Then I'm I'm wondering if this is a matter of lack of familiarity with history as a discipline, because if the evidence of a historical Jesus is not overwhelming then nothing is. If you're primarily used to, say, chemistry or physics or even sociology or anthropology, you're used to a different methodology, different types and levels of evidence. But evidence of persons of antiquity is like fossil evidence; it takes very precise conditions to preserve, and so we don't have a ton. Usually all we have is evidence for high-level political, military and religious figures, and sometimes not even that. Which makes the evidence for Jesus so striking; he is one of the most well-attested figures of antiquity, and he was a peasant from rural Galilee. Not only is he attested from within a reasonable timeframe, he is multiply-attested; all of the Gospels use sources that are provably independent from one another. And they are remarkably consistent on the large-print details- name was Jesus, born of Mary, came from Galilee/Nazareth, preached an apocalyptic message, went to Jerusalem, was crucified. And the overall episode is a familiar one, since Jesus was not the only peasant-preacher during that time and in that place.
Jesus is not well attested. The Gospels all copy Mark and Paul only knows of a vision of Jesus.
This article gives some of the evidence that Mark is rewriting OT narratives for Jesus, using fictive writing only used in myth and shows the author was very familiar with OT stories because he reworked them and quoted them.
Previously, I’ve written about the historicity of Jesus, and mentioned how the most recent analysis, in Richard Carrier’s On the Historicity of Jesus (the first comprehensive, academica…
lagevondissen.wordpress.com
Mark 15.24: “They part his garments among them, casting lots upon them.”
Psalm 22:18: “They part my garments among them, and cast lots upon them.”
Mark 15.29-31: “And those who passed by blasphemed him, shaking their heads and saying, ‘…Save yourself…’ and mocked him, saying ‘He who saved others cannot save himself!’ ”
Psalm 22.7-8: “All those who see me mock me and give me lip, shaking their head, saying ‘He expected the lord to protect him, so let the lord save him if he likes.’ ”
Mark 15.34: “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
Psalm 22.1: “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
On top of these links, Mark also appears to have used
Psalm 69,
Amos 8.9, and some elements of
Isaiah 53,
Zechariah 9-14, and
Wisdom 2 as sources for his narratives. So we can see yet a few more elements of myth in the latter part of this Gospel, with Mark using other scriptural sources as needed for his story, whether to “fulfill” what he believed to be prophecy or for some other reason.
He is not well attested because the other Gospels can be shown to be sourcing Mark as the Synoptic Problem demonstrates from Robert H. Stein’s
The Synoptic Problem: An Introduction:
Any serious discussion of the Synoptic Gospels must, sooner or later, involve a discussion of the literary interrelationships among Matthew, Mark, and Luke. This is essential in order to see how an author used his sources (both for reliability’s sake as well as for redactional criticism), as...
bible.org
(1)
The argument from length. Although Mark’s Gospel is shorter, it is not an abridgment, nor a gospel built exclusively on Matthew-Luke agreement. In fact, where its pericopae parallel Matthew and/or Luke, Mark’s story is usually the longest. The rich material left out of his gospel is inexplicable on the Griesbach hypothesis.
(2)
The argument from grammar. Matthew and especially Luke use better grammar and literary style than Mark, suggesting that they used Mark, but improved on it.
(3)
The argument from harder readings. On the analogy of early scribal habits, Luke and Matthew apparently removed difficulties from Mark’s Gospel in making their own. If Matthean priority is assumed, then what is inexplicable is why Mark would have introduced such difficulties.
(4)
The argument from verbal agreement. There are fewer Matthew-Luke verbal agreements than any other two-gospel verbal agreements. This is difficult to explain on the Griesbach hypothesis, much easier on the Lachmann/Streeter hypothesis.
(5)
The argument from agreement in order. Not only do Luke and Matthew never agree with each other when they depart from Mark’s order, but the reasons for this on the assumption of Markan priority are readily available while on Matthean priority they are not.
(6)
The argument from literary agreements. Very close to the redactional argument, this point stresses that on literary analysis, it is easier to see Matthew’s use of Mark than vice versa.
(7)
The argument from redaction. The redactional emphases in Mark, especially in his stylistic minutiae, are only inconsistently found in Matthew and Luke, while the opposite is not true. In other words, Mark’s style is quite consistent, while Luke and Matthew are inconsistent—when they parallel Mark, there is consistency; when they diverge, they depart from such. This suggests that Mark was the source for both Matthew and Luke.
(8)
The argument from Mark’s more primitive theology. On many fronts Mark seems to display a more primitive theology than either Luke or Matthew. This suggests that Matthew and Luke used Mark, altering the text to suit their purposes.
Moreover, the alternative, that someone would invent this figure, does not pass the relevant historical principles. It is a widely used principle in history that when people invent things, they invent things that help their own interests. They tend not to invent things that harm their interests. And for 1st century Jews, the messiah was a glorious military and political figure who would expel the Romans and re-establish Israel under the Davidic covenant. Under those circumstances, no one one invent the notion of a crucified messiah. And yet that's just what Jesus was- a criminal who not only failed to expel the Romans, he got crushed like a bug and killed and tortured in a way explicitly vilified by the Jewish Bible. And the patent absurdity of a crucified messiah is why Christians struggled to covert Jews (it was, as Paul described it, a "stumbling block" for the Jews, but not for the Gentiles). Far more plausible is the notion that some Jews thought Jesus was the messiah, Jesus got killed, and his followers had to re-invent the concept of being the messiah.
He could be made up the same way all other savior demigods in mystery religions were made up. Could be based on a Rabbi as well, either way the Gospel narrative is fiction.
This goes into Dr Tabor and the scholars who study savior cults, the basic idea is :
All Mystery religions have personal savior deities
- All saviors
- all son/daughter, never the supreme God (including Mithriasm)
- all undergo a passion (struggle) patheon
- all obtain victory over death which they share with followers
- all have stories set on earth
- none actually existed
- Is Jesus the exception and based on a real Jewish teacher or is it all made up?
Here's a couple other things. Christianity had many opponents, including from the very beginning. Christians were widely blamed for drawing the ire of the gods, because Christians refused to participate in pagan rites and one thing pagan gods did when not enough people worshipped them was smite the people with lightning and famines and so forth. Christians were accused of all sorts of infamy... save one charge that was curiously not leveled against them. That charge was of believing or inventing a false religion. Now if there was any truth to the notion of CHristians inventing Christ, surely there would have been some accusations of such, especially from the period where people would have been in a position to know?
On each of these points, mythicisism has only bad answers. Its simply no contest: the evidence for the historical Jesus is overwhelming.
First there was, For
we did not follow cleverly devised
myths 2 Peter. An argument against people saying it was made up.
But anti-Christian propaganda didn't survive so we don't know what detractors were saying.
Justin Martyr says the same, he argues all the Greek demigods similar to Jesus were made up but not Jesus. His bad apologetics shows there was an argument.
Justin Martyr, The Dialogue with Trypho,
Chapter 69. The devil, since he emulates the truth, has invented fables about Bacchus, Hercules, and Æsculapius
His followers didn't have to re-invent anything, Jesus is a savior in a mystery religion. A Jewish version of a mystery cult.
The Religious Context of Early Christianity
A Guide to Graeco-Roman Religions
HANS-JOSEF KLAUCK
Professor of New Testament Exegesis, University of Munich, Germany
Summary
The Hellenistic mystery cults play a decisive role in the argumentation of the representatives of the school of the history of religions (see the Introduction, above), in two ways. First, they postulate a genetic derivation of the Christian sacraments from the quasi-sacramental rites of the mystery cults (initiation, washings, anointings, sacred meals); they see the Chrisrian sacraments as having no basis in the message of Jesus and in Palestinian biblical Judaism, but rather as the outcome of a process of Hellenisation which is evaluated as a lapse from the original purity of the gospel, whether this is dated (with Heitmuller) already before Paul, or (with Harnack: see p. 148, n. 49) only outside the New Testament itself in the second century. Secondly, it is further argued (see Bruckner) that the myth of the dying and rising again of a divinity, which lies at the centre of each cult, was a significant influence on earliest Christianity's image of Christ, which drifted off into myth.
Petra Pakkanen, Interpreting Early Hellenistic Religion (1996), showed 4 trends all mystery cults shared, Christianity has all 4
- Syncretism: combining a foreign cult deity with Hellenistic elements. Christianity is a Jewish mystery religion.
- Henotheism: transforming / reinterpreting polytheism into monotheism. Judaism introduced monolatric concepts.
- Individualism: agricultural salvation cults retooled as personal salvation cults. Salvation of community changed into personal individual salvation in afterlife. All original agricultural salvation cults were retooled by the time Christianity arose.
- Cosmopolitianism: all races, cultures, classes admitted as equals, with fictive kinship (members are all brothers) you now “join” a religion rather than being born into it