• @Shard@lemmy.world
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    807 days ago

    Physical proof? No. But if that’s the criterion for proof that someone existed, then that mean 90% of historical figures can’t be proven to have existed. We don’t have the remains of Alexander the Great or any artefacts we can be sure are his. We have no remnants of Plato, none of his original writings remain.

    Did a person name Jesus live sometime during the first century AD? Scholars are fairly certain of that. We do have textual evidence other than the bible that points to his existence.

    It is highly unlikely that he was anything like the person written about in the bible. He was likely one of many radical apocalyptic prophets of the time.

    We don’t have too many details about his life but because of something called the criterion of embarrassment we have good reason to believe he was baptized by a man named John the Baptist and was later crucified. (i.e. most burgeoning religions seeking legitimacy don’t typically invent stories that are embarrassing to their deity)

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historicity_of_Jesus

    • @KneeTitts@lemmy.world
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      then that mean 90% of historical figures can’t be proven to have existed

      Well for most of those we tend to use independent verification for their existence. And in the case of jesus, we have literally zero Credible examples of independent verification.

      • @Shard@lemmy.world
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        If you mean Jesus as described word for word in the bible? Yes you are right. Such a mythical figure never existed.

        A man name Jesus from the first century AD? Who preached in the Levant? Who was baptized by a man named John and was later crucified? There is good enough evidence of such a person existing. This isn’t even a debated question among new testament scholars anymore.

        I see you are familiar with Bart Ehrman, Even he doesn’t dispute that a historical Jesus existed.

        https://youtu.be/43mDuIN5-ww

        Here’s an even deeper dive from Bart Ehrman.

        https://youtu.be/4CD5DwrgWJ4

        • @KneeTitts@lemmy.world
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          6 days ago

          Even assuming the passage is totally genuine, two fires had destroyed much in the way of official documents Tacitus had to work with and it is unlikely that he would sift through what he did have to find the record of an obscure crucifixion, which suggests that Tacitus was repeating an urban myth whose source was likely the Christians themselves,[3]:344 especially since Tacitus was writing at a time when at least the three synoptic gospels are thought to already have been in circulation.

          https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Tacitus

          According to Bart Ehrman, Josephus’ passage about Jesus was altered by a Christian scribe, including the reference to Jesus as the Messiah

          https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Josephus_on_Jesus

          Scholars have differing opinions on the total or partial authenticity of the reference in the passage to the execution of Jesus by Pontius Pilate.[15][30] The general scholarly view is that while the Testimonium Flavianum is most likely not authentic.

          Respected Christian scholar R. T. France, for example, does not believe that the Tacitus passage provides sufficient independent testimony for the existence of Jesus [Franc.EvJ, 23] and agrees with G. A. Wells that the citation is of little value

          A. The first line of the Tacitus passage says Chrestians, not Christians.

          Suetonius says Chrestus was personally starting trouble in Rome during the reign of Claudius.

          Suetonius is writing years after Tacitus yet doesn’t mention that Chrestus died.

          So Chrestus can’t be Jesus because it’s the wrong decade, wrong continent and missing a death.

          B. The second line in Tacitus that mentions Christ and his death was never noticed until after the mid-fourth century. So this second line is fake.

          P.S. Even if the second line was somehow authentic, the information would have come from Christians. This would be the equivalent of deriving Abraham’s biography by talking to Muslims.

          This is why Bart Ehrman specifically dismisses Tacitus and Josephus. As do most other biblical scholars.

          In the immortal words of Christopher Hitchens, if this is all you got, you are holding an empty bag.

          • @aidan@lemmy.world
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            05 days ago

            Even assuming the passage is totally genuine, two fires had destroyed much in the way of official documents Tacitus had to work with and it is unlikely that he would sift through what he did have to find the record of an obscure crucifixion

            Why? If it was a popular myth, why assume he wouldn’t try to confirm/deny it

            According to Bart Ehrman, Josephus’ passage about Jesus was altered by a Christian scribe, including the reference to Jesus as the Messiah

            So? I’m not presenting evidence for him being a Messiah. I am saying there is some independent evidence of him existing.

            B. The second line in Tacitus that mentions Christ and his death was never noticed until after the mid-fourth century. So this second line is fake.

            I agree that is bizarre, but not proof of it being fake. Though should be taken with a grain of salt.

            This is why Bart Ehrman specifically dismisses Tacitus and Josephus. As do most other biblical scholars.

            Who is Bart Ehrman and why relay his beliefs rather than speak for yourself?

    • @darthskull@lemmy.ca
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      -46 days ago

      We do have textual evidence other than the bible that points to his existence.

      Idk why you would need textual evidence besides the Bible to be certain the guy existed. It’s not like these are magical books that sprung from the earth. They have historical reasons for existing and the most likely reason includes the existence of the dude.

  • @alekwithak@lemmy.world
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    336 days ago

    The new testament stories were written well over a hundred years after. That would be like someone today writing an account of the civil war based solely on stories.

  • @Pm_me_girl_dick@lemmyf.uk
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    156 days ago

    Girl gets married

    Girl gets shitfaced and sleeps with someone other than her husband

    Girl is pregnant!

    Girl makes up some dumb shit to avoid jealous rage

    Shit gets waaaaay out of hand.

    There are many Jesus’s in the world.

  • @DeLacue@lemmy.world
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    156 days ago

    Christianity exists. Religions don’t tend to spring up from nowhere. Every myth has its nugget of truth. Was there a preacher back then whose followers later spread around the world? Almost certainly. Where else could Christianity have come from?

    Was he the son of god though? Was he capable of all the miracles the bible claims? Is the god he preached even real? There is no evidence that the answer to these three questions is anything but no I’m afraid.

  • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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    267 days ago

    As far as I know, we simply don’t have directly contemporary, first-hand evidence of him. Even the most ‘contemporary’ accounts of him that still exist were written at least 50 years after he would have died, and those are quite cursory. Perhaps primary sources were lost–or intentionally destroyed when they didn’t align with beliefs–or perhaps they never existed. There’s not even much evidence for Pontius Pilate (I think one source mentioning that he was recalled to Rome and executed for incompetence?), and there should be, given that he was a Roman official.

    People that study the history of the bible–as in, the historical bible, not the bible as a religious text–tend to believe that a historical Jesus existed, even if they don’t believe that he was divine.

    IMO, the most likely explanation is that Jesus was yet another in a long-line of false messiahs, and was summarily executed by Rome for trying to start yet another rebellion. Since cult members tend to be unable to reconcile reality with their beliefs, they could have reframed their beliefs to say that he was a spiritual messiah, rather than a physical messiah.

    • @KneeTitts@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      There are lots of people now today who claim to be god, claim to be jesus, claim to have magic powers. so it would appear this is just normal human behavior and has been for a very long time. But the main reason people continue to believe these ancient holy books and all the stories in them is literally because they are protected from inquiry. So Jeff down the street claims to be jesus? We can go test him and try to falsify his claims. But some guy 2000 years ago, ya its not possible to check that one out. And That is why they persist, its by design.

      • @HelixDab2@lemm.ee
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        106 days ago

        Let me see if I can explain what I mean.

        A historical Jesus might have had a small cult following, enough that the Romans couldn’t ignore him. He would have been talking about Jewish liberation from the Roman rulers, and how he was called by god. And then boom, he gets executed. His followers probably believed that he was actually the son of god, sent to liberate them. But now he’s dead. How do they reconcile the belief with the reality? So they retcon everything; he was a spiritual messiah, and he’ll eventually return and free the Jews, once the people are spiritually prepared.

        You can see traces of this in the way that the four gospels don’t agree with each other, but they all include bits of prophecies from earlier scripture about the messiah. They were written with the intent of making Jesus appear to fit in to older prophecies about who the messiah would be, since he ended up not being the liberator that they had been expecting.

        You can see similar behaviors in cults now. It’s clearly visible with Q; Trump was supposed to be their messiah, but he hasn’t managed to make any of their prophetic beliefs come true. So they’ve invented reasons why Trump’s holy will has been thwarted, and changed their history, rather than accepting that he was a false messiah.

      • @Tryptaminev@lemm.ee
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        -66 days ago

        Then why is it that the message was so powerful that the Roman empire abolished its idol worship and chose Christianity? Especially as Jesus a.s. was supposed to be a rebel against the empire?

        Do you think people 2000 years ago were all stupid?

        • @CoffeeJunkie@lemmy.world
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          76 days ago

          The message of Christianity is excellent for subjugating populations, giving them purpose & hope, keeping people busy & out of trouble. I think that all sounds very appealing to rulers.

          • @Tryptaminev@lemm.ee
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            -46 days ago

            And the roman empire was not able to do that already? From my understanding mythologically/spiritually the Roman empire was perfectly settled with what it had before in terms of political power. Incidentally the roman empire declined and fell apart in the centuries after accepting Christianity.

            And before the Roman empire there were the Egyptians. They seemed to fare much better in terms of power with their idol worship than later when they embraced Abrahamic religions, yet they did.

        • @samus12345@lemmy.world
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          15 days ago

          Do you think people 2000 years ago were all stupid?

          No stupider than people now. Christianity remains very popular.

        • @Mjpasta710@midwest.social
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          05 days ago

          Happened overnight too. /S

          This isn’t an accurate account of history.

          If you’ve studied any of the Roman empire in antiquity you’re actively acting in bad faith.

          If not, why are you making things up? Why are you actively lying?

          Constantine is reported as making it the state religion 300+ years after the alleged existence of yeshua.

  • Flying Squid
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    196 days ago

    I have said this many times-

    It doesn’t matter. It doesn’t matter if there was a “real” Jesus. The Jesus of the Bible, the Jesus that is worshiped is an impossibility. A fiction. His life is full of details that defy basic biological and physical laws. On top of that, nothing he supposedly said was written down at the time, so we have no idea if what is recorded to have been his sayings in the Bible are things he actually said.

    I always relate it to Ian Fleming having a schoolchum who’s father’s name was Ernst Stavro Bloefeld. So was there a real Ernst Stavro Bloefeld? Yes. Was he a supervillain fighting the world’s greatest secret agent? No.

    • Bob
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      146 days ago

      I don’t think this answer is really in the spirit of “no stupid questions”.

      • Flying Squid
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        36 days ago

        Ok, if you want me to sum up in a way that addresses it: Because the Jesus OP is very likely thinking of is fictional, there is no real physical proof of his existence.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      It doesn’t matter.

      I’d say the “Real Historical Jesus” matters at least as much as a Real Historical Julius Caeser or a Real Historical Abraham Lincoln.

      I always relate it to Ian Fleming having a schoolchum who’s father’s name was Ernst Stavro Bloefeld.

      That’s different in so far as Fleming was simply borrowing a name for a totally independent character. But Fleming was, himself, a Naval Commander and intelligence officer who leveraged his own biography to inform James Bond’s personal traits. What’s more, he borrowed heavily from the reports and anecdotes of other intelligence officials both during and after WW2 to inform the behaviors and attitudes of his side characters in his original novels.

      It actually is pretty interesting to talk about “The Real James Bond” from a historical standpoint, because British intelligence services were pivotal in maintaining the imperial and international financial controls necessary to run a globe-spanning empire.

      In the same vein, you might be curious to read about “The Real Julius Caeser” after working through the Shakespearean play or “The Real Abraham Lincoln” after getting through the stories where he’s a Vampire Hunter. These biographies inform all sorts of cultural and economic norms of the era. And reading about historical individuals can be both entertaining and illuminating, particularly when you begin to consider how your own world ended up as it is today.

      “Why is Christianity a globe-spanning religious movement going back 2000 years?” is a question worth interrogating. And you can’t really interrogate that question without asking who this Jesus guy was or how he got so popular.

      • Flying Squid
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        26 days ago

        There’s nothing to read about when it comes to any real Joshua, son of Joseph the Carpenter of Nazareth because nothing has been written about such a person.

          • Flying Squid
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            46 days ago

            Written while Jesus was still alive? If so, please present said writings. If not, that doesn’t really change my point.

              • Flying Squid
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                Are we talking about whether or not a historical person the Jesus of the Bible is based on existed or are we talking about whether or not there were any contemporary accounts? Because those are two very different things.

                As I suggested in the beginning, whether or not a “real” Jesus existed is not really relevant, because if we did, we know nothing about him except what was written a long time after he would have died, which we can’t trust. Which is the same reason not to trust Plato’s dialogues even if Socrates existed. Plato wrote them long after Socrates died.

                • if we did, we know nothing about him except what was written a long time after he would have died

                  Hardly the first instance of a historical figure with unreliable historical accounts. You could make the same criticism of Egyptian pharaohs. They were deified in their eras, too. Their monuments were not completed until many of them were long dead. I guess we should just ignore them and pretend they had no impact on the course of history.

    • @Shanedino@lemmy.world
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      56 days ago

      Listened through a history of rome podcast and learned an interesting thing where win was basically like a concentrate so you would mix it with water to drink. Aka. water -> wine.

      • @MagicShel@programming.dev
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        6 days ago

        Using reasoning like this to remove the supernatural from the Bible rather defeats the entire point, doesn’t it? If Jesus just made Gatorade like anyone else would, that’s a rather unremarkable thing to describe. Hardly worth committing to writing.

        • @Shanedino@lemmy.world
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          36 days ago
          1. I am sure there are countless mundane tasks that are pretty unremarkable.

          2. Does the Bible really have a point? I guess other than brainwashing masses?

          • @MagicShel@programming.dev
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            46 days ago

            That’s what I’m saying. There’s no record of him wiping his ass or playing cards. If it’s in the book it must be intended to present something exceptional. Explain his actions as something mundane and there isn’t really any reason to write it down.

            But equally, the fantastic supernatural elements make the whole thing into a fairy tale to be completely disregarded as a dubious source of folk wisdom at best by any thinking person.

        • Flying Squid
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          16 days ago

          I hope not, because port is my wine of choice and I would be like, “fuck you, Jesus. I wanted to drink that!”

    • @Tryptaminev@lemm.ee
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      His life is full of details that defy basic biological and physical laws.

      Which is perfectly sensible given that he was given the power to perform wonders by god to establish that he is indeed a messenger of god. The entire point of wonders is them defying the otherwise imposed limits of the physical world. Because the only one who can grant this power is the source of the physical limits themselves and that is god.

      This is logically consistent under the axiom that god exists. Which is what the scriptures are all about.

      You can set the axiom that god does not exist. But as there is no proof of that, it is equally axiomatic. So given that your logic works on an unproven assumption you should not use it to criticize a different logic based on another assumption.

  • @Lovstuhagen@hilariouschaos.com
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    106 days ago

    No, and that is to even be expected.

    He was a prophet whose movement had around 120 or so core disciples along with his apostles, plus thousands who followed him about and considered him a healer and revolutionary teacher.

    There are people who have done similar things that are completely lost to history other than small records that vaguely outline the controversy surrounding them… We shouldn’t really expect more in terms of proof…

    But what is unique is the fact that we have an extremely well preserved corpus of text surrounding him. We also have some good idea that a lot of his followers were prosecuted and killed, and never recanted in the process, which might incline you to believe in the radical truth that they lived by.

    Of course I am biased - I am a Christian - but it really does just seem pointlessly antagonistic to dismiss His Existence at all.

    • NightoftheLemmy
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      36 days ago

      Do you mean to say that there are actual remains of Jesus right now somewhere on Earth?

      • @nyctre@lemmy.world
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        -36 days ago

        Ofc there are. Unless they got destroyed someway or another. There was a guy named Jesus that was crucified by the romans and all that. There is proof of that. It’s all the biblical stuff that there’s no proof of.

        • DefederateLemmyMl
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          There was a guy named Jesus that was crucified by the romans and all that. There is proof of that

          There isn’t actually. The proof is basically: it’s embarassing that their cult leader got painfully crucified, so the early Christians and writers of the new testament wouldn’t have made that shit up.

          Personally I find it rather unconvincing.

          • @nyctre@lemmy.world
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            06 days ago

            Don’t believe in god either way, but if it’s good enough for the majority of historians , then it’s good enough for me. Not sure why you’d need more, but you do you.

            • DefederateLemmyMl
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              16 days ago

              if it’s good enough for the majority of historians

              It isn’t. Historians would love to have independent evidence of the existence and crucifixion of Jesus, but there isn’t… so most historians refrain from taking a position one way or the other. The ones that do have to make do with what little objective information they have, and the best they can come up with is: well because of this embarassing thing, it’s more likely that he did exist and was crucified than that he didn’t, because why would they make that up?

              That’s rather weak evidence, and far from “proof”.

              Not sure why you’d need more

              Well for one because the more prominent people who have studied this have a vested interest in wanting it to be true. For example, John P. Meier, who posited this criterion of embarassment that I outlined in my previous comment, isn’t really a historian but a catholic priest, professor of theology (not history) and a writer of books on the subject.

              • @nyctre@lemmy.world
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                26 days ago

                So instead of taking the glory for themselves like pretty much all other humans they decide to preach about an imaginary friend? Meh… Between “guy who got lost in history” and “bunch of guys that raved about that one gf that went to a different school”, I’ll go with the former as the more plausible one.

                I’ll concede the fact that it’s not the same level of proof as other figures, but all these people writing about him is more than we have about others.

                • DefederateLemmyMl
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                  There are basically four positions you can take about this:

                  1. Jesus existed and was crucified
                  2. We can’t know, because there is no conclusive evidence, but I think (1) is more likely
                  3. We can’t know, because there is no conclusive evidence, but I think (4) is more likely
                  4. Jesus is a myth

                  I am on (2), as are most historians, and you put yourself on (1).

  • @utopiah@lemmy.world
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    177 days ago

    That’s not the real question though. The real question is rather are there any “real physical proof” that Jesus had literally anything special that is in itself being the “son of God” or anything related to religion.

    Anybody (sadly) can be crucified, especially during a period where it is trendy. Anybody can walk through part of the desert. Anybody can organize a meal, give a speech, etc.

    Even if it’s done exceptionally well, that does not make it special in the sense of being the proof of anything religious. We all have friends with unique talents, and social media helped us discovered that there are so many more of those around the entire world, but nobody in their right mind would claim that because Eminem can sing words intelligibly faster than the vast majority of people he is the son of “God”.

    I also read a book about a decade ago (unfortunately didn’t write down notes about it so can’t find the name back) on the history of religion, from polytheism to monotheism, and it was quite interesting. If I remember correctly one way to interpret it was through the lens of religions maintaining themselves over time and space, which could include growing to a sufficient size in terms of devout adepts. The point being that veracity was not part of the equation.

    • Cethin
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      167 days ago

      Well, that’s the question if you want to believe in Christianity.

      It’s nearly universally accepted that he is a historical figure, though there is little to no evidence of that. The OP is asking why is that the case with so little evidence. They (presumably) aren’t asking for a religious reason, just as an interest in history. If you are Christian and asking this question you are well past the point of no return for your faith

    • @uienia@lemmy.world
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      67 days ago

      No, OPs question was perfectly fine, because it is necessary to stress the fact that we have not a single contemporary primary source that Jesus existed. So adding extra parameters is pretty pointless, since we cannot convincingly answer whether he actually existed, much less whether he was a religious figure. Scholars have reached a conjectural consensus that a Jesus in some form likely existed, but it is a consendus based on congecture and circumstantial evidence in the form of later secondary sources.

  • It seems like the consensus is that the stories probably stem from a real guy because that’s deemed more likely than no person existing as a basis for the story, but no, there is not material evidence for jesus christ’s existence