> Yes, which are the only parts about Jesus and miracles.
The mention of Jesus and his miracles are likely the authentic parts. It's the "if indeed one ought to call him a man," "He was the Messiah," and "restored to life" that were added later.
> Especially the parts you're trying to cite here.
Now you're just getting snarky. Do you want to have a reasonable discussion or don't you?
> Right, which means that "You don't know that.". You can speculate it, but you don't know it. The evidence we have at hand is insufficient given the extraordinary nature of the claim.
With evidence like this (a cold case), we don't deal in certainties but in plausibilities and probabilities. The evidence at hand is sufficient but not proof.
>>>>> The Gospel accounts have not be proved wrong at any point
>>> You're shifting the burden of proof here. The gospel accounts have never been proved correct. They have never been demonstrated to be true. They haven't met their burden of proof.
>> "The Gospel accounts have not be proved true at any point, so we have no reason to give them credibility."
> Fixed it for you.
You didn't fix it, you took it out of the logic it belongs in. The Gospel accounts have been proved to be true at hundreds of points. Hundreds. So you did fix anything, you just denied the evidence at hand.
> you really went all in on this shifted burden of proof fallacy. Do you think that a court room would find someone guilty because there's no competing hypothesis?
What I have consistently claimed, and is proven, is that the Gospel accounts have been proved reliable at hundreds of points. When we have a document that has been found to be reliable, if you contend it is not reliable, then the burden of proof is on you to (1) refute the reliability of the Gospel documents, (2) give evidence to that extent, and (3) present a credible alternative.
In a court of law, the burden of proof is on the affirmative, the prosecution. In a debate, the burden of proof is on anyone making a claim. So support your claim that "The Gospel accounts have not be proved true at any point, so we have no reason to give them credibility."
> The evidence you have is a story in a book, a story that was verbally passed along verbally for decades before it was written down.
You seem to misunderstand the milieu of oral communication. When the memory is trained from birth by culture to retain and communicate truth, the reliability factor is high—especially when dealing with a subject of royal or divine importance.
The only biographies we have of Alexander the Great were all oral traditions assembled not decades but CENTURIES later. Do we toss those?
> When it was written down, it was written in a now dead language.
This is incorrect. It was written in koine Greek, which has evolved into modern Greek. It's like saying Shakespearean English is a dead language. No it's not; it evolved as do all languages.
> We don't even have the originals, we have copies of copies of translated copies of copies.
We have so many copies of copies, that we can reassemble the original with better than 99% accuracy. We have no reason to doubt the text we have.
> We don't even know who wrote them.
The evidence for the traditional authors is far stronger than the evidence against. I would say that we can quite plausibly and even probably know who wrote them: Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. But obviously this is a much bigger discussion. We can have it if you wish. The weight of logic and evidence is largely in favor of the traditional authors.
> Nice, but that evidence doesn't lead anywhere, because it hasn't met its burden of proof.
It has. We have 4 accounts of provable reliability, of known provenance, of external corroboration, and of historical accuracy. If we are weighing the evidence, we can use abductive reasoning to infer the most reasonable conclusion and come to a conclusion of not only plausibility but also probability about the historicity, reliability, and authenticity of the texts and their accounts.
>> It shows from an extrabiblical source that Jesus had a reputation for special powers, and that's the point.
> Does it?
Yes, it does. The stated point is that Jesus had this reputation. The evidence shows us an extrabibilical source to that effect. I get the idea that you're deliberately obfuscating because you're reluctant to admit there is meritorious evidence.
> There is no extra biblical writings about Jesus that are contemporary.
You mean aside from the one I just mentioned? It's almost like CNN refusing to admit that Tara Reade has a legitimate accusation.
I hope you also realize how many 1st-c. works have been lost. We have only half of Tacitus's work. All but a fragment of Thallus's Mediterranean History is gone. The writings of Asclepiades of Mendes are gone. Nicholas of Damascus (the secretary of Herod the Great) wrote his Universal History in 144 books: none have survived. Papias's work is lost. Josephus's originals are gone (except for what we have through Eusebius). Quadratus wrote to Emperor Hadrian—all lost.
But it turns out we still have 4 very early works attesting to Jesus's life and works. Why does it have to be extrabibilical to be believable? That's like saying we can't trust anything about COVID coming out of the hospitals; we'll only trust extrahospitular testimony. It makes no sense.
> Even the bible writings, the earliest of which happened decades after his death.
Decades is nothing. Let's see, 30 or 40 years ago is Bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky, Ronald Reagan, Madonna, Cindi Lauper, Nirvana, and the tearing down of the Berlin Wall. It's still SIMPLE to get truth about these things. Simple.