Jesus: The Historical Evidence
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- Historicity
- Three possibilities
- Mythological
- Existed, but the Bible has reinvented him
- Existed, portrayed accurately in the Bible
- Jesus (2 BC-33 AD) v. Tiberius (emperor 14-37 AD), within 150 years of their lives.
- Jesus: 42 sources – 9 secular + 33 Christian
- Tiberius: 10 sources, including Gospel of Luke. (To be fair, there are also dozens of coins of Tiberius, naming him or portraying his image.)
- Historical facts accepted by most scholars (whether or not they believe in Christ)
- Born shortly before 1 BC (date of death of Herod the Great)
- From a large and poor family in the tribe of Judah
- Remained single
- Skilled in manual labor and physically tough (though of normal appearance)
- Critical of established religion, he aroused the wrath of the priesthood
- Executed by crucifixion (virtually no one survived this punishment) under Pontius Pilatus (26-36 AD)
- His first followers believed he’d been raised from the dead, and was the Messiah (anointed one)
- Three possibilities
- Insider testimony
- New Testament
- Written approximately 50-100 AD.
- Sources of the New Testament (like 1 Cor 15:3-5, as well as various hymns, like Phil 2:5-11 and Eph 5:14, and sayings, like Acts 20:35)
- Numerous aspects argue against fabrication.
- Conversion of skeptics like James the brother of Jesus and Saul of Tarsus
- Hostile testimony (see below)
- Criterion of embarrassment
- Admission of ignorance in Mark 13:32
- Rejection by his own family (Mark 3:20; John 7:5).
- Having the Messiah go to the Cross -- a stumbling block to Jews and foolishness to Greeks!
- Patristic writings (extrabiblical)
- 1st C: 1 Clement (96 AD)
- 2nd C: Ignatius (107 AD), 7 letters; Polycarp (69-155), letter to Philippians & martyrdom account; Justin Martyr (100-165), Apology [Defense]; and many more!
- Thousands of pages during the early church period (30-325 AD)
- We could virtually reconstruct the entire NT from quotations in early sources.
- New Testament
- Outsider testimony
- Josephus (37-100 AD) – brother of James; claimed of Messiahship
- Mara bar-Serapion (73) – Syrian Stoic, writing to son from Romans prison: crucifixion of Jews’ wise king; loss of kingdom
- Thallus (52) – commented on daytime darkness at time of death of Jesus
- Phlegon (80-150?) – crucifixion; darkness; earthquake
- Suetonius (69-122) – instigation by “Chrestos” in time of Claudius (41-54)
- Tacitus (56-120) – Nero’s persecution, July 64
- Pliny the Younger (61-112) – asked emperor Trajan how to deal with Christians (112)
- Lucian (115-200) – wise man; crucified in Palestine
- Celsus (2nd) – ridiculed Christianity -- a foolish religion for foolish people
- Talmud (200-500) -- trial and crucifixion; charges Jesus with sorcery (Sanhedrin 43a).
- Conclusion
- Myth? – No, since Jesus is rooted in history.
- “Good teacher”? – No, for this teacher claimed divinity. Unless that was true, he would have been dishonest – and hence not a good teacher.
- Same as other religious founders? – not at all!
- Confucius – civil servant who made shrewd observations; a sage, not a religious leader
- Buddha – agnostic / atheist; no individual existence; at the end, no relationships
- Muhammad – did not claim to be God; did not do miracles (so the Qur’an)
- Jesus was neither myth nor fabrication. The possibility that makes the most sense is that he existed, and his remarkable life was fairly and accurately portrayed in the Bible.