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That oral tradition really has to develop remarkably fast. Mark is from 60 or so, as far as I recall, John, the last and completely unreliable one, is from 100. And supposedly he died around year 30. The tradition developing that fast, seems very, very unlikely to me. People seemingly actually believed that stuff to a very large extent, he was a dominant figure much more than a silly 'urban legend'. It does seem much less reasonable to me, than that someone existed.
@ tore: It in no way improves the evidence. But how much evidence do you want? You really can't expect to much evidence concerning a figure like Yeshua. So I don't think it makes sense to be too skeptical about it. |
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I meant dominant in the mind of the people believing in him. Sorry, English is not my first language. He is much more important than an urban legend, to the people concerned with him. They would be more careful.
And of course. It is an oral tradition after Yeshua. No doubt about it. But it must stem from something, and with the speed it developed, that must be something substantial. A life or a lie. And if it was a lie, it wouldn't be so inconsistent at it's core. Sure, the details would remain the same. But talking about forgiveness on the mountain, then getting into a fit and throwing people out of the synagogue. His personality would have been less messy. But yeah, I can see that I haven't really been able to explain what I mean on that one. The thing is, as important as Yeshua became to people, if someone had invented him it would have had to be a conspiracy at it's core. And then it wouldn't have been so contradictory. I think this is what I'm trying to get at. |
No worries about the language thing. I get the idea of what you're saying - I'm in the circle of people who think the stories of Jesus probably were based on a real person. But I'm in no way certain about it.
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Oh, no, neither am I. It's like that with things that happened 2000 years ago in circles not really well documented. It's very, very rare that anything can be decided with complete certainty. But I just can't really see any reason to doubt it. I mean, any other explanation seems even less likely. It's interesting to examine though, I heard a podcast recently where a scholar explained how much of the gospels the real Yeshua had actually said. It turns out, very, very little. And while the story of Jesus seems hard to explain without some Yeshua participating, the story of his resurrection seems very easy to explain away, apparantly.
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I love this post. I am actually sexually attracted to it. |
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Now I'm infected with awesomeness. |
I think that there's enough sociological evidence that suggests Jesus was an actual human being, although I believe that in real life he was closer to a political revolutionary than a messianic figure. The entire foundation of the catholic church was based around the holy Roman empire's inability to deal with the subversiveness of the early pre-church Christians, kind of an if-you-can't-beat-em'-join-em' approach.
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Also, this argument you're making that "people really believed it so it must be true" basically implies that anything and everything people ever strongly believed was true is actually a fact. So do you think Hercules was a real person too? |
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