Ahem. The Internet is the murderer of false facts.RCSaunders wrote: ↑Fri Jun 07, 2019 9:04 pmWell, a little more than the Bible.
Jesus is metioned three times by Flavius Josephus, a first-century Romano-Jewish scholar and historian as well as the near contemporary Roman authors: Suetonius, in the Life of Claudius, and Tacitus, in Annals, where he reports that a Christus, after whom Christians are named, was killed by Pontius Pilate under the reign of Tiberius.
A little (very little) research revealed this on Wikipaedia:
1. Boman (2012) states that there are many different spellings of this word in the manuscripts he examined, namely "Chresto, Cherestro, Cresto, Chrestro, Cheresto, Christo, xpo, xpisto, and Cristo"
2. But the temporal order for the documents begins with Pliny writing around 111 AD, then Tacitus around 115/116 AD and then Suetonius around 122 AD.[58][61]
1. The manuscripts were not original.
2. Tacitus and Suetonius wrote (supposedly) about Jesus about 80 years after J died. This is comparable to truth value when people 50-70 years after the Holocaust deny that it happened. In other words, could have been a political or religious agenda that commanded the writers to write this. Tacitus, Suetonius etc. wrote 80 years after Jesus perished allegedly; this long a lag does not exclude the high probability that the text was ficiton.
Christianity obviously started. There is no denying it. Perhaps by Jesus the Christ, but there is no document of that other than the Bible.
The upshot is, that Christianity started, and that we don't know how, why, and by whom. We have the bible, which is an historical document at the same time as a religious text; believing in the bible for facts is the same as believing the bible as god's own words: no external references or proofs exist for its claims.