Tired of the Nonsense wrote:
The Resurrection Proof #2: The Holy Women Eyewitnesses
The holy women eyewitnesses are further proof that the Gospels are accurate historical records. If the accounts had been made up, no ancient author would have used women for witnesses to Christ's resurrection. Women were second class citizens in Bible times; their testimony was not even allowed in court. Yet the Bible says the risen Christ first appeared to Mary Magdalene and other holy women. Even the apostles did not believe Mary when she told them the tomb was empty. Jesus, who always had special respect for these women, honored them as the first eyewitnesses to his resurrection. The male Gospel writers had no choice but to report this embarrassing act of God's favor, because that was how it happened.
While it is true that the testimony of "mere" women was not allowed in court, we have no testimony of any "mere" woman to consult, because they left none.
This does not explain why women would be chosen as the first witnesses, either as decades-later fiction or in your conspiracy theory.
Tired of the Nonsense wrote:The Resurrection Proof #4: Changed Lives of James and Others
Changed lives are yet another proof of the resurrection. James, the brother of Jesus, was openly skeptical that Jesus was the Messiah. Later James became a courageous leader of the Jerusalem church, even being stoned to death for his faith. Why? The Bible says the risen Christ appeared to him. What a shock to see your own brother, alive again, after you knew he was dead. James and the apostles were effective missionaries because people could tell these men had touched and seen the risen Christ. With such zealous eyewitnesses, the early church exploded in growth, spreading west from Jerusalem to Rome and beyond. For 2,000 years, encounters with the resurrected Jesus have changed lives.
James the brother of Jesus who knew Jesus intimately his entire life, much like the rest of Jesus' family and neighbors in Galilee, was unimpressed with Jesus during Jesus' lifetime. Only after his brother was wrongly accused on trumped up charges and executed in the most ignominious fashion in Jewish society, did James take up the cause of his fallen brother.
This does not explain why James so drastically changed his views. In this vein you earlier referenced from Deuteronomy that any who are hung on a tree would be cursed; but that is simply
additional reason why James (and Jesus' own disciples and mother) would disbelieve, or at the most simply cut their losses, rather than compel them to start fabricating stories to put them
directly at odds with the ruling authorities.
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Danmark wrote:Re: the comparison of the historicity of Socrates with Jesus, there are glaring differences. One of the most striking is that with Socrates there is no claim that he was god or performed miracles or had other supernatural powers.
There is something about the descriptions of Socrates that has the 'ring of truth,' that is, the descriptions seem very human, as if a real person was described. A key example is his appearnce:
He was not the ideal of Athenian masculinity. Short and stocky, with a snub nose and bulging eyes, Socrates always seemed to appear to be staring. However, Plato pointed out that in the eyes of his students, Socrates possessed a different kind of attractiveness, not based on a physical ideal but on his brilliant debates and penetrating thought.
http://www.biography.com/people/socrates-9488126
In comparison, Jesus, tho' he lived about 400 years later, is portrayed very superficially in regard to his appearance. He was perfect, just too perfect.
You're serious? The gospels say absolutely nothing about Jesus' appearance to my recollection. But Christians believe that Isaiah 53 refers to Jesus:
He has no stately form or majesty
That we should look upon Him,
Nor appearance that we should be attracted to Him.
He's portrayed in various gospels as vindictive against a fig tree, vicious against the scribes and Pharisees, physically violent against money-changers, associate of prostitutes, sinners and tax collectors, supportive of Roman authority and all but blatantly violating Sabbath regulations.
All that is "just too perfect" in your view?
Portrayal of the disciples is even less flattering.
Regardless of how unbelievable miracles or the like are, I think on each of these three points there are some notable incongruencies which we wouldn't expect of a wholly fabricated story.