ecco
Veteran Member
This is probably not what you had in mind but it gives an idea of the encroachment of secular ideas and teaching into the Christian Church and learning institutions.
John Shelby Spong - Wikipedia
Burton L. Mack - Wikipedia
It's not about what I had in mind, it's about what you had in mind when you wrote...
Skeptical because the main assumption seems to be that the accounts had to have been written after the prophesied destruction of the temple. That is secular historian assumption.
Then you posted links to two people. I just took the first one. Here are some excerpts from your link...
- A liberal Christian theologian...
- He received his Master of Divinity degree from the Virginia Theological Seminary in 1955. He has had honorary Doctor of Divinity degrees conferred on him by Virginia Theological Seminary and Saint Paul's College, Virginia...
- In 2005, he wrote: "[I have] immerse[d] myself in contemporary Biblical scholarship at such places as Union Theological Seminary in New York City, Yale Divinity School, Harvard Divinity School and the storied universities in Edinburgh, Oxford and Cambridge."...
- Spong describes his own life as a journey from the literalism and conservative theology of his childhood to an expansive view of Christianity. In a 2013 interview, Spong credits the late Anglican bishop John Robinson as his mentor in this journey...
- He is representative of a stream of thought with roots in the medieval universalism of Peter Abelard and the existentialism of Paul Tillich, whom he has called his favorite theologian...
I see nothing in there that shows he was influenced by "secular" historians. Quite the opposite, his influences are all religious. You do understand there is a difference, a big difference, between theologically liberal and secular.
sec·u·lar
adjective
- 1.
denoting attitudes, activities, or other things that have no religious or spiritual basis.
"secular buildings"
Liberal Christianity - Wikipedia