Wow, again, you manage to read only the parts of the article that you like.
We shall see if it be bullets or if it be something less.
Worthless. It has to be the city of David in Judea to be in the running. Having Jews live somewhere just doesn't cut it.
Not worthless. True, the presence of Jews at that time period does not prove it to be the right place, but it makes it a *possible* place. Evidence is not all about single facts that prove the whole, it's building a case using various facts that are related to each other. For instance, if you wanted to prove that a guy murdered someone in a particular house, you have to start by showing that it's *possible*, by showing he has no alibi and was seen by no one else anywhere else at the time of the crime.
Also, it amuses me that you are calling all other evidence worthless, but the only thing you are basing your opinion on is a book you have read. Fun fact: the writers of the bible weren't there at the birth of christ
either.
Right...what evidence!!?? You think just saying it makes it so?
Of course not. And obviously, a bunch of people worshiping a place doesn't necessarily mean it's the right place (see: Bethlehem of Judea). However, what we have is one of the largest and earliest christian churches built right in the middle of a small jewish community that just happens to be named Bethlehem. If nothing else, it shows that the site was very important to early christians. Can you think of another reason for that?
Proof she rode it all on a donkey? And proof that people of that day had real trouble going more than 20 yards?? Ever hear of camels? Walking? Etc....
Camels would be much the same as a donkey, and walking would take even longer. Seven kilometers is a little less than five miles -- a day trip if you were riding or walking. 150 km is about 93 miles.
A camel caravan (probably the fastest option) can generally travel 25 miles in a day. That's a four day trip to B.o.T, and then another four days back. Would the Romans really run a census that required everyone to lose a week or more of productive work time in order to return to the cities of their great-great-somethingths ancestors? Or, does it make more sense that each region would have its own census center, probably within a day's journey of the towns surrounding it?
And why would a man drag his nine-months-pregnant wife on a week long camel/donkey trek when she could have just stayed at home?
Let's see that? Why talk as if you have something when you can't produce the goods?
"Studies of the town [Bethlehem of Judea] have turned up a great deal of Iron Age material from 1200 to 550 B.C. as well as material from the sixth century A.D., but nothing from the first century B.C. or the first century A.D."
This is probably the most damning evidence. Archaeologists have gotten pretty good at pinpointing layers of habitation throughout time. Each generation leaves their own mark on an area. The evidence shows that B.o.T. was inhabited up to five hundred years before Jesus's supposed birth, and as soon as six hundred years after, but that's a pretty huge gap of over a thousand years without any evidence of anybody living there.
More empty blab. Says who based on what exactly???
Says this scientist, based on all of the above. Granted, most of this evidence is circumstantial--you certainly couldn't convict on it--but the only thing you have to argue against it is 'Well someone else several hundred years ago said this city was the right one!'
Try facing reality before spouting unsupported conspiracy theories that are out of sync with Scripture and for which you cannot provide the slightest proof.
Do tell me which is more plausible: The romans require a bunch of jewish families to travel up to a hundred miles away from where they live to an
uninhabited place for a census, or some guy who was writing a story fudged the facts to make it fit better into an existing prophecy?
Just because it's blasphemy doesn't mean it isn't true.