Apparently there was a mound of evidence in the form of scholarship on which someone left a copy of the publication AWAKE on top of. When the cleaners came in at night they thought it was all a pile of trash and threw the whole works into the garbage. You can't blame them, they were just trying to do their job.
I am willing to bet than anyone who has read through this thread will see such humor as a deflection, designed to belittle scholarship because you haven't read any.
I have given you multiple sources you can check out for yourself if doubt me (which you obviously do, of course). And among those who actually study this matter, it is almost impossible not to come accross a work on early christianity or biblical studies which speaks about the historical Jesus.
The scholarship isn't hiding; you just haven't looked.
So I am still waiting for you to addres both my general comments on the evidence and type of orality, as well as the specific more in-depth analysis of a single aspect of this larger issue, and finally scholarship you have read which backs your view. Your response is humor and more google searches.
I ask for refences to scholarship rather than bad websites, and you belittle the scholarship of the people most acquainted with the evidence.
Apparently there was a mound of evidence in the form of scholarship
Actually there IS a mound. Also, this scholarship uses a great deal of primary sources material. Being unfamiliar with them, I understand that you can't say anything worthwhile about them. However, the scholarship I mentioned is based on enormous research of the relevent sources, and in addition uses techniques developed by other disciplines (e.g. sociology, literary theory, archaeology (before Jayhawker dumps on this, there is no direct archaeology evidence of Jesus. I was referring more towards the archaeology revealing the thorough "Jewishness" of Jesus hometown and home base.