Surlethe wrote:A suggestion which I am not qualified to carry out: It might be good to end this thread with a simple list of all of the scholarly-accepted facts available regarding the historical Jesus.
A good source is the Jesus Seminar. This is an international group of scholars (both secular and religious) that have tried to develop a methodology to distinguish authentic traditions from the confusing mythological mess that is first-century Christianity. The Wikipedia article gives a good overview, but to summarize: the seminar came up with a few guidelines for establishing the authenticity of any particular Gospel passage or pericope, such as multiple attestation from different authors, or indications of an oral origin. For example, if a passage has all the textual hallmarks of an oral origin, e.g. a parable, an aphorism, or a catchy sound-bite, etc., it has a greater claim to authenticity. Another way to establish an authentic oral origin is if multiple Gospel authors clumsily tried to work the saying into their narratives in different ways, (such as the "salt of the Earth" saying referenced in my post above.)
In brief, their most important conclusions are:
1) Jesus was an historical person from Nazareth
2) The Gospels of Matthew, Luke (and possibly Thomas) contain some authentic sayings of Jesus of Nazareth
3) Of all the sayings attributed to Jesus in the Gospels, only about 18% of them are authentic
4) Jesus was actually crucified by the Romans, but not necessarily for claiming to be the Son of God
The Seminar also assumes the standard conclusions of modern scholarship, e.g. Mark was the first Gospel, and Matthew and Luke drew both from Mark and a secondary "sayings Gospel" known as the Q document.
With that in mind, the Jesus seminar never directly attempts to refute the case for a mythic Jesus. However, they do more or less represent the conclusions of mainstream scholarship regarding the historical Jesus.
I'd like to point out that the case for a mythic Jesus and the case for an historical Jesus almost co-exist in different spheres. The case for a mythic Jesus, most notably expounded by Earl Doherty, focuses mostly on Paul's epistles and early first century writings, but fails to account for the Synoptic tradition. Whereas the Jesus seminar, and most of mainstream scholarship, is able to derive an historical Jesus from the Synoptic tradition, but cannot explain the silence towards Jesus's ministry or sayings in Paul's epistles.
However, there may be at least
some awareness of the Synoptic Jesus in Paul's epistles. For example:
Matt 24.43 wrote:But be sure of this, that if the head of the house had known at what time of the night the thief was coming, he would have been on the alert and would not have allowed his house to be broken into. For this reason you be ready too; for the Son of Man is coming at an hour when you do not think He will.
1 Thess 5:2 wrote:For you yourselves know full well that the day of the Lord will come just like a thief in the night
Also, 1 Timothy 5:18 seems to reference a saying from Luke 10:7. "The laborer is worthy of his wages."
So it may be that the case for a mythic Jesus is not as strong as it seems from reading Paul's letters. The conservative types may have a point that Paul had no cause to mention specific instances in Jesus's life, because his epistles are directed at an already-converted audience. Still, I find it bizarre that Paul constantly quotes from the Old Testament, but never directly attributes any saying to Jesus himself. Regardless, according to modern scholarship, the 'Q' sayings of Jesus found in the Synoptic tradition almost certainly existed (at least in oral form) at the time Paul was writing, so his failure to mention them cannot be attributed to their non-existence. I think the question is not "did Jesus of Nazareth exist", but rather, to what extent was Paul's community aware of the Gospel tradition, and how did the two seemingly disparate traditions merge into what we now call Christianity?