by jimwalton » Wed Apr 06, 2016 12:03 pm
First of all, "decades" is nothing. We are decades away from when Ronald Reagan was President, but reliable information is still easily available, along with eye-witness reports. We are decades away from the Beatles, the Vietnam War, the falling of the Berlin Wall, the breakup of the Soviet Union, and the Monica Lewinsky scandal. Reliable information is EASILY available.
Are the biblical texts historically accurate? The weight of evidence is largely in their favor. Of everything that can be confirmed, more than 95% can be confirmed as accurate. A few things are disputed, but only a few. Of what can be confirmed, the biblical text comes out as reliable.
> the rather predictable hero-myth format of the gospel stories
You're betraying your bias already.
> to provide something other than the gospel stories
Here's another bias. Why something other than the gospel stories? For example, democratic uprising occurred in the Middle East in 2011. Suppose I said to you, "Give me evidence of what happened there, but you're not allowed to use any eye-witnesses, people who had first-hand information, or any account that shows bias. I'll only accept for evidence people who weren't there and who didn't see any of it." Of course, that's ludicrous, but that's what you're asking for in the case of Judas. And you know that no such thing exists. The only accounts we have are the Gospel accounts, but they have been shown to be accurate time and again in records of culture, language, geography, religious environment, people, and historical events. The only reason you choose to doubt Judas is your own bias. Jerusalem was a city of about 80,000 at the time; we don't know anything about most of them, but that doesn't mean they didn't exist.
There are 40 mentions of Judas in the Bible.
Matthew 10.2-5 (and parallels). Judas is mentioned with other individuals whom we know to be literally historical (Peter, in particular). This would give evidence that the writer intends us to perceive Judas as historical also.
In Matthew 26 (and parallels), Judas is identified as one of the twelve actual followers of Jesus, a literal person engaging in real actions. There is nothing in any Gospel account to hint or allude to that Judas is a metaphor or a mere literary device. The Gospel accounts are written as if the author is intending to portray literal events in history.
The fact is we do have some limited historiography about Judas. It's in the Gospels, which have a lot in them that are historically corroborated. You choose to say, without evidence, that the story of Judas is fictitious. While we both know that we don't have a lot of evidence, what we do have is in the favor of historicity. To prove otherwise, you must prove otherwise.
So, as Debater #1, I have presented my thesis and the evidence we have (we all wish there were more). Now it is your turn to rebut with contrary evidence or to give evidence that the evidence I have presented is false. It's not good enough to say, "Because I don't think it is."
I’m just curious. What if archaeologists today found an anonymous document in Israel containing many of the same stories of Jesus we have in the Gospels? What would that do, in your mind, to the credibility of the Gospels? Negative (give the Gospels even less credibility), positive (give them more), or neutral (no effect)?
Or (hypothetical situation #2), suppose they found the same kind of document, but with a name attached? What would that do, in your mind, to the credibility of the Gospels? Negative, positive, or neutral? I'm really curious to know.
First of all, "decades" is nothing. We are decades away from when Ronald Reagan was President, but reliable information is still easily available, along with eye-witness reports. We are decades away from the Beatles, the Vietnam War, the falling of the Berlin Wall, the breakup of the Soviet Union, and the Monica Lewinsky scandal. Reliable information is EASILY available.
Are the biblical texts historically accurate? The weight of evidence is largely in their favor. Of everything that can be confirmed, more than 95% can be confirmed as accurate. A few things are disputed, but only a few. Of what can be confirmed, the biblical text comes out as reliable.
> the rather predictable hero-myth format of the gospel stories
You're betraying your bias already.
> to provide something other than the gospel stories
Here's another bias. Why something other than the gospel stories? For example, democratic uprising occurred in the Middle East in 2011. Suppose I said to you, "Give me evidence of what happened there, but you're not allowed to use any eye-witnesses, people who had first-hand information, or any account that shows bias. I'll only accept for evidence people who weren't there and who didn't see any of it." Of course, that's ludicrous, but that's what you're asking for in the case of Judas. And you know that no such thing exists. The only accounts we have are the Gospel accounts, but they have been shown to be accurate time and again in records of culture, language, geography, religious environment, people, and historical events. The only reason you choose to doubt Judas is your own bias. Jerusalem was a city of about 80,000 at the time; we don't know anything about most of them, but that doesn't mean they didn't exist.
There are 40 mentions of Judas in the Bible.
Matthew 10.2-5 (and parallels). Judas is mentioned with other individuals whom we know to be literally historical (Peter, in particular). This would give evidence that the writer intends us to perceive Judas as historical also.
In Matthew 26 (and parallels), Judas is identified as one of the twelve actual followers of Jesus, a literal person engaging in real actions. There is nothing in any Gospel account to hint or allude to that Judas is a metaphor or a mere literary device. The Gospel accounts are written as if the author is intending to portray literal events in history.
The fact is we do have some limited historiography about Judas. It's in the Gospels, which have a lot in them that are historically corroborated. You choose to say, without evidence, that the story of Judas is fictitious. While we both know that we don't have a lot of evidence, what we do have is in the favor of historicity. To prove otherwise, you must prove otherwise.
So, as Debater #1, I have presented my thesis and the evidence we have (we all wish there were more). Now it is your turn to rebut with contrary evidence or to give evidence that the evidence I have presented is false. It's not good enough to say, "Because I don't think it is."
I’m just curious. What if archaeologists today found an anonymous document in Israel containing many of the same stories of Jesus we have in the Gospels? What would that do, in your mind, to the credibility of the Gospels? Negative (give the Gospels even less credibility), positive (give them more), or neutral (no effect)?
Or (hypothetical situation #2), suppose they found the same kind of document, but with a name attached? What would that do, in your mind, to the credibility of the Gospels? Negative, positive, or neutral? I'm really curious to know.