So what you are saying is that Jesus was simply mistaken rather than having a mental disorder.
No. I'm saying that this is a possibility that Lewis' trilemma ignores, thus making it a false trichotomy.
I don’t agree because Jesus said many things about himself that would seem really crazy unless He was trying to deceive them. I gave one example previously ‘I am the living bread which came down from heaven’.
But you are right, the people of the day may not have recognised mental disorders and perhaps would have concluded that He was demon possessed.
Or they could have concluded that he was the genuine article.
You're a Christian, so it's probable you don't believe the central figures of other religions - Buddha, Muhammed, the Guru Nanak, etc - did the various supernatural things their respective religions claim they did. Yet, Buddhism, Islam, and Sikhism, are flourishing. If the followers of those people were mistaken, why couldn't the followers of Christ?
I don’t think there is any account of people referring to Him as mad in the bible and very few refer to Him as demon possessed. But I think that would be the general consensus
Why?
if it wasn’t for the amazing miracles He did – who can say someone is a lunatic (or a deceiver for that matter) when they have just brought someone back from the dead or healed a blind man?
Lewis' trilemma addresses those who broadly agree with the mundane aspects of the Gospels, but disagree that with the supernatural aspects (they dispute that the resurrection of Jesus and Lazerth, etc, occurred), instead saying that Jesus was merely a good moral teacher. Thus, the trilemma does not begin from the premise that the miraculous things occurred.
Naturally, if Jesus really did bring people back from the dead, that would make people sit up and listen, but the trilemma aims to prove Jesus' divinity using logic, not empiricism.
Now if you believe the bible was made up by people and not from God Himself then I can understand where you are coming from. I am only coming from the angle that everything in the bible is true and it is God's word but in that case the CS Lewis argument is a waste of time because it does not relate to people who think the bible is full of errors.[/COLOR]
On the contrary, that is
exactly the kind of people to whom Lewis is addressing: those who broadly agree with the Gospels, but dispute the more improbable, supernatural stuff.
Lewis argues that such people are left with three possibilities: that Jesus was lord, lunatic, or liar. He then proceeds to disprove the latter two, leaving us with only the first option left, which we must therefore conclude is true.
My only point, then, is that these people have a fourth option: that Jesus was simply honestly mistaken in his claims to divinity, and not through mental illness.