Good Evening First Baseman: I am not ignoring the NT accounts of the life of Jesus. I am shoring them up with what is historically known about the time and culture in which Jesus lived. It is one of the best studied periods and places in all history. We know a lot about it. I also have taken into account what is known about the authors of the NT, along with the social and political pressures and influences that produced these works. We know that the authors had incomplete knowledge of the culture and region and history of the time of Jesus. We know this from the mistakes in the Gospel stories. One example of many was the arrest of Jesus. This account tells of Jesus being brought before the high priest Caiaphas and the Sanhedrin the night he was arrested. The Sanhedrin never met at night and was not allowed to meet at night. Not for any reason. The Sanhedrin also never met during Passover. This was also forbidden. Jesus was arrested after the Passover meal. We know the political pressures of the time the gospels were written and the reasons the gospel writers were eager to blame the Jews rather than the Romans for the arrest of Jesus when writing their accounts. We know that Pilate was not the sort of person to try and save Jesus or hesitate to execute any Jew. In fact, he was recalled to Rome eventually because of his famous brutality. He was well known for putting thousands upon thousands of Jews to death. The whole affair about Pilate washing his hands was a literary device to add more blame to the Jews. The reasons for this can easily be researched and would take me many more pages to explain here.
With regard to the resurrection and ascension, we know that the Romans only crucified seditionists and we know they didn't allow the bodies to be removed from the place of execution, because that type of execution was supposed to be a gruesome display. Hundreds upon hundreds of corpse were displayed on crosses outside the gates of Jerusalem in all stages of decomposition as a warning to anyone who challenged the authority and rule of Rome. Jesus was one of hundreds, perhaps thousands hanging outside the gate. With regard to messiahs, Jesus was one of at least 12 known messiahs in and around Jerusalem at the time, and there were probably many more at the time, but 12 are known by name. All were more popular than Jesus and all had more followers than Jesus, who had only 12 apostles and 72 disciples. The others had more. Like Jesus, all were crucified.
All I am doing is trying to take a pragmatic look at the evidence when it comes to what I believe or don't believe. I owe it to myself, like anyone else, and I have spent many years studying Jesus of Nazareth because he was the central figure in the household I was raised in. For this reason, I wanted to know more about who and what he was. My conclusion is that over two thousand years, he has pretty much been whatever people wanted or needed him to be. Not a bad thing I supposed - just an observation.
All the best,
Gary