea that you can't trust an anayonous writting is a modern concept it's silly and illogical.


Paul just had heat stroke on the way to Damascus. He hallucinated that he saw Jesus. Paul has no witnesses that Jesus talked to him. He changed the religion of the Jews and created Christianity. You have to wonder why he thought that he had the authority to do away with the Sabbath, Circumcision, the Holidays,etc.


there's no proof what Paul saw, but that's not the point. Paul is not evidence for Early Christaintiy just becuase of his experinces, but because of what he tells us about the contact he had with Peter, James, and others who knew Jesus.


The Gospels were written after 70CE because they tell about the destruction of Jerusalem.Big clue at Matt 28:15
wrong, they do not. They anticipate the destructino of the temple, but as I arleady said the Jews expected that anyway. At the time those passages were writen the temple was not destoryed.

Mark had to be written before 70 because Matt is parodied in the Talmud from a passage that is known to date to AD 72. Thus Matt had to exist by at least 70 and since Mat copied Mark, Mark had to have existed ealier.





If a tomb is empty do you assume the former inhabitant was resurrected or someone moved the body?

No the point. the early Christians marked that tomb from the beginnig. From very early on they said "this is the tomb." they would not do that with a myth, espeicially not before he myth is written.


Jesus never showed himself to anyone but his followers after his resurrection.
He failed to show himself to his evil and adulterous generation or to the high priest.

Stuart Shepherd

fallacy, he walked openly through the streets of Bethany for anyone to see
I see you are making more assumptiongs up. The talmud passage you are talking about is assumed to be by a certain person who was writing into the next century, and is therefore the date of 72 c.e. can not be verified. For that matter, it is only tradition that rabbi wrote it. The babylonian Talmud in which it is discussed was written hundreds of years later... hardly what I would call good evidence of that parady being written in 72 ce... (we discussed it earlyer, and you never were able to get any kind of answer to my point on that).

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Post #28

Post by stuart shepherd »

Metacrock wrote:
stuart shepherd wrote:I hope you don't mind if I interrupt.
The gospels are anonymous. The names were added later. Matt, Mark, etc didn't put their names on the gospels. It is hard to believe something that is anonymous.

I don't believe that Mark wrote Mark or Matt wrote Matt, but that doesn't have to be the case for them to be eye witnesses. The idea that you can't trust an anayonous writting is a modern concept it's silly and illogical.

If you received a letter in the mail but it didn't say who it was from, what would you do?
I would throw it in the trash.

Paul just had heat stroke on the way to Damascus. He hallucinated that he saw Jesus. Paul has no witnesses that Jesus talked to him. He changed the religion of the Jews and created Christianity. You have to wonder why he thought that he had the authority to do away with the Sabbath, Circumcision, the Holidays,etc.


there's no proof what Paul saw, but that's not the point. Paul is not evidence for Early Christaintiy just becuase of his experinces, but because of what he tells us about the contact he had with Peter, James, and others who knew Jesus.

Last year when I went to Phoenix, I didn't drink enough water while I was outside. My head began to float free from my body and I saw the Father, son and Holy Ghost.


The Gospels were written after 70CE because they tell about the destruction of Jerusalem.Big clue at Matt 28:15
wrong, they do not. They anticipate the destructino of the temple, but as I arleady said the Jews expected that anyway. At the time those passages were writen the temple was not destoryed.

Read Matt 24, Mark 13, Luke 21. It is all written looking back on the events. Did you look at Matt 28:15? "to this very day" indicates it was written many years after the events it is reporting.

Mark had to be written before 70 because Matt is parodied in the Talmud from a passage that is known to date to AD 72. Thus Matt had to exist by at least 70 and since Mat copied Mark, Mark had to have existed ealier.





If a tomb is empty do you assume the former inhabitant was resurrected or someone moved the body?

No the point. the early Christians marked that tomb from the beginnig. From very early on they said "this is the tomb." they would not do that with a myth, espeicially not before he myth is written.

There are 3 tombs where Jesus was buried at Jerusalem.
If tomorrow you read in your newspaper that a body was missing from the city morgue would you suspect a resurrection?


Jesus never showed himself to anyone but his followers after his resurrection.
He failed to show himself to his evil and adulterous generation or to the high priest.

Stuart Shepherd

fallacy, he walked openly through the streets of Bethany for anyone to see
Where in your Bible does it say that? Or did someone tell you that tale?

Stuart Shepherd

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Post #29

Post by stuart shepherd »

Goose wrote:
stuart shepherd wrote:
I hope you don't mind if I interrupt.
Not all. And welcome!
The gospels are anonymous. The names were added later. Matt, Mark, etc didn't put their names on the gospels. It is hard to believe something that is anonymous.
You're assumption here is that those that did give names to the Gospels were either mistaken or lieing. For me to believe this, I'm going to need some substantial evidence. I believe they are as they are. Can you provide some evidence as to why they might be mistaken about the authors?
Paul just had heat stroke on the way to Damascus. He hallucinated that he saw Jesus. Paul has no witnesses that Jesus talked to him. He changed the religion of the Jews and created Christianity. You have to wonder why he thought that he had the authority to do away with the Sabbath, Circumcision, the Holidays,etc.
I realize again this is your opinion. Do have any evidence to support it?

Heat stroke doesn't generally cause an individual to turn from persecuting a particular group of people into wanting to join that group and become one of the persecuted. Heat stroke is temporary and doesn't usually cause long term effects.
The Gospels were written after 70CE because they tell about the destruction of Jerusalem.Big clue at Matt 28:15
Going to need a little more than that I think. Maybe you could walk us through how this relates to the destruction of Jerusalem. Here is Matthew 28:15

15 So the soldiers took the money and did as they were instructed. And this story has been widely circulated among the Jews to this very day. (NIV)

Do you have any other evidence? Because I could give a case that the synoptics were written before 70AD by working back from Acts.
If a tomb is empty do you assume the former inhabitant was resurrected or someone moved the body?
You are assuming that there would be sufficient motive to pull such a feat. Do you have any evidence that someone did move the body? Do you know who? Or when they did it?
Jesus never showed himself to anyone but his followers after his resurrection.
He failed to show himself to his evil and adulterous generation or to the high priest.
Why would He? Why would this be necessary? Because you think it would be?

You seem to have everything backwards.
You have gospels which were written anonymously and you want me to prove that they aren't legitimate? You prove they are legitimate.

Paul was a felon. He committed felony murder on Stephen. Why should I believe him without some kind of proof that he really talked to Jesus? Are you in the habit of believing murderers without proof? Paul earned his living selling Jesus. He had motive to lie.

I can think of many senarios where someone could have moved the corpse before Sunday morning. Use your imagination.

Jesus promised his "evil and adulterous generation" that he would give them the sign of Jonah...Three nights and three days in the grave. But he never showed himself so they could see the sign.

Stuart Shepherd

stuart shepherd
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Post #30

Post by stuart shepherd »

Do you have a red letter edition of the New Testament. Flip through the pages of Paul's letters. Except for the part about the wine and the bread, (blood and body) there are no quotes from the gospels in Paul's letters because Paul's letters were written before the gospels. The wine and bread stuff was edited into the gospels from Pauls letter because it was deemed to be very important.
In 1905 a team of theologans from an English university read through all the writings of the early Church fathers. They discovered that no church father from before 170CE ever quoted anything from any of the Gospels. You can find this on the internet if you look.

Stuart Shepherd

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