questions - about God

Did Jesus exist?

1. Jesus was a genuine figure of history.
The main evidence is the New Testament itself. But there is evidence from other sources.

Tacitus is our major source for the Roman world in the century of Jesus. He describes the fire that destroyed most of Rome in the year 64. Many blamed the fire on Nero. Nero in turn 'scapegoated' a new sect, the 'Christiani'. To be a scapegoat a group had to be both visible and hated.

In Annals xv.44, Tacitus explains where these 'Christians' came from. The 'founder of the name Christian' was 'Christ'. This 'Christ' had been executed thirty years earlier in Judaea in the time of Tiberius by Pilate the governor of the province. But the 'sect' did not die with its founder (as most movements did). It sprang up again in Judaea and spread to Rome where it had become an 'immense multitude' (as Tacitus called it).

Tacitus, though, was sickened at the punishment meted out to these wretches. Crucified by the thousands and then daubed with pitch and set alight. Tacitus had been a member of the Roman Senate and himself governor of a major province. He had access to imperial records. Tacitus knew what he was talking about.

So Tacitus the ever careful historian pinpoints Christ's execution as to the
(1) time (AD 30),
(2) place (Judaea)
(3) circumstance (treason).
And he explains how these 'Christians' came to be in Rome in the year 64.

Thus, world history has noted Christian origins. Not just Christian history. World history. World history, furthermore, that was independent of Christian sources. Tacitus' information most likely comes from official Roman reports. Crucifixions in the provinces were the subject of reports filed in official archives in Rome. As a former Roman consul Tacitus had access to such records.

What is interesting is that the narrative of Luke and Acts (which is one book in two volumes) tells the same narrative as Tacitus when reduced to its broad outline. Christ was executed in Judaea in the time of Tiberius by Pontius Pilate the governor and the movement sprang up again and had spread beyond Judaea including to Rome.

Tacitus the historian and Luke-Acts agree:
Who founded Christianity: Christ
Where it was founded: Judaea
When it was founded: When Pilate was Prefect of Judaea.
Circumstances of its founding: After the execution of Christ.
Progress of the movement: It spread from Judaea to Rome.

One further comment about Tacitus. Tacitus is a hostile witness. He hates Jews and he hates Christians. His corroboration of the outlines of Christian history is the more valuable because he is hostile.

2. The New Testament talks about Jesus and the early Christians in the same way it mentions famous people and events.
The New Testament often connects to prominent figures in world history.
Herod king of the Jews, Herod tetrarch of Galilee;
Pilate, Sergius Paulus, Felix, Festus, Roman governors;
Caiaphas High Priest in Jerusalem;
Aretas King of the Arabians;
Emperors Augustus, Tiberius, Claudius; a great famine in the time of Claudius.

These are all real people and events known from world history and archaeology and they appear in the pages of the New Testament. Just as world history noticed Christ and Christians, reciprocally (as it were) Christian history notices famous people in world history. And they appear in the New Testament in the same way Jesus, Peter, John, Luke, Mark and Paul do. In other words, the people we specially meet in the New Testament - Jesus in particular - are not mythical or legendary - but real and historical.

It's worth remembering that the Graeco-Roman world was a golden age in terms of education and literature. We know far more about the times of Jesus in the Graeco-Roman world than Europe during the thousand years from the Fall of Rome until the Renaissance. They were, indeed, 'dark ages' compared to the brilliance of the age of Rome and the Caesars.

The world in which Christ was born and his Gospel was preached was not 'stone age' or 'primitive'. There may have been a Camelot and there may have been a king called Arthur, or there may not have been. But there can be no doubt about the nature of the world into which Christ was born. The documents of the New Testament - the Gospels, the Acts, the Letters - speak about real people in a known world.

Archaeology has uncovered:

  • the inscription dedicated by Pontius Pilate to his emperor Tiberius,
  • the burial chest (ossuary) of Caiaphas the High Priest
  • the inscription bearing the name Sergius Paullus (Acts 13).

The Gospels and Acts and Letters are carefully written by real people in that world known to us from other sources. These documents write about Jesus, Peter and Paul in exactly the same down to earth terms as they refer to known figures from the world history of that day. Is the New Testament history? Indeed it is.

3. All the texts of the New Testament were written close in time to Jesus.
The Gospel of Mark was written by 70; 40 years after Jesus.
The Letters of Paul are written from 50; 20 years after Jesus.
The documents of the New Testament were all written and in circulation within a life time of Jesus' lifetime. Those who were his original disciples spanned from Jesus into the early church where they were leaders and missioners, guaranteeing that what was preached and written was true to the facts about Jesus.

This is a highly significant fact. Other subjects from history and what has been written about them - Alexander, Augustus, Nero - often came from many years after them. It is hard to find a famous person of the times for whom the evidence is so close as it is for Jesus.

The disciples did not die with their Master but spanned on for the next 30 years (in the case of Peter) and 60 years (in the case of John). In other words, the written texts that come down to us as the New Testament were either written by these disciples or were validated by them.

Suetonius wrote his Lives of the Caesars including of Tiberius. But Tiberius has been dead a hundred years when Suetonius wrote. Mark wrote his Gospel less than forty years after Jesus. It was not a cold biography but a living text the written down version of what had been preached in the years between Jesus and the moment Mark dipped his pen in ink and opened his scroll and began to write.

4. Our sources for Jesus are numerous.
Augustus was the greatest of the Roman emperors who ruled for nearly half a century and brought peace to the world - the Pax Romana. For Augustus the major source is Appian, Suetonius, Dio Cassius each of whom wrote a century of more after his death.

Jesus was born under that emperor's (Augustus') rule; from an obscure corner of the empire (land-locked Galilee); a member of a despised race (a Jew); and was crucified (unmentionable in polite society).

For Augustus almost nothing survives, while Jesus, a crucified nobody from a despised race, we have earlier and better sources of evidence than for the greatest Roman in history: The four Gospels; the Synoptic Gospel sources 'Q', 'L', 'M'; the Letters of Paul, James, Peter, Jude and John; and the Revelation. About a dozen in all - mostly primary, underived sources.

So many fingers each pointing to:
Jesus, who is called Christ of the royal line of David the Son of God crucified for sins raised alive from the dead
The closeness of the evidence to the person, and the extensive and diverse nature of the evidence is very impressive, historically. We have a sense of its historical reliability.

So we contrast the greatest of the great, Augustus, with Jesus the crucified Jew from nowhere, a real nobody.
Augustus is unremembered except for scraps of information that have survived from a century and more later.
Jesus has a dozen or so vibrant documents that were written within a lifetime of his lifetime.

So, how did this man Jesus, a sociological 'nobody', generate this plethora of early documentation?

Perhaps, two things alone account for this. His identity: the Son of God and what happened to him: he was raised alive from the dead.

5. There is an unbroken transmission between Jesus and us.
Jesus was raised from the dead on the first day of the week. So say each of the Gospels. He appeared to his disciples on the first first day of the week. He appeared to his disciples on the second first day of the week. As Thomas had good reason to remember, not having been there on that first Sunday, and having doubted that Jesus had been raised alive.

Every Sunday since - for 2000 years - disciples have met on that resurrection day, the first day of the week. At first those original disciples spread Jesus' words and works orally. Very soon they committed that word to writing. The churches were adapted synagogues. Like synagogues their core activity was reading their texts. That's what they chiefly did when they met on Sundays. They read the writings of the apostles to one another. The Qu'ran calls Christians 'people of the book' and that is correct.

This is how it happened:
First there was Jesus the teacher and saviour. Then his disciples oralized his words and works as they missionized. Seamlessly that missionizing orality became textualized, written. By the end of the textuality phase we already have an important phenomena - copying and publishing these texts.

Every new church must have texts for reading on Sundays. The Corinthians would copy Paul's letters to them and exchange their copies with the Ephesians. The seven churches of Revelation would each have their copy. Tacitus and Pliny each called Christianity a spreading disease.

Look at maps of churches in AD 40 - Jerusalem, Lydda, Joppa, Caesarea (in Palestine), Antioch (in Syria), Shechem (in Samaria), Ptolemais, Tyre, Sidon (in Phoenicia) Rome (in Italy).

Look at a map of churches in AD 50. - all of the above AND Tarsus (in Cilicia), Antioch, Iconium, Lystra, Derbe (in Anatolia), Philippi, Thessalonica, Beroea, Corinth (Greece).

Keep looking at these maps every decade for the next 200 years and what do you see? Dots on maps representing churches in every country ringing the Mediterranean. By AD 300 hundred, even thousands of them. A movement growing from a few thousand in AD 30 to perhaps 10 million by AD 313 when Constantine saw a vision of the cross in the sky with words, 'By this conquer.'

The point is that these churches met on Sundays for one main reason. To read the writings of the apostles (along with the Old Testament). So what did they need? They needed copies. Many such copies have survived. Some very early. A few lines from John from early in the second century that is likely a copy of the autograph that John wrote.

From the second century manuscript P46 (now held in Dublin) - Paul's letters, P45 (also in Dublin) - the Gospels and the Acts. From the fourth century AD the whole New Testament(NT), found in the late 1800s by von Tischendorf at St Catherine's, Mt Sinai and purchased from the Russians pre World War 2 for £100,000 and now in the British Museum. From the early centuries there are 5000 texts of the NT, in part or whole, in Greek, Latin, Coptic, Syriac, Armenian. It is to be contrasted with the number of extant manuscripts of Tacitus' Annals? One - discovered in the 1500s.

Also in those early centuries after the NT period the early church Fathers who quote extensively from the NT. You can cut and paste the whole NT from quotations of it in the early church fathers.

Several things guarantee this. One is that Christianity always was a missionary movement Another is that converts were gathered into churches. Another is churches met weekly for their core activity - reading. Another is that churches multiplied exponentially. Another is that they needed copies, copies and more copies. Another is that thousands of those copies in various languages have survived the ravages of time.

In other words the very nature of the movement created the situation whereby today we may be confident of the integrity of the texts we read.

6. What else could have given rise to the texts of the New Testament except that Jesus was the Son of God, raised from the dead? These sources say that Jesus was the Son of God who died for our sins and was raised alive from the dead.

They were either right or they were wrong. If wrong logically we would have to say they were either sincerely wrong (misguided) or insincerely wrong (mischievous).

Is it possible to read these ten disparate independent sources and conclude they are misguided or mischievous?

Either of those verdicts would be verdicts about the reader, that she was reading with a jaundiced eye.

The nature of the evidence - its earliness and its independence - drives the reader to reach another conclusion - that they portray Jesus as he was.

In summary, therefore:

  1. There can be no doubt that Jesus was a genuine figure of history that he was crucified under the Roman Governor, Pilate circa 30 and that within 30 years there were many Christians in Rome.
  2. The New Testament mentions famous people and events in the same way that it talks about Jesus and the first Christians.
    The NT is about real people in real places in real circumstances. This is not the stuff of myth and legend.
  3. The New Testament was written within a lifetime after Jesus. Mark's Gospel was written only 40 years after Jesus and Paul's earliest letters within 20 years of Jesus. The evidence for Jesus is closer than for almost all great figures in that era.
  4. There are as many as a dozen independent primary sources of information about Jesus, each pointing to him as Son of God and raised from the dead. Even great leaders like Augustus have nothing like this attestation. For a 'nobody' to have this documentation demands that he was a somebody.
  5. The nature of Christianity as a missionary movement that meets on Sundays to read texts guaranteed that a plethora of texts survived from that era guaranteeing the practical probity of those texts.
  6. It is difficult to account for the rise of Christianity and the writing of the NT unless Jesus was the Son of God, raised from the dead.

Misguided? All twelve? All of them? Surely not.

Mischievous? All twelve? All of them? Again, surely not.

Some of this material has been taken from www.stjohnnewland.org.uk

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