joelr
Well-Known Member
The 5 facts have been authenticated; this is why scholars accept hem as facts
Apologist Peter Williams wrote a book answering the arguments about the Gospels being unreliable. Except he didn't answer and real criticisms, he used strawman arguments. Bart Ehrman debated him and pointed out:
"My contention throughout the debate is that he has not answered the question adequately, that in fact virtually everything he says in the book is irrelevant to the question. It’s a very interesting and unusual attempt that he makes. But most of the book completely misses the point.
It’s the kind of book that anyone who wants very much to trust the Gospels will come away from saying “See, we CAN trust them.” But anyone who actually looks at what he’s saying, and who knows about the actual reasons people have for NOT thinking the Gospels are historically reliable, will say, “Wait a second! He’s simply countering arguments that no one makes, and is not addressing the arguments they do! That’s just building a straw man an knocking it down. That ain’t gonna work!”
No "facts" from the Gospels have been "authenticated"? What does that even mean? What it means is apologists decided to say "yup, uh huh, that part right there, that definitely happened, yup, so that's authenticated. Next...."
What a HISTORIAN says,
"
The short story is that I’m not intending or trying to trash the Gospels. In my view, what I’m doing is showing what the Gospels really are and what they really are not. And that is not a matter of trashing them. It’s a matter of revealing their true character, rather than foisting a false character on them.
To be sure, by arguing that the Gospels are not historically accurate I am contesting and challenging views of the Gospels that many Christians unreflectively have (and that some Christian scholars reflectively have). But urging a different understanding of the Gospels is not the same thing as trashing them. On the contrary if my views of the Gospels are right, then I’m illuminating the Gospels and showing both what kinds of books they are and how they ought to be read. That’s a good, positive thing, not a bad, negative one.
Among other things, these views insist that the Gospels are not always historically accurate in what they say about Jesus. That has been acknowledged by critical scholars of the New Testament as long as there have been critical scholars of the New Testament – for over 300 years. So it’s nothing new, even though I hear from people nearly every week who tell me that it’s news to them. It’s news to them because scholars can be among the worse communicators on earth, and biblical scholars in particular have done a truly dismal job of telling non-scholars what they have come to think and what they have tried to demonstrate in their research – for example about the accuracy of the Gospels.
Different scholars have different assessments of *just* how inaccurate the Gospels are. Some think they are reliable in most of the basics, with lots of details being unreliable; others think that major stories are not historically accurate (birth narratives, e.g.); others think that in fact very many of the stories need to be questioned. But for all of these scholars there is a basic sense that, at the end of the day, the Gospels are not dispassionate, accurate accounts of the things Jesus said and did. "
Bart Ehrman
This is the opinion of a historian who is NOT taking into the account the fact that Jesus and Christianity are mainly Hellenistic and Persian myths which completely explains its purpose. It's just religion doing it's religious syncretism as it always does.
Historians who study other religions that have influenced Judaism have a completely different view. Like Carrier, Lataster, Fransesca S, Price.
Theologians who claim these 5 elements to the story are authenticated facts are apologists not interested in what is true. They are interested in supporting their beliefs.