AusGeoff
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Sage of Gippsland
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Victoria
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Excerpted overview of main Jesus mythicist arguments from Wikipedia:
Most "Christ mythicists" follow a threefold argument: they question the reliability of the Pauline epistles and the Gospels to postulate a historically existing Jesus; they note the lack of information on Jesus in non-Christian sources from the first and early second century; and they argue that early Christianity had syncretistic and mythological origins...
Paul's epistles lack detailed biographical information— most mythicists agree that the Pauline epistles are older than the gospels, and note that aside from a few passages which may have been interpolations, there is a complete absence of any detailed biographical information such as might be expected if Jesus had been a contemporary of Paul...
The gospels are not historical records, but a fictitious historical narrative—mythicists argue that although the gospels seem to present a historical framework, they are not historical records, but theological writings, myth or legendary fiction resembling the Hero archetype. They impose "a fictitious historical narrative" on a "mythical cosmic saviour figure", weaving together various pseudo- historical Jesus traditions...
No independent eyewitness accounts survive, in spite of the fact that many authors were writing at that time. Early second-century Roman accounts contain very little evidence, and may depend on Christian sources... Paul refers to Jesus as an exalted being, and is probably writing about either a mythical or supernatural entity, or a celestial deity named Jesus. This deity is derived from personified aspects of God, notably the personification of Wisdom, or "a saviour figure patterned after similar figures within ancient mystery religions" which were often a dying-and-rising god...
While Paul may also contain proto-Gnostic (early theological) ideas, some mythicists have argued that Paul may refer to a historical person who may have lived in a dim past, long before the beginnings of the Common Era [CE].
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