> I'd say the adulterous woman story is fiction because someone added it to the Gospel of John hundreds of years later.
Yeah, it was. There's little debate about that. But amazingly it has a collection of features that show it to be old, possibly authentic, and maybe even historical, even though it wasn't added until centuries later.
* Literarily, it has a lot in common with the Synoptic Gospels of the first century. I mentioned them in my last post: Jesus at the Mt. of Olives, teaching in the Temple, a dilemma presented to him to trap him, the dilemma involves the Torah, Jesus answers cleverly).
* The vocabulary of the text is, ironically, remarkably close to Luke's, who writes in the early 60s.
* There are other possible historical references to it (Didymus the Blind, the *Didascalia Apostolorum* in Syrian, and perhaps even Papias in 125).
* The account sounds so very much like Jesus in several ways (clever, wise, extending mercy to sinners, seeming to subvert the Law but actually confirms it, rebuking hypocrites).
None of those guarantee its authenticity or historicity, but taken together they made me go hmm. The point is that its addition centuries later doesn't necessarily make it fictional. I don't think there's any way we're ever actually know. It's remotely possible that it was a real story of Jesus that someone decided (for who knows what reason) to add it in to John's record. We can be sure, however, that John didn't write it.
> I haven't read the Quran, and I'm sure it's very different from the Bible ... the same types of evidence do not verify the truth of the Quran
The Qur'an is not a historical text like the Bible. Though it occasionally makes brief historical references, it's much more a philosophical text. Without trying to misrepresent it (i.e., I'm trying to be fair to its character), here are the first couple verses of Surah 2, which are quite typical of the whole thing:
1. A.L.M.
2. This is the Book; in it is guidance sure, without doubt, to those who fear Allah.
3. Who believe in the Unseen, are steadfast in prayer, and spend out of what We have provided for them;
4. And who believe in the Revelation sent to thee, and sent before thy time, and (in their hearts) have the assurance of the Hereafter.
5. They are on (true) guidance, from their Lord, and it is these who will prosper.
6. As to those who reject Faith, it is the same to them whether thou warn them or do not warn them; they will not believe.
7. Allah hath set a seal on their hearts and on their hearing, and on their eyes is a veil; great is the penalty they (incur).
It's not really historical narrative. It's not anything like the Bible. If you want to verify the Qur'an with any kind of evidence, good luck. It's not that kind of text.
So what about the Bible? We could take any text, so I'll pull Exodus 1, just to pull something (again, not trying to be manipulative, but rather to be fair to the "evidence").
* We have a possible early reference to a nation called "Israel" coming from about 1400 BC.
* Archaeologists have discovered a village at Deer el-Medina that had been inhabited by laborers for over 400 years. Such a scene reflects reality.
* We know that immigrants from Canaan regularly entered and settled in Egypt. There are many archaeological artifacts confirming this.
* We know that a group of Semitics (the Hyksos) actually ruled in Egypt for a season.
* During the 13th c. BC, during the reign of Ramesses the Great, the old Hyksos capital of Avaris in the northeast Delta was rebuilt and expanded under slave labor.
* The logic of enslaving Israelites is that if they are not enslaved they will join the enemy and be driven out. This feeling could suggest the time period when the Hyksos are being driven from the land.
* The place names of Ra'amses and Pithom are real. They were store cities. They existed in the Late Bronze age, and there was extensive construction there.
* The ark of the covenant that the Israelites built has great similarity to one found in Egypt in the 2nd millennium BC.
* A 4-pillared "Israelite" house has been found along the Nile River near Ra'amses.
* An Egyptian papyrus reveals the name of a slave with a biblical name identical to the name of an Israelite midwife in Ex. 1.15: Shiphrah.
* Forced labor was common on Egypt.
In other words, EVERYTHING about the account rings true. There is evidence that the account is historical. The problem is that we have no direct evidence of an Israelite presence there. But as we keep marching through the text, chapter after chapter, there are
mountains of evidence of historicity, authenticity, and accuracy, so much so that its historicity becomes not only possible but plausible.
> The one detail you left out was that Samson's strength came from not cutting his hair. Isn't that enough to say this is fiction?
It's not that the hair was magical. The point is neither the hair nor its length but instead what the hair represented: The vow to God that he would be different from everyone else in his dedication to the Lord. The cutting of his hair would bring the vow to an end. He was right: when he allowed his hair to be cut, the Lord's blessing and protection would leave him, and his ability to judge the Philistines with the help of the Lord would be gone. Without the help of the Lord, he was no different than anyone else.
> How can you tell that the Biblical flood occurred as a historical fact but that Gilgamesh is fiction?
I'm not convinced that Gilgamesh is fiction. Before you roll your eyes, let me explain. That we have three separate records from the same region telling about the same event allows us to plausibly wonder if they narrate the same historical event. There is no reason to doubt that those accounts and Genesis refer to the same flood. This would certainly account for the similarities. The differences exist because each culture is viewing the flood through its own theology and worldview. Gilgamesh and Atrahasis use mythological, fantastical, and sexual/bloody language, as was common in their theologies. Genesis uses historical language, as was common in biblical theology.
> if the evidence and rationales used to verify the Bible also work to verify other religions and myths, then those evidences and rationals aren't useful to determine truth. Do you agree?
No I don't. I hope from this and the previous conversation, you are getting the honest feel that the Bible is quite different from the mythologies of the ancient Near East, from the Qur'an, and from any fictional tale. The evidences and rationales used to verify the Bible actually do bring us to a point of plausibility of the biblical text, whereas they do not function that way with Gilgamesh, Atrahasis, the Egyptian texts, and even the Qur'an. The Bible stands quite alone and unique among religious texts.