Was Jesus an Historical Figure?
Jesus Christ is the most influential figure on the planet, with more than 2 billion worshippers worldwide and many more who fondly study his teachings. But what if he never existed? Many skeptics have posed this very question, and while true believers scoff at such suggestions, the debate is far from resolved. Jesus may have changed the world, but did he really walk the Earth?








Regarding Paul
- From JP Holding
By J.P. Holding - Founder, Apologetics Ministries
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Revelation
Paul tells us at the beginning of Galatians that he is an apostle neither from man nor by man, but by Jesus Christ and God the father... and taking up the idea in 1:11f he explains that his gospel was neither according to man or taught by man, but received by revelation of Jesus Christ. He is clear that his gospel of the crucified Christ was not something derived from his predecessors. He was chosen before birth and called through grace, when God revealed his Son to Paul.
Mr Holding doesn't seem to perceive the significance of this regarding Paul as a witness to Jesus. It is not merely that Paul wasn't a direct witness to Jesus, but that his knowledge of him came through a revelation, not from a source in this world. There is no indication in Galatians that the Jerusalem group, though apparently messianists, even knew anything about Jesus.
I don't think Tacitus ever claimed that he got his knowledge of Nero from a revelation.
- spin December 24, 2008 4:37PM
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Paul's 100% failure to quote Jesus to explain salvation
Maybe some enterprising apologist can explain why Paul, so utterly concerned to write volumes about the gospel of salvation, never once quotes Jesus to substantiate his arguments, when in the nature of the case, a quotation from Jesus would be the absolute end of all argument.
Can you imagine Billy Graham preaching sermons for ten years and never once quoting the bible?
Wouldn't that make you scratch your head and think something was amiss?
Then neither can we imagine apostle Paul giving gospel and doctrinal instruction to his Christian converts and never once quoting Jesus, which supplies rational warrant to skeptics who say the gospel sayings of Jesus was either:
a - a late fabrications after Paul or
b - existed in Paul's day, but spelled out a very legalistic Jewish Christianity that Paul, the good businessman, knew his prospective Gentile audiences would not wish to align themselves with.
Oh, before I forget, one good argument that Acts is nothing more than spin-doctored history to support Paul's ministry, is it's ridiculous portrayal of the apostles quoting the Old Testament to settle the question of Gentile salvation (Acts 15). If this had truly been a meeting of the original apostles with other legalistic "believers", well, everybody present would thus accept the authority of Jesus. But nobody is quoting Jesus to settle a question about how somebody gets saved?!
Like I said, Acts is nothing but Pauline propaganda, and conservative scholars have never adequately addressed these unexpected omissions.
- greg 6
January 1, 2009 11:44AM
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