For example: Why did the Gospel of Mark tell of the 'Temple clearance' happening in the last week of his mission when the Gospel of John tells us that it happened in the first weeks? ........most strange.
...............and more to come.

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I didn’t mean anything different from “shifting events around” when I said “shifting events around a little”. Perhaps an idiom peculiar to me here. I can see how that could be confusing. The only thing that I can see that would limit what can be shifted around would be logic, like with something like seeing Jesus after he died.benchwarmer wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2024 4:23 pmYou are the one that introduced the timeline being off "a little". You failed to answer my question. What exactly fits inside this definition? Could it be anything that won't break your current beliefs?
First, you think I’m trying to eat my cake and have it, too. It makes perfect sense to eat the cake you have. It doesn’t make sense to eat your cake and have it, too, because after you eat it, it’s gone and so you don’t have it anymore.benchwarmer wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2024 4:23 pmNo, that's interpretation and possible thematic placement of sightings if we go by what you are saying. How can we know the sightings are of a 'resurrected Jesus' are not just a 'pre dead Jesus' placed conveniently in the timeline to fit the desired theme? The story lays out a timeline. The stories about Jesus before the crucifixion are assumed to be based on 'witness before death accounts' and the stories afterwards are assumed to be 'witness after death occurred'. However, you have just admitted that events may not be placed in the timeline according to their actual times, rendering any timeline suspect.
You are trying to have your cake and eat it too.
When convenient to your apologetics, the contradictory timelines are not relevant. When inconvenient to your apologetics, the idea the timeline is not correct is not relevant. How convenient for you
The amount of evasion and tinkering with words as well as appealing to Authorities (those who fit in with Christian propaganda of course) and trying to brush away the contradictions as minor.The Tanager wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2024 5:31 pmI didn’t mean anything different from “shifting events around” when I said “shifting events around a little”. Perhaps an idiom peculiar to me here. I can see how that could be confusing. The only thing that I can see that would limit what can be shifted around would be logic, like with something like seeing Jesus after he died.benchwarmer wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2024 4:23 pmYou are the one that introduced the timeline being off "a little". You failed to answer my question. What exactly fits inside this definition? Could it be anything that won't break your current beliefs?
First, you think I’m trying to eat my cake and have it, too. It makes perfect sense to eat the cake you have. It doesn’t make sense to eat your cake and have it, too, because after you eat it, it’s gone and so you don’t have it anymore.benchwarmer wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2024 4:23 pmNo, that's interpretation and possible thematic placement of sightings if we go by what you are saying. How can we know the sightings are of a 'resurrected Jesus' are not just a 'pre dead Jesus' placed conveniently in the timeline to fit the desired theme? The story lays out a timeline. The stories about Jesus before the crucifixion are assumed to be based on 'witness before death accounts' and the stories afterwards are assumed to be 'witness after death occurred'. However, you have just admitted that events may not be placed in the timeline according to their actual times, rendering any timeline suspect.
You are trying to have your cake and eat it too.
When convenient to your apologetics, the contradictory timelines are not relevant. When inconvenient to your apologetics, the idea the timeline is not correct is not relevant. How convenient for you
Second, use reason only and not pop-psychology in this discussion. Address my reasoning, don’t accuse me of accepting things for convenience. The theme doesn’t seem to be that different in the placement, but it’s a theme that fits both at the beginning and the end of Jesus’ ministry. The resurrection obviously fits at the end only.
Hello, and thankyou for your post.Realworldjack wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2024 5:25 pm [Replying to oldbadger in post #1]
This is quite comical. I mean, on the one hand we have those who want to complain that there are variances and contradictions between the Gospel writers, and then on the other hand we have those who complain that the authors record other events so closely that they want to insist that they must have copied each other. Exactly what would make you happy? If they record the events exactly, you want to complain of collusion. If they vary in any way you want to complain about that.
Wrong! So you've never been a Detective, I can see.How about this? When detectives question witnesses, they expect the witnesses to recall some of the events exactly, while at the same time they expect there to be variances, and contradictions. If the witnesses recite the same exact testimony with no variances, and contradictions the detectives suspect some sort of collusion, while they conclude one, or both of them are lying if the testimonies completely contradict.
So (apart from death, resurrection and communion) why didn't Paul write a sentence about anything that his God on Earth had said or done? Strange.So, what do we have with the Gospel accounts? It seems as if we have exactly what a detective would expect. In other words, we have some events reported exactly, while we have variances, and contradiction. Moreover, we have one of the Gospel writers who wrote not one, but two long and detailed letters addressed to one individual. In his second letter addressed to this one individual, we have very strong evidence that this author was a traveling companion of the Apostle Paul. Do you realize what this means? Well, it is a fact which cannot be denied that Paul was alive at the time of the death of Jesus, and we can know that Paul would have known and spent time with the original apostles, including Peter, James (the brother of Jesus) and John. This means, we have very strong evidence that the author of one of the Gospels would have been alive at the time of the events recorded, and that he would have spent many years with Paul and would have also known and spent time with the original apostles, hearing the claims they were making from there very lips.
The author of G-Mark was (very likely) a partial witness to some of the events in his gospel, but the others...? You've got to be joking!My point is, it seems to me we have exactly what we would expect. We have the authors reporting some events exactly, while we have discrepancies, and contradictions, on top of the fact we have very strong evidence that at least one of the authors would have been right there on the scene. Of course, I am not suggesting in the least that what I have presented should cause one to believe the accounts, but I am not certain what you believe should cause us to doubt?
Yet you've failed to produce some examples like I've asked so we can examine whether your example is obviously different than the contradictory examples that led to this line of debate.The Tanager wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2024 5:31 pmI didn’t mean anything different from “shifting events around” when I said “shifting events around a little”. Perhaps an idiom peculiar to me here. I can see how that could be confusing. The only thing that I can see that would limit what can be shifted around would be logic, like with something like seeing Jesus after he died.benchwarmer wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2024 4:23 pmYou are the one that introduced the timeline being off "a little". You failed to answer my question. What exactly fits inside this definition? Could it be anything that won't break your current beliefs?
??? Do you really think we all need an explanation of a common idiom?The Tanager wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2024 5:31 pm First, you think I’m trying to eat my cake and have it, too. It makes perfect sense to eat the cake you have. It doesn’t make sense to eat your cake and have it, too, because after you eat it, it’s gone and so you don’t have it anymore.
? This sounds like evasion. As above, let's 'use reason' and show examples. i.e. support your claims as required please. I'm not saying you are definitely wrong, but I remain unconvinced since you have not shown how this works on one case, but not the other.The Tanager wrote: ↑Fri Mar 29, 2024 5:31 pm Second, use reason only and not pop-psychology in this discussion.
You are demonstrating a lack of understanding here. Paul traveled the known world at the time planting Churches. This means Paul would have spent years in one town before traveling to the next, and it would be only then that Paul would have had the need to write a letter to the first Church he planted. When he wrote to said Church, he was not in any way intending his letter to be contained in the Bible which he had no idea about. Rather, Paul was only addressing that particular Church, addressing concerns in that Church. In other words, Paul's letters are not at all concerned with explaining to the world the life and teachings of Jesus. Again, his only concern was to address particular concerns in the Church he was addressing. Moreover, I did not say anything concerning Paul being a witness to the life of Jesus. Rather, what I said was, "it is a fact which cannot be denied that Paul was alive at the time of Jesus". The only point I was making there was the fact that we have very strong evidence that one of the Gospel writers was a traveling companion of Paul which would mean that we have an author of a Gospel alive at the time of the events he records, and would have known and spent time with the original apostles.So (apart from death, resurrection and communion) why didn't Paul write a sentence about anything that his God on Earth had said or done? Strange.
The point is really not the detective. Rather, the point is the fact that witnesses can, and do witness the same exact event and report some things exactly, along with there being variances, and contradictions, but this is not evidence the reports must, and have to be false. This is what you need to address.Again.......... Detectives who 'expect' should be dumped from their jobs. Expectations like that can lead to wrongful decisions, wrongful arrests, and more.
I do not know what sort of evidence you have that the author of Mark would have been any sort of witness? What I do know is, we have very strong evidence the author of one of the Gospels would have been alive at the time of the events recorded, and would have known and spent time with the original apostles.The author of G-Mark was (very likely) a partial witness to some of the events in his gospel, but the others...?
You make this statement as if it were a fact, and it is not a fact in the least. I mean think about what you are saying here? It is not like there were copies going around in order for all to have access. Copies would have been hard to come by at that time.The authors of G-Matthew needed to copy much of G-Mark
My friend, you can make statements like this if you wish but it is not helping your case. I do not have dreams, but rather I deal with fact. It is a fact that Jesus walked the face of the earth. It is a fact that he had a large following. It is a fact that Jesus was crucified. It is a fact we have reports of Jesus alive after the crucifixion. It is a fact that this same Jesus is the most well-known name in the history of the world some 2000 years later, and it seems you would have us believe that all this was accomplished by peasants who could not read, or write, when we have evidence these folks would have spoken more than one language. These are the facts we have, and you can believe as you wish. The problem is the fact that you seem to want to cast some sort of doubt about the reports but what you have given us thus far does not lend to doubt. In other words, I am not suggesting in any way you have no reason to doubt, but you seem to be suggesting there is no reason for anyone to believe, when you are not giving me any reason for doubt.So you have got one partial witness, masses of Oral Tradition (Northern Galilean Jewish peasants couldn't write) and quite a lot of dreams.
If you are speaking to me, then I have not suggested that any of the Biblical authors would have been eyewitnesses of the resurrection. Rather, it is a fact that we have very strong evidence that at least one of the Gospel writers would have been alive at the time of the events recorded.I already rebutted the 'eyewitness differences' excuse.
Again, this demonstrates a lack of understanding. What Paul would have taught the different Churches he addressed in his letters would have mostly been orally as he would have spent years there planting the Church and we have no idea what all he may have explained to them. When Paul wrote letters to the Churches he had already planted his concern would not have been with what he had already taught. Rather, Paul was concerned with issues inside that particular Church. In other words, Paul's letters are not concerned with explaining the death and resurrection to the world, and he certainly was not concerned in his letters about "firming up the sloppy stories we now have" since it is more than likely that what we now have, Paul would have been unaware of, since what we now have, either was not written at the time, or was in the process of being written.The excuse for Paul is even worse. If Paul was trying to talk his Greek Pagans into belief in Jesus, he would surely have recounted the 'signs' he did. The events, the miracles that accompanies the crucifixion and God knows a reliable account of the resurrection to firm up the sloppy stories we have now.
This is answered perfectly above in that Paul would have done all of this orally, and his letters were intended to address different concerns.But Paul says almost nothing. Just the fact of the crucifixion and a rather odd 'last supper' event which sounds more a ritual than an occurrence.
Again, Paul may have said a ton concerning all of what you say. With this being the case there would have been no need to address these things in his letters. The intent in Paul's letters was to address particular concerns in that particular Church. Moreover, we know for a fact that Paul wrote more letters than we now have. The point is, we have no idea what all Paul may have taught, said, and done.Where I am is, if it is based on nothing, it is no more than a ritual applied to a faithclaim and if based on a real event (execution) then the lest Paul says about who executed Jesus and why, the better.
I am not at all concerned with silencing anyone. In fact, I invite the criticism because it helps me think through the issues. This is why I would much rather converse with those opposed. I am also not concerned with alternative explanations gaining traction. However, the fact that you understand that you must and have to come up with alternative explanations sort of demonstrates there is reasons to believe the claims, otherwise there would be no need in the alternatives.That is what Apologetics is all about, but the fact is that the Bible has Lost credibility and the alternative hypothesis -explanation has gained traction and trust me, fella, will gain more, unless Xstianity find a way of silencing us.