The Gospels don't have the name of the writers on them anywhere...anywhere.
Already responded to this...and it is also worth mentioning the fact that even if the Gospels writers began their book with something like "I am MATTHEW, disciple of Jesus, and I am writing this DANG book", that still wouldn't mean that skeptics won't then say "Well, how do we know that MATTHEW actually wrote it, anyone could have wrote it and claimed to be Matthew." Skeptics are going to be skeptics and the name of the writers don't have to be on them, when you have uniform Church testimony of who wrote it.
They are. All work, document, and history is disputed, on a regular basis.
I am talking about even the stuff that isn't disputed. EVERYTHING. Nothing is reliable.
We are still critiquing WWII and that is very close to us. The point is information isn't static, you would be surprised how much we learn and change everyday. I remain a skeptic, not because I find the stories to be false, but because I am interested in motive, reason, and of course the politics.
Nothing is reliable in history based on your logic.
So are you incapable of an actual discussion without resulting to snide comments? I've been rather polite with you, but you just keep trying to build strawmen to set on fire.
Actually it wasn't a snide comment, it is a fact, that people will accept the historicity of Jesus minus the miracles and Resurrection...that is what I was saying...why am I not surprised? Context Frankie, context.
The standard for the resurrection of Jesus christ is far different than the standard of who painted the mona lisa. What we are sure of is that "some early christians believed that Jesus had risen from the dead" what resurrection actually meant to them, varies.
The disciples believed in a bodily/physical Resurrection as it is apparent in the Gospels, and by Paul's writings. So nothing varied, everything is clear cut.
Paul seems to believes that you will get a new body
And?
John seems to indicate that when Jesus was brought back he kept his old body, just with the ability to appear and disappear.
Point?
What I am sure of is that there was a man name Jesus who was a wise man, gave an amazing message that would be a core foundation for much of what would later be the western culture and who was executed for some reason by Pilate.
And that is exactly my point...you believe everything but stop short when it comes to the Resurrection...that is the exact point I made above.
So culture was more important than the complete fact of what happened? ok.
Regardless of how you feel about it, if that is the reason he left Mary out, then it isn't a contradiction.
And believe everything? Of course every historical person is in history, 100 years from now people won't know about who the heck I am, and if they read this they'll just scratch their heads. That isn't the point. Stop trying to build up a strawman.
I am not building a straw man. You are making this big fuss about the Gospel writers and how their name isn't attached to the books...and if someone asked you "Who wrote the book of Matthew?" You would say "I don't know". Yet if that same person asked you who painted the Mona Lisa, you would say "Leonardo Da Vinci", DESPITE the fact that his name isn't attached to the painting either. If having names attached to documents, books, stories, paintings, etc is YOUR standard of credible evidence then you basically don't believe in history, PERIOD. This is CLEARLY the taxi cab fallacy going on here, it has become quite apparent.
And yet Luke somehow forgets to write the part of when Jesus met Simon who we will assume that they are talking about Peter and not another Simon.
First off neither one of the Gospels record Jesus' appearance to Peter first, so saying Luke forgot it is disingenuous. Second, why am I not to assume that the Simon in question isn't Peter, when Paul said Jesus met Peter and fails to mention the "other" Simon in his breakdown of Jesus' appearance and to who. Not to mention the fact that Paul could hardly be mistaken on his account considering the fact that he met with Peter and the rest of the disciples as he mentioned in the creed that was "passed dow to him" from them...as I am bringing to your attention for about the third time now.
Again the usage of the 11, (And they found the 11 and those with them), was Peter not part of the 11?
Irrelevant.
Except Luke doesn't. BTW There was another Simon. Simon the Zealot, how do you know that isn't the simon who they were talking about? I mean Peter was used the entire time, and then suddenly it's Simon?
Yeah Peter was used the entire time, yet Paul calls Peter "Cephas" in 1Corin, despite the name "Peter" being used the entire time otherwise. I guess to Paul it really didn't matter what he was called the other times, and if it didn't matter to Paul, it doesn't matter to me either.
Didn't say that it was the only source, the Q document is another source as well to draw sayings, but the spinning of the tale is something different. It is not a fact that Mark was a disciple of Peter, it is taken from tradition.
Well Papias called him "interpreter" of people, whatever. He was a companion of Peter, bottom line, which is about the most credible source one can have regarding Jesus outside from James and John. And as far as the Q document is concerned, once again, that isn't a narrative of Jesus like you have in Matthew, and if you ASSUME that Matthew copied from Q source (which no one takes seriously anyway), then he would be copying from even earlier sources than himself, and the early you get to the event, the more credible your story becomes.
Yeah, the irony is the fact that all Gospels record the Resurrection. That is irony for unbelievers.
Have you not read Luke? Peter doesn't meet Jesus first, so yeah no. In none of the Gospels is Peter the first to meet Jesus. None.
Again, Paul, a guy who not only meet Peter but also the rest of the disciples PERSONALLY, claims that Jesus was first seen by Peter (excluding the women). That is why we can conclude that the Simon mentioned in Luke 24 is actually Peter, because Paul didn't even mention Simon the Zealot in his breakdown of Jesus' appearances.
Where did I say that? My point is that they had Paul's letters to refer to but yet they don't get the story straight.
All the Gospels do get the story straight, that Jesus lived, died, was buried, was raised, and was seen alive by the disciples (minus omitted verses in Mark). That is what Christians hold our hats on. All of this other stuff you are talking about is petty.
Yeah they did, and as far as we know James and Paul didn't really get along, Peter tried to play the middle man, and John was doing whatever John was doing.
Yeah, it was one big reality show in early first century Palestine.