Goat wrote:You are missing the point.
No, I think you missed the point of my post to RedEye.
There is no record of a city of Nazareth outside of the bible until the late 3rd century..
And thats a problem because...
And you must mean no
documentary record because there certainly is an archaeological record supporting the existence of Nazareth at the time of Jesus.
even though it was described as a city, big enough for a synagogue.
Why is that a problem? Is there something about having a synagogue that demanded mention?
There is no external evidence outside the bible until the 3rd century.
And this argument from silence proves what exactly?
Lets look at the facts.
1.
A city in the region of Galilee named Nazareth exists. This is indisputable.
2.
Remains of a Jewish settlement from the time of Jesus have been found in Nazareth.
3. There are four ancient biographies (Matthew, Mark, Luke/Acts, and John) that date to the first century which attest to the existence of Nazareth.
4. Around 175 AD Celsus, an antagonistic source towards Christianity, stated Jesus was the man of Nazareth (as recorded by Origen,
Against Celsus 7.18).
5. Around 220 AD Sextus Julius Africanus refers to Nazareth (as recorded by Eusebius,
Church History 1.7.14).
6.
Three stone fragments found in Caesarea dated to around the third/fourth centuries. One of which attests to the existence of Nazareth.
You are argued earlier in post 16 the following:
Goat wrote:Well, there was some ruins there.. but apparently, it was not inhabited during the time frame of Jesus except by about 10 houses, and it was not KNOWN as Nazareth.
But you do concede it was inhabited during the time frame of Jesus. Good, thats a start at least. And where are you getting this number of 10 houses? And if it wasnt known as Nazareth, then what was it known as? Do tell.
You got a village that was renamed in the 4th century.
What direct evidence do have that it was renamed in the fourth century? What was its name prior to being renamed and what evidence is there for that prior name?
Nazareth is not mentioned even once in the entire Old Testament. The Book of Joshua (19.10,16) " in what it claims is the process of settlement by the tribe of Zebulon in the area " records twelve towns and six villages and yet omits any 'Nazareth' from its list.
The Talmud, although it names 63 Galilean towns, knows nothing of Nazareth, nor does early rabbinic literature.
These arguments from silence arent terribly strong unless you can show
every town was mentioned
except Nazareth. And its not terribly surprising Nazareth isnt mentioned in the Talmud, a hostile source, if Jesus was thought to have come from there.
Not to mention Nazareth may have had a bad reputation anyway.
Nathanael said to him, Can any good thing come out of Nazareth? " John 1:46
It's not surprising at all that a small town, with a bad reputation with those that did know of it, would fly under the radar.
Paul knows nothing of 'Nazareth'. Rabbi Solly's epistles (real and fake) mention Jesus 221 times, Nazareth not at all.
Paul doesnt mention Mary or Joseph either so its not surprising he doesnt mention Nazareth. Paul was writing letters to churches dealing with pastoral issues. He wasnt writing a biography of Jesus so theres no reason to expect him to mention Jesus home town while addressing
believers who undoubtedly already knew the tradition that Jesus was from Nazareth.
Having said that, its likely Paul does happen to mention Nazareth in his speech recorded in Acts.
No ancient historian or geographer mentions Nazareth. It is first noted at the beginning of the 4th century.
Of course this argument from silence ignores the sources I just mentioned. Its not surprising there is no mention of Nazareth outside the sources listed above. It was probably an insignificant town with a poor reputation. No reason for Roman historians to mention it and very little reasons for Jewish historians to mention it.
It wasnt unprecedented for cities to be mentioned by a single source and then go unmentioned by the way.
Pliny speaks of the otherwise unknown
towns of Acerr, surnamed Vafri
No mention of these towns aside from Pliny. No archaeological evidence has been found supporting their existence. Apparently they didnt exist either I guess?
By the way just so no one thinks that the historical Nazareth position is only defended by conservative Christian scholars
here is a blog post from Bart Ehrman, an atheist and critical scholar, where he argues
against the idea Nazareth did not exist at the time of Jesus.