Originally posted by Jon Miller
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As I said, "evidentiary." Not what anyone chooses to believe, actual tangible evidence. There are plenty of reasons for that, mostly being loss and destruction of archaeological evidence, or that some data is simply not susceptible to archaeological or records preservation.
It wasn't until 1961 that we had (and still have only one) piece of physical evidence that Pontius Pilatus existed and was the Prefect of Judea. The Roman sources on Pilatus are mininal, and the writings of Philo (who was about as objective as one could find in the era) and Josephus (a distinct propagandist for the Roman point of view) are more contemporaneous and less favorable than the gospel versions.
What we have is a few manuscripts started a few decades after the date generally given for the death of Jesus, written by individuals who are frankly, unknown. Yeah, I know, John, Paul, George and Ringo, except that the apostles didn't write the manuscripts. They were written one or two generations after the fact, which in the ancient world, leaves lots of room for spin and embellishment. Part of the reason why, a few centuries after the fact, religious authorities decided to pick and choose which of many writings they would accept and discard. Oh, with the occasional condemnations for heresy, so on and so forth.
So sorry, a bunch of cherry-picked writings started several decades after the fact doesn't provide any specific evidence. (Reading Comprehension 101: None of this says "Jesus didn't exist." "Jesus doesn't exist" is not equal to "There is no evidentiary basis for the existtence of Jesus." )
Was there someone who inspired a particularly successful messianic cult (as it was referred to by its detractors) among the Jews? Yes. Were there enemies of Jesus himself? No evidence. Were there enemies of a cult/sect/religion based upon the supposed teachings of one called Jesus? Certainly. Two different things.
Logically, there most likely was at least one individual, or maybe a principle charismatic individual and some lesser known ones who said or did things later attributed to Jesus, who formed the basis for the Jesus stories. One thing we know for certain, ancient middle eastern peoples were far more concerned with a good story and literal truth. Prodigal son? Good story with an object lesson. Literal truth? Not needed, because the story and the lesson was the goal.
Oh, but they were inspired by God.
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