I think that although the docetists focused on Jesus as divine that does not mean that deny he ever walked the earth.
No, but it works against the idea that he was some sort of rebellious itinerant rabbi who had a bunch of myths hung on him. At the other end of the spectrum, you have people who accept Jesus' historicity but not his divinity. Pick any aspect or characteristic of Jesus, and you can find someone who disputed it even beginning with the early church.
LOL! At this point, all I'm saying is "Christ never existed!" strikes me an extraordinary claim, and I find it unconvincing. All the talk about status quo was just me trying to explain that position (which is barely a claim at all), not any attempt to prove Christ's historicity.
My position is that a claim should be supported on its merits; I don't necessarily view the fact that a belief has been long-held to be support if that's all it's got going for it.
As for Christ's historicity, I think that virtually all the parts of the Christ story that form the basis for Christianity are mythic. Was this body of myth formed around the kernel of a real person? In my mind, the question's largely irrelevant: as I've said before, I think it's like arguing whether there's a real stone in your
stone soup.
I don't think that the Christ that Paul talks about in his epistles seems to be especially based on a real, living person. Whether the Gospels were a later "fleshing out" of Paul's mythic Christ or whether Paul and the Gospel writers drew from the same earlier, fact-based source in some way... I don't know.
Are you sure? I'm not prepared to say you're wrong, but it's always been my impression that it's a relatively new phenomenon. Can you cite any specific examples?
I was mainly thinking of Docetism, as lunamoth mentioned (thanks, BTW - I couldn't remember the name).
I also have a vague recollection of some other early Christian groups having an allegorical understanding of the Gospel story... but that might be my brain playing tricks on me.