POI wrote: ↑Thu Nov 20, 2025 7:30 pm
This is a pure
hot garbage argument for two reasons.
1) Julius Caesar never told anyone to worship him to receive everlasting life.
2) If a popularity contest is where it's at, then be ready for Islam to soon surpass your indoctrinated beliefs. And even if it never did, based upon a popularity barometer, the claims from Muhammad would still be deemed way more credible than Caesar.
Um, first of all, I agree; this isn't a
popularity contest.
But since
you're the one touting all the evidence for Caesar, and emphazing how much impact he had, then I'm only countering it with how much my guy (Jesus), with less evidence, had even more of an impact.
No other human being, fictional or otherwise, has had more of a global impact as a whole, and on single, individual lives; than Jesus of Nazareth (who is called Christ).
No one.
Period.
Literally, every single second of the day, Jesus is on someone's mind.
No one, living or dead, can hold a candle to Jesus of Nazareth.
The greatest man born of a woman, John the Baptist (Matt 11:11), stated that he isn't worthy to even untie Jesus' sandals (Luke 3:16).
John the Baptist baptized Jesus, but John said that Jesus should be the one baptizing him!! (Matt 3:13-17).
Put some respect on Jesus' name (I say so humbly, with love).
I already explained the odds.
Those odds are shaky.
Sure. If the age of the biography was the only measure, then yes, the apparent veracity of Julius Caesar far exceeds that of Alexander. However, since we have other variables to consider, and I mentioned some of them in post 154, this is not where the analysis ends. Spoiler alert... Jesus is likely much lower on virtually all of them.
I was talking about Jesus' biographies; the Gospels...which even according to you, were written only
decades later, after his death.
If 400 years after person X's death can still be considered credible, then
decades after person Y's death should be considered even more credible.
Unless, of course, we are hopping in the
taxicab and are riding around in fallacious territories.
Is that what we're doing?
The Gospels are not trustworthy. A plain side-by-side reading confirms this. --- Couple this with observed political/religious bias, observed additions/modifications/subtractions/other, and you have a recipe for an untrustworthy publication, which is to be discarded as deemed '"truth." But is instead a mere time capsule to the past.
Well, saying the Gospels are not trustworthy is your opinion.
I'd ask for evidence, but all you want to do is request videos to watch, which I can just as
easily do as well..to support
my side of things.
Nothing will change when you have been (heavily indoctrinated) and then apply (belief preservation)
Heyyy, what's up,
Genetic Fallacy?
It's been a couple weeks since I've seen you.
How have you been?
Oh, I get it..you only come around when POI needs help.
I get it.
while supporting this illogical religion. And yes, you will never change your position, no matter what. Just like Kent Hovind won't. You two are like two peas in the same pod. You two will go down with the ship, Titanic-style, no matter what.
Another handwave...
When reading the beginning of Luke, it's clear the author did not even claim to be a direct witness. An eyewitness would not need to investigate. They would tell their direct tale, through eyewitness attestation. (i.e.) 3 I too decided, after investigating everything carefully from the very first,[a] to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus
Broo, that's the point!!!
Luke (the alleged author), is being genuine and sincere, by blatantly insinuating that he ISN'T/WASN'T an eyewitness.
That in itself (in my opinion, obviously, yours differ), is part of what gives credence to the entire book.
He also stated..
1. There were eyewitnesses (many), which obviously presupposes that there was someone (and others, plural) to bear witness, and some
thing to bear witnessed of.
2. This was his orderly account, distinguishing his account from other orderly accounts (he said that "I, too, am giving an orderly".
So, in summary, the author of Luke is stating that there were many eyewitnesses who saw, and some even gave orderly accounts of what they saw, which is what he is doing with the book that he wrote.
Seems genuine to me.
Well, his 'investigation' is a mere synonym for "corruption/manipulation", when directly compared to "Mark".
Bro, to be honest, I don't even think you believe what you just said.
Please recall it was YOU who brought up Julius Caesar. You also missed the point given. The writings from Julius Caesar, both from himself and others, were contemporary. The Gospels were not. This gives an advantage to the writings of Julius Caesar <over> the Gospels here.
Um, the point is, one can systematically and emphatically deny/reject
anything.
You claim that Julius Caesar left his own writings.
Ok, well, I can ask..
Me: How do you know HE actually wrote it?
You: Because, he said in the annals (or whatever it is) "I, Julius Caesar, Emperor of Rome, wrote this".
Me: Well, how do you know he even wrote that? Anyone could have written that, and portrayed it as him.
No matter what you your response is, there can always be
plausible deniability from the skeptic... especially given the fact that this is all historical inquiry...and neither one of us were there.
At some point, it all simply comes down to..
1. Either you believe it.
2. Or you don't.
As stated prior, if the only criteria to analyze was the age, then you would have some type of a very small point. But there are many factors involved. And the Gospels have quite the uphill climb on all fronts.
I just don't see what you see, and vice versa.
Hmm, so you too accept that the 'golden paragraph', within Josephus's writing (Testimonium Flavianum) was a later corrupt addition, and not from Josephus?
I do..because it is glaringly obvious...and whoever corrupted it needs to be slapped because it was just fine without it.
Sadly, there is no way to truly 'verify' a character from ancient antiquity. We can only surmise and go with the 'odds'. But, couple the lesser probability, with all the errors abound, and you have a recipe for unlikeliness, at least where it REALLY counts. (i.e.) that an ancient apocalyptic preacher really did rise from the grave to say hi to some followers, as this is a very far-fetched tale.
Well, as I always say..
Either you believe it, or you don't.
I can certainly understand how it can seem far-fetched to an unbeliever.
But to a believer, it is everything.
Just the tale of two different paths.
0+0+0+0+0+0+0 still equals 0.
For an unbeliever, that's what it is.
Paul never even attempted to mention knowing a Jesus when he was alive. So, he obviously would not count.
This is a strawman, and much more...because skeptics like throwing the "Paul never met / didn't know Jesus" thing around...but..
1. We don't know if Paul ever met and/or seen Jesus despite his lack of confirming whether he did/didn't in his written work.
So anyone making such a statement is committing the
arguing from silence fallacy...which is what your doing.
2. No is claiming that Paul met Jesus anyway...as our argument works fine even without the claim.
I am of the opinion that Paul never met Jesus formally, but he did see him in person.
This is an opinion, but I'm not making any argument off this opinion and I would encourage you to do the same on the flip side.
Third, all evidence shows that Paul was
contemporary to the times, area, culture, and religion...he would know, and was in a position
to know, whether the protagonist of the religion (Jesus) was a myth or not.
That's what being
contemporary means...which he was.
It is obvious that Paul didn't think of Jesus as a myth and even more so, spoke of him as if he wasn't.
Fourth, it's funny, because what you guys are claiming about Tacitus and Josephus (not being contemporary to Jesus), does not apply to Paul, and that STILL isn't good enough for you guys.
So again, nothing is ever good enough...a skeptic can/will always find something.
So, it all goes back to...either you believe it, or you don't.
No. The soldier who also wrote about Julius Caesar was a contemporary to Caesar. Paul was not a contemporary to Jesus.
Scholars date Paul's conversion to between 3-5 years after the crucifixion.
That's makes him
contemporary to Jesus.
The religion did not really prosper until Constantine.
Your definition of "prosper" differs from mine.
Yes, they can.
Oh, care to share examples?
There is but one fate, for the guilty.