Bart being anti-theist has no bearing on my point. We were talking about how he views Jesus the man — Tom Storm
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. There is an extensive scholarly literature on these matters. While there is disagreement, which sometimes gets heated, many of the scholars, on all sides of an issue, consider themselves religious. That they agree with those who consider themselves agnostic or atheist should give us pause. — Fooloso4
I think this is what annoys me; the irony of a sort of fundamentalist proselytizing against the Christian myth — Noble Dust
I don't normally use AD and prefer BCE but based on the above, they may well have been contemporaries. — universeness
Dorothy enters the shabby dining room of the Catholic Worker House of Hospitality in a full-skirted pastel dress with cuffed short sleeves singing Que Sera Sera. — Bitter Crank
So my main focus for this thread has been Jesus. — universeness
the influence of Christianity on Western Culture and the actions it performed 'in the name of' has been devastating. — universeness
They may have been. As I said, though, I don't see Tacitus relying on any work by Josephus for the little he (Tacitus) writes about the person known as Christus. Why would he? He wasn't particularly fond of any emperor, and certainly not Domitian or the Flavians in general. I doubt he'd look to their favorite as a source.
I haven't read Atwill. Those Alexandrians certainly were a busy bunch, weren't they? Both Jews and Greeks — Ciceronianus
Christianity prior to the hegemony of the Church Fathers was without official doctrines. It was an "inspired" (the indwelling of spirit) religion. But even the attempt to establish the inalterable truth met with change from the very beginning. Rather than "the rock" on which the Church was built, it has been shifting sand. — Fooloso4
One problem is that a balanced, measured response can be too quickly labeled an attack. — Fooloso4
Far too much of antiquity is lost to us, unfortunately. — Ciceronianus
Really? How do you know that those very same crimes wouldn't have been committed in the name of Jupiter or some other god, had not the Jesus character been invented by Josephus as you claim? — Olivier5
Stalin did not need a god to kill millions. Attila was not a saint either... — Olivier5
Why unfortunately? We can fight, too. — baker
Two wrongs don't make a right. The fact that I complain about those slaughtered in the name of God does not mean I excuse non-theistic reasons for slaughtering millions of people either. It's a bizarre projection to suggest. — universeness
I see no reason to question the existence of Jesus but many reasons to question the existence of "the Christ". — Fooloso4
Isn’t the point of ridding the human race of religious “fables” presumably to eradicate the types of suffering and injustice they’ve caused? Why pursue this when non-religious institutions result in the same atrocities? It’s no bizarre projection — Noble Dust
The point of bringing in Stalin and Attila was to show that man never needed a theological excuse to kill man. Atheist regimes such as China are not less brutal than theocracies. — Olivier5
Well, I suppose there is some use in knowing what you are not saying.I’m saying none of that — Noble Dust
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