Originally posted by beingofone
Only if you dicount the fact that substantial portions of the Roman Empire had groups of Christians scattered throughout by the end of the first century.
Think about what it would take to pull that off. Also books were extreemly expensive and involved not just one person as today but usually several if not dozens to cooperate.
We are talking the biggest hoax in the history of mankind under the nose of the efficient Romans.
Only if you dicount the fact that substantial portions of the Roman Empire had groups of Christians scattered throughout by the end of the first century.
Think about what it would take to pull that off. Also books were extreemly expensive and involved not just one person as today but usually several if not dozens to cooperate.
We are talking the biggest hoax in the history of mankind under the nose of the efficient Romans.
Jesus himself was active in only a small area in a province, far far away from rome and, after all, Jesus was very reluctant to do anything for non jews but rather concentrated his missionary efforts (and miracles) on jews.
So we can assume that all of the missionary work outside of this area was done only after the death of Jesus and most probably only by a small group of people (i.e. those of the apostles who did all of the voyages to convert people within other countries to the christian faith [and, speaking of rome, only the far fewer number of apostles who actually cared to also convert non jews to the christian faith])
All was needed is, that these few people believed in the resurrection of Jesus. They would do the convertion of the first people in a new country (bringing with them also the faith in the resurrection of Jesus) and then these converts would carry on converting other people, always also mentioning the faith in the resurrection of jesus.
It wouldn´t even matter if not all of the apostles believed in his resurrection, as only those apostles (like John and Peter) who did their missionary work outside of galilea needed to believe in it.
If Apostles (or other disciples) who didn´t do much missionary work didn´t believe in the ressurrection, it wouldn´t matter much, as it was more important which faith gained supremacy among the christian parishs (and for this it was more important how many people believed in it and not if their faith was true).
(not taking into account the explanatiion that it could possibly be that Jesus wasn´t dead as he was taken from the cross [but just unconscious with very shallow breath] so that, when he awoke in his tomb, all of the people [and Jesus himself] believed that he was resurrected from the death [after all in Mark 15:44 Pilatus was surprised to hear that Jesus was already dead, so it seems to be that it normally took longer for people on the cross to die])
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