I AM ALL I AM wrote:G'day Cnorman18.
You should have ordered a copy instead of believing the religious lies and propaganda that you did.
What "religious lies and propaganda" did I believe?
I certainly don't believe the New Testament. I'm a Jew, remember? That doesn't mean I have to believe Bushby, does it?
Here is Tony Bushby's reasoning for not engaging in religious debate .....
No arguments
WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
Many people may find themselves at odds with certain conclusions reached within this book. Therefore, the author, publisher and associates of this publication will not engage in written religious argument with readers who hold a different opinion from those expressed here.
The history carried in this book is obtained from information found in Christian texts, in the records of the early church, and in ancient biblical texts obscured from the public domain. Recorded facts have also been called from Celtic annals and British Chronicles, along with information from the sovereign, saintly and chivalric archives of Europe. Much of the documentation referenced is preserved in rare archival manuscripts and difficult-to-find ancient reference books. Many of these works are priceless historical documents.
This literary exposition therefore rests on supportable or specific historical information that demonstrates the point being made and pursues avenues of much hitherto suppressed knowledge for the benefit of all.
- The Bible Fraud, page 12.
"I really, truly found this stuff even though others can't verify it, and if you don't believe me I won't talk to you."
The bibliography extends from page 227 to 253 and is extensive to say the least. Many of the quoted texts are directly from church writings, one for example being the Catholic Encyclopaedia, which clearly states that they do not know who wrote the 'Gospels' and that they have been altered/changed (in other words forged) at different points throughout history.
That is not, of course, the "information" I find hard to swallow. Some of Bushby's sources, for information that is not news, may be credible; that does not indicate that other sources for more, um, surprising information - sources wnich seem to be conveniently inaccessible - are equally credible.
Below is a special thanks that appears on page 253, which you will note in particular ...
Advanced Theological Studies of Jerusalem
Institute of Holy Land Studies, Jerusalem
Pontifical Biblical Institute of Jerusalem
So what? What can you tell me about any of these high-sounding names?
"The Institute for Historical Review" sounds very academic and reliable, too. It isn't. Names are just names. For all you or I know, they may be the names of storefronts that sell propellor beanies. Accepting an academic authority because is has a plausibly academic-sounding name is the very definition of gullibility. Further, even citing a known and credibly authoritative source does not guarantee accuracy; as we have already seen, the "British Museum" source seems to be a straight-up fake.
Of course, you can believe the religious propaganda that you posted....
What religious propaganda was that?
Virtually all of what I posted was a synopsis of Bushby's claims. Was that synopsis accurate? If so, that fact speaks for itself.
....instead of reading the book yourself, that is your choice, illogical as that may be considering that you state "that the Bible ought not be assumed to be be historically or scientifically true or authoritative".
Again; I do not believe the Bible is literally and historically true. That doesn't mean I
logically have to waste my time on theories and speculations that I judge to be little better than incoherent raving.
To state "this stuff is right out there with "UFOs are piloted by Nazis with a secret base inside the Hollow Earth." " without having ever read the texts shows a complete lack of respect and is simply derision of someone and what they have written EVEN THOUGH YOU HAVEN'T EVER READ THEIR WRITINGS.
If the synopsis I posted is accurate, I'll stand by that assessment. If someone tells me that Jesus was the king of Britain, I don't feel obligated to investigate that frankly loony claim.
Obviously, with the above quoted statement and your lack of having read any of his material, we can rest assured that you are not an "authority" on the writings of Tony Bushby.
Never claimed to be; but I think my
opinion is well-founded.
Sorry, but you can't use the "you're just buying into religious propaganda" dodge with me. I find it quite sufficient to say that I don't believe that Jesus was the Messiah, God Incarnate, the son of God, or was resurrected from the dead. I don't feel a need to say that the Church has been a conscious and deliberate scam for two thousand years, that Jesus had a twin brother who went to India, or that Jesus himself became the King of Britain to justify my disbelief.
The best and most balanced article on the "historical Jesus" I have ever seen is
here. The documents we have are quite sufficient to cast doubt on the claims of the Christian church.
Bushby's work is not scholarship. He places a famous, and famously
bogus, quote from Pope Leo X on the cover of his book; that does not bode well for the reliability of his work. Leo X was among the most corrupt and decadent of Renaissance Medici popes, but there is no indication that he ever actually said this or what he meant if he did. If this is the level of scholarship we can expect from Bushby, he isn't worth anyone's time.
Maybe Bushby DID find some or all of these obscure and unknown accounts; why are we to take them as being any more historically reliable than the NT documents?
Note that I do not say the NT documents are reliable; I don't think they are. But obscure and "hidden" documents that contain blatantly outlandish and bizarre stories, some of which have already been discredited and proven false, don't have much claim to credibility either, and in fact have even less.
The NT may very well be a "fraud" in some sense; but if it is. Tony Bushby had and has nothing whatever to do with proving it. All he has proven is that books of goofy and sensational theories and allegations, with very little in the way of independently verifiable and credible documentation, can make money.