Where did Christianity come Frum?

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Where did Christianity come Frum?

Post #1

Post by Jagella »

(No, that's not a typo in the title of this thread.)

Consider the mysterious and fascinating sect that's become known as the "Cult of John Frum." This sect originated on an island in the Pacific during World War II. The island had become "invaded" by American soldiers who were based there as they advanced west against the Japanese. The Americans brought with them much that seemed magical to the natives such as food that didn't appear to the natives to be gathered or grown. They had planes and trucks and bulldozers as well as as strange things that made strange sounds (phonographs and radios). And unlike some of the white men who had previously visited the island (the British and the French), the Americans soldiers treated the natives well.

So one day the Americans left the island. Suddenly all the marvels they brought with them were gone much of it dumped into the sea. But their memory was not forgotten as the natives began to "worship America." They fashioned effigies of the American planes, sang patriotic American songs as best they could remember them, and marched with wooden "rifles" as the American soldiers had done.

But perhaps the most fascinating belief of this sect involved some of the visions some of them started to have. Some of the natives started seeing a mysterious man at night on the beach. He looked like an American soldier, and he uttered prophecies that some day the Americans will return.

This man become known as "John Frum," and he is evidently based on a soldier named John who was from America.

Anyway, the story of the John-Frum sect demonstrates how religions like Christianity can originate. No real gods or miracles are needed. All you need are superstitious and primitive people who are quick to look for gods whom they hope will save them. Yes, the Cult of John Frum is based on real places, things, people, and events. However, these places, things, people, and events are embellished with magical properties by the people who may have witnessed them. I see no reason at all why Christianity need be any different from this sect in these ways.

Question for Debate: Why dismiss the Cult of John Frum as superstition while insisting that Christianity is "the truth"?

John 14:3:
And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, so that where I am, there you may be also.
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Re: Where did Christianity come Frum?

Post #31

Post by Jagella »

Goose wrote:Its a valid way to support a premise especially when virtually every expert is saying the same thing.
If I don't have anything else to go on, then yes, I might go with a consensus of experts. If relevant information is available to me, however, and that information serves to falsify what those presumed experts are claiming, then I conclude that that information is what is more likely to be true. In the case of New Testament studies, the relevant information regarding the historicity of Jesus is available to laypersons as well as scholars. After reading and considering that information, I've concluded that there is no good evidence for a historical Jesus.

Sorry! :(
Would you accept the argument for evolution based on a "consensus" of scientists?
I consider that to be a valid argument in favour of evolution, yes.
So you'd explain that evolution has happened because the experts say it has occurred.
...evidence is interpreted to support Evolutionary theory.
I hope not! It makes sense to me that the evidence should come first and then the theory tested to see if that evidence supports it. In the case of Jesus studies, the historicity of Jesus has been assumed from the start as a Christian dogma based on faith. The "evidence" for his historicity came later when skeptics started to question it. For example, 2 Peter 1:16 has the author asserting that Jesus was "no cleverly devised myth" and that he and other Christians were "eyewitnesses of his majesty." So here we have an argument from authority being employed at the very earliest stages of Christianity to "prove" a historical Jesus. So it's: Jesus existed because we said so.
Its never an inane argument or stupid argument to rely on or appeal to qualified experts.
Oh it's good to check what people have to say about an issue. "Experts" might be very helpful in presenting the logic and evidence that supports some proposition. But I don't go by their word alone to judge the truth of that proposition.
Yes we know people make up stories but how do you know Avatar was a made up story?
It's setting is on an alien planet that harbors life. Humans have not yet been able to travel to such a planet. It is then probably fiction. In much the same way, the gospel tale is based on premises for which we have no evidence. Being consistent, I conclude that the gospel tale--like Avatar--is probably fiction.
Besides, I'm not saying I know how old fossils are. So I'm not relying on authority regarding their age.
But you inevitably will have to rely on the authority of experts for fossil dating if you ever wish to argue for evolution.
Again, I need to correct you regarding my knowledge of the age of fossils. I don't know how old fossils are, and I never said I did know how old they are. And neither am I arguing for "evolution." I don't know if evolution really occurred because I have little first-hand evidence for it. I'm well aware that the "experts" say evolution occurred, but I don't think evolution happened because somebody said so. Evolution seems to be part of the world I live in as I see things changing all the time. This empirical evidence is what has led me to conclude that biological evolution has probably occurred.
I have no way of establishing their age. Neither do you. We need experts for that...To get the dating you need experts. See how that works?
Experts are fine for the job of dating fossils, but they fall short of being able to demonstrate the age of those fossils on their word alone. In a similar fashion, Bible scholars are helpful in providing information about the text of the Bible, but their word alone isn't what suffices as that information.
I don't believe that's correct. In the documentaries I've watched it was assumed that there was a "real John Frum" who inspired the cult although his real name is unknown.
That would mean there was no real John Frum.
I'm not sure how it logically follows that if we don't know the actual name of the soldier who inspired the Cult of John Frum, then he did not exist.
Those many critics are non-expert internet blogger types. Of course it would be dumb to count them to determine whether Jesus existed or not. That would be an argumentum ad populum. And thats a fallacy.
Who's making that argument? I'm not arguing that since some "internet blogger types" question the historicity of Jesus, then he may not have existed.

Incidentally, there's tons of real-Jesus apologetics on blogs. I hope you agree with me that just because information is posted on a blog doesn't mean it's misinformation.
There you go with the may have never been rubbish again. If all you want to argue is that its possible that Jesus may have never existed then fine, go ahead.
I have no problem admitting I'm not sure about the existence of Jesus. The reason I'm so unsure about his historicity is because the evidence is so very ambiguous. The very same evidence we have for Jesus we could have for a recognized myth. The evidence for Jesus is completely in the form of documents, and documents will stand as still for lies as they will for truths.

So if my uncertainty annoys you, then take it up with the writers of the New Testament.
Stop asking me if it could have been.
Sorry, but we should consider all relevant possibilities and not just what we want to believe.
Many Jews were crucified by the Romans. So what does that prove?
The crucifixion of the Jews on the part of the Romans helps to form the basis for my hypothesis that the story of Jesus was based on the "tradition" of Jewish rebels being executed by the Romans. No doubt there was much sympathy for and approval of these crucified rebels on the part of Jews, and to create a Jesus based on these rebels would probably appeal to some Jews.
Oh I absolutely agree Christianity drew upon Judaism. Now how do you get from there to Jesus wasnt historical?
As we have seen, the Cult of John Frum was affected by Christianity. So we know that emerging religions can get their "facts" from older religions rather than base those facts on real people and events.
The John Frum cult emerged in direct opposition to Christian influence borrowing ideas out of a sense of competition.
That's probably what Christianity did to Judaism--Christianity borrowed ideas out of a "sense of competition."

Thanks for helping me make my case.
But you say Carrier has done a great job. Well what makes Carriers work so great compared to the work of the vast majority of scholars who you virtually swept under the carpet in a single stroke as not good historians?
Carrier is a very good writer and speaker, and he's not shy about making a case for his ideas. I agree that time will tell if his ideas catch on.
It wouldnt, by chance, be because Carrier holds a mythical view now would it?
I don't think so. I don't agree with all mythicist arguments.
Name them. Show me their testimonies.
LOL--I don't need the names of the natives of Tanna who said they saw John Frum to know that they existed. I've seen the documentary with footage from WWII that has the natives interacting with the American soldiers and the subsequent emergence of their cult. There is obviously no such evidence for Jesus.
And after looking at the evidence have you concluded he wasnt real yet?
I don't think anybody will ever know if John Frum existed. The evidence is too ambiguous. The same goes for Jesus: the evidence is too ambiguous to tell if he was real or not.

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Re: Where did Christianity come Frum?

Post #32

Post by Jubal »

Goose wrote:
Jagella wrote:I already explained that trusting only the words of "experts" is not sufficient to demonstrate anything's truth.
Its a valid way to support a premise especially when virtually every expert is saying the same thing.
Experts ?
99% of those alleged 'experts' are FAITHFUL CHRISTIANS.

They HAVE to believe in Jesus - else they lose their faith, their religion, their friends, perhaps even their job - we've seen it happen many times.

Worthless as evidence.

How many NON-Christian contemporary ancient historians, respected and published in the field, have investigated the evidence and concluded Jesus existed ?

Maybe a few ?
Can you name any such ?
(I've heard of just three IIRC, compared with thousands of faithful Christian 'scholars'.)

Those alleged experts are the most biased sample you could find on the planet - faithful believers with a personal connection to Jesus.

How many faithful Hindu scholars believe in Krishna ?
Should we believe everything they believe about Krishna ?

Or does that silly argument only apply to YOUR faith ?


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Re: Where did Christianity come Frum?

Post #33

Post by Jagella »

Jubal wrote:Those alleged experts are the most biased sample you could find on the planet - faithful believers with a personal connection to Jesus.
That kind of bias among Bible scholars doesn't seem to be taken into consideration when we hear this consensus-of-Bible-scholars argument for the historicity of Jesus. Sure, everybody has a bias, but most Bible scholars as you say have a Christian bias and so do their employers. If many Bible scholars who work for these Christian organizations concluded openly that Jesus probably didn't exist, then they'd be out on their scholarly butts filling out applications at the employment office.

So the consensus-of-Bible-scholars argument for the historicity of Jesus is not very convincing to me. I might accept it if I didn't know any better, but I do know better.

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Re: Where did Christianity come Frum?

Post #34

Post by Tcg »

Jagella wrote:
So the consensus-of-Bible-scholars argument for the historicity of Jesus is not very convincing to me. I might accept it if I didn't know any better, but I do know better.
And don't forget, this consensus-of-Bible-scholars only addresses whether or not some dude named Jesus actually existed. It doesn't address his supposed miracles, his claimed resurrection, nor the idea that he was God.

What real difference does it make if these myths were tacked onto some real dude or if the dude was also mythological? None that I can determine. The myths didn't happen in either case.

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Re: Where did Christianity come Frum?

Post #35

Post by Jagella »

Tcg wrote:What real difference does it make if these myths were tacked onto some real dude or if the dude was also mythological? None that I can determine. The myths didn't happen in either case.
That's a great question. For most non-Christians a mythical Jesus is not much different from a "real" Jesus with miracles "tacked onto" him. However, I have an interest in history, and the historicity of Jesus and the early church is important to me. I'd like to know if he existed. That's why I make an issue about what real-Jesus apologists are claiming about the existence of Jesus. I don't want to be misled by them.

And of course, a real Jesus is vital to the faith of most Christians. Without a historical Christ, they may feel there is no heaven. Consider what the Apostles' Creed has to say:
I believe in Jesus Christ, God's only Son, our Lord,
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, died, and was buried;
he descended to the dead.
On the third day he rose again;
he ascended into heaven...
Everything said here involves an earthly Christ. So the real drive for a historical Jesus is based in Christian faith more than in any historical evidence.

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Re: Where did Christianity come Frum?

Post #36

Post by Tcg »

Jagella wrote:
However, I have an interest in history, and the historicity of Jesus and the early church is important to me. I'd like to know if he existed.
I certainly understand that desire and interest. My point was more that many Christians present the fact that many Bible scholars believe Jesus was a real man and think that this is some great victory for their point.

They overlook that this consensus says nothing of the supernatural claims about Jesus. The agreement that Jesus existed is no victory for those that claim he performed miracles, rose from the grave, or was God in the flesh. That is a totally different argument.

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Re: Where did Christianity come Frum?

Post #37

Post by Clownboat »

Goose wrote:
Jagella wrote:All evolutionary biologists hold to the "reality" of biological evolution, but I'd never be so stupid as to argue their majority as a reason to think that evolution takes place!
What makes you think that would be a stupid argument? What If I were to ask you why dismiss the movie Avatar as fiction while accepting evolution? How would you answer that given you cant prove evolution?
I look at the evidence for evolution like fossils, DNA, and the geographical distribution of species.
Sure you can look at the evidence. Great. But at some point you will need the informed opinion of an expert in order to come to some conclusion. For example, go ahead and tell me how you date fossils without appealing to experts?
The same goes for anybody who claims Jesus is historical--I want to see convincing evidence. If that evidence is absent--and it is--then I remain a doubter.
But your personal doubt here or what you personally demand evidentially in order to be convinced is entirely irrelevant.
Actually, some people do study the Cult of John Frum. But studying the sect built around the figure of John Frum doesn't make him real, and studying Christianity doesn't make Jesus real.
You are stating the obvious while missing the point. I didnt argue there werent scholars who studied the cult of John Frum. I argued there are no scholars who study the cult that hold to a real historical John Frum. Whereas almost all scholars, some of which are critics, do hold to a real historical Jesus. And we can infer from these two facts that the evidence to support the existence of Jesus and John Frum are not the same as youve tried to argue. We can infer from this that the evidence for Jesus must be stronger than for John Frum since it has convinced critics of Christianity that there was a historical Jesus.
I must take back what I said. It depends on what you mean by "John Frum." The John Frum that the natives of Tanna saw in visions was obviously illusory, but there could have been a real American soldier who later became identified as John Frum.
In either case there was no real John Frum.
The same goes for Jesus. There may have been one or more "Jesuses" who engaged in a tradition of rebellion against the Romans getting themselves crucified.
There may have been... isnt much of an argument. Actually it isnt an argument at all. You need evidence to support this idea regarding Jesus so where is it? Pointing to John Frum doesnt establish this argument.
The primitive and superstitious people of first-century Israel--just like the primitive and superstitious people of mid-twentieth-century Tanna--built up a religious cult around these Jewish rebels just like the people of Tanna built up their religion around the American soldiers that visited their island.
Asserted but not shown.
The similarities between the two religions are striking indeed!
Oh I have no doubt the John Frum cult borrowed from Christianity. Theyve virtually admitted as much and it makes sense since its a cult which emerged as a reaction against Christian influence.
Yes, we've heard all about the "vast scholarship," (ad infinitum, ad nauseum) and I'm still waiting for a shred of evidence for a historical Jesus.
If the evidence that exists is enough to convince critics like Erhman that Jesus was real I think I can safely rule out statements like these as a denial of evidence.
I have often disagreed with both my doctors and my mechanics. I was right every time, in fact. The reason I was right was because I used reason and evidence to conclude that they were wrong.
So youve proven your Doctor and mechanic wrong often. I suggest its time to find new ones. In any event, your anecdotal stories of your incompetent Doctor and mechanic in no way overturn the fact that an appeal to authority is valid form of argumentation. Hence no logical error on my part.
So that's why your argument from authority is fallacious.
Its not fallacious to appeal to a qualified authority. If you think so, you dont understand valid argumentation. Now if I were to appeal to your car mechanic as an authority on the historicity of Jesus, well, that would be fallacious.
I don't doubt that Bible scholars are experts in Biblical studies. They can tell you a lot about the Bible. But they're not historians--or at least they're not good historians.
The bold is nothing more than an unsupported assertion. I suppose you think Richard Carrier is a good historian though, right?
I don't agree with your logic. Just because somebody doesn't have a good argument and evidence against a position doesn't make that position right.
You dont even seem to understand the logic. I never said anything like, because somebody doesn't have a good argument and evidence against a position that position is right.
But there are good arguments and evidence against the historicity of Jesus. Richard Carrier has plenty of them.
Has he? What is the evidence that Jesus did not exist?
I know that the gospel tale reads like fiction with all its outlandish claims, but I'm not sure that Bible scholars don't know that too. I don't see how they could miss it!
I thought you said youve read Ehrman.
Tacitus wasn't a contemporary of Jesus, and we don't know his sources for Jesus. Since we don't know where he got his information, then his testimony is of little value as evidence for Jesus. He may have been just repeating what Christians were saying.
He doesnt need to be contemporary. He was a hostile source who didnt trust Christians and had access to official Roman records. Why would he take the word of Christians, a cult he despised and called superstitious? His testimony to the existence of Jesus is about as strong as it gets for history.
We have the testimony of the natives of Tanna who we know were in fact contemporaries of John Frum if he existed.
Sure but do you have an enemy of the cult attesting to the existence of John Frum within say even 100 years? No, you dont. So the evidence for Jesus and John Frum is demonstrably not the same.
Ehrman uses the word of the followers of Jesus to "prove" Jesus' historicity. It's the exact same evidence we have for John Frum only the testimony for Frum is far better than that for Jesus!
Ehrman uses Tacitus as well.
But I already explained that I don't go by a laundry list of scholars to assess historicity.
I didnt ask for a laundry list. I just asked for one measly scholar who holds to a historical John Frum. Whats the matter, cant find one?
But here's an online article by Paul Raffaele who writes for Smithsonian Magazine, In John They Trust.
The author doesnt hold to a historical John Frum. In fact the article says this.
  • Its possible that local leaders conceived of John Frum as a powerful white-skinned ally in the fight against the colonials, who were attempting to crush much of the islanders culture and prod them into Christianity. In fact, that view of the origins of the cult gained credence in 1949, when the island administrator, Alexander Rentoul, noting that frum is the Tannese pronunciation of broom, wrote that the object of the John Frum movement was to sweep (or broom) the white people off the island of Tanna.
Scholars are a dime-a-dozen.
So says the guy who appeals to Richard Carrier.
LOL--it depends on what the doctorate has been awarded in. But again, I'm not looking for PhDs--I'm looking for evidence, and you don't have any.
But you seem to think Richard Carrier is truly qualified and a good historian, no?
So if somebody lied about John Frum, then somebody could have lied about Jesus.
But you are back to simply making obvious statements like it could have been all made up. Thats not an argument.
The gospel writers, in particular, could have easily been lying.
Prove they were lying. Dont just tell me they could have been.
Anyway, it seems like religion often blinds people to the facts.
What is Bart Ehrman blinded by then? Because he certainly isnt religious and hes no friend to Christianity.
You're forgetting that we humans are not as superstitious as we once were (at least some of us).

You need to understand that if the John Frum account took place 2,000 years ago, and Rome adopted it as a religion, that it would likely have people in this very day believing that he was just as real as many believe Jesus was.

You're looking at John Frum through modern glasses. If you did the same thing with Christianity, I submit you would not be a believer.
You can give a man a fish and he will be fed for a day, or you can teach a man to pray for fish and he will starve to death.

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Re: Where did Christianity come Frum?

Post #38

Post by Jagella »

Tcg wrote:They overlook that this consensus says nothing of the supernatural claims about Jesus. The agreement that Jesus existed is no victory for those that claim he performed miracles, rose from the grave, or was God in the flesh. That is a totally different argument.
Some real-Jesus apologists like Bart Ehrman have stripped Jesus of his magical powers and have demoted him from god to "apocalyptic preacher." This divestment is necessary to make a historical Jesus plausible. So yes, it's important to understand what is meant by a "historical Jesus." Many Christians seem happy enough to settle for this stripped-down Jesus apparently feeling that he's better than a myth. With a sufficient apologetic, the miracles can be tacked onto Jesus later.

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Re: Where did Christianity come Frum?

Post #39

Post by Jagella »

Clownboat wrote:You need to understand that if the John Frum account took place 2,000 years ago, and Rome adopted it as a religion, that it would likely have people in this very day believing that he was just as real as many believe Jesus was.
I don't doubt that if John Frum catches on like Jesus, then we'll have John Frum scholars assuring us that he was historical. All those Frum scholars couldn't be wrong, now could they?

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Re: Where did Christianity come Frum?

Post #40

Post by Goose »

Jagella wrote:If relevant information is available to me, however, and that information serves to falsify what those presumed experts are claiming, then I conclude that that information is what is more likely to be true.
I agree that if evidence exists which would falsify what a scholar has claimed then we should go with the evidence. Now where is the evidence that falsifies the widely held position that Jesus was historical?
In the case of New Testament studies, the relevant information regarding the historicity of Jesus is available to laypersons as well as scholars. After reading and considering that information, I've concluded that there is no good evidence for a historical Jesus.
But now you are saying something different. You are not saying youve found evidence that falsifies the claim that Jesus existed. You are simply saying you dont think there is good evidence to support the claim. Thats two different things entirely.
So you'd explain that evolution has happened because the experts say it has occurred.
I wouldnt explain Darwins idea of evolution as having happened. But I would accept an argument from the majority of experts as a valid form of argumentation in favour of evolution, yes.
I hope not! It makes sense to me that the evidence should come first and then the theory tested to see if that evidence supports it. In the case of Jesus studies, the historicity of Jesus has been assumed from the start as a Christian dogma based on faith. The "evidence" for his historicity came later when skeptics started to question it. For example, 2 Peter 1:16 has the author asserting that Jesus was "no cleverly devised myth" and that he and other Christians were "eyewitnesses of his majesty." So here we have an argument from authority being employed at the very earliest stages of Christianity to "prove" a historical Jesus. So it's: Jesus existed because we said so.
This isnt even a coherent argument. I have no idea what it is your are arguing.
"Experts" might be very helpful in presenting the logic and evidence that supports some proposition.
Right. And if they do you need evidence and counter arguments to overturn it.
But I don't go by their word alone to judge the truth of that proposition.
Thats fine in cases where a single scholar may have done little more than simply assert an opinion with no supporting argumentation or evidence.
It's setting is on an alien planet that harbors life. Humans have not yet been able to travel to such a planet. It is then probably fiction.
But that doesnt follow. Just because we havent yet the technology to travel to distant planets doesnt mean Avatar is fiction. Isnt it possible that there is a planet out there with big blue monkey-like humanoids that have tales?
In much the same way, the gospel tale is based on premises for which we have no evidence.
What on earth? We are talking about the mundane claim of Jesus existing in history. Surely we have ample evidence to support the claim that a person can exist. Geez.
Being consistent, I conclude that the gospel tale--like Avatar--is probably fiction.
But your logic is a mess.
I don't know how old fossils are, and I never said I did know how old they are.
But you implied knowledge of the age of fossils when you said you could see transitional fossils. How can they be claimed to be transitional if you dont have any idea of their age? And you get an idea of their age from experts.
Evolution seems to be part of the world I live in as I see things changing all the time. This empirical evidence is what has led me to conclude that biological evolution has probably occurred.
Sure if you are now simply talking about biological evolution in terms of observable change. But thats something different than what you said earlier when you tried to welcome me to the naturalistic world of Darwinian evolution.
Experts are fine for the job of dating fossils, but they fall short of being able to demonstrate the age of those fossils on their word alone. In a similar fashion, Bible scholars are helpful in providing information about the text of the Bible, but their word alone isn't what suffices as that information.
Thats fine. Again Im not thinking in context to experts who merely assert things without any support whatsoever. Im thinking more along the lines of experts who publish in peer reviewed journals, write academic material, author books which evaluate the evidence, and so on.
I'm not sure how it logically follows that if we don't know the actual name of the soldier who inspired the Cult of John Frum, then he did not exist.
Let me be clearer then. There was no American soldier named John Frum in the region at the time. He doesnt exist and never did.
I have no problem admitting I'm not sure about the existence of Jesus. The reason I'm so unsure about his historicity is because the evidence is so very ambiguous.
Again, always with these statements about your personal doubt. Your personal doubt is irrelevant.
The very same evidence we have for Jesus we could have for a recognized myth. The evidence for Jesus is completely in the form of documents, and documents will stand as still for lies as they will for truths.
There are numerous people from history who have nothing other than documentary evidence to support their existence and also have supernatural claims attributed them. Alexander the Great comes to mind.
The crucifixion of the Jews on the part of the Romans helps to form the basis for my hypothesis that the story of Jesus was based on the "tradition" of Jewish rebels being executed by the Romans.
Which Jewish rebels are you referring to?
No doubt there was much sympathy for and approval of these crucified rebels on the part of Jews, and to create a Jesus based on these rebels would probably appeal to some Jews.
Easily falsified. If Jesus was based on some Jewish rebels who were executed by Rome then we would expect the Jesus of the Gospels to be depicted as having a rebellious attitude toward Roman rule and instigating militant action against Rome. A Jewish military hero of sorts. But we dont see that at all. In fact we see quite the opposite. We see a peaceful and loving teacher who preached that Jews should pay their taxes to Rome. Therefore, Jesus wasnt based on some Jewish rebels.
As we have seen, the Cult of John Frum was affected by Christianity. So we know that emerging religions can get their "facts" from older religions rather than base those facts on real people and events.
But you bear the burden to prove that in the case of Jesus.
That's probably what Christianity did to Judaism--Christianity borrowed ideas out of a "sense of competition."
Nah. Like I said they werent competing with Judaism. They were an extension of it.
Carrier is a very good writer and speaker, and he's not shy about making a case for his ideas. I agree that time will tell if his ideas catch on.
Well dont hold your breath. Carriers ideas arent anything new. The mythical Jesus theory has been widely discredited among scholars.
LOL--I don't need the names of the natives of Tanna who said they saw John Frum to know that they existed.
Why are you laughing? You claimed to know the people who were eyewitnesses for the events that led to the Cult of John Frum. Surely if you know them, you can at the very least name them. But you cant even do that. So I conclude you dont know them.
I've seen the documentary with footage from WWII that has the natives interacting with the American soldiers and the subsequent emergence of their cult. There is obviously no such evidence for Jesus.
No video footage of Jesus disciples? Yeah. Obviously.
I don't think anybody will ever know if John Frum existed.
I know he didnt exist. So do the scholars who study the cult. If he had existed there would be American military service records supporting his existence. There arent.
The same goes for Jesus: the evidence is too ambiguous to tell if he was real or not.
Again, you mean you personally find it ambiguous. Scholars dont.

You arent addressing the bottom line here. In fact youve ignored it in your last post. The bottom line is that Ive answered your OP question by giving a valid reason to reject the John Frum cult as a superstition - Frum wasnt real. And Ive provided support for the claim he wasnt real. Until you can either prove Frum was real or prove Jesus wasnt, I think we are basically done here with everything else being a diversion.
Things atheists say:

"Is it the case [that torturing and killing babies for fun is immoral]? Prove it." - Bust Nak

"For the record...I think the Gospels are intentional fiction and Jesus wasn't a real guy." – Difflugia

"Julius Caesar and Jesus both didn't exist." - brunumb

"...most atheists have no arguments or evidence to disprove God." – unknown soldier (a.k.a. the banned member Jagella)

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