Two Scholars Admit Weaknesses in Jesus Resurrection Case (feat. Kamil Gregor)

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  • Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024
  • Recently, leading resurrection scholars Dr Mike Licona and Dr Dale Allison Jr. discussed their two different approaches toward historical evidence for Jesus' resurrection... even though they agree on the Christian conclusion. Kamil Gregor (from ‪@camandkam‬ ) joins me to point out where he and I differ on the path the evidence takes toward a conclusion against Jesus' resurrection.
    The Resurrection of Jesus: Mike Licona & Dale Allison in Dialogue by ‪@SeanMcDowell‬
    • The Resurrection of Je...
    === RESOURCES ===
    Richard Miller's paper on missing bodies:
    (2010). "Mark's empty tomb and other translation fables in classical antiquity." Journal of biblical literature, 129(4), 759-776
    www.jstor.org/...
    Here's some literature on divine translation and appearances of divine beings. I'm including recent titles, which cite a ton of older literature.
    Miller, R. C. (2014). Resurrection and Reception in Early Christianity. Routledge
    Cook, J. G. (2018). Empty Tomb, Resurrection, Apotheosis. Mohr Siebeck
    Fox, R. L. (2006). Pagans and Christians. Penguin UK, particularly the "Seeing the Gods" chapter
    Litwa, M. D. (2014). Iesus Deus. Augsburg Fortress Publishers, particularly chapter 5
    Litwa, M. D. (2019). How the Gospels Became History. Yale University Press, particularly chapters 11-15
    Larsen, K. B. (2008). Recognizing the Stranger: Recognition Scenes in the Gospel of John. Brill
    Burnett, D. C. (2021). Christ’s Enthronement at God’s Right Hand and Its Greco-Roman Cultural Context. Walter de Gruyter
    Petridou, G. (2016). Divine Epiphany in Greek Literature and Culture. Oxford University Press
    Justin Daneshmand's recent PhD thesis "The Elusive Jesus of Luke-Acts in Its Ancient Mediterranean Literary Context" (2020, University of Manchester)
    Some literature on Paul in context:
    Wendt, H. (2016). At the Temple Gates. Oxford University Press
    Eyl, J. (2019). Signs, Wonders, and Gifts. Oxford University Press
    Kloppenborg, J. S. (2019). Christ’s Associations. Yale University Press
    Stanley, C. D. (2004). Arguing with Scripture. Bloomsbury Publishing USA
    Is The Historical Jesus More Plausible Than Mythicism With Kamil Gregor
    • Is The Historical Jesu...
    Bible Scholar Attempts my Resurrection Questions (Dale Allison)
    • Bible Scholar Attempts...
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Комментарии • 1 тыс.

  • @badatpseudoscience
    @badatpseudoscience Год назад +130

    5:40 Dr. Allison hits one of my pet peeves. He presents the concept of "keeping an open mind" as being in opposition to skepticism. The idea behind keep an open mind is not to believe a claim if you don't have sufficient reason to. To keep an open mind means to allow the evidence and logic to guide you no matter what you predisposition for a particular answer. A default skepticism is part of that. This is because if you have a conclusion without first having proper reasons for that conclusion, you are closed minded. As a test for this idea, consider that I can believe anything I want as long as I don't require a proper reason to believe.

    • @pauligrossinoz
      @pauligrossinoz Год назад +3

      *Yes! This!*

    • @joonzville
      @joonzville Год назад +5

      100% THIS. I just posted a similar comment (I didn’t read the comments first, I usually just upvote comments I agree with but he pissed me off a bit with that ‘misunderstanding’.). Yours is more detailed and calm but we agree.

    • @bludfyre
      @bludfyre Год назад +1

      The best default question I have ever heard for examining a claim or belief comes from the TIK history channel here on RUclips: "But is that really the case?" While I disagree with him politically, I 100% agree with asking that question of any historical narrative, then examining the evidence for or against that narrative and reaching a conclusion.

    • @Petticca
      @Petticca Год назад +4

      @Bad at.
      Yeah, at 5:40, I agree, however I'm not sure he means it to be a one or the other thing though. Immediately before that he uses skeptism to say one should not just readily accept the thing.
      I honestly think he just means that he's less skeptical with some of the biblical stuff, than other bits of biblical stuff, I think his 'open minded' isn't meant to pit the two as opposites. Just that he's more credulous. I think it's more a commentary on his personal take, rather than his suggesting those skeptical aren't open minded.
      I could be wrong. I've only seen him speak a few times, but I got the impression that he is trying to be as open as he can, and admit when he understands why there's opposing skeptical views, he just struggles to get there.

    • @Amazing_Mark
      @Amazing_Mark Год назад

      Dr Allison keeps 'an open mind' w.r.t. SPECIFIC aspects of the Christian faith/evidences that are put forth for the resurrection. He still firmly believes that the evidence AS A WHOLE is in favour of Christianity.

  • @romanbesel4759
    @romanbesel4759 Год назад +90

    Cool to see Kamil featuring in the video. Guy is a well of historical knowledge, sarcastic comments and based humour.

    • @utubepunk
      @utubepunk Год назад +2

      TRUEEEE!

    • @tHEh1VES
      @tHEh1VES Год назад +1

      +1

    • @rembrandt972ify
      @rembrandt972ify Год назад +4

      I like Kamil, he enjoys discussing Christianity with a little spit and Polish... sorry. 😛

    • @ramigilneas9274
      @ramigilneas9274 Год назад +2

      @@rembrandt972ify
      And a little bit of Czech.

    • @amyonepelosi2925
      @amyonepelosi2925 Год назад

      yes. Such a great talker Kamil and so much knowledge

  • @Jeremy-of7bx
    @Jeremy-of7bx Год назад +391

    So, they admit that they were indoctrinated into these beliefs as a child, and admit that the evidence is relatively weak, but they choose to believe anyways because Christianity is pragmatic to their lives. Got it. I also thought it was interesting Licona admitted that if Islam had the same level of "evidence" that he would reject it just based on the fact he doesn't like Islam.

    • @mariod1547
      @mariod1547 Год назад +8

      You remember the minutes he said that about Islam? I don't feel like watching the entire video?

    • @greyeyed123
      @greyeyed123 Год назад +1

      Which is also a bit of an incestuous logical circle, as the REASON he doesn't like Islam is because he was indoctrinated as a child in Christianity. "Why is that other religion not true? Because my religion is true. Why is my religion true? Because I was raised to believe it was true, just like those people in those other religions."

    • @michaelstanet7453
      @michaelstanet7453 Год назад +12

      Yep, that about sums it up.

    • @jeffmason7013
      @jeffmason7013 Год назад +35

      Ineed. It’s on par with with WLC’s admission of lowering the epistemic bar to suit his fancy.

    • @0cypher0
      @0cypher0 Год назад +6

      @@michaelstanet7453 around 10:00 ish

  • @OneEyed_Jack
    @OneEyed_Jack Год назад +98

    I just kept hearing "as a historian, it's very frustrating that the stuff I want to believe can't be defended historically, at all." I know it's not his actual words, but it's what I heard.

    • @Petticca
      @Petticca Год назад +15

      Yeah, I don't envy anyone who has that cognitive dissonance to contend with.
      I do respect what comes across as genuine attempts to be intellectually honest against strong, deep rooted world-view beliefs.

    • @garlottos
      @garlottos Год назад

      Yep, absence of evidence is evidence of absence. Who would believe the Hittites were real?

    • @G_Demolished
      @G_Demolished Год назад +6

      @@garlottos Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, but it is a circumstance where belief is unjustified.

    • @jeroenky6038
      @jeroenky6038 Год назад

      Actually you need more faith to be an atheist then believe in god. What is your evidence that there is no god?

    • @blue-pi2kt
      @blue-pi2kt Год назад +5

      @@jeroenky6038 Whilst we culturally don't recognise it, a substantial amount of the logical leaps necessary to reach a monotheistic or Christian God is just packed into your upbringing. There are plenty of subjective or experiential cues in someone's life that could lead them to become spiritual, none of which include Jesus Christ as your Lord and Saviour of Man Kind. Jesus didn't seem to visit other cultures until the West arrived there. Other deities were used to explain these experiences. I'm more agnostic than explicitly Atheist but in the same way existence precedes essence, it also seems to precede divinity. After all, accepting you don't have the answer is just as comforting as the deep faith necessary to believe you do.

  • @kendokaaa
    @kendokaaa Год назад +78

    "I'm not a skeptic by nature, I'm open minded"
    I don't think those two are mutually exclusive. When I hear of something new, I don't immediately doubt of its legitimacy unless it clashes with what I know to be verifiably true. In this case, it seems "open minded" means to believe just cuz

    • @BigFatWedge
      @BigFatWedge Год назад +1

      If you don’t immediately believe something, it means you doubt it.

    • @greyeyed123
      @greyeyed123 Год назад +12

      I define "open minded" as believing something (that isn't a mundane claim) after evidence that is falsifiable, verifiable, reproducible, and predictive is presented to me (even if the claim is one I don't like, or didn't want to believe before the evidence was presented). I define "close minded" as NOT believing something after such evidence is presented to me. You can be "skeptical" and believe lots of extraordinary things, as many extraordinary things have been demonstrated to be true. It just means you DON'T believe extraordinary things that HAVEN'T been demonstrated to be true...as that list of things is much, much, much longer with no guard rails to highlight the truth.

    • @ziploc2000
      @ziploc2000 Год назад +6

      @@BigFatWedge So do you immediately believe everything you are told? I would define that as gullible.

    • @rembrandt972ify
      @rembrandt972ify Год назад +9

      @@greyeyed123 Skeptical means open-minded. If you hear a claim, you then search for supporting evidence before you accept or reject the claim, whether the claim is mundane or not. Being closed-minded would be accepting or rejecting a claim regardless of evidence supporting or debunking said claim.

    • @Vadjong
      @Vadjong Год назад +6

      Being open-minded is in the definition of what it means to be a skeptic. It is a minor point in the discussion, but he does confuse skeptics with kneejerk nay-saying cynics and open-mindedners with happy-clappy mystics. For a scholar, he is rather fast and loose with his choice of words (also: ".. by nature... "??)
      Pro tip: You should never be so open-minded that your brains fall out.

  • @nickbrasing8786
    @nickbrasing8786 Год назад +53

    A great job of editing Paul. I've watched this on Sean's channel and know how much time this must have taken. Was hoping you would do a video on this and you never disappoint.

  • @acerx203
    @acerx203 Год назад +53

    it's interesting to see Cognitive Dissonance in such intelligent people. They believe because that is how they were raised.

    • @jamiehudson3661
      @jamiehudson3661 Год назад +3

      Where did you get that from the video? Did you watch the entire original video or Paulogia's hacked up and decietfully editted video?

    • @ramigilneas9274
      @ramigilneas9274 Год назад +4

      @@jamiehudson3661 😂

    • @Lobsterwithinternet
      @Lobsterwithinternet Год назад +6

      @@jamiehudson3661 “Who are you gonna believe? Me or your lying eyes!!” 😆😆😆

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 Год назад +8

      @@jamiehudson3661 Thanks for the unsupported accusation. That's what we expect from Christians.

    • @jamiehudson3661
      @jamiehudson3661 Год назад

      @@donnievance1942 I support in depth in another comment I made on the video.

  • @mdhutch2002
    @mdhutch2002 Год назад +35

    I've heard plenty of philosophical, historical, and psychological discussions of Christianity, but this is the first time I've ever heard someone having a literary discussion of the gospels and early Christianity, especially not in the context of other contemporary religious stories. I found this discussion and the context it gave to early Christianity to be absolutely fascinating.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas Год назад

      It is very late as we have zero out of the first century

    • @Ugly_German_Truths
      @Ugly_German_Truths Год назад +1

      That is the difference between a proper historian and a biblical theo-historian that grew up in a millieu favoring to see everything through faith glasses.
      That's one of the biggest problems in the mythicism/historicism debate: all the pro Historical Jesus folks come from the not very history oriented theo-historical corner. That does not mean they cannot know ANYTHING about hsitory, but most of them, including Dr Ehrmann, will subjugate their historical research under faith aspects and readily accept things any other historian investigating ancient texts would not let go through unqualified. Its a complete sub disciplien of History that heavily leans towards "whatever religion says".
      See as mentioned in this video "the argument from embarassment", which is barely ever used outside of biblical history studies. But inside the field it is - excuse the pun - taken as the "gospel" truth.

    • @blue-pi2kt
      @blue-pi2kt Год назад

      I am actually far more comfortable with the experiential argument for justification of faith, despite it obviously being not especially pursuasive to the unconverted. Apologetics would be put in far greater stead if Christian scholars acknowledged the uncertainty of the historical evidence for Jesus Christ outside of the Bible. If you believe you don't need more, if you don't well.... It wasn't going to pursuade you anyway.

  • @donaldnumbskull9745
    @donaldnumbskull9745 Год назад +18

    It seems to me that the apologists are asking "We have a couple of grams of somewhat plausible evidence, about a kilo of implausible evidence, and tonnes of complete nonsense. Surely, that's enough?"
    No, it's not.

  • @Locust13
    @Locust13 Год назад +34

    The apologists give away the game at the beginning, they did not start believing Jesus rose from the dead based on evidence, they believed Jesus rose from the dead because it was demanded of them at a young and impressionable age by an authority figure and now they're grasping at straws for some reason to continue holding a belief that they find comforting.

    • @lil-al
      @lil-al Год назад +3

      Of course. There is no other way to do it.

    • @ob2249
      @ob2249 Год назад

      I0cust13
      very insightfuI c0mment
      rammed int0 them fr0m birth tiII they cant reas0n

  • @WolfA4
    @WolfA4 Год назад +49

    I love the fact that some random guy on youtube, turned atheist got the attention of respected philosophers, historians, and theologians. I think it shows that this has been a long time coming, a lot of the questions posed in these videos are questions we've all had but were unable to ask.

    • @TorianTammas
      @TorianTammas Год назад

      Historians aren't dealing in mythology. They research facts snd not fiction

    • @EdwardHowton
      @EdwardHowton Год назад

      Well, see, that's where their self-promotion is leading you wrong. Notice how you called them "respected philosophers, historians, and theologians"?
      The two in the video? They're apologists. An apologist is the intellectual equivalent of a fat slob sitting in an armchair covered in Frito dust looking at Olympians and slurring "I could do that" around his sixth beer of the morning. An apologist, hell even a theologian, is nothing respectable or qualified in any sense, it's just some self-granted title conmen use with each other to sell the illusion of respectability. "Theology" is, in other words, a fake degree.
      I think it's only natural for _real_ experts in history and philosophy to take notice of someone like Paulogia, since they may not have the time around their actual legitimate careers to run a proper RUclips channel but it's always fun to dunk on clueless bastards and frauds like McDowell and Comfort and the rest. That whole panel of scientists who got together to humiliate Deepak Chopra looked like they were having the time of their life!
      To put it more simply, I guess I should say that "respected theologian" is equivalent to "gentlemanly wife-beater".

    • @djangohill55
      @djangohill55 Год назад

      Remember, for hundreds of years, Christians were able to smear anyone that dared to ask these types of questions through their congregation controlled media outlets (town criers) and institutions. And if smearing you and turning you into a social untouchable didn't stop you from asking good questions or telling people the truth, then their Christian police would visit you, and if you survived to make it to their Christian Courts, they had no problem sending innocent people to their congregation controlled prisons and insane asylums.

    • @dustinbigheart3667
      @dustinbigheart3667 Год назад

      DNA evidence still is not even 30 years old yet it took 10 years before society would even accept it as fact religions time is coming to a end second by second

  • @mrwallace1059
    @mrwallace1059 Год назад +19

    Great to see Kamil on your channel , he has a lot of knowledge to offer .

  • @HatsoffHistory
    @HatsoffHistory Год назад +17

    Hey, Kamil Gregor is on Paulogia! This is long overdue, KG is fantastic!
    Great job guys : )

  • @roblovestar9159
    @roblovestar9159 Год назад +31

    5:40 Dr Allison "I'm not a skeptic by nature. I'm open minded..." A good skeptic IS open minded. They just need sufficient evidence to believe. Belief WITHOUT sufficient evidence is not only unskeptical; it is unreasonable.

    • @jackcimino8822
      @jackcimino8822 Год назад +4

      He's confusing cynicism with skepticism

  • @HarryNicNicholas
    @HarryNicNicholas Год назад +21

    kamil is great, he has a very unique perspective and has come up with some extraordinary insight into religious writing and myth, with a great sense of humour.

  • @kennethh8086
    @kennethh8086 Год назад +7

    Excellent commentary! Paulogia's content is so informative. Thank you.

  • @Marconius6
    @Marconius6 Год назад +33

    The more I learn about this period, the more mundane the Jesus story sounds to me. Like yeah, today the whole story seems kind of unique to us, so Christians say "well how could anyone make this up? It must have happened!"; but that's just because there's 2000 years of other stories built on top of the Jesus one, and 2000 years to bury all the other stories that didn't have the support of major organizations to preserve it.
    If we lived 2000 years ago, the Jesus story might sound like any coming-of-age or hero's journey story sounds to us today; basically on the level of Star Wars or The Hunger Games.

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 Год назад

      Or it might sound like the narrative of a hundred other wandering preachers, magicians, and cult leaders. Scholars say that the eastern Mediterranean was rife with characters like these in that period. We already know about the apocalyptic Essene cult at Qumran, whose teachings bear a number of similarities with the Christian cult. I have long surmised that the Jesus narrative may have initially been compounded out of the careers of several wandering preachers related to this or similar cults after one them ran afoul of the authorities and was crucified. There was likely a mish-mash of stories about the life of "Jesus" before the person who wrote Mark around 70 AD assembled a specific version that became the template for the other gospels that were written later. Mainstream Biblical scholars, most of whom were Christians, have challenged virtually every item in the Gospel biographies, except for the crucifixion and resurrection, as being unlikely to be historical, for a list of various reasons.
      So it seems improbable that the Biblical account of Jesus is close enough to the actual life story of any given individual to say that "there was a certain person x and this person was Jesus." The debate about the historicity of Jesus might not have a definitive solution even if we had a time machine and could go back to Palestine from CE 1 to CE 30 and check things out. All we would be likely to find would be that there had been some apocalyptic preacher who had been crucified, but whose actual biography resembled the New Testament story so little that it would be debatable whether he could be meaningfully identified as Jesus even if it could be established that the story of his crucifixion had become an element of the tradition that ultimately evolved into Christianity. And it would be likely that whatever such a person had been teaching would not overlap with the general theology of Christianity enough to call it a match. So people would still be debating "did Jesus exist or not?"
      As for the resurrection-- why anyone would believe the account of a miraculous event, recorded nowhere else but in the 2,000 year old scriptures of a religious cult founded at a time when most people believed all kinds of supernatural spooky stuff, including stuff from a host of other cults that had traditions of divine beings rising from the dead, should boggle the mind of anyone capable of rational thought.

    • @BlackDeath920
      @BlackDeath920 Год назад +3

      The original comic books

    • @luna-p
      @luna-p Год назад +4

      There are plenty of Jesus-like figures in other religions/ mythology. There's nothing original or remarkable about him. Mundane is right.

  • @DesGardius-me7gf
    @DesGardius-me7gf Год назад +166

    Mike Licona might be the only Christian Apologist who _actually_ has a sliver of intellectual honesty.

    • @mdhutch2002
      @mdhutch2002 Год назад +29

      Well, that's because he's a historian, not an apologist. They're actual scholars, not salesmen.

    • @AnnoyingNewslettersPage6
      @AnnoyingNewslettersPage6 Год назад +16

      Sometimes. Hasn't he made quite a few unsupported claims addressed on this channel?

    • @uncleanunicorn4571
      @uncleanunicorn4571 Год назад +49

      wasn't Licona the guy who lost a lucrative teaching position because he correctly stated that the zombie story in Matthew was a non literal exaggeration?

    • @iluvtacos1231
      @iluvtacos1231 Год назад +13

      @@uncleanunicorn4571
      Yeah, he was

    • @Julian0101
      @Julian0101 Год назад +5

      I might be mistaken, but didnt he HAD to rectify/backtrack that comment at risk of losing OTHER lucrative offers?

  • @dougt7580
    @dougt7580 Год назад +11

    I have much more respect for Dr's Allison and Licona than pretty much any other apologists that I'm aware of, but that's for doing what is generally considered EXPECTED from academic researchers - admitting and pointing out the weaknesses, the biases, their assumptions, and specifying caveats and potential flaws in their conclusions. I thank them and applaud them for doing so in the video clips provided. But ultimately they are still just arguing for not just magic, but magic which just so happens to have met with their personal approval, and from which they (believe) will benefit from.

  • @adruiddrummer8841
    @adruiddrummer8841 Год назад +15

    Wait... So Paul was essentially the Joseph Smith of the 1st century? And just, the only story we got about him is the version his followers believed rather than what the skeptics and "ex Mormons" had to say about him?

    • @pansepot1490
      @pansepot1490 Год назад +5

      I have heard others notice that Mormonism is to Christianity what Christianity is to Judaism.

    • @Preservestlandry
      @Preservestlandry Год назад +1

      If Paul really believed his vision, he'd be more honest than Joseph Smith. I mean Joseph Smith knew he was lying.

    • @kimkingsun7315
      @kimkingsun7315 6 месяцев назад +2

      Saul threw the supposed teachings of Jesus out and invented his own narrative. And having never seen Jesus in person, how did he know who he supposedly saw.

  • @monkchips
    @monkchips Год назад +16

    Does it not occur to some people that, gods appearing at festivals or in battles to hundreds of people dropped off massively with the advent of the camera. The world was full of miracles for a long time but when people started asking for evidence it slowly dropped off.

  • @magicofjafo
    @magicofjafo Год назад +14

    I don't understand why the "discovery by women" would be embarrassing.
    The women who discovered the empty tomb weren't believed!
    They told some men, and the men didn't believe them. So the men had to go verify for themselves.
    So why would that be embarrassing? It's exactly what you would expect.
    Why can't that have been made up?

    • @johnnehrich9601
      @johnnehrich9601 Год назад

      The "discovery by women" is pretty impossible without them facing a capital crime. Jesus died on Friday and Joseph of "Bestdiscipletown" anointed it with oil, then buried it (so the story goes). There is no reason women would unwrap a corpse which even at that point was starting to reek, so they could douse it again with more oil. According to Jewish law, this would be considered desecrating a corpse, a crime which would mean you'd be stoned (and not in a good way).
      But the gospels add them in as a plot device as otherwise no one would "know" Jesus had resurrected.

    • @magicofjafo
      @magicofjafo Год назад

      @@johnnehrich9601 yeah, you can make a case for why it would be impossible. But you wouldn't call it embarrassing, though.

    • @johnnehrich9601
      @johnnehrich9601 Год назад +7

      Using the criterion of embarrassment should be totally embarrassing to those who claim it. It could "prove" every work of fiction. Oh, what the characters did here was reasonable - must be true. Oh, here what the characters is NOT reasonable - must be true.
      Oh, Watson would never claim Holmes fell to his death - how embarrassing, must be true. The wizard was a little man behind the curtain - embarrassing, thus true. Piglet and Pooh continue to walk around a tree, following their own footprints by mistake - yup, were their faces red. True and true.

    • @magicofjafo
      @magicofjafo Год назад +3

      @@johnnehrich9601 lol spot on. It's not an historical criteria used by real historians.
      It's funny that biblical scholars have to make up their own criteria for their books to be taken seriously.

    • @ramigilneas9274
      @ramigilneas9274 Год назад +3

      Why would the disciples immediately go to the tomb?
      They were afraid and ran away… and supposedly there were guards at the tomb.
      Of course the authors of the gospels had to invent an alternative.

  • @cindychristman8708
    @cindychristman8708 Год назад +9

    This was excellent, Kamil. You have given me more insight than anyone else.

  • @tristanalain9239
    @tristanalain9239 Год назад +66

    These two historians, I respect the fuck out of them.
    They seem to be intellectually honest, and fully cognisant of their own internal biases that can affect their work, and as a result actively try to set those aside in this discussion, going with the facts they can verify. They even note when and where their biases lie in the discussion and make sure that it is well know, and then explain what the evidence actually has.
    We need more Scholars, Theologians, and Historians of any religion and religious text like this. Our history and knowledge pool would be so much richer. I want more of these guys in the field.
    I am sad they are a minority.

    • @Julian0101
      @Julian0101 Год назад +5

      Sadly, Sean mcdowell is well known for going to christian university classes and presenting himself as an atheist to respond to apologetics points (there are a couple of videos on RUclips of this).
      So he is merely recovering the respect he lost because of that.
      Though i agree, is cool to see an historian acknowledging what they actually have.

    • @tristanalain9239
      @tristanalain9239 Год назад +3

      ​@@Julian0101I was unaware of that history.
      I only have what I saw in the video.
      But it is so sad that historians of the Bible and Christianity and so forth are so inherently dishonest (at least in the US, can't speak for elsewhere cause I don't know), that doing the bare minimum is worth praise.

    • @resurrectionnerd
      @resurrectionnerd Год назад +11

      I've noticed Licona sounds much more honest when he's in dialogue with another Christian like Allison. But when he's discussing with a skeptic or atheist he's not very charitable. For example, in this discussion he even considers the "objective vision" hypothesis to be plausible in regards to what Paul experienced. However, when I've pointed out that the data suggests the appearance to Paul was visionary and by extension the others were too since Paul places his own experience in the same list as theirs without distinction, he immediately shifts the burden onto the skeptic that "it doesn't mean they all just had visions." My response is that Paul's testimony fails to establish these "appearances" were veridical sightings of a resurrected figure in physical reality which is what the resurrection argument requires. The burden of proof is on Licona to show that.

    • @tristanalain9239
      @tristanalain9239 Год назад +1

      @@resurrectionnerd Hmmm valid point.
      Maybe I was to quick to give that one credit for honesty then?

    • @resurrectionnerd
      @resurrectionnerd Год назад +2

      @@tristanalain9239 If you watch his debate with Dan Barker you can really see the slimy tactics of Licona come out, but that debate happened a while ago.

  • @PHDinADHD
    @PHDinADHD Год назад +7

    Love Kamil, recognized his voice immediately.

  • @lnsflare1
    @lnsflare1 Год назад +33

    At the end of the day, the main question is, "would you accept the same standard of evidence for the religious claims of other belief systems?"
    I guess a relevant follow up would be, "if yes, then how do you determine that your Christian beliefs are true when tons of other religions actually *do* have as good or better evidence for their claims?"

    • @jursamaj
      @jursamaj Год назад +6

      As shown in this video, at least Licona openly admits he *wouldn't* accept it. Many others say or demonstrate that as well.
      But whether they'd say yes or no, they simply deny that other religions *do* have evidence, and exaggerate their own evidence.

    • @silenthero2795
      @silenthero2795 Год назад

      You do know you're trying to make an equivalence fallacy when comparing religious claims as if they work the same, right? That's like saying would you accept the same standard for all murders to this one specific case. You would have to argue that every murder case have different situations and evidence that supports it and thus one cannot make a blanket statement to refute every one of them just because of how they operate.

    • @jursamaj
      @jursamaj Год назад +4

      @@silenthero2795 In what relevant way do they *not* "work the same"?
      In any case, nothing in this thread is about "a blanket statement to refute every" religion. The question being addressed was if another religion had as good or better evidence as christianity, would the apologist convert. And his answer was "no". That answer, along with the admission that he became christian at 10 without real thought about it, shows that the evidence is irrelevant.

    • @silenthero2795
      @silenthero2795 Год назад

      ​@@jursamaj This has nothing to do with this "he became christian at 10 without real thought". What I'm saying is that OP is using a logic to discredit many belief system in a pretense that they work all in the same standard which is false. You're making false equivalence if you do. They should stand on their own merits based on their own evidence, other cases being irrelevant.
      I cannot speak to any belief system but you need to be very specific what kind of evidence you're speaking of, not just this vague "good evidence" and not just "what if". It's very idle to pretend that every belief system "work the same" even if they share some similarities. "Apples and oranges" as they say. Both are fruit but they're not obviously the same thing.

    • @jursamaj
      @jursamaj Год назад

      @@silenthero2795 Nothing in OP's post has anything to do with "discrediting many belief systems", thus everything you said was entirely irrelevant.
      And you didn't answer the question: In what relevant way do religions *not* "work the same"?

  • @joethompson132
    @joethompson132 Год назад +3

    I love this type of discussion rather than argument keep it up

  • @peternierop3241
    @peternierop3241 Год назад +1

    Very nice to meet this Kamil Gregor. Well spoken, loads of info.

  • @jamiegallier2106
    @jamiegallier2106 Год назад +3

    What an awesome show! Really enjoyed Kamil’s knowledge, attention to detail, and use of citations.

  • @SteamBunneh
    @SteamBunneh Год назад +2

    That was really interesting what Kamil had to say.. thank you for having him on Paul! Going to go watch some of his stuff now :)

  • @arachnidsLor
    @arachnidsLor Год назад +11

    today i told my dad about how fascinating i find the concept of enzymes. and then he goes on to say how "well, some scientists believe that is evidence of god..!" and then i remembered not to discuss topics like that with dad

    • @werriboy55
      @werriboy55 Год назад +1

      Your dad is using the God of Gaps Fallacy. Start with the concept of Burden of Proof and work your way uo.

    • @Lobsterwithinternet
      @Lobsterwithinternet Год назад +1

      Should have told him “And some scientists believe the Earth is flat and the Moon is made of cheese. Good thing we don't believe things just because a scientist believes it.”

  • @JohnStopman
    @JohnStopman Год назад +4

    100k+ subscribers! Congrats Paul! ❤

  • @marieugorek5917
    @marieugorek5917 Год назад +11

    I am so greatful for this feed. Insisting on historicity of scripture is such a huge part of the harm being done by those who claim the name of Christian in this world. I find myself unable to leave the faith, so have the weighty responsibility of trying to turn this tide, and conversations like this help me immensely in that work.

    • @sulas548
      @sulas548 Год назад +1

      Marie, can I politely ask you what it is that results in you being 'unable to leave the faith'?

    • @recoveringbaptist2749
      @recoveringbaptist2749 Год назад +1

      I would also like to know what prevents you from leaving the faith.

    • @marieugorek5917
      @marieugorek5917 Год назад +1

      @@recoveringbaptist2749 Just can't do it. Can't walk away from Christ's people without walking away from Christ, and every time I try to do that, the pain is unbearable. Each time, I've ended up diving into scripture and commentary until I find an interpretation that allows me to stay, instead. So I guess mine is the path of reform, whether I want that job or not.

    • @scottmaddow7879
      @scottmaddow7879 Год назад +1

      I recommend watching Genetically Modified Skeptic for support in deconstruction and apostasy. He recommends several resources.

    • @recoveringbaptist2749
      @recoveringbaptist2749 Год назад +1

      @@scottmaddow7879 amen!

  • @travisjazzbo3490
    @travisjazzbo3490 Год назад +5

    Kamil was excellent here. Carrier is similar in how he discusses 'what people believed then' or how myths such as the stories we read in the Bible were extremely common back then and how stories and motifs were commonly borrowed. He also does a nice job of helping us see how things could have happened then, based on how strange things happen today that are very similar. Very good stuff

  • @mikefoxtrot1314
    @mikefoxtrot1314 Год назад +3

    Happy to find Kamil wherever I can

  • @azophi
    @azophi Год назад +13

    Yeah, that admission that they would not convert religions based on the evidence for Christianity is just super honest for them and I respect them for it.
    Of course, now the issue is getting that said in the pulpit. But yeah that admission is just … crazy. Though I most definitely respect their intellectual honesty.

  • @koihoshi
    @koihoshi Год назад +8

    "It's the inerrant word of god! ok but... you know... with some ambiguity and lack of clarity here and there... and... it could have been written better... BUT PERFECT." XD

  • @Marconius6
    @Marconius6 Год назад +6

    "I'm not trying to be skeptical..."
    Well, why not?

  • @MatthewCaunsfield
    @MatthewCaunsfield Год назад +10

    Kamil's knowledge of the period is excellent, raises many new thoughts for alternative explanations

    • @jamiehudson3661
      @jamiehudson3661 Год назад

      How would you know it's excellent? Are you a scholar?

    • @MatthewCaunsfield
      @MatthewCaunsfield Год назад +2

      @@jamiehudson3661 Yes

    • @jamiehudson3661
      @jamiehudson3661 Год назад

      @@MatthewCaunsfield In what field?

    • @MatthewCaunsfield
      @MatthewCaunsfield Год назад +3

      @@jamiehudson3661 You weren't interested in what scholastic field I was in when you asked your earlier question, so why does it matter now?
      Or is this just a thinly veiled attempt to employ the "appeal to authority" fallacy?

    • @jamiehudson3661
      @jamiehudson3661 Год назад +1

      @@MatthewCaunsfield Why would you say I wasn't interested? All I asked was were you a scholar.

  • @LarryPhischman
    @LarryPhischman Год назад +7

    Roman law said that bodies had to be left on the cross as an example to onlookers. They would not have made an exception for some preacher.

    • @dougt7580
      @dougt7580 Год назад +4

      Paulogia even cited this in a previous video responding to IP. Roman's didn't give a crap about local customs when it came to those accused of trying to usurp the authority of the empire.

    • @druidriley3163
      @druidriley3163 Год назад +1

      *They would not have made an exception for some preacher* Especially not with the short-tempered, brutal and intolerant Pilate in charge.

  • @BobLeach_DarkWolf
    @BobLeach_DarkWolf Год назад +5

    Big fan of Kamil. Really looking forward to watching this.

  • @Seapatico
    @Seapatico Год назад +1

    THIS IS SUCH A COMPELLING VIDEO! How have I not watched this yet? Between Dale and Mike conceding enormously on the evidence for the resurrection, to Kamil presenting the interpretation that the author of Mark was just a very effective, intelligent story-teller who used the motif of "reversed expectations", this is one of the best counter-apologetic videos available.

  • @martifingers
    @martifingers Год назад +5

    This is very good, closely argued stuff on both sides. One very basic point that seems to be completely ingnored in these discussions though is Rabbi Singer's argument about the nonsensical reason given for the women's visit to the tomb at all. See his video Rabbi Tovia Singer: "There was No Empty TombꟷThe Gospel’s Resurrection Accounts Never Occurred".
    This would appear to lend additional credence to the idea that the resurrection accounts are indeed constructed around literary narratives rather than historical ones or as Rabbi singer puts it "a plot device".

    • @joanbarbano4244
      @joanbarbano4244 3 месяца назад +1

      Yes. There is no reason to anoint a buried body and, even if there were, women do not attend the bodies of dead men.

  • @nigeltown6999
    @nigeltown6999 Год назад +1

    I was sent to 'Sunday School' by my parents - from the age of about 8.
    After a few weeks, when the person in charge could not answer my first question, "Are we going to do another story about Jesus this week" - I became an atheist - nothing I i have heard, read, or experienced, since has changed my conviction.1.
    1. We are alone in the universe
    2. To outlast our sun, we need to stop destroying the environment we have now
    3. To survive, as a species, we need to collaborate on a scale unheard of to date
    4. The alternative is a decline, to oblivion, where nothing of what we are survives…

  • @iluvtacos1231
    @iluvtacos1231 Год назад +4

    I've not heard of Kamil before, but I'll definitely be checking out his channel!

    • @ianchisholm5756
      @ianchisholm5756 Год назад +4

      He often appears on Pinecreek's channel, too. They have done some in-depth but fun analyses of gospel texts and their sources.

    • @HarryNicNicholas
      @HarryNicNicholas Год назад

      kam and cam highly recommended.

  • @Cyan37
    @Cyan37 Год назад +2

    "I'm not a skeptic by nature, I'm open-minded." One does not exclude the other. These words don't even oppose each other.

  • @leslieviljoen
    @leslieviljoen Год назад +4

    Usually when people get as honest as Licona and Allison, they stop being Christians.

  • @1Dropboys
    @1Dropboys Год назад +9

    I'm loving this so far, seeing Christians take an actual honest position is nice

    • @Gandalf98
      @Gandalf98 Год назад +1

      My question is this: why do you even care? Why is there any interest in a subject among people who not only disbelieve in this stuff buteven mock and ridicule it? The only thing I can think of is that there must be some amount of doubt about the position expressed here, however small or insignificant.

    • @Lobsterwithinternet
      @Lobsterwithinternet Год назад +1

      @@Gandalf98 Mostly because not only do a large part of the population believe it as divine truth but these very same people make decisions based on these beliefs that affect the rest of society.

    • @jursamaj
      @jursamaj Год назад +5

      @@Gandalf98 We like to learn about this stuff because we are surrounded by people who *do* believe it, and often insist on *us* believing it too. When neighbors, co-workers, family members, etc., assail us with their latest "proof", it's handy to have real info to give them back. It tends to shut them up, at least for a while.
      To turn your insinuation around: why do you even care if we care? And why are you offering your answer if you really want *our* answers?

    • @DatHombre
      @DatHombre Год назад +6

      @@Gandalf98 Yeah its just like when people try to discredit the flat earth theory- like why do you even care, right??
      /s

    • @lil-al
      @lil-al Год назад

      @@jursamaj So many christians have had their inquisitiveness - especially about their own delusions - completely knocked out of them so they just cannot understand why other people just have an interest and a thirst for knowledge.

  • @thembill8246
    @thembill8246 Год назад +3

    This raises some very very good points and I would love to see an apologist try and respond to it. I have a feeling though that they would just disregard it entirely

  • @bengreen171
    @bengreen171 Год назад +2

    Fantastic - what a shame that no apologist will ever address Kamil's propositions. Come on IP... time to get the cherry picker out.

  • @rustkitty
    @rustkitty Год назад +6

    17:42 It's not implausible that a charismatic cult leader may have the fans with connections to secure his corpse special treatment and a lavish burial. Such things have happened with modern successful cult leaders when the whole cult didn't implode after the founder's death. If a historic Jesus was executed along with two criminals, his followers may have pressured the authorities to get him buried but the other two would be thrown in a ditch or something.

  • @dillondoran4654
    @dillondoran4654 Год назад +2

    I am not a Christian but dude I respect these guys so much for their honesty

  • @philpaine3068
    @philpaine3068 Год назад +5

    It always comes down to the same thing. Would these self-styled "historians" give the same credence to identical miraculous claims made for other religions? The answer is ALWAYS "nope." Everything falls apart whenever this simple question is asked. If their "historical evidence for the resurrection of Jesus" is the same sort of stuff as the evidence for "in front of thousands of others, Holy Man Sri Sathya Sai Baba raised from the dead his follower whom he simply called, Venkatesh" a supposed event firmly believed by millions of people and attested by thousands of "first-hand witnesses", then their proclaimed "historical evidence" is just pure bullshit.

  • @helenaconstantine
    @helenaconstantine Год назад

    Amazing. This is the first time I have seen a list of actual scholarly works posted on RUclips (except when I've done it).

  • @jasonsabbath6996
    @jasonsabbath6996 Год назад +13

    The best evidence for "The resurrection" is blind faith, hoping, and making a wish that it's true. Period. There is zero evidence and they know it. 🤦‍♂️
    Also, which is far more likely, that Jesus' body was never found because he was resurrected or because he never existed?

    • @natsusatsujinki8342
      @natsusatsujinki8342 Год назад

      His body wouldn't really matter if he can just hop in another one. Why do you think he wasn't recognized after the resurrection? He came back as Christ but with a different body.

    • @ramigilneas9274
      @ramigilneas9274 Год назад +4

      @@natsusatsujinki8342
      He came back with a different body… that’s why he wasn’t recognized… and then he switched back into his crucified body that still had all of the holes in it and appeared to doubting Thomas.
      Of course even most Christian historians think that this story was invented by the authors of the gospel of John.😉

    • @dougt7580
      @dougt7580 Год назад

      @@ramigilneas9274 they never think these things through.

  • @anthonymich5184
    @anthonymich5184 Год назад +4

    Paul as an ancient Deepak Chopra is an interesting frame to consider.

  • @ziploc2000
    @ziploc2000 Год назад +6

    "We don't have fictional characters relevantly similar to Jesus in Mediterranean Antiquity" so all the Greek and Roman gods and demigods are historical too? Or are they not relevantly similar? What am I missing here?

    • @kamilgregor
      @kamilgregor Год назад +4

      I recommend checking the interview I mentioned, the link is in the video description. I go into detail there.

  • @Autists-Guide
    @Autists-Guide Год назад +2

    Yup. I believe in resurrection... Then ... I've seen Elvis at my local supermarket.
    That's much more plausible that "I saw Elvis so now I believe in resurrection."

  • @sanaltdelete
    @sanaltdelete Год назад +5

    Kamil is awesome! I love his accent and of course what he has to say too :3

    • @Vindsus86
      @Vindsus86 Год назад

      I love how he pronounced all the old names. Greek and stuff.

  • @vanessamontes8951
    @vanessamontes8951 Год назад +1

    Kamil is blowing my mind...so much knowledge and insight.

  • @joonzville
    @joonzville Год назад +4

    WTF does Allison mean by ‘I’m not a skeptic, I’m open minded’?! Being a skeptic *is* being open minded to changing your opinion based on *evidence*. Someone who just believes things without evidence isn’t being open minded, they’re being credulous.

  • @gullyfoyle3253
    @gullyfoyle3253 Год назад

    What a great guest! I loved this, thank~you!

  • @cps_Zen_Run
    @cps_Zen_Run Год назад +3

    It’s an absurd to claim to know what happens after death. However, if one dies, autopsy, buried,(better yet, cremated), then returns after a year; then we can start a conversation. 😮

  • @gornser
    @gornser Год назад +1

    Loved that inserted death of Yoda inserted while Mr. Gregor were explaining the trope of disappearing

  • @waynemills206
    @waynemills206 Год назад +3

    It seems to me if you are confident enough in a concept for it to be true, yet it lacks sufficient external evidence to support it, that belief is being held for other reasons.
    Fortunately, irrational beliefs can be easily held in the brain if they are satisfying, not too costly and do not encounter physical verification. This is likely why the life blood of theism is wholly predicated on linguistic history/predictions we cannot verify in the present.

  • @φαρμακεία-πρωταρχικός

    Dr. Allison chuckling at Dr. Licona’s side comment on Islam was gold.😆🤣

  • @elainejohnson6955
    @elainejohnson6955 Год назад +5

    There is no workable timeline in the Bible for a real person of Jesus. He can't be born in two different years that are at least 10 years apart. He can't be in two different places at the same time when they are many miles apart.

  • @GnosticInformant
    @GnosticInformant Год назад +1

    this was so fire

  • @cargo_vroom9729
    @cargo_vroom9729 Год назад +6

    Paulogia main channel videos are amazing because they contain about 5% Paulogia. The 95% is Christians tying themselves into knots and falling over.

  • @SNORKYMEDIA
    @SNORKYMEDIA 8 месяцев назад +1

    Kamil is the embodiment of "a book says a thing"

  • @mrdrone4253
    @mrdrone4253 Год назад +5

    I have a book with some stories in it, that doesn't make the stories true. Even if I really really really believe it, that still does not make the story true. The hero might have saved the village, but he did not shoot fireballs at this enemy. 500 people saw Jesus walking around after he was killed is ridiculous. Who are these 500 people and what are their names? Can I go talk to them? Why is it that we do not see any of these supernatural events taking place in modern day with digital video?

  • @joed1950
    @joed1950 Год назад +1

    These three Christians seem to be aware of the weakness of their justifications. Seems they are on the cusp but just can not let go. Their honesty is commendable imho.

  • @OscarSommerbo
    @OscarSommerbo Год назад +14

    I have an issue with calling "Christian scholars" "Scholars" as they usually have a predetermined outcome decided and then works to find the supporting evidence. Not every Christian scholar is a "Christian scholars", when studying matters that faith doesn't touch on, or those that can convincingly put their biases aside. But those scholars are few and far between.

    • @dougt7580
      @dougt7580 Год назад +3

      100%. Most Christian "scholar's" job is not to try to hit the target, it's to paint the target around the arrow stuck in the wall.

    • @angelmendez-rivera351
      @angelmendez-rivera351 10 месяцев назад

      Biblical scholars are not really "scholars," they are more like lawyers for the Bible.

  • @pwoods100
    @pwoods100 Год назад +2

    As an atheist, I really like Dale Allison. But I wish he would stop saying things like, "I'm not trying to be skeptical" or "I'm not a skeptic by nature." But he IS. Whether he recognizes it or not, he totally is a skeptic - even though he's a Christian, and it's pretty obvious.

  • @Vindsus86
    @Vindsus86 Год назад +2

    Camel, camel, camel, camel! 🎉
    (callback to old Nathan and Kyle Huitt video, if I recall correctly)

  • @mr.zafner8295
    @mr.zafner8295 Месяц назад

    Gregor was really interesting and well spoken. Maybe if you're looking for video ideas you could ask him if he has anything going on that would be a good subject for one of your videos and then you could ask him softball questions about his current hyperfixation or whatever he's studying in the genre

  • @yerfdogderf
    @yerfdogderf Год назад +6

    When giving their reasons for their belief not one of the apologists admits to making money from it as a driving force. Dave Allison at least admitted that his main reason for belief is that it made him feel good. Not interested in proof, just likes to feel good.

  • @FighterDoken
    @FighterDoken Год назад +1

    It's very telling that these guys, who are considered to be *the best in their field in understanding Christianity,* are still getting hung up on simple concepts like "oh wait, but what if the person I'm arguing with believes something different?"
    This is the top of the heap...getting stuck on simple concepts like *empathy* and *understanding others' position.* Wow.

  • @elliotKanjovu
    @elliotKanjovu Год назад +13

    Another Dose of paulogia 🍷😌

  • @keithwalsh3682
    @keithwalsh3682 Год назад

    One of your best videos. Very well done.

  • @disinterestedhomo6002
    @disinterestedhomo6002 Год назад +5

    Dr. Richard Carrier has a wonderful book "On the Historicity of Jesus" that makes some pretty compelling arguments for mythicism. After reading his book personally feel like there's no need to assume that Jesus was a historical person

  • @karachaffee3343
    @karachaffee3343 Год назад +1

    Christianity has become a pure tradition that survives when not closely examined.

  • @JamesRichardWiley
    @JamesRichardWiley Год назад +4

    No one returns from death regardless of the claims of the living.
    If you came back from the dead you were not dead.
    It's called reality.

    • @natsusatsujinki8342
      @natsusatsujinki8342 Год назад +1

      Nobody that YOU know. I happen to KNOW differently than you BELIEVE.

    • @ramigilneas9274
      @ramigilneas9274 Год назад +1

      @@natsusatsujinki8342
      How many people do you KNOW who were actually dead and then came back?😂

    • @natsusatsujinki8342
      @natsusatsujinki8342 Год назад

      @@ramigilneas9274 1 without a doubt.

    • @ramigilneas9274
      @ramigilneas9274 Год назад +1

      @@natsusatsujinki8342
      Probably with an error margin of 1.😂

    • @youngknowledgeseeker
      @youngknowledgeseeker Год назад

      There may be more on heaven and earth than exist in your philosophy Horatio....

  • @daveevans1236
    @daveevans1236 Год назад +1

    "A weekness". What a ridiculous understatement,!

  • @sciologist
    @sciologist Год назад +9

    Do gods come down from heaven and get earth girls pregnant? of course not, that is mythology. The whole foundation of christianity is mythology. That from the virgin birth, to Jesus' assection to heaven, is mythology. The new testament begins with mythology and ends in mythology.

    • @mil401
      @mil401 Год назад

      There’s certainly a lot of mythological elements included in the gospels.
      That doesn’t disconfirm that a historical figure existed at the base of it all though, something significant had to inspire multiple authors to diligently try and theologically reconcile how someone could both be the messiah while also have the most un-messiah-like, shameful thing happen to them.

    • @jaclo3112
      @jaclo3112 Год назад +1

      When it comes to an historical figure, the entire argument for his existence is nothing more than an argumentum ad populim.
      Without the magical aspects of the biblical jesus the historical jesus is irrelevant. The entire christian religion hinges on the common dying-and-rising deity trope. And there isn't a shred of evidence that ever happened.

    • @mil401
      @mil401 Год назад

      @@jaclo3112 Not the rising from the dead part, no. But I can accept that mainstream scholarship has good reasons to think Mohammad existed, even if I don’t think he split the moon or spoke with an angel. I see Jesus in a similar way.

    • @natsusatsujinki8342
      @natsusatsujinki8342 Год назад

      Symbolically if my parents raised me Christian and I come with the modern update to the belief system(straight from the source)then in a way God and my mother made me.
      If you don't understand it's probably not for you or not time for you to know. 🤷‍♂️

    • @johnnehrich9601
      @johnnehrich9601 Год назад

      Actually it is possible and not all that uncommon for women to get pregnant merely from "heavy petting." Well, that and lying about how pure they were.

  • @Desertphile
    @Desertphile Год назад +1

    I dislike your use of the word "admit" because the correct word would be something like "accept."

  • @notruehippie
    @notruehippie Год назад +5

    Five hundred people is a lot of people. I can't imagine how that would happen unless he was on stage or something. I think Adele could walk around Las Vegas all day and one would be pressed to find 500 people who said they saw her.

    • @donnievance1942
      @donnievance1942 Год назад +3

      Also, doesn't 500 sound like an oddly round number?
      Reporter for the Roman Times: "Okay, how many of you people saw Jesus walking around after he was crucified?"
      "Oh, tons and tons of us saw him."
      "Okay, I'll put down 500."

    • @nathanielalderson9111
      @nathanielalderson9111 Год назад

      You know, the text answers your questions right?
      When Jesus started performing his miracles, early, it is described as they were pressed in by "multitudes". (Enough for Jesus to request a boat for some relief from the pressure.)
      After his death, and coming back, I think a (rounded out) number of 500 people, is quite reasonable.

    • @druidriley3163
      @druidriley3163 Год назад

      @@nathanielalderson9111 - *they were pressed in by "multitudes". (Enough for Jesus to request a boat for some relief from the pressure* but then that makes you wonder why no one wrote about Jesus during his lifetime. He was SO popular, according to scripture that he was known all through Judea, Syria and the cities of the Decapolis, but not a single person wrote about him during his lifetime?

    • @nathanielalderson9111
      @nathanielalderson9111 Год назад

      @@druidriley3163 because writing back then was expensive, by hand, took a long time, and was separated by long distances. It was not like it is today.
      And they did write about him. In many places. You're either denying them or don't know about them.

    • @druidriley3163
      @druidriley3163 Год назад +1

      @@nathanielalderson9111 - no one wrote about Jesus until decades and centuries after his supposed lifestyle. NO ONE. And historians have quite a lot of writings from the 1st century. Scholars have letters, books, poems, histories, speeches, laws, etc., etc. People wrote all the time. Historians also know the names of travelers, merchants, and other folks who even traveled to where Jesus supposedly lived during his life exactly when the bible said he was doing his miracles and teachings _and not a single one of these people mention him_ Well-to-do people were literate and according to the bible, Jesus had fans among the rich. Sooo...any reason they couldn't have written about him?

  • @murph8411
    @murph8411 Год назад +2

    If Kamil thinks Mike’s book on the resurrection and his knowledge about the topic is world leading that doesn’t say much for the state of the topic.
    I mean he just said that the 500 most likely saw a physical Jesus as the surrounding text was about physical sightings but then admitted this wasn’t true as Paul included himself at then of the passage.
    Even Mike admits that Paul didn’t see a physical Jesus and his sighting was some sort of vision.

  • @michaelstanet7453
    @michaelstanet7453 Год назад +5

    yes, Kamil!!!!

  • @ΘάνατοςΧορτοφάγος

    Very impressive explanation from Kamil 👌

  • @AnnoyingNewslettersPage6
    @AnnoyingNewslettersPage6 Год назад +3

    At 09:00 when he mentioned Acts, it reminded me of the Bart Ehrman podcast I listened to this morning, where he said that only 7 of the 27 books of the bible are even authentic, those being the 7 verified letters of Paul.
    I'm sitting here thinking that if only 26% of the book can be verified, it's a very poor foundation for the faith, not that it'll matter to the majority of believers.
    ruclips.net/video/TW5b07T5VNM/видео.html

    • @youngknowledgeseeker
      @youngknowledgeseeker Год назад

      You mean "New Testament" not "Bible"

    • @dougt7580
      @dougt7580 Год назад

      By authentic I think he means we have relatively decent confidence in the identity of the author, not necessarily their content. The 'canonical' gospels are anonymous, as are several epistles. My understanding is that 7 of the 13 (14 if you include Hebrews) letters that most Christian denominations have usually attributed to Paul are accepted by scholars to be his writing. Three of them, 1,2 Timothy and Titus if memory serves are almost universally rejected as being forgeries written by someone else. The remaining 3 don't have as strong consensus, but the lean is to they are written by others as well.

  • @thecrowing1989
    @thecrowing1989 3 месяца назад

    Paulogia, I love your channel, but have seen a few videos where the term "skeptic" is used incorrectly by yourself or guests. In another video the phrase "Christians or Skeptics" was used, but I don't think that those are mutually exclusive. In this video, Dr. Allison says he's "not a skeptic, he is open-minded". I don't think being a skeptic means you are closed-minded, it just means you are critical of evidence. Please let me know if I'm way off base. Thank you!

  • @TheLookingOne
    @TheLookingOne 9 месяцев назад +1

    How likely is it that inspirations for the christian christ character's missing body were:
    a) the Greek theological trope of the missing body, and
    b) the chronicler Josephus's story of Yehsu the Egyptian not being heard from
    after the Romans attacked him and his followers on the Mount of Olives ?

  • @onepercenter13
    @onepercenter13 Год назад +2

    What other thing of importance, in your life would you accept, believe or live your life by based on absolutely ZERO evidence ?

  • @Dan_C604
    @Dan_C604 Год назад

    WOW Paul, this is GOLD! The host seems puzzled….

  • @prizmajeno
    @prizmajeno Год назад

    It is good to see ppl with some integrity!

  • @KGP221
    @KGP221 11 дней назад

    We have zero detectable, observable, and measurable evidence for anyone's resurrection, and since we have zero documents, document fragments, or words on any page written from the biblical character, Jesus’, own hand, we don't know if he was even a real person.

  • @ziploc2000
    @ziploc2000 Год назад +2

    Regarding the tomb, how long would it take, with the tools available at the time, to carve out a stone tomb big enough not just for a horizontal body, but for several people to stand inside? More than a weekend I'd imagine. More like months if not years to prepare, which is why only the wealthiest people had them.
    Apart from the labor costs, you'd need an agreed site to work on, or risk someone claiming your tomb is on their land and it's now theirs.
    Given the construction time and labor involved, were tombs dug out ready for a client to pay when needed, or were they created only when an advance payment had been made?
    Were round stones used to seal these tombs once occupied, that could be easily rolled aside by a couple of women, or maybe a couple of tomb robbers? Or were they better sealed or better hidden, like Egyptian tombs?

    • @natsusatsujinki8342
      @natsusatsujinki8342 Год назад

      You're assuming that they had little to no technology when the pyramids around the world had been built with no modern explanation from historians. Logically if the wonders of the ancient world could be produced during the assumed time period then they had equal or greater technology than we had.

    • @kamilgregor
      @kamilgregor Год назад +1

      I'm not an archeologist but my understanding is that there are locations around Jerusalem which are more suitable for these kinds of tombs than other location. For example the site of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre (the traditional location of the tomb) is a former limestone quarry (limestone being easier to carve than other types of stone) and multiple rock-cut tombs were discovered there.

    • @ramigilneas9274
      @ramigilneas9274 Год назад

      @@natsusatsujinki8342
      Or… they had something called slaves… with primitive tools and nearly unlimited time.😂

    • @Lobsterwithinternet
      @Lobsterwithinternet Год назад

      @@ramigilneas9274 Too bad we know that the pyramids were made by professional workers who were paid well for their work rather than slaves.

    • @ramigilneas9274
      @ramigilneas9274 Год назад +1

      @@Lobsterwithinternet
      Exactly… that’s why it’s not really that mysterious how the pyramids were built.
      But I am not sure if you really need the best trained experts to create a rock cut tomb.😉

  • @davewaring73
    @davewaring73 Год назад +1

    I suspect the original sightings of the risen Jesus are something akin to modern ghost stories and shared experiences of contacting the dead.
    Even the stories of post resurrection appearances are strange and non real. Sometimes he is mistaken for someone else. Sometimes they didn't recognise him until after they parted. He seems to pass through walls to prove his physical existence to Thomas, who never does touch him. He cooks fish.
    Perhaps the stories are based on early accounts of people who in grief had resurrection experiences, plus others who believed those accounts.

  • @jamesneighbour5565
    @jamesneighbour5565 Год назад +1

    Finally nice to see a little honesty from Christian apologists.