God Fearing Atheist wrote:First of all, "the NT" is not a single document; it is a collection of several first and century second documents, plenty of which are literarily independent of each other. Paul and GMark independently attest to Jesus' crucifixion and having a brother James, for example.
Yes, but that doesn't prove the existence of Jesus. Just because Paul claims that James the Just was the brother of Jesus doesn't necessarily have to mean that he really was. Take a look at 1 Galatians 1:18-19:
1:18 Then after three years I went up to Jerusalem to see Peter, and abode with him fifteen days.
1:19 But other of the apostles saw I none, save James the Lord's brother.
Paul also calls his fellow Christians "brethren" in Galatians, here's an example:
Galatians wrote:4:12 Brethren, I beseech you, be as I am; for I am as ye are: ye have not injured me at all.
An other example can be found in 3:15 as well as in the other epistles. I've seen it suggested (although I don't fully buy into it: I'm not a Biblical scholar) that the James that Paul refers to was a convert and that Paul used "brother" to distinguish him from the apostles (indeed, two of the apostles were named James. However, IIRC James the Great was dead by that time and the background of James the Less is confusing to say the least)?
In regards to Paul, it's also interesting that the gospels and epistles in general rhymes very poorly with each other (compare Jesus' message in the Gospels to how it's treated in the epistles of Paul, for example. There are claims that directly contradicts what Jesus is supposed to have said.). Strangely enough, the crucifixition seems to be pretty much everything that Paul seems to have had knowledge about as he never mentioned anything about the virgin birth, Jesus' childhood, none of the supposed miracles that Jesus performed, none of the parables that Jesus used (he never referred to anything that Jesus is supposed to have said according to the Gospels), the other circumstances around the death of Jesus Christ (such as Peter's denial etc.) or any other specific events from the Gospels in his epistels. This is very odd considering the fact that he could've gotten first-hand accounts of Jesus from Peter (among others).
God Fearing Atheist wrote:To this we can add some noncanonical Christian sources and the Roman historian Tacitus. These are not contemporary, obviously, but that hardly matters.
Leaving the Christian sources aside, Tacitus who was a Roman historian, apparently couldn't get his facts straight. "Tacitus" refered to Pilate as a procurator, but Tacitus should've known that Judea was under military rule and that Pilate's title was
prefect and not procurator (which was a civilian title). There are many other problems with the Tacitus quotes, but it's sufficient to say is that it's not an eyewitness account and is, at best, hearsay (oh, not even Eusebius referred to the "Tacitus" quotes nor did Tertullian who based his works extensively on Tacitus. Furthermore, the work containing this passage was "discovered" in the 15th Century. It was first suggested in a book published in 1878 that the discoverer, Gian Francesco P. Bracciolini, forged the entire work: [url=
http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext05/8tcbr10.txt]Tacitus and Bracciolini, by John Wilson Ross - txt file[/url). Ross refers, among other things, to the language quality (or rather lack thereof), the use of specific words ("Imperator" being one) etc. Of course it should be quite clear to everyone that even if it isn't a forgery made by that specific person, it had been missing for
more than one millennium to begin with).
God Fearing Atheist wrote:Let me ask you this: what occassion would the early Fathers familar with Josephus have to quote the (reconstructed, ala Meier 1991) Testimonium? Its not enough to simply say they didnt.
I'm not quite sure I'm following you. There were quite a few early Fathers who tried to find evidence for Jesus in non-Christian sources. We've discussed Origen (who never referred to the TF), but there are others as well such as Clement of Alexandria (who referred to Josephus, but never to the TF), Saint Justin Martyr (who I've mentioned earlier made no reference to the TF) and Tertullian. Photius (who we'll come back to later) wrote a revision of
Antiquities and wrote that Josephus never mentioned Christ. The TF seems to be nothing but "CliffsNotes" of the Gospels which, in a few lines that doesn't add anything that wasn't already known, pretty much confirms everything what the Gospels had to say about Jesus Christ, but still none of these people cared to mention it?
God Fearing Atheist wrote:Josephus uses that language for alot of things. Women (13.16.6), locusts (2.14.4), gentile nationalities and communal groups, and so forth. The only thing unusal about it is its coupling with "Christians," which is to be expected here and no where else.
Why "is it to be expected here"? He never refered to the followers of other Messianic characters (characters that Josephus loathed) in this way and the TF had already established his Jewish origin. As you correctly point out, Josephus refers to women and locusts as tribes, but the other times that he refers to tribes, he refers to nationality or race, never to cults.
God Fearing Atheist wrote:Let me also sorta switch gears and add something else about the crucifixion: it is a very improbable thing to invent since it was, in an honor/shame culture like theirs, an ignoble way to meet your end. Josephus (in Wars 7) describes crucifixion as "a most miserable death," Paul (Gal 5.11) calls it an "offense" and Seneca, in his 101st epistle, says he "should deem [Maecenas] most despicable had he wished to live up to the very time of crucifixion." Even suicide were preferable to the cross and its "long drawn-out agony.
Yes, I know. Josephus states that up to fivehundred Jews were crucified per day by Titus. However, that people were crucified doesn't mean that a Jesus Christ character, as portrayed in the Gospels, has ever existed or was crucified himself.
God Fearing Atheist wrote:It was a source of dispersions cast on Christians by critics. The pagan Caecilius in M. Felix's Octavius claims "the objects of their worship include a man who suffered death as a criminal, as well as the wretched wood of his cross," and that these two deserve each other; the wretched man, punished for wicked crime, and the equally wicked Christians who worship him. This sort of depiction was appearently widespread. Even Paul admits (1 Cor 1.23) that the crucifixion of Jesus appears "a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles." I could go on.
Considering how early and frequently his crucifixion is attested to, and taking into account these other considerations, just what exactly can better account for the evidence?
If I'm not mistaken,
Octavius was written in the mid 2nd Century, right? By then, the Gospels existed as did other Christian writings. Otherwise I refer to my answer above (about Paul).
God Fearing Atheist wrote:Why would we expect Justus to have mentioned Jesus? As Photius tells us in his Bibliotheca, Justus' work was entitled "A Chronicle of the Kings of the Jews in the form of a genealogy," and dealt with the "history with Moses" and subsequent rulers all the way down until "the death of the seventh Agrippa of the family of Herod and the last of the Kings of the Jews."
Photius also tells us that he suffered from "the common fault of the Jews." Justus was a Jewish non-Christian and, presumably, would not have thought of Jesus as kingly. Why then should Justus have included him in a work that appears to detail Jewish royal history?
Because Justus seems not to only have covered the kings, but the general Israeli history as well (as a fuller Photius quote shows). The work you mentioned wasn't the only one Justus wrote (IIRC, he wrote over 80 books, among others a book named
A History of the Jewish War, which is lost, with a different inclination than Josephus. Josephus himself refers to Justus).