Why is that relevant? — T Clark
Yeshua is Hebrew. Translated through Greek to English it became Jesus — T Clark
According to the web, Jesus would have been known in as Yeshua Ben Yussuf; Jesus - son of Joseph; which was a common name when he lived — T Clark
I don't understand your need to vehemently attack all angles of the Christian myth. It's seems to be an unbalanced position; a weird obsession. Of course, I've seen it a thousand times; nothing new. — Noble Dust
Why is that relevant?
— T Clark
Why is not relevant?
who do you believe was the true Jewish Messiah, prophesied in the old testament from the list available? I choose none of them, including the fabled Jesus Christ. — universeness
According to the web, Jesus would have been known in as Yeshua Ben Yussuf; Jesus - son of Joseph; which was a common name when he lived. Christ was not his name, it was the designation he gave himself
— T Clark
Maybe true, but there were many others who also claimed such titles: — universeness
In Greek, even his name literally translates to Jesus(Saviour) Christ(Messiah), so his name is Saviour messiah.
— universeness — T Clark
This makes your original point meaningless as the gospels were written in Greek so the character's name in Hebrew is not relevant to the gospels. — universeness
Another point you should consider is that Ben Yussuf goes against the immaculate conception claim.
If the virgin birth is true then calling the character 'son of Joseph.' would be incorrect. — universeness
I don't understand your need to vehemently attack all angles of the Christian myth. It's seems to be an unbalanced position; a weird obsession. Of course, I've seen it a thousand times; nothing new. — Noble Dust
I don't see why the fact that others had claimed to be the Messiah is relevant. — T Clark
But the statement from your post is not correct. That says nothing about the divinity or historicity of Jesus Christ. — T Clark
Information I found on the web indicates the King James version of the Bible was a translation from Hebrew and Greek sources — T Clark
I am sure if I knew more about you, I would find some of your positions 'unbalanced' and 'weird' and 'obsessive,' — universeness
Yes it is and yes it does. If you want a panto exchange then I can provide one for you until I get bored doing so. You just make statements you offer no reasoning worth rebuttle. — universeness
I don't understand your need to vehemently attack all angles of the Christian myth. It's seems to be an unbalanced position; a weird obsession. Of course, I've seen it a thousand times; nothing new. — Noble Dust
I'm not a theist, but the level of hatred for religion I see here on the forum bothers me. I think it calls into question the forum's claim of support for human rights and freedom of expression. — T Clark
[joke] Noble Dust's positions aren't unbalanced, weird, or obsessive, but he himself is.[/joke] — T Clark
I'm not a theist, but the level of hatred for religion I see here on the forum bothers me. I think it calls into question the forum's claim of support for human rights and freedom of expression — T Clark
The Babylonians contributed their stories to a section of early people who they enslaved — universeness
I agree with Noble Dust's evaluation: — T Clark
I have debated many theists. I cannot speak for others but I have never been accused by any of them as having a 'hatred for religion.' — universeness
not everyone on this forum cares very much about who you agree with. I for one, certainly don't. — universeness
You sure seem to care — T Clark
I saw that debate and its an old one. Bart has become far more anti-theist since then, check out some of his latest YouTube offerings. — universeness
regarded by some as an attack motivated by hatred — Fooloso4
Why then focus on Jesus only? You might as well deconstruct Jeremy, Moses or Abraham... :-)
To me, the guy Jesus seems one of the best to come out of that tradition. He was certainly not the worst Jewish prophet ever. And to my mind, the Greco-Roman world did need a little injection of Semitic wisdom, which they got through him...
This little injection almost destroyed the Roman empire, as per Gibbons — Olivier5
It is unfortunate that a discussion of the historical sources and influences that shaped the writings of the Bible and its various interpretations is regarded by some as an attack motivated by hatred. — Fooloso4
There’s a difference between a balanced, measured scholarship, and a mania resembling fundamentalism. — Noble Dust
I think this is what annoys me; the irony of a sort of fundamentalist proselytizing against the Christian myth. — Noble Dust
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