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Now, as Atheists/Agnostics/any religion other than Christianity, do you believe that Christ was real historically? Not as in the Son of God, but as in a true historic figure.
P.S Please do some research about the subject if you are not very knowledgable about it.
This has been addressed ad nauseam. Have you tried the forum's search function?Now, as Atheists/Agnostics/any religion other than Christianity, do you believe that Christ was real historically? Not as in the Son of God, but as in a true historic figure.
Research is good. Have you tried the forum's search function?P.S Please do some research about the subject if you are not very knowledgable about it.
This has been addressed ad nauseam. Have you tried the forum's search function?
Research is good. Have you tried the forum's search function?
Now, as Atheists/Agnostics/any religion other than Christianity, do you believe that Christ was real historically? Not as in the Son of God, but as in a true historic figure.
P.S Please do some research about the subject if you are not very knowledgable about it.
My personal feeling is that there may have been a real person at the core of the Jesus story that has had mythic elements accreted onto him... kind of like the grain of sand at the centre of a pearl.
... and like a pearl, the grain of sand isn't the part of the pearl that anyone values. I think the parts of Jesus that make him matter to Christians are mythic, not historical.
They believe that, sure.But don't a lot of Christians believe that historical Jesus is the same as Biblical Jesus?
I think it's entirely likely that his legend grew after his death in all sorts of ways. It's not like I think that the Gospel is all true if you just take the miracles away; I think his story was embellished across the board.Since they claim he did claim to be the Son of God, but I totally understand. It's sort of like something which people could never understand, they couldn't comprehend how a simple man can preach such goodness so they made him bigger than what he really was.
... and like a pearl, the grain of sand isn't the part of the pearl that anyone values. I think the parts of Jesus that make him matter to Christians are mythic, not historical.
We have more evidence for the historical person of Jesus than for most ancient figures. That said, sorting out the legend from the facts is a difficult (perhaps insurmountable) problem. There are very few facts about the historical person of Jesus which are virtually uncontested by the academic community.Now, as Atheists/Agnostics/any religion other than Christianity, do you believe that Christ was real historically? Not as in the Son of God, but as in a true historic figure.
P.S Please do some research about the subject if you are not very knowledgable about it.
Now, as Atheists/Agnostics/any religion other than Christianity, do you believe that Christ was real historically? Not as in the Son of God, but as in a true historic figure.
P.S Please do some research about the subject if you are not very knowledgable about it.
When did I say I didn't consider that? There have been many examples through history where the followers of some leader deify him as an expression of his perceived greatness. I'm not saying that he wasn't noteworthy or important to his followers, but that the reasons he was originally considered noteworthy and important aren't the ones that are considered important to Christians now.An interesting claim, as though Jesus is ultimately an unnoteworthy granular excess around which people formed and solidifed a series of their own projections. Though, why not consider that the mythic elements themselves are related to the historical core. That is to say, that the mythic elements are an expression of the value of the "historical Jesus" rather than being the value itself. In my opinion, this is much more likely even as a strictly agnostic and historical analysis.
I don't know, but there are lots of plausible possibilities.To posit a kind of "amorphous, liquid Jesus" at the foundation of the structures so passionately constructed on his personality begs the question: what in Jesus was so interesting, controversial and persuasive to begin with?. Especially considering his immediate disciples met martyrdom in Jerusalem and beyond, there is a force that your hypothesis doesn't propose to reckon with in its pacifying of and total ambivalence towards the content of the historical core.
Yes ...Now, as Atheists/Agnostics/any religion other than Christianity, do you believe that Christ was real historically? Not as in the Son of God, but as in a true historic figure.
P.S Please do some research about the subject if you are not very knowledgable about it.
is, in my opinion, also beyond the pale. At least, it seems to suggest the actions and teaching of Jesus have receded so far into the past that we can say nothing about him historically besides the fact that a host of magical- religious beliefs were errected around him. A great amount has been proffered about the historical period in which he appears and in which it is possible to contextualize him and yield a partial picture.is like a pearl, the grain of sand isn't the part of the pearl that anyone values
I don't doubt that the gospels were written by well versed highly spiritual individuals who really understood the core. Most of it was not lost.An interesting claim, as though Jesus is ultimately an unnoteworthy granular excess around which people formed and solidifed a series of their own projections. Though, why not consider that the mythic elements themselves are related to the historical core. That is to say, that the mythic elements are an expression of the value of the "historical Jesus" rather than being the value itself. In my opinion, this is much more likely even as a strictly agnostic and historical analysis. To posit a kind of "amorphous, liquid Jesus" at the foundation of the structures so passionately constructed on his personality begs the question: what in Jesus was so interesting, controversial and persuasive to begin with?. Especially considering his immediate disciples met martyrdom in Jerusalem and beyond, there is a force that your hypothesis doesn't propose to reckon with in its pacifying of and total ambivalence towards the content of the historical core.
Certainly (at least within academics whose field and research has concerned the origins of christianity and the historical figure of Jesus). However, it is essential to distinguish two claims, both of which can lead to the same conclusion but only one of which is the one above, namely:That they are just legends with a faint, indiscernable historical echo is, in my opinion, a controversial claim.
And the "Jesus was a literal god-man" crowd is similarly outside that circle of consensus.Sorry, perhaps I should have been more precise. I don't intend to say that historical criticism has established the claims we most associate with the Christian faith are true. I only mean to point out there is an entire field of historical criticism dedicated to the study of the historical Jesus which, though diverse and inconclusive, yields at least a circle of consensus that the "Jesus was a myth" or the "Osiris" crowds stand well outside of.
What I meant by that is that no mortal human man would be "the lamb of God who comes to take away the sins of the world." I've heard many Christians say that, to them, it would not be enough for Jesus to be merely a great human teacher. Consider C. S. Lewis' "lunatic, liar or lord" trilemma.Your claim that the historical Jesus
is, in my opinion, also beyond the pale. At least, it seems to suggest the actions and teaching of Jesus have receded so far into the past that we can say nothing about him historically besides the fact that a host of magical- religious beliefs were errected around him. A great amount has been proffered about the historical period in which he appears and in which it is possible to contextualize him and yield a partial picture.
I think you're reading way more into what I was saying than I intended.I'm just wondering, when you say you "have no confidence in any particular event reported in the Gospels", what sources are you relying on? How wide is your reading on the question of the historicity of the Gospels? That they are just legends with a faint, indiscernable historical echo is, in my opinion, a controversial claim.
There are rather few accounts of the character of Jesus.Now, as Atheists/Agnostics/any religion other than Christianity, do you believe that Christ was real historically? Not as in the Son of God, but as in a true historic figure.
P.S Please do some research about the subject if you are not very knowledgable about it.