Nothing about you?Your assumptions are baseless, whether about me or about your historical Jesus, of which you can know nothing about in either case.
I am curious as to if and what historians can say about a Jesus of history vs the Jesus of legend and myth that we are all familiar with. Apparently it's not so cut and dry since anyone that ever wrote about Jesus never met the guy. I've tried discussing this topic on other forums but it's just too emotionally charged for some, I hope that's not the case here.
So you don't care about this issue, but you have brought it up on "other forums" in addition to devoting so many of your posts here to the question. And either you honestly don't what what historians say (which indicates you haven't read them), or you do know and are being dishonest.
I have no opinion as to Jesus' place in history because I don't know to what extent he is historical if at all.
How do you have "no opinion" about Jesus' place in history if you "don't buy the historical Jesus" with the evidence we have?I don't buy the historical Jesus from what we have
Then there's your depiction of biblical scholars and historical Jesus research. First, you chide them for being dismissive of those who haven't studied but nonetheless criticize their work and their expertise acquired through years and years of hard work:
Considering the disdain offered by those of a traditional historical view of Jesus towards those that have doubts about that view, you wouldn't know that the traditional view wasn't holy and off limits to questions.
Then you show at least as much disdain you critique specialists for having, only without any justification:
Biblical scholars are not historians, which is why the biblical Jesus just happens to turn out to be the historical Jesus when left up to the biblical scholar.
Then you add accusations of bias to these insults:In fact, if you want to read some fine scholarship avoid historical Jesus. Biblical scholars doing historical Jesus is not so good. I would recommend Who Wrote The Bible? by Richard Elliot Friedman.
The so called consensus, what is that other than an opinion held by a majority of Christian scholars, an appeal to tradition or the bandwagon fallacy.
Consider the so called consensus, it hardly reflects an agnostic position, one of not knowing whether Jesus existed or not with the information that we have. The so called consensus is that Jesus existed. Who are these agnostic scholars you know of that don't know if Jesus existed or not?
You've also indicated where you get your information:
Philo may have influenced the writer of John, he wrote some essays about the word and logos. I will try to find them online.
And no, I am not that familiar with Ehrman, other than what I have come across online.
Yet even when asked to produce something you show you are actually familiar with the work of the scholars you criticize, you don't:
You insult the expertise of scholars, you accuse them of bias, and you make generalized claims about their work. What you don't do is provide a single example of scholarship you are familiar with, despite requests.So quote some scholars.
Scholars that read Greek contradict each other as to how 'brother of the Lord' can be interpreted. Maybe when the experts get it together we might know something.
As for p52:
I was well acquainted with p52 dating years before this thread came about which is why I questioned your narrow window for its dating when I came across it.
"Well acquainted"?
As long as this date for John from 125 - 150 CE is in any way accurate.
Here's an actual, relevant issue we can discuss thanks to its very specific nature. Given how "well-acquainted" you are, you should be able to present good reason other than relying on the authority of a few scholars mentinoed in a wiki article.
First, there's this
Going to wikipedia is an appeal to authority. The only differences between what I do (in terms of appeal to authority) and going to wikipedia areThe wiki contained a reason for a wider range of dates which you ignored in favour of appeals to authority.
1) the appeal is indirect, as you are relying on wikipedia which is at best an accurately summary of scholarship (and at worst is a misleading and inaccurate portrayal). In other words, while I "appeal" directly to scholarship I've read, you appeal to the summaries of some of this scholarship supplied by others.
2) Wikipdedia relies entirely on scholarship, but only a small subset which is (again, at best) a fairly representative summarized view coming from a much, much, much larger amount of scholarship. So not only does appealing to wikipedia mean an appeal to authority you haven't read, it also necessarily means that you are necessarily appealing to a very limited amount, and further that you don't know how much or what you are missing.
3) Your appeal to authority in this case (with p52) isn't even a typical indirect appeal to scholarship through wikipedia. You actually ignore most of the page in favor of what little supports your doubt.
So you do appeal to authority, and you did in this case as well. Which makes the following especially amusing:
"So I leave it to the experts, and they have a consensus." Of course the experts are the ones that favour a narrow early window for dating with no line of reason supplied by you as to how it discounts a wider range.
You claim that you were already "well-acquainted" with p52. One wonders first, then, why you appealed indirectly to a few authorities in a wiki article, rather than the sources you used to become "well-acquainted".
Additionally, the only people who can date papyri are experts. The difference is not that I am "leaving it to the experts" while you are doing something different. It's simply that you are choosing to favor the few who don't agree with the majority. You haven't given any reason to, of course, nor any indication (despite my bringing this up frequently) that you have a reason. If you reallly are familiar with p52, then I'd be mroe than happy to discuss the points raised by the sources you have used to form your opinion.
You've repeated this over and over again. So often that I actually asked you for your sources and what you are relying on for your views about the historical Jesus.
When I quoted Wells, you used what wikipedia said about him to rebut what he himself said. The only names you've mentioned are those typical for mythicists: Wells, Doherty, Price, Ehrman, etc. In other words, all authors who have published popular works for people who are not familiar with historical Jesus research.
The only other author you referenced again demonstrates your familiarity:
I thought it was Strauss that explained gospel miracles as natural events, whatever, the point I make on topic is that historical Jesus is still up for debate.
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