On 05/12/17 05:49, Quadibloc wrote:
> On Monday, December 4, 2017 at 3:46:42 PM UTC-7, George Neuner wrote:
>
>> The new testament is a half-wtted collection of contradictory stories
>> which mostly was written hundreds of years after Jesus supposedly
>> lived, by people who had no knowledge of the events. It is not the
>> word of any god, it is the word of man - an attempt by the church to
>> control the people.
>
> Some corrections to that should be pointed out, in fairness.
>
> The canon of New Testament scripture was established by church authorities. But
> they chose from writings that were already circulating, already in existence.
>
Yes - from writings already written by /men/. (I say "men" - there
might have been some women involved, but the Jewish and early Christian
traditions were seriously misogynist.)
> And one can compare the books in the New Testament to the books of New Testament
> apocrypha, and that does make it clear that the books they chose were those
> which would appear to be more worthy of being taken seriously.
That is rationalisation after the fact. You are assuming that there is
a "real God" and a "real Jesus" as described in the Bible - and
therefore the books chosen for the Bible are the "right" ones. If you
compare the NT books with the apocrypha, Dead Sea scrolls, and other
sources, you'll see that the choices were made for practical and selfish
reasons.
A key distinction is that books that showed the humanity of Jesus, and
books that encouraged thought and self-exploration (the Gnostic texts)
were dropped - books that encouraged a centralised Church and a
controlling priesthood were kept. The Bible books were picked to force
people to do what they were told, and to view the priesthood and church
as the sole interpreters of the Word of God.
>
> If Jesus had never walked the Earth, how would one explain the _existence_ of a
> Christian church in the first place?
And if Muhammad is not the true Prophet of God, how do you explain the
existence of Islam? If Buddha was not truly enlightened, how do you
explain the existence of Buddhism? If Shiva and friends did not exist,
how do you explain the existence of Hinduism? If Odin and his brothers
had not killed Ymir, how could they have made the world from it?
There is /some/ - not much, but some - historical evidence for a
religious teacher called "Jesus" at roughly the time and place matching
the NT. But there it ends - there is no evidence at all for any
supernatural or divine events. There isn't even any evidence for his
execution, or his relevance compared to any others of the hundreds of
other religious teachers and wannabe messiahs in that period. Why did
the cult of Jesus grow into a successful religion, while similar cults
died out? I have no idea - nor does anyone else. Luck, maybe.
It is absolutely fine to have faith, and believe in God and Jesus (or
whatever else you want). If that is what suits you, what gives you
strength or meaning, what makes you a better person - great, go for it.
Just don't try to suggest there is a rational, scientific or historical
basis for your faith.
>
> This doesn't prove the truth of the Bible by a long shot.
Indeed.
> But for a charismatic
> individual to attract a following through claims that he had a message from God:
> there are hundreds of examples of that, including well-known ones like Muhammad
> and Louis Riel.
>
Some charismatic folk get a following, some don't. Some followings
last, some don't. Nowhere is there any evidence that they were "right"
in some way - whether they get a long-term following or not.
And the historical evidence surrounding Jesus is so little, that we
can't even be sure that he /was/ charismatic or had a noticeable
following at the time. Indeed, we can't even be sure that he existed at
all - the evidence is in favour of his existence as a historical figure,
but does not rule out his non-existence or that the person we think of
as "Jesus" is a mix of more than one real figure.