Redshirt wrote:Ok, cool, let's start with Schweitzer.
Here's the list of people he mentions who claim Jesus never existed:
Bauer
Here's the list of people who who treat Jesus as a historical figure of some sort:
Bahrdt
Reimarus
Hase
Paulus
Venturini
Strauss
Schweitzer himself.
And if you read the book, he argues that all of them are full of shit because they use invalid methods to find the Jesus they were looking for in the first place.
I have no idea how you could possibly read a book to which the Thesis is "light all current scholarship on fire and start from scratch and you will be more right" and use that in support of the conclusion that "the scholarly consensus is that real Jesus really existed." He is very clear that people who write that Jesus exists in 1906 truly believe it, and have no fucking actual scholarship to support their belief,
including himself.
Lord Mistborn wrote:I'm not sure what the big deal with this is? Does it really matter if their is an actual flesh and blood person under the centuries of accumulated myth and legend? Whether or not their was a 1st century cult leader called Jesus the narrative provided in the gospels is already bullshit.
Because history exists? I mean, we can all agree that at no point did Alexander the Great ascend into heaven to sit at the right hand of God, but it still kind of matters (to the extend anything matters) whether he actually conquered India, or just sat in a house in Macedon writing about all the cool things he totally did.
Maj wrote:[url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus wrote:Wikipedia[/url]]Most modern scholars of antiquity agree that Jesus existed, but scholars differ on the historicity of specific episodes described in the Biblical accounts, and the only two events subject to "almost universal assent" are that Jesus was baptized by John the Baptist and was crucified by the order of the Roman Prefect Pontius Pilate. There is a significant debate about his nature, his actions and his sayings, but most scholars agree that Jesus was a Galilean Jew who was born between 7-4 BC and died 30–36 AD, that he lived in Galilee and Judea and did not preach or study elsewhere, and that he spoke Aramaic and perhaps also Hebrew and Greek.
Unsurprisinly, Wikipedia is not an accurate summary of contemporary biblical scholarship. For one thing, if you said most scholars agree that Jesus spoke Aramaic, you would be laughed out of the room. As for the proposition of historocity being the consensus, it cites Bart Ehrman, who is known for viciously attacking scholars who disagree with him (So when he says "every competent scholar" he doesn't mean "I don't know of anyone who disagrees who is qualified" he means "I will slit your throat and drink your blood if we are ever in the same room Richard Carrier."), a man who's only higher degree is in theology, and a 100 year old retired classicist.
Almost like there is a reason I cited a book more than a 100 years old for the proposition that the historocity was and is not settled, instead of for the proposition that he totally is definitely not historical.
He also included a rebuttal of all the "historicists" of his day too. Because he thought that everyone was doing bad history, and they needed to do better history in order to find out the answer. Which you'll notice is nearly exactly the opposite of saying "we generally know what the answer is."
Maj wrote:You cannot count Brodie as he is a Christian author and clearly cannot write objectively about Christianity's originator.
Huh what? Are you trying to parody yourself? Do you understand the concept of bias? If, you can't count on him to write objectively, you can count on him to, where he were to err, err on the side of historicity.
You can count on well trained historians to at least in some cases recognize their biases, and come to the correct conclusion despite them. That is one of the main ways to differentiate real scholars from William Lane Craig, since that fucker claims to have a PhD and therefore be qualified to talk about whatever the fuck he wants.
More specifically, since the point I referenced Brodie's work to support is the claim "You can find a christian author arguing for the lack of consensus every decade of the last 110 years" the fact that Brodie is a Christian is not only not a problem, it is essential.
If you are going to contend that I am not allowed to cite Christians as examples of Christian authors who believe there is no consensus on the historical Jesus then you should just leave this thread, and this forum, forever, or at least until you have gathered the very basic knowledge of what constitutes a subset of another thing.