oldbadger said:
So the question begs, who was the threatening, grasping, sword wielding and violent man of the same name?
If the facts truly align with the writings, Jesus was born under suspicions of being the product of fornication, and worse, according to Jewish sources, the son of a Roman soldier. With the arrival of the Magi from the East, Jesus’s life was threatened, and his family embarked on an intercontinental journey to Egypt. After all this, Jesus jeopardized everything when, at twelve years old, he began preaching in the temple of Jerusalem—a direct affront to the very system that had pursued him. Subsequently, Jesus chose disciples who, grammatically speaking, were young men, and he began his ministry using phrases like "brood of vipers," among other provocations. He performed healings or therapies, according to religious leaders, on the Sabbath, and Jesus often hid in deserts, in his home far from Jerusalem, or in the mountains. His own relatives (brothers) plotted against him, sending him to Jerusalem at a time when people there sought to kill him. Then there was the violence during the cleansing of the temple in Jerusalem, where the sacrificial system was being harshly exploited. It is also known that at least one of Jesus’s disciples carried a sword and wounded an authority. In the end, Jesus hid in Ephraim—a move that, in modern terms, would be like hiding in the area bounded by S. Los Angeles St., Boyd St., S. San Pedro, and E. 5th Street in Los Angeles. Among many other events, it fell to Paul, formerly the violent Saul, to pacify this Jesus. In broad terms, the Pauline school pacified two at once—both Jesus and Saul—in favor of the Romans, who would later destroy Jerusalem. It wasn't the first time they had done this; they had also done it with Flavius Josephus.