[FONT="]
Even Christian scholars largely admit there are no writings from anyone who directly knew or witnessed Jesus. There are no contemporary writings (and we should expect to [FONT="]find some), and [FONT="]there's nothing written down for decades after the pur[FONT="]ported events.[/FONT][/FONT][/FONT]
[/FONT][FONT="][FONT="]
But [FONT="]t[FONT="]hat's the thing, we don't have any records from anyone w[FONT="]ho was anywhere close to [FONT="]th[FONT="]e source.[/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT]
[/FONT]
[FONT="]
Unfortunately the historical record doesn't agree with you. The[FONT="] books were written at least 40 years afterwards, [FONT="]Luke and Matthew w[FONT="]ere based off the book of Mark (this is known as the synoptic problem within Christianity), and the book of John barely lines up with the other three about anything.[/FONT][/FONT][/FONT]
Furthermore the books [FONT="]of Luke and John (at least) were written outside of the li[FONT="]fespan of anyone that could have possibly been alive during the time of Jesus.[/FONT][/FONT]
[/FONT]
[FONT="][FONT="]
There are not many documents we have that are less credible tha[FONT="]n the Bible [FONT="]historically[/FONT]. Especially when it comes to thin[FONT="]gs like Jesus.
The best you can say for it[FONT="] is that some places name[FONT="]d[/FONT] in the Bible were actual towns/cities. But [FONT="]that's not really anything to show the bible is credible at all. Fictional stories are set in real places all the time (for example Spiderman lives in New York City, [FONT="]h[FONT="]owever the existence of New York City doesn't lend credibility to the idea that Spiderman is a real person)[/FONT][/FONT].
I[FONT="]t can also provide some insi[FONT="]ght into the lives and customs of people[FONT="] at the time, however the point is[FONT="], there's no evid[FONT="]ence that the [FONT="]more wild or supernatural claims[FONT="] are accurate[FONT="].[/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT]
[/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][FONT="]
I'm not sure where you're getting your info... most scholars have the position that the book of Mark was written in response to the destruction of the temple. Off the top of my head the destruction of the temple is talked about in Mark 13 (although it is written as a "prediction").
[FONT="]
Some of the claims made in the gospels are ridiculously wrong, and would never have been committed by a 1st century Jew living in ancient Israel. Examples are mistakes in cultural rituals, mistaken geography, and more. The gospels are not as airtight as you may think they are.
[FONT="]
This goes back to my Spiderman and New York city example. Just because the story was set in a real place, and real names and whatnot may have been inserted into the story, that doesn't mean the story is credible.
Again, there's also a lot of glaring mistakes made in that area as well on that note.
[FONT="]
[FONT="]Again, there's no doubt that the biblical authors us[FONT="]ed real places and real names in their narratives. That doesn't mean their stories are real though[FONT="].[/FONT][/FONT][/FONT]
[/FONT][FONT="][FONT="]
If a great supernatural [FONT="]darkness fell upon the world, which wa[FONT="]s met with massive earthquakes, and the zombie invasion of Jerusalem when Jesus die[FONT="]d [/FONT][/FONT][/FONT](as is described in the go[FONT="]spels), people would have noticed that too.
[FONT="]But for [FONT="]some reason, the Roman[FONT="] records from the time show nobody[FONT="] [/FONT][/FONT]seemed to notice[FONT="].[/FONT][/FONT][/FONT]
[/FONT][/FONT]
[FONT="][FONT="]
I'll have to look it up, it's been a couple years since I have seen it. It was a documentary that was ma[FONT="]de when Jonestown was still going on before the disaster. They interviewed some people who lived[FONT="] there and they made claims that Jim Jones created food out of thin air to feed every[FONT="]one, etc.[/FONT][/FONT][/FONT]
[/FONT][FONT="]
[FONT="]How are the[FONT="] stories about Jesus as contained in t[FONT="]he gospels any more credible? We actually have confirmed first hand accounts[/FONT][/FONT][/FONT] for [FONT="]J[/FONT]im Jones, [FONT="]we don't have that for Jesus.[/FONT]
[/FONT][FONT="][FONT="]
How do you know the wh[FONT="]ole Jesus thing wasn't based on a sham either? Just because a lie has been told for a long [FONT="]time, do[FONT="]esn't [FONT="]somehow make th[FONT="]e lie true.[/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT][/FONT]
[/FONT][FONT="][FONT="]
Have you ever read any counter-[FONT="]arguments to that viewpoint?
[/FONT][/FONT]
[FONT="]
That's actually an appeal to authority, not evidence in and of itself.
[FONT="]
[/FONT]As far as what He claimed and the miracles He did well you have to rely on witness accounts unless we were there which we were not. So this has to be taken on faith. But we do have some indirect evidence from all the people who are willing to testify as witnesses and lay down their lives for those beliefs. __________________
Science is getting closer and closer to the very core of existence. The closer they get the more they will see that there had to be a creator.
Again, why should we take it on faith?
Someone writing something down is not evidence, nor is someone laying down their lives for their beliefs. People of any major religion have laid their lives down for their beliefs, and they can't all be right.
And how do you know science is going to determine there had to be a creator? Do you have some insight into the scientific research that nobody else has access to yet?
Another major mistake that is rather important to the bible narrative is the account of the Roman census. There's no reason to believe Romans required anyone to travel to their hometown for the census, quite the opposite...it would be extraordinarily difficult to get everyone to do this...and serves no real practical purposes.