conspiracy theory

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achilles12604
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conspiracy theory

Post #1

Post by achilles12604 »

I was giving some thought to the athiest viewpoint here. I was considering in my mind if my religious bias had blinded me to something obvious. Was this theory more likely than my current one? After reading my following post please tell me :

1) If this theory fits better than the theory that it is more or less true and accurate.
2) WHY one theory is better than the other.
3) What other theories could be possible?
4) Why those theories should be considered.

The theory: The earliest Christians, Paul, James, and the apostles at the least, perhaps more unnamed men, made up Christianity or borrowed ideas from other religions to make up their own. Then they pushed it as truth onto the unknowing masses and gathered a following.



For this theory to be truth, first there must be a why.

Why would these men want to construct a religion of their own which would be considered totally evil by most of the people they were reaching at first? In addition to this, their new religion would be directly against their current beliefs, against the beliefs of their families and society, and would have the end result of excommunicating them from their friends and support structure.

What reason could so many men have for creating something completely out of nothing, which would be so devestating to themselves, physically, financially, and socially?

To this atheists have replied, "How do you know that this is what happened? How can you proove that the early christian's suffered?"

To answer this one simply needs to read Jewish writings or Roman historians. Pliny the younger wrote that every time he discovered Christians, he tourtured and murdered them. Not some of the time. EVERY TIME. The Jewish Pharasee's like Saul, before he converted, were imprisoning Christians. To the Jews, these believers were a mutation of their beliefs. The Talmud has some very strong words about the Christian's. Josephus writes of them being stoned. If any athiest wishes to present the case that Christian's were not persecuted, they must first deal with history.

The next step for validating the conspiracy theory, after determining why these men would have done this, is to see if the facts fit. In other words, does history point to a conspiracy, or truth?

Extra-biblical writings of Jesus :

At first this subject seems to point in great favor of the conspiracy theory. Outside of the bible and writings of the conspirators, there is little support. However, when certain things are taken into consideration, this becomes less and less of a problem. For example, almost all of the writings of this time period were about rulers, wars, conquering countries and other such important things. So should we have expected to see a great deal of writing about a poor man from a really small town in a clountry being ruled by a foreign power? Not really. In fact we should have NOTHING written about him ever. Especially since he never existed.

But we do. We have the writings of a contemporary historian, Josephus. Although his writings are universally thought to have been altered by later Christians, the core of one passage concerning Jesus is thought to be genuine and a second passage is thought to be entirely genuine by most scholars. In addition to this we have Jewish Historians (writers of the Talmud) who by reviewing history determined that a man named Jesus was a magician and was killed by authorities by hanging on a tree.

This is very impressive for a poor tradesman, and this is assuming he even existed. The conspiracy theory doesn't even allow for a man named Jesus at all. Remember that the theory is that these men constructed all of their ideas from other ancient religions. Hence Jesus should have never even formed much less have been refered to by outside sources. This does not boad well for a conspiracy.

The audience :

This is a bigger problem for the conspiracy than the few extra-biblical references. This is because if it was a conspiracy, then the authors spreading these lies should have been shouted down by the masses. Especially since these lies would have been spread within the lifetimes of those men and women who would have known them to be false. After all today you can not convince someone that a building was knocked down by a terrorist if it did not really happen. Those people knew that there was no Jesus or if there were, that he never did anything even close to what these liars claimed.

This is what we should see if it was a consipiracy. However, this is not what we see happened. Instead, this very town where the supposed events happened (but they never did if it was a conspiracy), became the center and brain for the most quickly advancing and totally overcoming religion ever on earth. The Christians (Jewish converts) from Jerusalem, who would have known if these had been wild lies, were so convinced that they faced the aforementioned persecutions to spread the word further.

These men would have known for a fact, that this conspiracy was a bunch of lies. The authorities would have known they were lies and called them just that. But what does history say they called these events? Magic. Demon work. Perhaps the greatest blow to the conspiracy theory is the fact that the enemies of this movement did not say that the conspirators were lying. They explained away the events instead. This leaves us with the understanding that SOMETHING happened which needed to be explained.

The normal athiest answer to this problem is that there is no first hand accounts of the authorities reaction. They do not have any real answer to the masses which converted but should not have believed anything because nothing ever happened. To this, we can reply Josephus commented on the authorities being involved with the later Christian movements and their reactions to the men involved. They called witchcraft, demons and executed those involved. But they never said the most obvious statement if it were all a big conspiracy, "Nothing ever happened."

Later accounts from the Talmud concure with Josephus on this point. They explain him away, but do not deny the Christian movement.

So far we have looked at why the conspirators would have invented a lie which would have brought them nothing but pain, poverty and hardship for both themselves and their families. We looked at the writings of the time and recognized that if this were truely a conspiracy, there shouldn't be ANYTHING extra, yet it is there. We looked at the audience and recognized that the audience SHOULD have ignored the liars because they obviously had nothing to go on. The conspirators were claiming some REALLY OUTRAGEOUS and more importantly, easily disprovable things. They should have been out before they even began. Yet this didn't happen.

Based on just these three points, I suggest that the conspiracy theory is a flop. It is certainly not the most plausible theory if it is even possible. And that is a big if.
It is a first class human tragedy that people of the earth who claim to believe in the message of Jesus, whom they describe as the Prince of Peace, show little of that belief in actual practice.

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Re: conspiracy theory

Post #251

Post by RyanP »

juliod wrote:For example, it means nothing that followers of a religion really really believe it to be true. The members of Heaven's Gate were so convinced that a spaceship was behind the comet Hale Bopp that they killed themselves while wearing jumpsuits and carrying a five-dollar-bill. That is sufficient to show that zeal for a religion is no argument in support of it's truth.
Your point supports the OP when he said
achilles12604 wrote:This is because if it was a conspiracy, then the authors spreading these lies should have been shouted down by the masses. Especially since these lies would have been spread within the lifetimes of those men and women who would have known them to be false. After all today you can not convince someone that a building was knocked down by a terrorist if it did not really happen. Those people knew that there was no Jesus or if there were, that he never did anything even close to what these liars claimed.
Because the members of Heaven's Gate were liars, their message faded quickly in time and you won't even know they existed 100 let alone 2,000 years from now.

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Re: conspiracy theory

Post #252

Post by Goat »

RyanP wrote:
juliod wrote:For example, it means nothing that followers of a religion really really believe it to be true. The members of Heaven's Gate were so convinced that a spaceship was behind the comet Hale Bopp that they killed themselves while wearing jumpsuits and carrying a five-dollar-bill. That is sufficient to show that zeal for a religion is no argument in support of it's truth.
Your point supports the OP when he said
achilles12604 wrote:This is because if it was a conspiracy, then the authors spreading these lies should have been shouted down by the masses. Especially since these lies would have been spread within the lifetimes of those men and women who would have known them to be false. After all today you can not convince someone that a building was knocked down by a terrorist if it did not really happen. Those people knew that there was no Jesus or if there were, that he never did anything even close to what these liars claimed.
Because the members of Heaven's Gate were liars, their message faded quickly in time and you won't even know they existed 100 let alone 2,000 years from now.
Please demonstrate that the members of heaven's gates were liars. Show that they did not believe in what they did.
“What do you think science is? There is nothing magical about science. It is simply a systematic way for carefully and thoroughly observing nature and using consistent logic to evaluate results. So which part of that exactly do you disagree with? Do you disagree with being thorough? Using careful observation? Being systematic? Or using consistent logic?�

Steven Novella

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Re: conspiracy theory

Post #253

Post by justifyothers »

goat wrote:
RyanP wrote:
juliod wrote:For example, it means nothing that followers of a religion really really believe it to be true. The members of Heaven's Gate were so convinced that a spaceship was behind the comet Hale Bopp that they killed themselves while wearing jumpsuits and carrying a five-dollar-bill. That is sufficient to show that zeal for a religion is no argument in support of it's truth.
Your point supports the OP when he said
achilles12604 wrote:This is because if it was a conspiracy, then the authors spreading these lies should have been shouted down by the masses. Especially since these lies would have been spread within the lifetimes of those men and women who would have known them to be false. After all today you can not convince someone that a building was knocked down by a terrorist if it did not really happen. Those people knew that there was no Jesus or if there were, that he never did anything even close to what these liars claimed.
Because the members of Heaven's Gate were liars, their message faded quickly in time and you won't even know they existed 100 let alone 2,000 years from now.
Please demonstrate that the members of heaven's gates were liars. Show that they did not believe in what they did.
I would also like to see this proof.....

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Re: conspiracy theory

Post #254

Post by RyanP »

goat wrote:Please demonstrate that the members of heaven's gates were liars. Show that they did not believe in what they did.
Belief in something does not make it true. For example, God exists whether or not He gives me a mind of grace to believe.

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Re: conspiracy theory

Post #255

Post by justifyothers »

RyanP wrote:
goat wrote:Please demonstrate that the members of heaven's gates were liars. Show that they did not believe in what they did.
Belief in something does not make it true. For example, God exists whether or not He gives me a mind of grace to believe.
You lost me here............God exists no matter what! Do you feel that you are blessed/or not with a mind to accept this knowledge?

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Re: conspiracy theory

Post #256

Post by McCulloch »

RyanP wrote:Belief in something does not make it true.
This is true.
RyanP wrote:For example, God exists whether or not He gives me a mind of grace to believe.
Well actually it is that the existence or non-existence of God does not depend on whether you believe it.
Examine everything carefully; hold fast to that which is good.
First Epistle to the Church of the Thessalonians
The truth will make you free.
Gospel of John

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Re: conspiracy theory

Post #257

Post by Thought Criminal »

RyanP wrote:Because the members of Heaven's Gate were liars, their message faded quickly in time and you won't even know they existed 100 let alone 2,000 years from now.
Their message faded because, well, they killed themselves. Christians instead killed others and forced them to convert, which is why their religion is still around. Longevity in religions is evidence of memetic fitness, not truth.

Oh, and for the record, you don't just get to claim God exists and expect us to take you seriously. If you make such a claim, you need to prove it, but you can't.

TC

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Re: conspiracy theory

Post #258

Post by RyanP »

justifyothers wrote:
RyanP wrote:
goat wrote:Please demonstrate that the members of heaven's gates were liars. Show that they did not believe in what they did.
Belief in something does not make it true. For example, God exists whether or not He gives me a mind of grace to believe.
You lost me here............God exists no matter what! Do you feel that you are blessed/or not with a mind to accept this knowledge?
No, and it's in stark contrast to what I posted in another thread where faith is a choice. This is similar to the fate vs. free will debate but it goes like this: if I believe in God, do I choose to believe in God or does God give me the ability to believe?

Then the LORD said to Moses, "See, I have made you like God to Pharaoh, and your brother Aaron will be your prophet. You are to say everything I command you, and your brother Aaron is to tell Pharaoh to let the Israelites go out of his country. But I will harden Pharaoh's heart, and though I multiply my miraculous signs and wonders in Egypt, he will not listen to you. Then I will lay my hand on Egypt and with mighty acts of judgment I will bring out my divisions, my people the Israelites. And the Egyptians will know that I am the LORD when I stretch out my hand against Egypt and bring the Israelites out of it." --Exodus 7:1-5

Pharaoh didn't have a choice: God hardened his heart so he wouldn't free the Israelites. The end result doesn't matter really but some believe faith is chosen whereas others believe faith is a gift. As for myself, I don't know.

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Re: conspiracy theory

Post #259

Post by Thought Criminal »

RyanP wrote:
No, and it's in stark contrast to what I posted in another thread where faith is a choice. This is similar to the fate vs. free will debate but it goes like this: if I believe in God, do I choose to believe in God or does God give me the ability to believe?

Pharaoh didn't have a choice: God hardened his heart so he wouldn't free the Israelites. The end result doesn't matter really but some believe faith is chosen whereas others believe faith is a gift. As for myself, I don't know.
Let me help you out here: faith, in anything, is always wrong.

TC

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Re: conspiracy theory

Post #260

Post by RyanP »

Thought Criminal wrote:Their message faded because, well, they killed themselves. Christians instead killed others and forced them to convert, which is why their religion is still around. Longevity in religions is evidence of memetic fitness, not truth.
Christians were killed in the first few centuries after Christ simply for preaching the Gospel and refusing to bow to the emperor. You can't deny that and it's amazing the Gospel survived it.
Thought Criminal wrote:Oh, and for the record, you don't just get to claim God exists and expect us to take you seriously. If you make such a claim, you need to prove it, but you can't.

TC
What more proof do you need?

Now Thomas (called Didymus), one of the Twelve, was not with the disciples when Jesus came. So the other disciples told him, "We have seen the Lord!" But he said to them, "Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were, and put my hand into his side, I will not believe it."

A week later his disciples were in the house again, and Thomas was with them. Though the doors were locked, Jesus came and stood among them and said, "Peace be with you!" Then he said to Thomas, "Put your finger here; see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side. Stop doubting and believe." Thomas said to him, "My Lord and my God!"

Then Jesus told him, "Because you have seen me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed." --John 20:24-29


I love this passage because Thomas is me: I would've said the exact same thing. So when Jesus appears to Thomas to prove to him, he's proving to me, and I accept this testimony.

But I suppose the obvious retort is that the Bible is made up and contains no truth even though there's no evidence to support that claim.
Last edited by RyanP on Wed Jul 30, 2008 10:37 pm, edited 2 times in total.

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