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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You see? So you couldn't focus upon the one gospel with a clear concise brief list of reasons for your very strange claim that G-John was written before 70AD.SiNcE_1985 wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2024 2:35 pm.......
First off, had you taken time to actually, not only read what I said, but also comprehend what I said...
...........
So, I wasted my time...and it won't happen again.
Ok, so I will trade your blank, empty assertion with one of my own.
Which is a good thing.we also have no originals to evaluate -- only copies of copies of copies of copies.
When you give specifics of B, then I'll address it.You are only attacking B), and not addressing anything with A). This is a strawman argument.
Um, I recall asking you a question about your belief in Christianity.. pertaining to whether you believed that history supports Jesus' followers belief in his resurrection.POI Who says I believe every part of every written story in antiquity? I don't. I gave you two big examples already.
Ok, so..You act as if both positions stand upon equal footing. They don't. Does the 'evidence' more-so suggest direct deposed eyewitnesses to this claim of the "extraordinary", or not? Like I stated prior, with haunted house claims, without eyewitnesses, in which we can depose, the claim then has no legs. It has no real starting point. Why? Such sightings are based solely upon a one-time claimed event which leaves little else behind for verification. If no one really saw it first-hand, but merely report, through circulating oral tradition alone, that such an event took place, then why should any logical and reasonable human decide to apply faith to such a collection of claims, manufactured from hearsay? My vote is then for indoctrination leading to specific conformation bias, and/or cognitive dissonance, and/or evolutionary processes which propel humans to apply possible type 1 errors.
We've just established that we have copies upon copies..which means that stuff that was added or molested can be exposed, which is why most Bibles are heavily footnoted throughout with things like "verses 14-15 are not in the earliest manuscripts", with prime example being Mark 16:9-20.POI The earliest preserved complete sources, which were likely molested by the church, or, just the small scraps from prior? There's a big difference.
Genetic fallacy.When events are written by an extremely biased source politically or other, it tends to be less trustworthy.
Just because a source is biased, doesn't mean that they favor lies.Imagine if you only got your news from Fox or, alternatively, MSNBC. Consider the source.
And again, the video is from a biased source. So I am going to disregard it, and anything related to it...in the same way you disregard the Gospels.POI I do not have the time or the energy to list all the contradictions again. I do not have them neatly archived. But the video author does. The video lists many of them in a neat and tidy package. You have spent much more time dodging it, then just watching it.
Then please articulate why you are willing to accept AtG for everything but his alleged supernatural powers.POI More of the doubling down.... Yet again, I accept Alexander was a dude who acquired land and died of fever. I do not accept he had supernatural powers. In order not to be a victim of this 'taxicab fallacy" I guess this means you reject the prior existence of Alexander and Mohammad![]()
I did.
Okey dokey.We already know that Paul died circa mid century, probably in Nero's pogrom of mass executions. So we also know that a nbrr of letters attributed to him were written by others.
The synoptic gospels were written much earlier than G-John, you're mixing them all up in some attempt to bamboozle us, methinks.
You haven't even got near warmed up. You are pushing away the discussion before it starts. No discrimination or expertise is applied.SiNcE_1985 wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2024 9:44 pmNo amount of sense appears to be made here.TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Sat Apr 13, 2024 4:54 pm It seems the taxicab fallacy tries to excuse Gospel contradictions as excusabl;e. My argument (which I commend to others) is that the "Biggies" are not. The bext explanation is that nobody else knew of them. The excuses have been tried, but the better explanation is that someone made them up.
This is laughable. So let me see if I get this straight..Notably, the messianic announcement in the Nazareth synagogue. Only in Luke
the miraculous haul of fish at the calling of disciples; only in Luke - but in John after the resurrection and in Matthew as a sort of parable - explanation: a story the writers picked up and used in different ways, not eyewitness.
.
No transfiguration in John (I like that one) No raising of lazarus in anyone BUT John. How could the synoptics not have known unless John made it up?
The synoptics gets dinged for being too similar, as the same stories are told in all 3.
Yet..
John gets dinged for being different than the 3 that are already dinged for being too similar?
Hahahahahaha.![]()
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The penitent thief? Ohh, that.Penitent thief only in Luke
In Luke, correct?
That story is told in one of the other 10 chapters of Luke that Mark did not share with us.
Elaborate.and in John the women do not know what happened to Jesus. No angel or message.
Elaborate.The synoptics not only have an angel or two explaining everything but Matthew has the women actually meeting Jesus.
Again..Not to mention Luke altering the whole story because the disciples should not go to Galilee but stay in Jerusalem, see the ascension (not mentioned by anyone else) and found the church.
1. Dinged for being too similar.
2. Dinged for being too different.
Pick a side..can't have it both ways.![]()
So pick which battlefield I need to meet you on.
Escape it? I'm just getting warmed up.This is just the start. When we know that the contradictions mean making stuff up, all the rest goes down the tube. Nativities, sermons, death of Judas...
And yeah...let's have it again.
You cannot escape. The shadow of truth moves despite the dark of denial.
You cannot escape it.
I've addressed all of your points, sir.TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Sun Apr 14, 2024 10:05 am You haven't even got near warmed up. You are pushing away the discussion before it starts. No discrimination or expertise is applied.
Not only am I aware of it, but I also acknowledged it in prior posts.Yes, IF the synoptics were written differently but told the same story, Copying would not be an issue. But they are identified as being dependent on an original synoptic source. In fact Matthew and Luke are often cited as being based on Mark. If you are not aware of scholarship..that is why you can't get warmed up.
Um, no.Similarly, if John told the same story differently, critics would have no leg to stand on, but his story is wildly discrepant.
Please share.Thus you should (and I invite you to understand) know that synoptic similarity does 'ding' them as a copied (and elaborated) single source and John dinged and - not being different, but wildly contradictory.
Historians: Who was he (Ramesses) kidding? It did not happen that way.Appeal to dubious histories is not going to help youHistorians are well aware of dubious history and clues that validate it. Take the battle of Kadesh. Ranesses' boasting is surely overdone, but the battle was surely real, and Hittite records confirm it.
Take Jesus Christ..Take Alexander. His empire was surely real and his coins have his image on. But the Gordian Knot? A dubious story. So historians evaluate; they do not dismiss or accept on faith or bias as you seem to think.
The Gospels are supported, by each other.The Gospels are not so supported despite apologetics appeals to extra biblical history.
That can be discussed if you wish, as you clearly have much to learn, so do try to catch up.
History is valued, and history supports the resurrection of Jesus.Quite apart from a 'believe - or not' false mindset, it appears that you are following (if not using) the universal theist fallacy "If history can be debunked, God - claims remain the default hypothesis". No. If history is not valued, the Bible certainly is not.
Again (for the umpteenth time), you cannot ding them for being too similar but the moment they aren't telling the same exact story, word for word, they get dinged for being different.Elaboration of my two points, same really, in John the (evidently more than one) women report back to the disciples that they found the tomb empty and have no idea what happened to the body.
This not only contradicts Mark (who probably is closest to the synoptic original) with an angel telling them what happened to Jesus
Um, you are wrong., but Luke who changes what the angel says so the disciples are NOT instructed to go to Galilee (slam dunk falsification there) but Matthew claims the women actually met Jesus going back to to the disciples.
Yet, it was addressed.These are Biggies that you failed to understand.
It means that Luke could have only gotten so far with Mark, considering he has stories that Mark doesn't have... thus, extra chapters that Mark doesn't have.The penitent thief is a medium discrepancy, which you excuse with other chapters of Luke (whatever that means)
1. Mark, Matthew, John did not record the "thief" account at the cross.for which you have no evidence. Even if you did, it would not alter the fact that neither Mark, Matthew, nor John knew anything about that. I have seen various miserable attempts at excuses to explain why nobody but Luke (who has already been caught falsifying the text) was the only one who knew about that. What's yours?
Unless what I said gets properly addressed..as far as I'm concerned, it stands.TRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Mon Apr 15, 2024 7:13 am I haven't seen any valid answers, either denial, claiming you answered where you haven't answered anything, and maintining the gospels are ok when I have shown they aren't.
Then taken together, it becomes obvious that at first both reviled Jesus but later, one repented.How can you say, for example, that it is not a valid question why only Luke reported the penitent thief? Mark and Matthew (hang on...) yes, both of those record that the thieves reviled Jesus. Neither say that one repented and was saved. How could that be if they were eyewitnesses? You must at least admit that it is a valid question; is it an invention of Luke's?
Looks to me as if all of your points were addressed..which is a lot more than what you've been giving me.You haven't answered anything, you have dismissed,denied and ignored everything, and you are not the only Bible - apologists to do that.
No sense appears to be made here.Ok, at the end you tty the 'reporters' notebook' apoologetic combined with the 'campfires stories' apologetic. Which is, the discrepancies are explained by treating the gospels as though they were written down on the spot, but the stories related later on (by the Roman who was there and told them all, as an explanation conjured out of thin air (making stuff a up'as we call it) conveyed, as at memories told about the campfire to the writers...so why didn't they write it? If they didn't know at the time, why didn't they know later on?
1. As long as the updates are true, that's all that matters.Well, I can do that one. The soldier only converted later on and the other gospels were already written. Luke updated the synoptic version with the information the soldier have to the Christians later on.
Makes no sense.But even if that excuse was in itself as good as 'Luke made it up'. 'it fails because of other discrepancies - the 'clean hands' principle. As you say, John doesn't have the thieves reviling Jesus at all, and yet the 'Eyewitness' must have been there as he records Jesus handing him mother over. And, as i said, Luke is known to alter gospel text.
Yeah, just like you are appealing to this unsupported claim that Luke made stuff up.Appealing to stuff that we do not have answers nothing.
1. Mark does not mention X.Mark DOES mention the thieves reviling Jesus but nothing about one rebuking the other. Supposed chapters that mark didn't write does not address discrepancies in what he did write.
You are just reaching.Luke has been caught fiddling before. The angelic message is altered by him. Plainly altered; undeniably altered. Yet I can't recall a single Bible - apologist that even acknowledged that, never mind addressed it.
No one answered it, probably because it ain't a big deal and hardly worthy of addressing.Ok, I know that all the time the Bible - apologists can make stuff up, they can tell themselves they have 'answered' everything. But to those who use reason rather than Faith, these excuses are not only without evidence and don't answer everything adequately. It comes down to what people think. I know the Faithful will never accept even undeniable evidence - like I said, Luke altered the angelic message, but I never saw a Bible -apologist acknowledge that. It does mean Luke doesn't have clean hands, and no amount of making stuff up can explain or excuse it.
SiNcE_1985 wrote: ↑Mon Apr 15, 2024 8:55 amTRANSPONDER wrote: ↑Mon Apr 15, 2024 7:13 am I haven't seen any valid answers, either denial, claiming you answered where you haven't answered anything, and maintining the gospels are ok when I have shown they aren't.It has been all but debunked, never mind addressed.Unless what I said gets properly addressed..as far as I'm concerned, it stands.How can you say, for example, that it is not a valid question why only Luke reported the penitent thief? Mark and Matthew (hang on...) yes, both of those record that the thieves reviled Jesus. Neither say that one repented and was saved. How could that be if they were eyewitnesses? You must at least admit that it is a valid question; is it an invention of Luke's?Not (reasonably) if they are the same story and they contradict. Not unless one can come up with a valid explanation, and you have failed to do so. Even if the invented explanations were adequate, other examples of persistent contradictions when all should have learned the facts by the time the gospels were (supposedly) written makesreal contradictions (inventions and alterations) the go -to hypothesis and the excuses....just excuses.Then taken together, it becomes obvious that at first both reviled Jesus but later, one repented.
Again, two things can be true at the same time.
You haven't answered anything, you have dismissed,denied and ignored everything, and you are not the only Bible - apologists to do that.Well you have attempted to answer with some stock invented excuses, but looks to me like you are dismissing, ignoring and deny them without addressing them, which is pretty much what Bible - apologists do when theyr evasions, excuses and inventions fail.Looks to me as if all of your points were addressed..which is a lot more than what you've been giving me.
Ok, at the end you tty the 'reporters' notebook' apoologetic combined with the 'campfires stories' apologetic. Which is, the discrepancies are explained by treating the gospels as though they were written down on the spot, but the stories related later on (by the Roman who was there and told them all, as an explanation conjured out of thin air (making stuff a up'as we call it) conveyed, as at memories told about the campfire to the writers...so why didn't they write it? If they didn't know at the time, why didn't they know later on?No attempt appears to be made by you to answer my point which ought o be understandable to anyone who can read and has two braincells to bang together. Simply the later information from converted Roman soldiers or (e.g) Temple guards explaining what they said to the High priests about the angel opening the tomb (all of which is invented excuses), should have become known to all, and so does not explain why it was not all recorded in Mark and Matthew, whichNo sense appears to be made here.
en they should have heard the story during the scriptural talks we hear of in Acts.Well, I can do that one. The soldier only converted later on and the other gospels were already written. Luke updated the synoptic version with the information the soldier have to the Christians later on.1. As long as the updates are true, that's all that matters.
2. The updates are true.
3. Therefore, that's all that matters.I love that bit of (not untypical) bit of Bible apologetics trickery.
Taking a flawed bit of logic (assuming the updates are true, which is a faithclaim and ignores the evidence), cast sit as though it was a logical proposition.
here's similar false one.
Anyone who claims what is wrong is true is a liar
Christians claim the Bible is true when it isn't
therefore Christians are liars.
You know this is invalid and not logically sound. And the People will see a terrible poor attempt or bamboozleas a lack of any valid response.
But even if that excuse was in itself as good as 'Luke made it up'. 'it fails because of other discrepancies - the 'clean hands' principle. As you say, John doesn't have the thieves reviling Jesus at all, and yet the 'Eyewitness' must have been there as he records Jesus handing him mother over. And, as i said, Luke is known to alter gospel text.Simple enough. I don't believe that you are dumb, I think you are smart enough, so only blind denial can account for your refusal to address the point.Makes no sense.
Appealing to stuff that we do not have answers nothing.Based on the text -evidence, that is a more probable explanation than 'they didn'tknow' plus the contraqdictory 'a convert told them everything' later on. Either theh all knew the big events and so should have written them or they didn't in which case how do they know minor or secret details,like what Jesus prayed while they were asleep? You cannot have it both ways. Not honestly.Yeah, just like you are appealing to this unsupported claim that Luke made stuff up.
Luke is not a person to buy a used car from. Apart from his very dubious pretence of dedicating his books to a Roman patron,we can pretty much see the sourses he used.The synoptics, "Q",Paul and Josephus. The rest he altered, fiddled and made up.The man claimed that he carefully investigated this stuff, and if what he recorded is a result of his careful investigation, then it doesn't matter what some skeptic typing on a religious message forum thinks some 2,000 years later.
A list of inventions
Announcement in the synagogue in Nazareth.
Miraculous draft of fish at the calling of disciples.
Antipas involved in the trial
Mark DOES mention the thieves reviling Jesus but nothing about one rebuking the other. Supposed chapters that mark didn't write does not address discrepancies in what he did write.Avalid question when the event is too big, public and memorable to be excused by 'everyone else missed it'. Denialist, blinkered dismissal of unwelcome evidence on your part.1. Mark does not mention X.
2. Therefore, X didn't occur.
Illogical, dubious reasoning.
Luke has been caught fiddling before. The angelic message is altered by him. Plainly altered; undeniably altered. Yet I can't recall a single Bible - apologist that even acknowledged that, never mind addressed it.You are just denying. In Mark and Matthew the angel says Jesus has gone to Galilee, and the disciples would see him there (which in Matthew is just what happens). But in Luke it is altered to what Jesus said in Galilee, and the disciples stay in Jerusalem, which Luke knows because he has read Paul's letters.You are just reaching.
It was a different variation of the same message or at the very least, the angel said all of those things and it is up to the author to pick which part of what the angel said to record.
You are being overly skeptical just for the sake of being skeptical...and it is unwarranted.
It is not a different version of the same message but an alteration to convey a different message altogether. Shall I post it or do you even have a Bible to look at for yourself?I'm sure our readers do and they will see who is telling what the bible says and who is in denial about it.Ok, I know that all the time the Bible - apologists can make stuff up, they can tell themselves they have 'answered' everything. But to those who use reason rather than Faith, these excuses are not only without evidence and don't answer everything adequately. It comes down to what people think. I know the Faithful will never accept even undeniable evidence - like I said, Luke altered the angelic message, but I never saw a Bible -apologist acknowledge that. It does mean Luke doesn't have clean hands, and no amount of making stuff up can explain or excuse it..No one answered it, probably because it ain't a big deal and hardly worthy of addressing
It is par for the course for Bible apologetics to dismiss pretty serious contradictions in this way - by brushing them off as unimportant. The residue is (to anyone with an open mind) the Bible scholars have been ignoring concealing and denying strong evidence that the Gospels are not eyewitness, not reliable and and not coherent. The antics of Bible - apologists are clearly excusing, denying and dismissing this unwelcome evidence.
This is just the tip of the iceberg. I haven't even mentioned the Decapolis material "Q" material and the Holy Week cover -up. The gospels are full of contradiction all the way through.