Expert Answers Google's Most Popular Questions About Jesus

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • We've asked Helen Bond FRSE Professor of Christian Origins and New Testament at The University of Edinburgh to answer the most googled questions about Jesus.
    Discover the past on History Hit with ad-free exclusive podcasts and documentaries released weekly presented by world renowned historians Dan Snow, Suzannah Lipscomb, Lucy Worsely, Mary Beard and more. Watch, listen and read history wherever you are, whenever you want it. Available on all devices: Apple TV, Amazon Prime Video, Android TV, Samsung Smart TV, Roku, Xbox, Chromecast, and iOs & Android.
    We're offering a special discount to History Hit for our subscribers, get 50% off your first 3 months with code CZcams: www.historyhit.com/subscripti...
    #historyhit #expertanswers #jesuschrist
    00:00 Introduction
    00:37 Was Jesus called Jesus?
    00:53 Was Jesus born in Bethlehem?
    01:44 Was Jesus real? / Archeological evidence of Jesus?
    02:42 What records are there of Jesus?
    03:38 How popular was Jesus?
    04:33 Was Jesus crucified?
    05:08 What languages did Jesus speak?
    05:53 What clothes did Jesus wear?
    08:03 Who were Jesus' parents?
    08:29 Did Jesus do miracles?
    09:53 Was Jesus born in a barn?
    10:36 What ethnicity was Jesus?
    10:53 Why did the Romans want to kill Jesus?
    12:04 Did Jesus invent Christianity?
    13:21 Did Herod try to kill Jesus?
    14:37 Did Pontius Pilate exist?
    15:41 Did Jesus have disciples?
    16:36 Did Jesus marry Mary Magdalene?
    18:24 Was Jesus a carpenter?
    18:57 Where is Jesus' grave?
    20:24 What other religions does Jesus appear in?
    20:52 Was Jesus a very naughty boy?

Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @jdjones4825
    @jdjones4825 Před měsícem +83

    "He's not the messiah, he's a very naughty boy"
    Philosophical comedy gold..

    • @jdjones4825
      @jdjones4825 Před měsícem +2

      People talking about someone decades after the fact doesn't mean someone existed.. Paul had a so called hallucination .

    • @danielmorris3687
      @danielmorris3687 Před měsícem +7

      The Life of Brian is probably more accurate in the actual rise of the cult of Jesus and Christianity than any believer would ever want to contemplate. Comedy gold indeed. It's one of the funniest movies ever made.

    • @smoutube1197
      @smoutube1197 Před 14 dny

      @@jdjones4825 Ya but it was 2000 years ago so that's really our evidence that any ancient historical figures existed some historian wrote is down some time, Jesus probably existed his 12 apostles went in pairs in 6 different directions some to India some to Rome some to Ethiopia 40 years after jesus's death the first gosepsl were written by the apostles followers writing down what they'd said so it's not just this one guy paul it's 12, also it would be a bit bizare if they made the whole thing up as a joke said it to people who didn't take kindly to it got martyred and then 2000 years later it's the worlds leading religion

    • @jdjones4825
      @jdjones4825 Před 13 dny +1

      @@smoutube1197we don't know if the deciples scriptures are legitimate and even if they are I think once the paul edits occurred the Christian branch of Judaism was eternally "bastardised" from its original free flowing sentiments..

  • @chewysugar971
    @chewysugar971 Před měsícem +35

    I was born into a Christian family, but no longer consider myself a member of the faith. I find the historiography of Christianity so fascinating. Always a pleasure to hear Professor Bond speak on the subject.

    • @con_boy
      @con_boy Před měsícem

      Really? She's so chock full of utter gibberish I can't cope and I've watch 11seconds and had to stop
      There is no one in history better attested: pliny the younger, Suetonius, Josephus, plus about 20 others independently attest Jesus. We know the sermons preached in corinth. from 17 years after the crucifixion. She's just a nut job with a badge mate

  • @yourfavebrendan
    @yourfavebrendan Před 28 dny +37

    Loving the rational and well-informed debate in the comments where everyone apparently possesses more historical knowledge about biblical times than an actual professor at the University of Edinburgh... Well done you. You really "got" whoever it was you think you're getting.

    • @FBDAGM2023
      @FBDAGM2023 Před 23 dny

      Don’t disagree with you, but I do wonder if you’re aware that people possessing more knowledge than world experts is the very basis of YT :-)

    • @paulryan5150
      @paulryan5150 Před 22 dny +1

      You do know that there are only so many books on this subject and anybody can read them and have an opinion about them just as valid as this professor. Most are on the internet.

    • @MarieIsHere-rg3bv
      @MarieIsHere-rg3bv Před 19 dny +5

      @@paulryan5150 OK, but being a professor is way above the level of "reading all the books". She spends her life attending conferences, reading academic papers from all over the world, doing original research in museums, writing papers, which are then peer reviewed. She'll be up-to-date on all the latest ideas and will be expected to have an informed opinion on them and she'll also be asked to review them. She's probably able to read ancient Greek, Hebrew and Aramaic. She's been doing this for decades. She might even have to do some teaching!
      If you're not an academic, you don't have access to this world.

    • @FleurPillager
      @FleurPillager Před 18 dny

      I wish this was more in-depth and she presented the actual evidence for the claims she makes. You could do an entire hour long video on the evidence that Jesus dressed like a Roman and had short hair. I'd be interested in that.

    • @MarieIsHere-rg3bv
      @MarieIsHere-rg3bv Před 17 dny

      @@FleurPillager Helen has a lot of content on CZcams and has written a lot of books

  • @MysticChronicles712
    @MysticChronicles712 Před měsícem +50

    Notably, there are scant documents that date back centuries that support the claims made about the majority of historical figures from that era. She is not claiming that he is divinely born, as Alexander the Great was supposedly born to Zeus; rather, she is stating that the evidence for his existence is consistent with accepted historical accounts.

    • @JohnD808
      @JohnD808 Před měsícem +5

      @Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn I publicly declare that you’re a divine being.
      Now we need exceptionally good evidence to be sure you’re a real person.

    • @infozencentre
      @infozencentre Před měsícem

      There are no historical accounts. A couple of guys a generation or two afterwards who claim to be his inheritors of authority are hardly unbiased sources

    • @maxdecimus13
      @maxdecimus13 Před měsícem +2

      ​@Letsthinkaboutit-mb7nn I completely disagree. There is enough in the New Testament that are not fanciful stories of miracles etc to believe these are actual people.
      As mentioned, the best evidence is the crucifixion in that it would make no sense to make up a religion on that basis.
      There is plenty of other very good circumstantial reasons to mean the default is that he was real. Whether we know a single thing about him other than that he was crucified is another matter entirely.

    • @silverhawkscape2677
      @silverhawkscape2677 Před měsícem +1

      Sadly Atheist with Argue over anything that claims Christ Was actually a Real Person. Making her fair game.

  • @elijahcumpton9926
    @elijahcumpton9926 Před měsícem +47

    This was an absolute delight, thank you professor Bond!

  • @stefanavic6630
    @stefanavic6630 Před měsícem +25

    "He was very unpopular with a group of people in Jerusalem..." - The diplomat's answer.

    • @MrCopyrat
      @MrCopyrat Před 13 dny +1

      that shows she is not fit for the job.

    • @sallyside8855
      @sallyside8855 Před 12 dny +2

      @@MrCopyrat It's lucky you are not in charge of a university!

  • @MylesAwayAgain
    @MylesAwayAgain Před 13 dny +2

    The way she says the word “questions” is wild

  • @Garbagejuicewaterfall
    @Garbagejuicewaterfall Před měsícem +1

    You’re soooo lovely ! Thank you 🙏

  • @madisonphillips4888
    @madisonphillips4888 Před 18 dny +3

    I really don’t understand why this video didn’t perform as well as most of the others, I really enjoyed it!

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před 14 dny +1

      Me too. But some people nowadays are seem to be very bitter at Christianity to the point they love to deny historicity of Jesus and keep mocking every expert who doesn't agree with them and seem to be trigger at any mention of Jesus. (And there is of course the other group - overly-religious ones who reject any critical academic discourse.) It's so sad how fanatical are both sides.

  • @LeandroCapstick
    @LeandroCapstick Před měsícem +117

    Just wanted to remind all the smug armchair experts in the comments here that most historians think Jesus was real. If he was the son of God is another matter entirely. The evidence for Jesus is better than most historical figures who's existence no one denies.

    • @maxdecimus13
      @maxdecimus13 Před měsícem +21

      As an atheist, I despair at the levels some people go to to assert he didn't exist. It is pure wishful thinking.
      If you use Occam's razor, it is far far more likely that a ten-a-penny preacher was crucified and then his supporters spun the story in a way that resonated with people, than the idea that a group of people purposely invented a logically inconsistent story based around a guy being crucified. It literally makes no sense.

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před měsícem

      I'd like to remind you that history is not a political numbers game, and everything not written AT THE TIME is not valid evidence of anything, but gossip and spin.

    • @87tinman
      @87tinman Před měsícem +6

      I deny his existence

    • @christinabiller8901
      @christinabiller8901 Před měsícem +1

      😊 pop pop

    • @gannonmcnall356
      @gannonmcnall356 Před 29 dny +1

      @@87tinman then he will deny you. Repent brother, do you really think you’re perfect?

  • @milgoncalez
    @milgoncalez Před 28 dny

    Great video, thank you! I will definitely look for your podcast.

  • @mhobsonirish
    @mhobsonirish Před 21 dnem +5

    Jesus like had “the kind of burial someone who was slightly executed might have.” Lmao

    • @moonlightbay4814
      @moonlightbay4814 Před 7 dny

      She says, "...the kind of burial that someone who's been executed is more likely to have had." (20:11)

  • @padraic773
    @padraic773 Před měsícem +3

    09:55
    There might not be any evidence to confirm this as such, but I imagine that if a deep dive was done to see how often the Bible or other records show how often he closed a door when leaving a room, we could make a fair assumption as to yes or no.
    I have not been a believer since I was 12, but growing up I can safely recall never hearing tell of him closing a door. That would lead me to assume that yes, he was in fact born in a barn had he existed. Which, I'm happy to accept he was a real person.

  • @zoes7434
    @zoes7434 Před měsícem +40

    It's worth pointing out that most historical figures from that period are based on very few sources dating centuries after their death. She's not saying he's the son of God, like how Alexander the great was considered the son of Zeus, just that the evidence that he existed stands up to standard historical scrutiny

    • @LP-jn4tw
      @LP-jn4tw Před měsícem +6

      He existed just as much as the other thousands of guys named jesus existed. Throw in a bunch of writers and storytellers (with various agendas) and you've got entertaining fairy tales at the very least.

    • @pirththee
      @pirththee Před měsícem +3

      @@LP-jn4tw Throw in a few messianic expectations and you have a rock and roll band.

    • @steveofthewildnorth7493
      @steveofthewildnorth7493 Před měsícem +4

      No, actually, they're not. But for some strange reason, we give Jesus a pass on actual evidence.

    • @JohnD808
      @JohnD808 Před měsícem +1

      @@steveofthewildnorth7493no, actually, we don’t. Fortunately most people aren’t ideologically obsessed atheists who want to contort history to suit their own purposes.

    • @preciousmourning8310
      @preciousmourning8310 Před měsícem

      @@steveofthewildnorth7493 Xtian apologists do but critical biblical scholars who do scholarship based on evidence do think a traveling apocalyptic Jewish preacher named Jesus was around at the time and had a following.
      It obviously does not mean Christian teachings themselves are true, just that he was probably a guy who existed. Look up "Direct archaeological evidence for a historical Jesus?" by Dan McClellan on CZcams.

  • @neinzukorruption9321
    @neinzukorruption9321 Před měsícem +1

    like it very much, thank you

  • @skontheroad
    @skontheroad Před měsícem +3

    And the dinner in the painting was the Passover Seder!

  • @BenRush
    @BenRush Před měsícem +5

    Q: "what languages did Jesus speak?"
    A: "Murican"

  • @grumhelden
    @grumhelden Před měsícem +35

    Absolutely mental seeing Prof bond on CZcams when I last saw her in the late 90s when a mate shared a flat with her friend 😂

    • @Domee894
      @Domee894 Před měsícem

      Was she wild back then?

    • @steveofthewildnorth7493
      @steveofthewildnorth7493 Před měsícem +3

      Was she assuming crap then too?

    • @dh7314
      @dh7314 Před měsícem +5

      Was she guessing at the life story of fictional characters then too?

    • @FleurPillager
      @FleurPillager Před 21 dnem

      @@dh7314 Do you think other historical figures are fictional too? Dido? Henry the 8th?

  • @CarolStJohn-oz3oc
    @CarolStJohn-oz3oc Před měsícem +2

    It’s like you’re looking at the top of the ceiling. Very odd have never seen that ever before.

  • @AzamatoTheGreat
    @AzamatoTheGreat Před měsícem +4

    It is insane how much things in the world and history have happened based on people's faith in someone of whom we know so little about

  • @mike9512
    @mike9512 Před měsícem +21

    Loved this one. I am a former protestant member that never really believed, but was always fascinated by Jesus. Hearing this kind of perspective is so refreshing and interesting.

    • @andreascj73
      @andreascj73 Před měsícem

      It is quite common theology and has been for more than 200 years now.

    • @mike9512
      @mike9512 Před měsícem +6

      @andreascj73 what is the point of your comment? I go online and make a positive comment, you don't know anything about me, and your instinct is to condescendly come on to point out something I already know? Just keep your mouth shut buddy, and move on.

    • @andreascj73
      @andreascj73 Před měsícem

      @@mike9512 Nothing condescending in my comment. But this is common theological knowledge. It would have been the same if you were surprised by some common medical knowledge and thought it refreshing being a former football coach or something, and you were told by a doctor that it is common knowledge.
      Instinct? There is no instinct in replying to a comment, mate.

    • @BadgerUKvideo
      @BadgerUKvideo Před měsícem +5

      @@andreascj73 Ask a mate to reread your response. It does legit look like your instinct was to condescend. Your follow-up makes it look even more so.

    • @andreascj73
      @andreascj73 Před měsícem

      @@BadgerUKvideo I actually don't care how it appears tbh. Common knowledge among theologians is common knowledge among theologians.

  • @chiron14pl
    @chiron14pl Před měsícem +30

    While he spoke Aramaic, he probably knew enough Hebrew to participate in reading the Torah, and probably read it aloud

    • @bentucker2301
      @bentucker2301 Před měsícem

      Who?

    • @pirththee
      @pirththee Před měsícem +12

      Do you realize how many times the word "probably" figured into the conclusions you've drawn?

    • @andrasszabo1570
      @andrasszabo1570 Před měsícem +9

      @@pirththee Do you realise it's impossible to talk about anybody without probabilities, let alone somebody 2000 years in the past?

    • @pirththee
      @pirththee Před měsícem +4

      @@andrasszabo1570 Here's a phrase that is helpful in situations like you're describing. "I don't know" It's a quaint little phrase that trumps all probabilities and suppositions..

    • @thelostone6981
      @thelostone6981 Před měsícem +1

      @@pirththeewhat? Are you saying it’s NOT probably true that Mohammed split the moon in half, Joseph Smith found gold plates and Olifat causes mischief in Micronesia? Well, as the first MusMormOliest, I can say that those things ABSOLUTELY, 100% happened*.
      *probably

  • @jackthemac132
    @jackthemac132 Před měsícem

    Super interesting video

  • @ericthompson3982
    @ericthompson3982 Před měsícem +2

    I was of the understanding that actual togas were more of a formal garment, rather than the everyday garment of Romans.

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před měsícem

      They certainly were by the early Empire.

  • @tcbph
    @tcbph Před měsícem +7

    Its interesting because the New Testament states Jesus was crucified for blasphemy. However, that crime was punishable by stoning. The crime of crucifixion was reserved for inciting rebellion or insurrection against the Roman state.

    • @Medic545
      @Medic545 Před měsícem

      The Jews were not allowed to administer capital punishment under the Romans. The gospels say that the Jews incited Pilate and the Romans to crucify him by charging him rebellion against Rome.

    • @uxigadur
      @uxigadur Před měsícem +2

      Blasphemy was the temple authorities acussation. But he was presented as a rebell against Rome to Pilatos. That Is why pilatos first really doesnt care, and the reason jesus Is mocked as a false king of the jews. A messiah Is both a religious and polítical figure.

    • @user-us6pj2jw1h
      @user-us6pj2jw1h Před měsícem +1

      Another way you can read this from the eyes of Apostle Paul is that although you are right that he shouldn’t have been hanged on a tree for blasphemy, God purposefully made it so so he can rightfully redeem us from the curse of the law as it is written in Galatians 3:13 -
      ”Christ redeemed us from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us, for it is written: “Cursed is everyone who is hung on a pole.”[h] 14 He redeemed us in order that the blessing given to Abraham might come to the Gentiles through Christ Jesus”
      Deuteronomy 21:22-23 says “a hanged man is cursed by God”.

    • @bentucker2301
      @bentucker2301 Před měsícem

      It's a story

    • @gobic1319
      @gobic1319 Před měsícem +1

      You forgot about the thieves crucified near Jesus.

  • @LadyShmady
    @LadyShmady Před měsícem +3

    Josephus also mentions Jesus and his brother James, not just Pilate. You'd think that would be important context. Hopefully not edited out.

    • @pirththee
      @pirththee Před měsícem

      Josephus was born decades after Jesus alleged death, Jesus didn't appear in Josephus's first history ,but only in his second history which overlapped dates, Josephus's 2nd history followed the Roman propaganda of the time which Josephus was personally beholden to.

    • @infozencentre
      @infozencentre Před měsícem

      Josephus is a later Greek source widely debunked in actual scholarship. It's generally the bible bashers who tout Josephus about, usually misquoting him and giving him more credit than deserved

    • @tomasrocha6139
      @tomasrocha6139 Před měsícem +1

      @@infozencentre No, Josephus was a Jewish historian that apologists hate since he exposes lots of blunders in Luke-Acts as he had access to actual Roman records since he was close with the Flavians.

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před 29 dny

      @@infozencentre Jospehus was Jewish not Greek and he wasn't debunked. He is widely regarded as non-Christian source on Jesus, though it is agreed his fragment was subject to some inetroplation.

  • @steveandsheryl
    @steveandsheryl Před měsícem

    Pliny the Younger, a Roman Gov. talks about him having believers sing to him"as to God".

    • @iainrendle7989
      @iainrendle7989 Před měsícem

      Pliny was some time after Jesus died, and what he refers to is the Christians that he was dealing with whilst Governer of Bithynia in 110 AD, and what you refer to is his letter to Trajan and how he was to deal with the Christian community from a judical point of biew. He never actually uses the name Jesus, but rather Christ ( and not identified as a person, and the term was "as to 'a' god" of which the Romans had many and allowed the belief of a huge amount of others. So Pliny can be used regarding the early christian movements spread but nothing about Jesus as a person or him ever existing in reality

  • @deborahcustance2754
    @deborahcustance2754 Před měsícem +2

    I understand the argument that Jesus was not the first Christian, but I am unsure about the assertion that Christianity did not emerge as a separate religion from Judaism until much later, even after Paul. I thought that Paul argued that gentiles did not need to convert to Judaism to be accepted into the Kingdom of God. My understanding is that Paul argued with Peter and James (Jesus' brother) that gentiles did not need to adhere to the Jewish laws about food (and presumably circumcision, but I am less sure about this). If that is the case, then it seems to me that Paul was founding a separate religion from Judaism even if he didn't call it Christianity. Have I misunderstood Paul's writings? I would very much appreciate Prof Bond's clarification. Thank you.

    • @lizzieh5284
      @lizzieh5284 Před měsícem

      There were many different forms of Christianity at that time. 'Heresy:Jesus Christ and the other Sons of God'by Catherine Nixey is a very good book on the subject.

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před měsícem

      None of that makes any sense, because Christianity as we understand it, did not exist before the council of nicea 325 CE and the first evidence of AD dating ocurrs in the 6th century.

    • @Hugh_Morris
      @Hugh_Morris Před 29 dny

      I can tell you that from a Roman perspective, Christians were seen as a Jewish sect until the reign of Vespasian in 70 AD. This indicates that most Christians at the time looked and acted like other Jews.

    • @randommusic4567
      @randommusic4567 Před dnem

      I suppose the question is when does something become a separate religion rather than a branch of a religion or some members of a religion that have slightly different views than the mainstream
      This happens all the time in Christianity and islam and judaism but we dont count them as separate religions

  • @draoi99
    @draoi99 Před měsícem +10

    Why is it that in Spanish culture, people use the first name "Jesús" but we don't do that in the rest of Europe?

    • @AleksiJoensuu
      @AleksiJoensuu Před měsícem +20

      Well, there's Joshua in English, Jussi in Finnish, Giosue in Italian, Iosua in Romanian, aaand so on. Not Jesus exactly, but then according to the video, Jesus wasn't named Jesus either 😅

    • @robiking011
      @robiking011 Před měsícem +14

      It's because in Spain in the 1500s there arose the last name ''De Jesus'' (which means ''Of Jesus'' in Spanish) This last name became very popular in Spain and so people in Spain got used to seeing ''Jesus'' in people's names. And so by the 1700s some people just started naming boys ''Jesus'' and it became a common name in Spain and other Spanish speaking places.

    • @robiking011
      @robiking011 Před měsícem

      @@AleksiJoensuu Giosue, Iosua, Jussi, all just mean ''Josepth''. not Jesus. Are you saying that ''Jose'' in Spanish means Jesus too?

    • @AleksiJoensuu
      @AleksiJoensuu Před měsícem +3

      @@robiking011 Did you watch this video? If not, see 0:38 - 0:52.

    • @robiking011
      @robiking011 Před měsícem +1

      @@AleksiJoensuu What does that have to do with anything? She never says that Giosue, Iosua, Jussi all mean Jesus.

  • @therealcaldini
    @therealcaldini Před měsícem

    What’s with the blurring out on the picture?

  • @julianob9917
    @julianob9917 Před měsícem +2

    I like the video. But I must point out that the excerpts of the Bible in old English and low quality print was a poor design choice.

  • @britaccent4352
    @britaccent4352 Před měsícem +4

    Always love listening to Helen Bond! If anyone cares to listen to her podcast you with find that there are many scholars over many disciplines that have studied the historicity of the Torah and the Bible and speak knowledgeably on how the books were assembled and what parts are historically supported. Her position that Jesus was a real man referenced not only by the Bible but by other historians of the time period does not mean that she swallows everything in the Bible as historically accurate. It is a text that is telling a story in order to support its teachings, and knowing that, it can be analyzed to separate the historical from the embellished. Did Jesus’s life happen and inspire religion? The answer is clearly YES. Was he the miracle working son of God? That’s up to you and your beliefs. Her beliefs are withheld here as she is speaking about history, not religion.

  • @lbakemeyer
    @lbakemeyer Před měsícem +18

    Correct me if I am wrong but Pilate had Jesus crucified because the Saducces and Pharisees along with Caiaphas wanted him killed and Jews weren't allowed to do that so they sent Jesus to Pilate to have him tried and crucified. So it wasn't just the Romans responsible for this act but also the Jewish authorities who felt threatened by Jesus's teachings.

    • @jeffmartin5419
      @jeffmartin5419 Před měsícem +7

      That's how the gospels tell it, but they're a biased source. The other sources we have just don't give details about it - Josephus just says there was a preacher called Jesus who got executed. (and had a big following that didn't dissolve after his death.) The general idea that the politically powerful folks in the area didn't want him starting a revolt does make sense, though.

    • @iainrendle7989
      @iainrendle7989 Před měsícem +3

      They could have him put to death for blasphemy, ie stoned to death, but as he seemingly avoided that, then they used first Herods and then Pilates fear of insurrection to have him dealt with under civil law rather than religous law. Judea and the whole of the Levant was a powder keg, and Pilate would not want to be seen as the person that allowed the whole thing to go up, so if he deemed Jesus to be an instigator of Jewish Independence ie a messiah, then he would want to suppress that very quickly.....so false witnesses were probably used to convince Pilate that Jesus preached insurrection and independence from Rome......nothing about him being King or his religeous views.

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před měsícem +1

      There is no contemporary evidence to suport any of this.

    • @TheLastAssaultman0351
      @TheLastAssaultman0351 Před měsícem +4

      ​@jeffmartin5419 Josephus was a Jewish historian, and the mainstream Jews considered Jesus a heretic. To claim that the gospels are biased as historical documents, but that counterclaims written by someone with an opposing ideology are not is intellectually dishonest.

    • @TheLastAssaultman0351
      @TheLastAssaultman0351 Před měsícem +1

      ​@wiretamer5710 the gospels and writings of Paul are contemporary historical documents. Whether or not you believe they are divinely inspired is irrelevant. The fact is they are part of the historical record, and they were written within living memory of the events described.

  • @jarrettperdue3328
    @jarrettperdue3328 Před měsícem +2

    ACTS 11:26, probably from the 80s, has followers of The Way first being called "Christians" at Antioch. It may have been intended to have a negative connotation.

  • @fotograf736
    @fotograf736 Před měsícem

    Beautiful voice, beautiful eyes and a matching jacket = wonderful video.
    A naughty child with the powers of God? Sounds like the God to me.
    In a modern version of Titus Andronicus starring Anthony Hopkins, God is (by metaphor) depicted by a naughty child at the beginning, wreaking havoc on the world for play. So the idea can't be new.

  • @andrasszabo1570
    @andrasszabo1570 Před měsícem +16

    One small addition: Jesus is present in a couple of religions, not just Christianity and Islam.
    He was one of the 4 prophets in manichaeism, which was a major world religion in the 3rd-7th centuries.
    In the druze faith, he is one of the 7 prophets.
    In the Bahá'i faith, he is a manifestation of God.
    Some Hindis consider him an avatar (an incarnation of a god) or sadhu (a holy person).
    Some Buddhists, including the current Dalai Lama, also consider him a budhisatva.

  • @kenc9236
    @kenc9236 Před měsícem +3

    My mom used to ask me all the time if I was born in a barn?

  • @p1971cuda
    @p1971cuda Před měsícem +2

    Love Helen And her podcast (Biblical Time machine) with Dave

  • @williamfletcher5760
    @williamfletcher5760 Před měsícem +1

    There were two Bethlehems at the time the second one is under a motorway

    • @lizzieh5284
      @lizzieh5284 Před měsícem +1

      The Romans who kept metuculous records also never recorded a census at that time.

    • @williamfletcher5760
      @williamfletcher5760 Před měsícem

      @@lizzieh5284 they did a census as recored in the birth of Jesus stories. Dont forget populations were less in those days and population growth was slower so census was not required as often.

    • @williamfletcher5760
      @williamfletcher5760 Před měsícem

      @@lizzieh5284 The Census of Quirinius was a census of the Roman province of Judaea taken in 6 CE, upon its formation, by the governor of Roman Syria, Publius Sulpicius Quirinius. This is the one most likely to be the census recorded in the New Testament

    • @lizzieh5284
      @lizzieh5284 Před měsícem

      @@williamfletcher5760 but in the bible it states that Joseph and Mary went to Bethlehem for a census. There is no record of this written by the Romans. 'Birth of Jesus stories' - exactly that 'stories'.

    • @williamfletcher5760
      @williamfletcher5760 Před měsícem

      @@lizzieh5284 see the reply sowing the roman census

  • @jontastic
    @jontastic Před měsícem +10

    So the followers of JC waited decades to a hundred years after his death to write an account? How is this a historical record? It’s more like a historian writing about the fables of Atlantis. While Jesus probably lived, the mythology written about him is just that. I was hoping for an objective review of these questions.

    • @pirththee
      @pirththee Před měsícem

      Good luck finding objectivity on this subject.

    • @preciousmourning8310
      @preciousmourning8310 Před měsícem +3

      He's mentioned in the Pauline Epistles about 20 yrs after his death. The scholarly consensus is that a traveling apocalyptic preacher named Jesus existed and had a following but obviously the religious stuff and miracle claims are unprovable.

    • @pirththee
      @pirththee Před měsícem

      @@preciousmourning8310 Can one cite those that comprise ones scholarly consensus?.

    • @preciousmourning8310
      @preciousmourning8310 Před měsícem

      @@pirththee Look up the critical biblical scholar Dan McClellan here on CZcams, he has a PhD in the Bible and the cognitive science of religion. Especially relevant is his video: "Direct archaeological evidence for a historical Jesus?".

    • @pirththee
      @pirththee Před měsícem

      @@preciousmourning8310 That's one source I believe you talked about a consensus which implies more than one..

  • @mattpaullmusic
    @mattpaullmusic Před měsícem +3

    Hey History Hit, great video! But please remind your guests to look into the camera lens not at the monitor please :) gives the impression that the person is looking above the camera

    • @shortdrink873
      @shortdrink873 Před 17 dny +2

      I dunno, I’d prefer someone inexperienced on camera to look past me but talk comfortably than getting unnerved looking down the lens. It takes practice to get good at that.

  • @simontemplar404
    @simontemplar404 Před měsícem

    The most important question left is does Jesus save with the Woolwich?

  • @samkelomambisa1897
    @samkelomambisa1897 Před měsícem

    What kills you when crucified? Is it that you bleed to death? Or do they also put a nail through your forehead, and it was simply decided not to depict that in the Christian iconography?

    • @ziploc2000
      @ziploc2000 Před měsícem

      My understanding is it was usually suffocation.
      The longer you're up there the harder it is to support your own weight, eventually you hang by your arms and it becomes hard to breathe. You could also die from dehydration.
      I found it interesting the two images she showed had the nails through his hands, when they should be through his wrists. You can't hang by just the skin between your fingers, the nails would eventually rip through.
      In Jesus' case if he was only up there a few hours, he probably died from artistic interpretation.

    • @thomabow8949
      @thomabow8949 Před 14 dny

      I'm not sure regarding the nail to the forehead, but presuming that the crucification is in the form of the traditional cross.
      1.) Hypovolemic shock: Having your radial arteries severed alongside other blood vessels will lead to a gradual loss in blood over time; whether or not it will be sufficient to lead to hypovolemic shock, where the heart no longer is able to adequately perfuse blood throughout your arteries and return them via veins, is unclear and likely varies based on the nail size as well as the location and trauma to the surrounding tissues. What is clear is that your entire body weight resting upon the nail will further damage tissue and help prevent clotting which would further blood loss.
      2.) Exposure: being stripped naked, and slowly drained of blood or losing a significant volume of blood, as well as likely being malnourished and exposed to a.) nights and b.) winds would rapidly deplete your body of energy, and all of these factors would decrease the ability of your body to properly thermoregulate. You become hypothermic and your core body temperature gradually decreases until your heart has dysfunctions that leads to death, or you fail to oxygenate your tissues properly and functionally die of suffocation.
      3.) Malnutrition and starvation and/or infection & septic shock. Jesus is presumed to have been stabbed by a spear, this injury is categorically what would have killed him, based on what I have been exposed to. Romans typically left the crucified alive, up there, for days on end until the elements take them. So considering the physical trauma, as well as the cyclic heating leading to dehydration and baking during the days and increasing fluid loss (thus worsening hypovolemia) and freezing at nights, leading to greater energy expenditures, your head once again gives out. If you happen to get an infection during this time period, you are severely immunocompromised and it could lead to septic shock, but I would bet money the other issues kill you first.

  • @doctor_gibbo1392
    @doctor_gibbo1392 Před měsícem +16

    Ironic that a carpenter ends up nailed to a piece of wood. Imagine him hanging there thinking "I could have done a much better job for half the price"

  • @olisipocity
    @olisipocity Před měsícem +8

    Just listen to his mother. He was a very naughty boy. (Source: Life of Buaian)

  • @thomabow8949
    @thomabow8949 Před 14 dny +1

    You know, I think I figured out why so many people are upset about this video. I think it's because they put a scholar to the task, who, in her research, does not enter the topic with the presupposition that Jesus was, in fact, the incarnation of a deity, and that you, as the researcher, have your eternal salvation on the line specifically when it comes to the belief in said Jesus as their lord and savior, which you know, might just maybe, in some maybe small maybe you know, possibly totally irrelevant way bias the researcher so horrendously that you could never have them honestly present this information.

  • @amaltoadie
    @amaltoadie Před 14 dny

    "Why did the Romans want to kill him?" "This is sort of at the end of his life" - ya don't say...

  • @VinnieG-
    @VinnieG- Před měsícem +13

    "There's a very good chance it's a 100 percent true"
    Assumption after assumption after assumption after assumption and this is her conclusion.
    very good

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před měsícem

      She nowhere says this. Yes, examinibg Jesus's life is based on assumptions. But there is nothing wrong with making assumptions and trying make the most probable scenario.

    • @VinnieG-
      @VinnieG- Před měsícem +1

      @@pendragonsxskywalkers9518 She says this right in the first 25 percent of the video after mentioning Jesus' crucifixion.
      2 different sources mention it, so she says in a convoluted way that it must be true.
      I'm not saying it isn't. I'm saying her logic is ridiculous.
      with her logic we can talk in the same way about Zeus or Hercules or Robin Hood

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před měsícem

      @@VinnieG- It's not the same. Zeus wa snever claim to be human in first place. Robin is character from folklore.

    • @smoutube1197
      @smoutube1197 Před 14 dny

      Whats the alternative that 12 guys met up and made up a elaborate scam spent the rest of their life peddling it facing persecution never asking for personal favours and ultimalty getting killed then a christian hunter named paul has a road to damascus moment and helps spread it as the second generation of christians rise writing down what the 12 apolstles said in over 60 differnt gospels in 60 differnt places also risking life and limb under roman persecution to spread their religion
      that seems more ridiculous

  • @chrisb9360
    @chrisb9360 Před měsícem +26

    19:58 “the gospel writers of the early Christian’s want to imagine that Jesus…”. Could’ve answered all the questions with that single phrase.

    • @andreascj73
      @andreascj73 Před měsícem +1

      Yes, you could but it would be rather imprecise.

    • @mdtdbe
      @mdtdbe Před měsícem

      Not that phrase exactly; leave off the apostrophe in “Christians.”

    • @pirththee
      @pirththee Před měsícem +3

      You could have stopped with "Early Christians want to imagine", because that says it all.

    • @JohnD808
      @JohnD808 Před měsícem

      @@pirththeeyeah, that says it all! Ancient writers wrote things!!! Why so any more!?!?!

    • @pirththee
      @pirththee Před měsícem

      @@JohnD808 "Early Christians want to imagine" as the phrase used not "wrote things". What's with you trying to rewrite the sentence now?

  • @p.c8281
    @p.c8281 Před 25 dny +1

    the expert is a very sweet lady

  • @MarieIsHere-rg3bv
    @MarieIsHere-rg3bv Před měsícem +1

    18:58 I'm surprised that she doesn't mention Jesus's grave at Srinagar in India.

    • @infozencentre
      @infozencentre Před měsícem +4

      I'm surprised she didn't wear a tinfoil hat

    • @arturmangolim9385
      @arturmangolim9385 Před měsícem

      The gospel which talks about it it's a forgery from the XIX century.

    • @arturmangolim9385
      @arturmangolim9385 Před měsícem

      The gospel which talks about it it's a forgery from the XIX century.

    • @MarieIsHere-rg3bv
      @MarieIsHere-rg3bv Před měsícem

      @@infozencentre Sorry. I don't understand.

    • @MarieIsHere-rg3bv
      @MarieIsHere-rg3bv Před měsícem

      @@arturmangolim9385 ? There isn't a gospel that talks about it. It's an Ahmadi myth, isn't it?
      If your going to talk about the 2 fake Jesus graves in Jerusalem, why not mention the much more interesting Ahmadi version?

  • @ricklehurst
    @ricklehurst Před měsícem +4

    April Fool's Day was the 1st. 🤷‍♂

  • @ianp1986
    @ianp1986 Před měsícem +10

    Was Jesus real? Probably.
    Was he the resurrected son of a god while also being that god who sacrificed himself to himself to save everyone from what he’d do to them if they didn’t worship him? Probably not

  • @antonarnell814
    @antonarnell814 Před měsícem

    Why do you blur the suffering of our Lord?

  • @rascalap2968
    @rascalap2968 Před měsícem

    Tune next week for her answers on Santa Claus, and remember to submit your questions in time for the Tooth Fairy Q&A at the end of the month…

  • @Catseye189
    @Catseye189 Před měsícem +3

    No, he didn't exist. It was a tale from Egypt that the christians rewrote. Horus was born of a virgin, had twelve disciples, walked on water, delivered a 'sermon on the mount', performed mircles, was executed beside two thieves, rose from the dead and ascended into heaven.

    • @silverhawkscape2677
      @silverhawkscape2677 Před měsícem +2

      Wrong completely. The Horus Manure has long been debunked to the point anyone repeating might as well say they also believe in UFOs.
      For one, here was how Horus was actually Conceived.
      "After Osiris' death, Isis gathered up the pieces of his body and brought him back to life long enough to CONCEIVE Horus. According to some versions of the myth, Isis used her magical powers to resurrect Osiris and then COPULATED with him, resulting in the conception of Horus.
      In other versions, Isis used a magical spell to create a PHALLUS for Osiris, allowing her to conceive Horus without actual physical contact. This mythological detail highlights the importance of Isis' magical powers and her role as a powerful female deity."
      Horus wasn't even born from a Virgin. Isis CLEARLY had to knock up Osiris Reanimated Corpse to guve birth to Horus.

    • @arta.xshaca
      @arta.xshaca Před 19 dny

      So many crackheads here

  • @dadno_sound4533
    @dadno_sound4533 Před měsícem +5

    very naughty boy

  • @rogink
    @rogink Před měsícem

    Interesting to see the picture of Jesus with Mohammed. How long before the video gets demonetised?

  • @telemachus53
    @telemachus53 Před měsícem +1

    Re the birth place of Jesus: It could've been in Bethlehem in the Galilee, which is only about 12 kilometres North West of Nazareth.

  • @oldi184
    @oldi184 Před měsícem +6

    Did he even exist? What about the "silent historians". Historians who lived in the 20s, 30s, and 40s AD and they never mentioned him.
    A person who performed amazing miracles - walked on water, calmed the storm, resurrected the dead, and changed one liquid into another (water into wine).
    Nobody wrote about him when he was alive, nobody kidnapped him.

    • @preciousmourning8310
      @preciousmourning8310 Před měsícem

      Scholars believe there was a Jewish man named Jesus who traveled around in that time period and had apocalyptic teachings but obviously those miracles are not something that can be proven.

    • @TheStijg
      @TheStijg Před měsícem

      That IS the whole point: nothing was written down when he lived. Despite his “miracles”…

    • @oldi184
      @oldi184 Před měsícem

      @@TheStijg
      I find this very bizarre. A person with powerful, god-like skills and abilities was never mentioned. Nobody abducted him to use his skills.
      He could resurrect the dead. How incredible is that? He could change one substance into another. That's incredible.
      The Roman Empire was very bureaucratic, they wrote about everything worth mentioning and a person with magical abilities was certainly worth noting.
      The gospels were written by people who had never seen Jesus in person. Never. They weren't even close to him.

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před měsícem +1

      @@oldi184 You didn't listen her - there were many figures of miracle performers. Jesus wasn't so special to outsiders. It was his followers that made mark on history.

    • @oldi184
      @oldi184 Před měsícem

      @@pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      I think Jesus did not exist.
      She often said that there is no good, hard evidence that Jesus Christ was real.
      And why the New Testament was written in Greek? Why not in Aramaic?

  • @stephencurry8552
    @stephencurry8552 Před měsícem +17

    Fact is, Jesus would have had brown skin, brown eyes. He would look nothing like the popularized depictions of a white man with blue or green eyes and long blond hair!

    • @TheLastAssaultman0351
      @TheLastAssaultman0351 Před měsícem +5

      Throughout history, artists have rendered images of Jesus in their own context. Their are Native American images of Native Jesus, European images of European Jesus, Asian images of Asian Jesus, etc. Prior to the globalization of the 20th century, people lived in a much more insular world. When they heard stories, they would transfer them to their own context. Especially in a world of extremely limited literacy, art was used to tell stories in a way that people would understand.

    • @maxdecimus13
      @maxdecimus13 Před měsícem +5

      This is certainly a hot take, and not one that people have been pointing out for my whole life...

    • @con_boy
      @con_boy Před měsícem +1

      Not true, the hellenic Mediterranean wasn't the same gene pool as now. You're looking at today: 2,000 of intermarriage later. Wind the clock back. Do the effort.

    • @stephencurry8552
      @stephencurry8552 Před měsícem

      @@TheLastAssaultman0351 And yet there are facts. Accuracy. Not emotion. It is well known that white Europeans made depictions of christ look like what they wished he looked like. Obviously, inaccurate for racist reasons. Get real man. Facts are the only thing that is important. I could not care less about your emotions.

    • @brendankelly9789
      @brendankelly9789 Před měsícem

      'inaccurate for racist reasons', well definitely not in the Middle Ages when art (paintings, statues etc.) depictions of Jesus were made to tell Biblical stories to a local crowd.

  • @TheOrientalistReport
    @TheOrientalistReport Před měsícem +22

    Philo of Alexandria (who was the 1st Century equivalent of History Hit) wrote extensively about the Jewish peoples. He would have been a contemporary of Jesus. What did he write about him? Nothing. Now that might be explained away. However, if Jesus was drawing huge crowds and as much of a thorn in the authorities side as the bible says - why did he not write about him? For the record, I believe there probably was some obscure end times preacher by the name of Yeshua Ben Yosef (or something similar) roaming around Judea with a small group of followers - but most of his life was the product of later embellishment and exaggeration.

    • @marsspacex6065
      @marsspacex6065 Před měsícem

      Exactly he was probably a nut leading a small cult preaching against the romans and was executed like all the other people who were doing similar things at the time as the romans saw this as trying to incite rebellion among the Jewish population. His later followers were successful in crafting his story to blame the Jews so they could then be accepted as a religion in the Roman Empire.

    • @tomasrocha6139
      @tomasrocha6139 Před měsícem +11

      Philo never wrote about John the Baptist. the High Priests or Roman Governors of Judea other than Pontius Pilate so that's not much of an argument.

    • @antoniousai1989
      @antoniousai1989 Před měsícem +7

      There are many other sources from Roman and Judaic writers with no interest in Christianity and they nevertheless reported the life of Jesus. There's no doubt Jesus is a historical figure in the sense that he was a preacher in Judea, he died on the cross, and this happened during Tiberius's reign.
      @Tsumami__
      I'm not even a Christian, you genius

    • @Tsumami__
      @Tsumami__ Před měsícem +2

      Probably many street preachers with that name were roaming around with small bands of followers lol

    • @Tsumami__
      @Tsumami__ Před měsícem +1

      @@antoniousai1989No. your belief does not make him a historical figure. And religious apologists are not historians.

  • @williamfletcher5760
    @williamfletcher5760 Před měsícem

    The Apartment family grave?

  • @JustSueMe
    @JustSueMe Před měsícem +2

    Judging from the comments, I feel that most people would be surprised by how little evidence we have about historical figures and their life and works at that time period. Even with major historical figures like Alexander The Great. Most of what we know about him come from Arrian who lived hundreds of year after Alexanders death.

  • @Mr.KaganbYaltrk
    @Mr.KaganbYaltrk Před měsícem +13

    I am not a Christian but i find this interesting 😅

    • @drew8305
      @drew8305 Před měsícem +3

      Nothing that this person says is actual, truthful, plausible.
      Historical.....

    • @drew8305
      @drew8305 Před měsícem

      Show me the bones Sasquatch

    • @drew8305
      @drew8305 Před měsícem

      Get a hobby.
      Learn to paint.
      Houses

    • @FlippyD1998
      @FlippyD1998 Před měsícem

      @@drew8305What are you on about?

    • @LeandroCapstick
      @LeandroCapstick Před měsícem

      Same here! His impact on the world is enormous, up there with the likes of Caesar and Alexander the Great.

  • @ToddWerner-vp3vc
    @ToddWerner-vp3vc Před měsícem +5

    Can you do a documentary on Santa Claus next? Possibly how he met the future Mrs.?

  • @lizzieh5284
    @lizzieh5284 Před měsícem

    I taught RE and History and I never taught RE as History.

  • @johanneslindh3313
    @johanneslindh3313 Před 13 dny

    The youtube channel “useful charts” has a very interesting video on depictions of Jesus. One of the oldest is a graffiti of Jesus with a donkey head on the cross mocking a Christian. You can see how his look changed when he was depicted as similar gods to introduce him to the romans. He started off being depicted as a Roman, then other Roman gods and eventually similar to the Greek god Zeus, which is where the long hair and bearded look comes from

  • @johnthekeane
    @johnthekeane Před měsícem +8

    Oh dear. Is it April 1st again?

  • @samgee_gamwise
    @samgee_gamwise Před měsícem +73

    So many comments on this video exude a high degree of ignorance from the commenters. Jesus is as much a historical character as Spartacus or Alexander the Great. Just because we do not have archaeological evidence of his body (like we don’t have the remains of Alexander or Spartacus) doesn’t mean he didn’t exist. It’s not just the Biblical accounts that tell of him, but also historians and writers that (while not contemporary to Jesus) were contemporary to the times of the early Christian communities-historians such as Josephus and Tacitus. His historical existence can be detached from the religious/supernatural claims of the faithful.

    • @26OP011
      @26OP011 Před měsícem +18

      Lol ,🤣as long as your convinced

    • @bentucker2301
      @bentucker2301 Před měsícem +18

      🏅 gold star for mental gymnastics

    • @SeanCSHConsulting
      @SeanCSHConsulting Před měsícem +3

      yeah, no lulz

    • @jasonAnthony4178
      @jasonAnthony4178 Před měsícem +11

      Also, don’t forget the evidence in Pompeii. Also, saying their is no evidence of Jesus is like saying theirs no evidence that Caesar lived. We believe Caesar lived because we see the evidence in the record as a result of his life and it’s implications. I love how people want to apply a different standard to Jesus then they do any other historical figures.

    • @BamberdittoPingpong
      @BamberdittoPingpong Před měsícem +18

      Lots of Reddit atheists in these comments

  • @wiretamer5710
    @wiretamer5710 Před měsícem +2

    Its important point that no person who wrote the Bible, ever anticipated that anyone from the general public would be capable of reading it, let alone express an opinion about it.

    • @soccerchamp0511
      @soccerchamp0511 Před měsícem

      That's absolutely FALSE. For example, Paul's epistles addressed to particular church communities were meant to be read, shared, throughout the church communities they were sent to.

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před měsícem

      @@soccerchamp0511 ahhh… how many people were ABLE to read those letters?

    • @FleurPillager
      @FleurPillager Před 21 dnem

      How do you know?

  • @TheCrossroads533
    @TheCrossroads533 Před 23 dny +2

    I like the boatbuilder speculation. And since we're speculating, maybe the 1st century A.D. "Jesus Boat", discovered during the 1980s, may have been his handiwork?

  • @cinemaipswich4636
    @cinemaipswich4636 Před měsícem +5

    Did his disciples believe he was God? Probably not.

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před měsícem +1

      Would depend on what they ate for dinner the previous day.

    • @legolord5114
      @legolord5114 Před měsícem +1

      According to the gospels, Thomas definitely believed only after he was raised from the dead.

    • @zorydirwai8661
      @zorydirwai8661 Před 2 dny

      Thomas did. John 20:28

  • @Tom-uv7ry
    @Tom-uv7ry Před měsícem +9

    Absolute Twaddle 😂

  • @mazz3736
    @mazz3736 Před měsícem

    Pontius Pilate wrote about Jesus. There are records of his writing. He was complaining about the chaos Jesus was causing amongst the Jewish leaders of the time. Pilate didn't know what to do with him and stated that in his opinion Jesus hadn't done anything wrong. But we all know the outcome. So YES there is evidence of his existence.

    • @maxdecimus13
      @maxdecimus13 Před měsícem +2

      I believe he existed, but I'm sorry someone has spun you a yarn. This doesn't exist.

    • @marcomenendez
      @marcomenendez Před 23 dny

      There letter of Pilate to Tiberius is a copy made centuries after Pilate's dead. It's supposed to be a translation of the original letter that nobody know if it even existed and if it existed, that it was actually from Pilate. So no, there is no hard evidence. It wouldn't be the first forgery by the church, would it? Remember the Constantine Donation?

  • @bec7080
    @bec7080 Před měsícem +1

    Me at 49s: 👀

  • @mabuhayASMR
    @mabuhayASMR Před měsícem +14

    All the derogatory comments here are to be expected. Jesus and Christianity are a soft target. Imagine if they tried to do a similar Q&A about the Prophet you-know-who. My god.

    • @SassyUnicorn86
      @SassyUnicorn86 Před měsícem

      Well we turn the other cheek and that's a quality I admire

    • @Tsumami__
      @Tsumami__ Před měsícem

      A soft target? HAHAHAHAHHAHAHAHHAHAHAHA
      yes, the most brutal and controlling, and largest religious denomination in the world is totally “a soft target”. Give me a break. Yall are always oppressing while claiming to be oppressed. This is why the world is quickly becoming done with Christianity.

    • @Tsumami__
      @Tsumami__ Před měsícem

      @@SassyUnicorn86Christians never turn the other cheek. Considering your deity told you to enslave other nations and wipe them out to the last infant “dash the infants against the rocks” - and to be JOYOUS while yall do so….no. Turning the other cheek is not what Christians are about.

    • @Dusk.EighthLegion
      @Dusk.EighthLegion Před měsícem

      Of course they are expected, you've had thousands of years to prove your religion is true and you have nothing, either get some evidence or stop whining when people call you out on your lies. As for a Muslim Q&A, Muslims are not like you. Muslims do not go online, talk shit about their prophet, and then wonder why people don't like them.

    • @spreadneck2063
      @spreadneck2063 Před měsícem

      Muhammad? there is more proof that he was real than there is of Jesus being a real person. Either way, God isn't real.

  • @OiiRobbi3x
    @OiiRobbi3x Před měsícem +3

    Now do a video about Mohammed im sure that will happen.

  • @leonardstudley184
    @leonardstudley184 Před 23 dny

    Two questions: did he have a Bris (circumcision): When he was 13, did he have a Bar Mitzvah?

  • @authormichellefranklin
    @authormichellefranklin Před měsícem

    Love Dr. Bond-- her Historical Jesus book is fascinating!

  • @lynnedelacy2841
    @lynnedelacy2841 Před měsícem +7

    I feel her eyeline is odd - it appears she is speaking to someone standing behind the camera rather than into the camera

    • @cleverusername9369
      @cleverusername9369 Před měsícem +1

      What a random takeaway

    • @pirththee
      @pirththee Před měsícem +1

      @@cleverusername9369 So much for relevant content.

    • @kimbarnetson3297
      @kimbarnetson3297 Před měsícem

      She might be, I've done a little bit of filming before where I've been interviewed about my work and you talk to the person opposite you rather than direct to the camera.

    • @pheart2381
      @pheart2381 Před měsícem

      I agree,its irritating.

    • @lynnedelacy2841
      @lynnedelacy2841 Před měsícem

      I didn’t say the content wasn’t relevant I just found it distracting

  • @davetremaine9688
    @davetremaine9688 Před měsícem +3

    "ehh it mightttttt go back to recollection.. but maybe they lied to make it sound good, that's my PROFESSIONAL opinion" So the first answer is entirely biased

  • @nashpainting
    @nashpainting Před měsícem

    Follow The Shoe!

  • @oreopagus2476
    @oreopagus2476 Před měsícem

    About 24 hours left to watch "Digging Up the Bible #18: Even More Archaeological Evidence for Jesus and His Life"
    (one of the CrossExamined videos)

    • @SleepyObi
      @SleepyObi Před 28 dny

      Look up Titus Kennedy. This is what he does, he is a biblical historian

  • @mr.alaska2232
    @mr.alaska2232 Před měsícem +6

    I doubt very serious.Jesus would have gotten a short haircut because of a roman emperor

    • @davetremaine9688
      @davetremaine9688 Před měsícem +1

      Right? This woman seems like someone who knows just enough to be wrong. Yes, African slaves in the South all wanted George Washingtons wig makers business card, too.

    • @wiretamer5710
      @wiretamer5710 Před měsícem

      I doubt anyone in the Levant would have given it a second thought.

  • @MrOliverwoods
    @MrOliverwoods Před měsícem +9

    You should have the Pillow Guy on next to talk about 2020 election.

  • @steveandsheryl
    @steveandsheryl Před měsícem

    these extra canonical gospels, particularly the "Gospel" of Thomas were never "in" the Bible or referred to on any of the Biblical lists by Anthanasius or any of the early synods or later ones, any one. Thomas and these others were not actually Gospels but are spuriously referred to as such. Thomas is a Gnostic writing which is an early religion and became a Christian heresy. Elaine Pagels is the professor who so famously made something of the "gospel" not even heard of until 1945.

  • @Lucatoire
    @Lucatoire Před 29 dny

    This is really hard to look into because it's such a complex topic, but if historians agree there's no archaeological evidence for jesus, does that then mean any relics accepted as real by the Catholic church e.g thorns from the crown, pieces of the true cross, pieces of the spear that pierced his side are unquestionably fake?

    • @M-_-O
      @M-_-O Před 28 dny

      Of course they are fake, all the “relics” can be dated to be too late to have come from Jesus’s time. It turns out, a thousand years later, people want to turn a different kind of profit. The historical person still existed regardless of what later people did with the story. I can sell you a piece of Socrates’ beard but that doesn’t negate his existence.

    • @pendragonsxskywalkers9518
      @pendragonsxskywalkers9518 Před 26 dny

      If something is from 1st century and Palestine there is always possibility that something was authethic - but it is impossible to prove it truly came from Jesus.

  • @Cas_anova
    @Cas_anova Před měsícem +16

    Cool, do Lord Of The Rings and Harry Potter next. 👍🏼

    • @andreascj73
      @andreascj73 Před měsícem

      Considering they are based on the gospels, maybe learn those first?

  • @user-xm4ep1rl1j
    @user-xm4ep1rl1j Před měsícem +22

    An "...expert on Jesus" ???

    • @422katieleigh
      @422katieleigh Před měsícem +10

      Yes there are experts on lots of historical figures.

    • @user-xm4ep1rl1j
      @user-xm4ep1rl1j Před měsícem

      @@422katieleigh The Archbishop of Canterbury? The Pope of Rome?

    • @422katieleigh
      @422katieleigh Před měsícem +9

      @@user-xm4ep1rl1j They are religious leaders, not historical experts

    • @PaulHaigh072
      @PaulHaigh072 Před měsícem +2

      Professor of divinity.

    • @user-xm4ep1rl1j
      @user-xm4ep1rl1j Před měsícem

      @@422katieleigh If you don't know Jesus' religion - you can't know Jesus.
      Go back to the beginning and start over.

  • @stunningkruger
    @stunningkruger Před měsícem

    i think most theologians can agree that god broke his word on the cross

  • @PaulScowen
    @PaulScowen Před 16 dny

    Killing other children & rude to teachers = naughty?!!

  • @pampoovey6722
    @pampoovey6722 Před měsícem +3

    The Liz Truss of History.

  • @87tinman
    @87tinman Před měsícem +5

    Next week an expert on the tooth fairy

  • @liviosinibaldi3632
    @liviosinibaldi3632 Před měsícem

    Highly probable, a good man.

  • @t2times729
    @t2times729 Před měsícem

    Jewish is an ethnicity? So I suppose that upon my next job application along with Black, White, Asian, or other, Christian, Islam, and other religions will be there. Is she truly a professor?

    • @abigail5712
      @abigail5712 Před měsícem +2

      Yes? Jewish has always been both an ethnicity in and of itself, and the name of a religious affiliation… you’ve never heard of, for example, an Ashkenazi Jewish person?

  • @edblough4134
    @edblough4134 Před měsícem +4

    The question that must be asked why would all the disciples die horrendous deaths for a lie? Look at their life they gained nothing on this earth for their continuance of the belief in Jesus. No gain on this earth and only to die horribly for a lie? I think not!

    • @PaulHaigh072
      @PaulHaigh072 Před měsícem

      I wonder if you’d extend that explanation to Mohamed Atta?

    • @thomasrotweiler
      @thomasrotweiler Před měsícem

      Tens of millions of people died in WW2 because they believed a lie. The willingness to die for a cause is not evidence for the validity of that cause.

    • @edblough4134
      @edblough4134 Před měsícem

      @@PaulHaigh072 a lot of people have done impulsive suicidal things but the disciples were not impulsive nor suicidal they were horribly killed because they taught the world about Jesus.

    • @andrewman178
      @andrewman178 Před měsícem

      People were willing to surrender all their worldly possessions and pleasures because they were inspired by the Buddha, but I doubt he actually conquered a supposed cycle of reincarnation. Most of the New Testament was written decades after Jesus was executed, drawn from oral traditions about Jesus' life that were exaggerated or invented as they spread from person to person. Stories about martyrs grow and change the same way, just like how the Roman emperors barely noticed Christians until Diocletian organized a specifically anti-Christian persecution. The Romans killed people for disrespecting the Emperor and the Roman gods, not for being Christian, and there were many groups besides Christians who the Romans went after.

    • @MarieIsHere-rg3bv
      @MarieIsHere-rg3bv Před měsícem +2

      @@edblough4134 So were the followers of every religion. This doesn't make religions true.
      You make a false dichotomy between these disciples willing martyrdom and Christianity being a lie.
      Could they not have just been mistaken in their faith as, presumably, you believe Jain, Buddhist and Sikh martyrs to have been?

  • @TheAegisClaw
    @TheAegisClaw Před měsícem +16

    Followers starting to talk about him "within a couple of decades of his death" really isnt good evidence. Why do we drop basic scientific rigor when talking about religion? Its ridiculous.

    • @aps-pictures9335
      @aps-pictures9335 Před měsícem +5

      Because… oh there isn’t good reason 😅. Literally could’ve written contemporaneously or within a year, but no, decades later copying mythology from all the other prophets at the time 😂. Each book getting more elaborate to the point of invented earthquakes and zombies…

    • @theokaos7882
      @theokaos7882 Před měsícem +8

      Historical research doesn't operate on "scientific rigor". You can test out theories in science because in science there are scientific laws that are always operating. In history, knowledge about the past has to be found out through both material evidence and written literature, that often varies on various points. It's dependent on human memory and what people think is worth writing about, hence in the field of history rigourous searching for material evidence like a person's remains or other forms of testing we could do to test scientific hypotheses isn't possible. Hence, why in the case of an obscure Jewish rabbi who preached in provincial backwaters and was only in Jerusalem for a short time before he was executed, it makes sense that any Greco-Roman historian of note wouldn't feel the need to write about him, or have even known, about him. Christianity grew after Jesus' death and became popular in the literate Greco-Roman world because of Paul's work, whose letters probably date 20-30 years after Jesus' death which is a span of time in which the people who knew Jesus or his followers would still be very much alive. A better question to be put to the test is why basic historical methodology is suspended by non-historians when talking about religion.

    • @infozencentre
      @infozencentre Před měsícem

      Absolutely right. As a Buddhist I dislike Buddhists who talk about us knowing what Buddha said and did, it was 2500 years ago in his case, we just don't know, we only know what we have now. That's what should be applied to Jesus too, and this has been the biggest cause of people getting dead in 2000 years

    • @tomasrocha6139
      @tomasrocha6139 Před měsícem

      Our writings about the general Hannibal, the Gracchi brothers or Spartacus are from decades later, do you think that's bad evidence?

    • @aps-pictures9335
      @aps-pictures9335 Před měsícem

      @@tomasrocha6139 I’ve no knowledge of the Gracchi brothers tbh. Hannibal has extensive archeological evidence as a leader, especially with wars and contemporaneous evidence of war campaigns. Jesus has none. Whether Hannibal mythology is exaggerated or fabricated isn’t particularly important or relevant, because we have all the supporting evidence of a warlord leader, and his tactics, whoever he was.

  • @perfriisnielsen3146
    @perfriisnielsen3146 Před měsícem

    People on that time, needs a leader because of the Romers indvaders.
    And thy chose Jesus many years after, to be the new saviour....exactly with Nikæa in 325 a/c.

  • @jakobsmith1396
    @jakobsmith1396 Před měsícem +1

    I know she was referring to a Monty Python quote, but I still find it quite strange that she provided a story where Jesus is killing other children as a child as an example of him being "a naughty boy".

    • @lizzieh5284
      @lizzieh5284 Před měsícem

      It was in one of the gospels that the Church decided would be left out of the Bible, as were many ithers that didnt make for good PR.