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The Goodacre Debate

BY R ICH AR D CAR R IER / ON DECEMB ER 20, 2012 / 96 COMMENTS

One of the many things I did when I was inEngland was go on a radio show that then aired in London just this last
weekend (Saturday, December 15th, 2012), called Unbelievable with Justin Brierley, for Premiere Christian Radio.
There, I had a cordial and informal debate with professor Mark Goodacre on the merits of the theory that Jesus didn’t exist
(but is instead as mythical as Hercules or King Arthur).

Justin was an excellent host, and we both mused over the irony of the fact that he had
an American in England debating an Englishman in America. I had stopped by the
studio in person while I was in London; Goodacre was kind enough to phone in from
his office at Duke University, North Carolina, where he’s an Associate Professor of
the New Testament. So we were both at a disadvantage, he by being on the phone
(having been there myself, I can testify to how difficult it is to carry on a conversation
that way), and me by having almost literally just landed after a twelve hour flight from
Los Angeles, which had immediately followed a six hour drive by car, and after which
we had just enough time to get our bags and drive to the city and drop me off at a
tube station en route to Premiere. Fortunately, I’m pretty resistant to jet lag. But it
definitely felt weird. I had that “wired” feeling one gets after being awake for far too long.

If you want to listen to the show, it’s available online (for just this week it’s the featured show but after that it will be in
their archives; and if that link doesn’t work properly try this) and via iTunes. I will comment on the show here. So if
you’re keen to hear my thoughts on it, read on.

Goodacre as Goodscholar
Mark Goodacre is one of my favorite scholars in the field. He is one of the world’s
leading experts on the intertextuality of the Gospels, and is most famous for being, like
me, an ardent advocate of a “fringe” theory: that there was no Q source behind what
the Gospels of Luke and Matthew added to Mark, that Luke just copied and
redacted Matthew (and Mark). He is also a strong critic of the same “method of
criteria” now used in Jesus studies that I took down in my book Proving History,
citing Goodacre’s work several times (especially his critiques of the criteria of
embarrassment and multiple attestation).

But on that point, everyone relevant agrees with him (i.e., everyone who has published
studies on the validity of those methods). It’s on the other point that he and I share a
more pertinent bond: we have both faced astonishing irrationality and stubbornness from our peers, who cling to
“consensus” rather than sound argument. Indeed, I really don’t understand why Goodacre’s conclusion about Q is fringe.
When I finally did read his Case against Q (given to me by a fan, who wanted me to read it–thank you!) I found his
evidence more than sufficient and his argument thoroughly persuasive. Arguments for Q, by contrast, uniformly suck, in
respect to both logic and evidence.

I have since read more on the subject (both his work and that of others who agree with him; especially his website on Q
which is an excellent resource; and then what critics of his arguments I could find), and I have concluded that the evidence
is fairly conclusive from any objective standpoint: Luke very certainly used Matthew as a source. Yet Goodacre’s
arguments and evidence are flippantly dismissed, without valid rebuttal, even by such luminaries as Bart Ehrman–who
couldn’t even be bothered to present a single valid argument against him in his latest book, where he just casts him aside as
“lively” and “spirited” (and buries even that in an endnote), and goes on to base his arguments on the existence of Q, as if it
were not even in doubt. I wonder if Ehrman really even knows what Goodacre’s arguments are.

The point here is that this is the same stonewalling I face when I advance the hypothesis that (like Q), Jesus didn’t exist,
either. I face the same stubbornness, irrationality, erroneous and distorted treatments of the evidence, and fallacious appeals
to the nebulous “consensus” (a consensus of people who actually haven’t examined the case and thus can’t possibly have
formed a consensus in any responsible sense). I’ve extensively documented examples of this appalling behavior from Bart
Ehrman and James McGrath (see my Ehrman on Historicity Recap). So Goodacre definitely knows how that feels. He’s
been there.

This, plus his solid expertise in the field, makes him a good candidate for objectively reviewing the case I have to make. I
trust his critique of my book (On the Historicity of Jesus Christ, which will be out next year) will be among the best and
most important. I’m looking forward to it.

Forty Minutes on the Air

Just forty minutes of informal conversation on the radio won’t be of much use in that regard (our participation in the show
clocked in at about an hour, but that’s after adding commercials and intros and lead-ins and close-outs and such). We were
only able to present our respective positions in the shallowest and least explored terms, barely touching the tip of the
iceberg. Our actual collective speaking time was probably around twenty minutes each–especially after subtracting the time
taken to discuss our respective backstories and thoughts about the role of bias on both sides of the debate and other such
topics. Our exchange was also informal and unstructured, and largely led by the host as moderator, who kept the
conversation interesting to listeners by changing the subject from time to time. I was also a bit wired (as I noted earlier;
perhaps I should have asked Justin for a whiskey instead of tea before the show…and that’s kidding on the square).

But for all those faults, this has been the best debate on the subject I know so far. Goodacre wasn’t flippant or dismissive
but took the possibility seriously, and he agreed with me on several things, such as that the only evidence really worth
debating are the letters of Paul, which became the main occupation of the show, so we zeroed in on that issue more than
usually happens. Yet that is exactly what should happen.
It was refreshing that he got that. We thus bypassed most of the tedium of the usual red herring exchanges on other
evidence that is always, in the end, a waste of time (being so conclusively inconclusive). So if you are wondering why my
following comments are almost solely about that (with nothing about the more usual nonsense like Josephus or Nazareth or
Aramaicisms in the Gospels), it’s because we ended up talking almost solely about that. Which, to my view, is properly
cutting right to the heart of the matter.

Itemized Commentary

1. What theory are you defending? Some might prefer I start by suggesting you watch (either before or after listening to
the show or finishing this commentary) my thirty minute talk, “So…if Jesus Didn’t Exist, Where Did He Come from
Then?” which provides a brief précis of my book’s argument that Jesus didn’t exist. This, too, just touches the tip of the
iceberg, but if you want a more coherent picture of what I was defending on the radio, that’s the best way to get up to
speed (Goodacre might not have seen that video yet; at least I don’t assume he has–he knows my work, we’ve been
exchanging information for over a year, but not as much on this subject).

2. What was the main objection to it? Paul’s epistles. I was actually surprised to find that Goodacre has been so
thoroughly indoctrinated by “the consensus” that he actually thinks all sorts of things are in Paul’s Epistles that in fact are not
there. In general he argued “Paul is really very good evidence, very good evidence, for the existence of a historical Jesus”
because “it’s very clear from his epistles that [Paul is] talking about a real human being,” but as I said in the show, no, that
isn’t clear at all. Just read them all through (the authentic ones, not the forgeries), without the assumption that Paul means
anything other than a celestial being who underwent an incarnation, death, and resurrection in outer space like some taught
Osiris had done. You’ll then find, for example, Goodacre’s claim that “[Paul] refers on several occasions to different things
in [Jesus’] ministry” is conspicuously false. Paul does not refer to even a single thing in Jesus’ ministry. Ever.

3. No evidence at all? One can imagine only two possible exceptions, Jesus having sayings and a passion. But even when
Paul says he “has a saying” from Jesus, he never links it to a ministry, but only (if anything) to private revelation. Likewise all
he knew of Christ’s passion. Paul uses the exact same phrases and vocabulary in Galatians 1:11-16 and 1 Corinthians
15:1-8 (a point Goodacre, like many scholars, was not aware of). Even the last supper (the only passage anywhere in Paul
that references anything like a narrative for Jesus): Paul says he learned that directly from Jesus, which means, by
revelation–and accordingly, Paul does not mention anyone being present at that event, but instead quotes Jesus as
speaking (as if from heaven) to future generations of Christians. Accordingly, even Gerd Lüdemann concludes this does not
derive from any historical tradition (see his chapter on the evidence of Paul’s epistles in Sources of the Jesus Tradition,
which I reviewed last year).

4. What about those two passages about his birth? I didn’t have time to address (beyond generally) two other facts
Goodacre mentioned, that Paul does indeed say Jesus’ flesh was “descended from the seed of David” (actually Paul says
“born/made,” not “descended”) and “talks about [Jesus] being born of a woman.” I remarked that these claims are also
explicable on mythicism, but didn’t elaborate. In the second case (Gal. 4:3-5) Paul is speaking allegorically (Gal. 4:23-
26); and in the first, prophetically (the Christ must have been Davidic, so that was simply assumed–hence Paul does not
mention how he knows Jesus was Davidic, like mentioning who his father was; yet to effect an incarnation God can make
any seed he wants, including a seed from David: 1 Cor. 15:36-38). See Thomas Verenna’s chapter on this (and other
evidence in Paul) in Is This Not the Carpenter?(which I reviewed in July). I don’t agree with Verenna’s every point,
but he adequately illustrates how ambiguous these references are when understood in context.

5. What about the people Paul knew who knew Jesus? Goodacre said “Paul knows loads of people from that early
Christian movement, people like Peter, people like James, the brothers of Jesus, the twelve” and so on, but the question is
whether these people knew a living Jesus, or were merely claimed to have generations later in the Gospels–which they did
not write. Paul never mentions them knowing Jesus in life. Never. Not once. As far as Paul seems to know, Peter and
James learned of Jesus by the same revelatory pathway Paul did (1 Corinthians 15:1-8). And as far as we can tell,
“brothers of the Lord” (whether James, Gal. 1:18-19, or generically, 1 Cor. 9:5) was just Paul’s way of saying “Christian”
(perhaps of a specific rank), since otherwise all baptized Christians were “brothers of the Lord,” and the status of James or
anyone as peculiarly the “biological” brother of “the Lord” is never claimed or implied by Paul (see my previous summary
of this point, which answers our host’s worry that having a brother of the Lord “wouldn’t make any sense if you didn’t
have a historical person to tie that to,” since, in fact, being a fictive brother of the Lord routinely made sense to Paul). It’s
therefore not clear what Paul means in these two passages. It is certainly not “very” clear. And when considered against the
backdrop of the complete absence in Paul’s letters of any clear reference placing Jesus in earth history, a “historicist”
interpretation of such a grandiose title as “brother of the Lord” starts to look less likely.

6. What was all that about Paul mentioning Judeans? We were briefly talking over each other (a common problem
with dial-in conversations; and a big reason why I don’t like dialing in myself), so I misheard Dr. Goodacre’s reference to
“the Judeans in 1 Thessalonians 2” and went on assuming we were still talking about Galatians 1-2 (where the Judean
churches come up) and we moved on. The audience will be confused because neither of us explained what his remark was
about. I am certain on listening back that he meant the famous passage that most experts deem an interpolation: 1
Thessalonians 2:14-16, where Paul says the Jews have finally been punished once and for all for killing Jesus. As that is
plainly a reference to the Jewish War, which hadn’t happened when Paul was alive, it’s plainly an interpolation. He never
wrote it. For the arguments and scholarship on this point see my past blog on Pauline Interpolations.

7. Why was Goodacre so convinced? Goodacre’s overall argument was that, for him, “it’s very difficult to see lot’s of
this stuff in Paul’s epistles as being/talking about some kind of figure that began life as a sort of cosmic, mythological being,”
but it’s not difficult when you read passages like Philippians 2:5-8 and 1 Thessalonians 4:14-17 and 1 Corinthians 8:6,
where we see clear hallmarks of Paul talking about a cosmological Jesus (this is even clearer in the early pseudo-Paulines:
see Hebrews 1:1-4 and 8-9 and Colossians 1:12-20), yet we never get anything comparably clear from Paul talking
about an earthly Jesus. Allegories and metaphysical fulfillments of prophecy were normal then, and thus should not be
difficult to see for someone who immerses themself in how the ancients saw and thought about the world. And once we
realize that, the passages in the Epistles usually touted as evincing an earthly Jesus instead look very strange. For example,
in 1 Corinthians 15:1-8, it’s conspicuously odd that no mention is made of Jesus ever “appearing” to anyone before he
died, only after. It’s as if Jesus had no ministry, and the only way he was known to have died is through “scripture.”

8. What did you mean by his objections often being in error? I’ve mentioned some examples already (where he thinks
things are said in the Epistles that are not), but there were two very pronounced examples of this. The first of these is when
Goodacre said of Paul:


He didn’t meet Jesus himself in the flesh, and that was a cause of great anxiety to Paul. I mean, if Jesus
had never appeared in the flesh, then Paul wouldn’t have to have any of that sort of great stress that he
has, that he never actually met Jesus, and his big battle in early Christianity is with people who knew
Jesus in the flesh, and so Paul has to say, ‘Hey, look, you know, I’m not in the least inferior to you lot,
you know, you superapostles, I’m still, you know, important in my own right’.”

Here he gives Paul an argument that I then pointed out is foundnowhere in the Epistles. I wish we had Paul saying anything
like that! But he doesn’t. This is a modern Christian apologeticinterpretation of Paul (which has been internalized even by
secular scholars), and is both ad hoc (modern Christians just made it up to explain away oddities in the Epistles) and strains
badly against the evidence, where in fact we have Paul declaring the exact opposite attitude throughout Galatians 1-2, as I
explained on the show. Goodacre is thus reading into the Epistles what isn’t there, and worse, something that actually
comes from modern apologetic attempts to explain away the deeply odd features of the Epistles that mythicists have been
pointing out for over a century. He has even internalized that apologetic to the point that he thinks it’s based on evidence
(that it is a “fact,” and not a contrived interpretation), and he assumes that that evidence is in the Epistles. As I once did.
But when I looked for it, I was shocked not to find it.

9. Why is that important? Because when you realize that, it turns everything upside down, leading to a paradigm shift in
how you look at the Epistles. It is precisely because Paul doesn’t ever say anything like “I’m not inferior to you, even
though you knew Jesus,” nor even hints at anything like it, that historicity looks dubious. Not the other way around. Paul is
therefore good evidence against historicity, not for it. Goodacre’s immense certainly that Paul made such an argument
proves my point: he is so sure Paul would have, that the fact that he actually didn’t is very bizarre. This is evident again in
the passages where Paul uses the phrase Goodacre uses (“super-apostles,”hyper lian apostoloi, lit. “apostles beyond
exceedingly”). Paul never says this relates to their having known Jesus, but only to their being much better speakers than
him (2 Cor. 11:1-7 and 12:7-13, which in context I suspect indicates that the “thorn in his side” he is talking about is a
stutter or speech impediment; remember that “apostle” means “messenger,” so being a “super great messenger” has a more
obvious meaning in the Greek). Paul might also have been concerned about the fact that they were apostles first (as that
could be a problem for him even if Jesus didn’t exist), but he never says that, and he doesn’t mean that when he calls them
“apostles super exceedingly.” He means they are spectacularly good at selling the gospel, while he is but a poor speaker
with a humble heart. So when he asserts that he’s as good as them, he refers to his ability to receive “revelations of the
Lord” like they did (2 Cor. 12:1-7) and perform miracles (2 Cor. 12:12) and demonstrate spiritual knowledge (gnôsis: 2
Cor. 11:6); his only failing compared to them, Paul says, is not being a good speaker (cf. 1 Cor. 2:3-4). Conspicuously
absent is any argument that his revelations ought to be reckoned as good as their knowing the man personally. To the
contrary, he always assumes his access to Jesus was identical to theirs (see 1 Cor. 15:5-8 and 9:1). This is, to put it mildly,
weird.

10. What was the second big error? Goodacre actually thought that in 1 Corinthians 15:1-8 Paul wrote that he got the
gospel he summarizes there “from those who were in Christ before him.” This was even a key part of Goodacre’s argument
that Paul knew the people who knew Jesus, and that he got his gospel from them. In fact, Paul insists up and down exactly
the opposite (in Galatians 1-2; the extent to which Paul may be lying there is not relevant to the present point). And in 1
Corinthians 15, Paul nowhere says the gospel he summarizes there came “from those who were in Christ before him.” But
that Goodacre was so certain it said that gave me a surreal experience–I couldn’t believe he could make such a mistake,
leading me to doubt my own memory, so I looked the verse up on my iPad during the show (and read it out), just to make
sure that phrase really wasn’t there. It’s not. Yet Goodacre was so certain it was. This exemplifies the stranglehold dogma
has even on so skilled and experienced a scholar as him, to the point that he again confused apologetic with fact. Goodacre
can only have been thinking of either Romans 16:7, where Paul only asks the Romans to salute the apostles Andronicus
and Junias who were “in Christ before me,” or Galatians 1:17, where Paul says exactly the opposite of what Goodacre
was claiming (Paul there says “I did not go to Jerusalem to those who were apostles before me” to learn the gospel).

11. Why is that important? Because historicists have this idea in their head that Paul talks all the time about receiving
traditions from the “disciples” of Jesus who traveled with Jesus and to whom Jesus taught the gospel before he died. Why?
I don’t know. Paul never mentions disciples (the word never appears in his letters), nor does he ever mention traditions.
Goodacre went on to say that Paul is talking about a received “tradition” in 1 Corinthians 15, but that is not there, either–
Paul never uses the word “tradition” in this sense (as something he heard from another, except Jewish traditions, Gal.
1:14), and never refers to the gospel as such anywhere. Instead he uses the same words in Galatians 1:11-12 that he uses
in 1 Corinthians 15:1,3 to refer to receiving (and transmitting) a revelation, not a tradition. So when Paul assumes
everywhere that he saw Jesus the same way Peter and everyone else did (as I noted above), we should sooner conclude
they saw Jesus in visions, not in “real life.” There is no evidence of the latter anywhere in Paul’s letters. Which is, again,
weird.

12. Are the epistles really that lacking in Jesus tradition? Yes. And this is where perception was trumping reality in
our debate. Goodacre kept saying things like “1 Corinthians 15 especially is pretty rich in Jesus tradition,” which is odd,
because it’s really not–very conspicuously not. Almost nothing about Jesus is mentioned there, beyond that he died, was
buried, and rose (no details being given for any of those points), and then appeared (still no details–and no mention of his
appearing or having been known to anyone before any of that). The rest is about a celestial Jesus Lord ruling at the right
hand of God. Nothing about a ministry, miracles, biography, family, travels–no historical details whatever. And no sayings
or teachings, either. In other words, almost nothing we would call “Jesus tradition,” much less a “rich” one.

13. But surely Paul tells us lots of things about Jesus? Yes, lots…but only the cosmic Jesus, the one he prays to in
heaven. Hence when Goodacre said at one point “it’s amazing how much stuff [Paul] tells you about Jesus,” I found that
ironic, considering that nothing Paul ever tells us about Jesus places him on earth or relates even a single story about him
being on earth or having been personally known to anyone before the resurrection epiphanies. That is what is amazing.
Otherwise, it simply isn’t true that Paul tells us loads of stuff about Jesus. Apart from a cosmic Jesus, Paul tells us next to
nothing about Jesus. Lüdemann himself was surprised to discover this was true in his survey of references to a historical
Jesus in Paul (in Sources of the Jesus Tradition). Even Mogens Müller had to concede the same point when trying to
argue Paul attests to a historical Jesus (in Is This Not the Carpenter?).

14. Okay, Paul never uses the word “tradition” like that, but can’t we assume that’s what he means? No. That
would be making a circular argument. You can’t assume an explanation is true in order to argue that it’s true. You have to
ask what the relative consequent probability is of the same evidence on either explanation, not just the explanation you
prefer (as I explain in Proving History). Thus, for example, when Goodacre argued that the “traditions” Paul and Peter
shared “only really make sense” if they were about a historical Jesus on earth, his only examples are “that he died” (which
Paul certainly says a lot), and that Paul talks about knowing some moral teachings of Jesus (for example, 1 Cor. 7:10), and
that Paul “mentions [Jesus’] family on several occasions” and “talks about his other disciples.” But Paul never identifies
anyone as a disciple (or as ever having known Jesus in any comparable sense), and never clearly refers to the “family” of
Jesus (as I noted above, his few vague references are as easily explained on mythicism–we find no discussion of who his
mother or father were, for example, and he does not say anyone was biologically related to him, or that he was from
Nazareth or Galilee), and Paul says teachings of Jesus came to him by revelation (so that he would know some of them is
no argument against mythicism: Jesus teaches from heaven), and “that he died” (in outer space, like Osiris did, and as the
Ascension of Isaiah originally said) is the mythicist theory–it cannot be evidence against it!

15. What about all the other stuff Paul says happened to Jesus? What stuff would that be? I was surprised to find
Paul doesn’t say much at all–and what little he does say is entirely compatible with mythicism. For example the notion of
Jesus’ suffering and being tempted: the mythicist theory is that Paul believed all that did indeed happen–in outer space.
Hence, notably, it’s happening “on earth” is precisely what is never said or implied anywhere in Paul. Similarly, in
Philippians 2, Goodacre notes, Jesus “takes the form of a slave” and “that’s the whole point of a crucifixion, it’s a slave’s
punishment.” But he cannot mean this literally, as Jesus was not by any account an actual slave (so Philippians is obviously
speaking metaphorically, leaving us to debate what the metaphor is), nor is crucifixion specifically a “slave’s” punishment
(all subjects who lacked Roman citizenship or a state-recognized status as an honestior were subject to crucifixion for
capital offenses). Philippians is only saying Jesus became as obedient as a slave, to the point of allowing himself to be
crucified–which, on mythicism, occurred in the sky at the hands of Satan and his demons, exactly as the Ascension of
Isaiah once said it did. So there is nothing in Philippians 2 that contradicts the basic mythicist theory. Indeed, any historical
details that would rule that interpretation out are conspicuously absent from this passage. Again Goodacre keeps saying
this is taking place “on earth,” but that word or concept is again not in this passage. Or anywhere in Paul. And that’s the
problem.

16. What about his argument that Christians would never come up with an idea of a crucified messiah unless
there really was one? I already answered that well enough on the show. Goodacre argues Paul had a hard time
explaining the idea of a crucified savior to people. But that would have been just as true of a crucified celestial messiah as
an earthly one. So that argument is a wash. One is as much a stumbling block as the other. Both are equally weird–so
anything that would inspire the idea in the one case, would inspire it just as easily in the other. That was my point in
mentioning the seductive logic of Hebrews 8-9: that explains the idea behind a crucified messiah and why they needed one
(to replace the corrupt temple cult). A celestial crucified messiah would accomplish that goal just as well–and indeed, the
author of Hebrews appears to know of no other kind. The host’s claim that it “wouldn’t make any sense” to compare a
Christian’s own dying and rising with that of a cosmic Jesus (as Paul often did) is similarly mistaken: that was the whole
reason Jesus assumed a body of flesh to die in, so he and his new brethren would share in the same process. That can
happen in outer space as easily as on earth.

17. Why did Paul persecute the Christians then? Goodacre argued that Paul persecuted the Christians (before his own
conversion) “presumably because of this idea that the messiah was going to be crucified.” I am aware of no actual evidence
to support that. It’s a common Christian apologetic today. But it has no basis in any evidence. Jews actually had no
demonstrable problem with dying messiahs: the Talmud shows it even became an orthodox notion, and no one there shows
any idea that it was ever blasphemous or criminal, and it clearly was not inconceivable, since the Talmudic Jews readily
conceived of it. So did the author of Daniel. And possibly the author of 11Q13. (On all these points see myDying
Messiah Redux.) In contrast, there is not only no evidence, but there isn’t even any logical reason why preaching a
crucified messiah would be a persecuting offense to the Jewish authorities. Why would they care? It violates no law in
Torah or Mishnah. If I had to guess, a more likely reason Paul persecuted the early church is the fact that its gospel
replaced the temple cult (and thus Levitical law: Hebrews 8-9), but we don’t really know, because Paul never says. Of
course, even apart from the legal question, if the idea of a crucified messiah was preposterous, it would be just as
preposterous (in fact more so) for a celestial messiah to be crucified, so again this argument is a wash. One stumbling block
is as stumbly as the other.

18. But why come up with a stumbling block at all? All religions do. There are bizarre, shocking, counter-cultural
doctrines at the heart of Islam, Mormonism, Jehovah’s Witnesses, Scientology–and for antiquity, I mentioned Attis cult on
the show as a prime example. Why invent a castrated Attis? They had some reason. So did Christians. I could have said
more on that point–in particular, that this is how you separate insiders from outsiders: you invent a shocking doctrine, to be
the Kool-Aid that prospective members must drink to prove their loyalty, and their separation from the “orthodoxy” they
are abandoning. Only people who “buy it” can be trusted to have shifted their loyalty from one system to the other. This is
why the church later committed mass murder and went to war over bizarrely trivial differences in arcane creedal statements.
Who cares whether God is a trinity or a unity? Those who want a test of loyalty care. Who wants a crucified messiah? The
same people. We can add to that the fact that the whole notion was already widely popular: every other national cult had
adopted a suffering cosmic savior son of god, many even a dying-and-rising one; we should actually have expected the
Jews to jump on the same bandwagon eventually. And on top of all that, the whole notion of a crucified messiah was a
brilliant way to eliminate dependence on the temple cult, exactly as Hebrews explains (and as I explained on the show).

19. So the first Christians just made it all up? A couple times it was suggested that the mythicist theory I am defending
entails that the first Christians (Peter, Paul, etc.) were “colluding together” to invent a mythical Jesus (as our host said
around timestamp 18:50; later Goodacre similarly objects that the crucifixion “is not something they were manufacturing”).
Though that’s possible (see chapter ten of Not the Impossible Faith), it’s not necessary. When Paul says he and others
“saw” Jesus in revelations (and thereby “learned,” from that or scripture or both, that this Jesus had recently undergone an
atoning sacrifice), he could well have been telling the truth as he knew it. That does not require a historical Jesus. Nor does
it require them to have “manufactured” anything (beyond subconsciously).

20. However, the Gospels are another story. Our host said he was “having trouble buying [the idea] that” the authors
of the Gospels are making it all up, but that’s more a sentiment one expects from a layman or a Christian apologist.
Because objectively, you won’t have as much trouble buying it once you see that the authors of the Gospels are making
things up. Once you admit that they have done that at least a few times, it no longer becomes so hard to imagine they did
the same thing in every other part of their narrative. And the fact is, most mainstream scholars admit every Gospel author
has made stories up at least a few times (and many agree they made up almost everything: see my review of the latest
books by Crossan and MacDonald). The construction of the nativity accounts is a prime example–Goodacre himself agrees
(though he didn’t have time to mention it on the show) that Luke invented his version of the Nativity by changing-up the
version he inherited from Matthew. If Luke felt free to do that, what would stop him doing the same in every other chapter
of his Gospel? Look at what we’re learning about how fabricated his book of Acts is, for example (see Pervo’s The
Mystery of Acts for starters).

21. Did Goodacre also cite the Gospels as evidence? Sort of. He made no specific argument from the Gospels to
historicity, other than the fact that they tried to explain the theological point behind a crucified messiah (which, contrary to
his assumed logic, is not any less expected on mythicism, as I noted above), and the argument that the Gospel authors “are
thoroughly persuaded that Jesus is a figure in history.” That may be true (and is not a problem for mythicism: Plutarch was
thoroughly persuaded Romulus was a figure in history, and so wrote a whole biography about him, a man who in fact never
existed; and if Plutarch could do that, so could the authors of the Gospels). But I think he may be confusing what they were
selling with what they believed…

22. Why does that distinction matter? It is demonstrable (and I will prove this in my next book) that all the Gospel
authors are extensively fabricating the stories they tell. Which means they cannot have believed those stories were true–they
were the ones making them up. If they were “thoroughly persuaded that Jesus is a figure in history,” why did they make up
stories about him, instead of tell the stories that “thoroughly persuaded” them? It’s hard (not impossible, but hard) to
maintain that they really believed what they were saying. They almost certainly did not believe most of it actually happened.
And if they were comfortable selling things as having happened that they knew didn’t, it’s not far to go to conclude they
were comfortable selling the whole thing as having happened when they knew it didn’t (or had no idea whether it did). We
cannot get into the mind of the Gospel authors so as to know why they made up so much and felt free to do so, and even to
shamelessly pass it off as known history. But that is what they did. Whatever their motives. So a case for historicity
cannot be made on the premise that the Gospel authors were “thoroughly persuaded that Jesus is a figure in history.” We
actually don’t know that they were, and even if they were, we have no idea what persuaded them of that. Because it
certainly wasn’t the stories they tell–those they were making up themselves.

23. Was there really a pre-Christian idea of a celestial Jesus? Yes, Philo does write about a Jewish belief in a pre-
existent celestial firstborn son of God named Jesus, which Christians appear to have simply converted into a dying-and-
rising demigod, as we see in Philippians 2:6-11. Philo was writing from Egypt between the 20s and 40s A.D. It’s very
unlikely he would “coincidentally” invent the exact same celestial figure as Christians imagined Jesus to be; this therefore is
far more likely to have been an earlier belief that Philo is describing. I
discuss this evidence in Not the Impossible Faith (pp. 150-51).
But in short, Philo quotes Zechariah 6:11-12, which speaks of a man
named Jesus [which is simply Greek for “Joshua,” hence the actual
name is “Jesus” in the Greek of Philo and the Septuagint] being
crowned in heaven and given the name “Rises” (anatolê in Philo’s
Greek, as also in the Septuagint), which Philo says is not an earthly
man but God’s celestial high priest and “firstborn son,” a preexistent
being, God’s agent of creation, and his Logos (“Word” or
“Reason”), all the same things the Christians believed of Jesus (see
image to the right; click to enlarge). Zechariah, of course, meant the first high priest of the second temple, a historical (or at
least legendary) man, Jesus ben Jehozadak, though that, when translated, means “Jesus son of Jehovah the Righteous,” so
anyone reading this text like a pesher (as many Jews were then doing with the scriptures) could easily take this as a veiled
reference to something else. And that is exactly what Philo does, and most likely others had before him. Christianity almost
certainly derived from a cult that did so.

24. And that’s why things are very much the other way around. Goodacre says “the evidence we would expect to
find is exactly what we do find, which is Jesus surviving in the memories of those who were closest to him.” That is indeed
the kind of evidence we should expect to find. Yet it is precisely the evidence we don’t find. Not a single document from
anyone who knew a living Jesus exists, nor a single document that we can demonstrate derived anything from any such
person (no Gospels even claim to do so, except John, and his claim, that he had an anonymous witness absent from all
other accounts, is demonstrably bogus, as many scholars have pointed out before, as I’ll show in my next book). All we
have from Paul are references to people like Peter and James who had revelations of Jesus after his passion–no references
to anyone knowing him before that, much less to their memories of it.

25. Thus what Goodacre ultimately said of mythicism is actually the case for historicity. As I see it, it is defending
historicity that “becomes tortuous after a while” because “there are so many difficult moments in the argument it just
becomes terribly strained,” whereas instead we should go “for the simplest hypothesis.” Quite so. I have found that, indeed,
the simplest hypothesis, the one that requires the fewest ad hoc assumptions to explain all the oddities in the evidence (and
none against the grain of demonstrable background evidence), is mythicism, not historicity. One step toward realizing that
will be realizing that everything Dr. Goodacre thinks is in the Epistles isn’t there at all . Step two will be grasping the
relevance of the background evidence I drew attention to (such as, but not only, my points in the show about the
Ascension of Isaiah and the celestial Jesus in Philo). But my next book is needed to frame that all up in the proper way. I
do not believe this debate or my Madison video are at all sufficient to convince anyone. For that, you’ll have to await my
book. It’s first complete draft is just ten or twenty pages from being finished, after which I have a load of double checking
and revising to do, peer review, contract negotiation, and production pipeline. I estimate six months from now to
publication.

P.S. Dr. Goodacre also posted the show on his blog and a lot of discussion ensued in the comments there. I
unfortunately didn’t have time to read all of it. But it looked mostly constructive, even when critical (except I saw
one instance of me being called dishonest by a commentator, a claim Steven Carr quickly refuted, which I
appreciate).

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96 comments
G. SH ELLEY • DEC EMBER 20, 2012, 10:42 AM

It seems much (perhaps even the majority) of the arguments for Jesus’ existence start from the assumption he
was real and work from there. The most famous of course, is the Testimonium Flavianum, for which all the
arguments in favour of it being based on an original passage seem to boil down to “Well, Josephus would
certainly have at least said something about Jesus, so this must be what is left of his words”, but it also comes
through clearly in the discussion you write about. Goodacre examines all the Pauline Epistles through the lens of
Paul writing about a man who physically lived and died 20-40 years earlier, rather than judging them on what
they actually say.
R E P LY

V IN N YJH 57 • D EC EMBER 20, 201 2, 1 0:53 AM

I found it very interesting that Goodacre read “from those who were in Christ before me”into 1 Cor. 15:3. It
reminds of how Ehrman cites Acts as corroborating that James was Jesus’ brother.

Nevertheless, I think Goodacre makes a valid point about reading Galatians and 1 Corinthians separately (even
though he doesn’t quite do so). Without knowing of Paul’s insistence in Galatians that he received nothing from
man, I think the most natural reading of 1 Corinthians 15 would be that Paul received the gospel from the
predecessors that he mentions in the same way that the Corinthians received it from him. Even though this might
seem inconsistent with what he writes in Galatians, we cannot assume that he spoke with complete consistency
on the issue on all occasions. I don’t think we have enough examples of his use of “received” to categorically
state that he always meant “received by revelation.”

One thing that occurs to me is that geography might have something to do with it. The Galatians were much more
likely to be influenced by the pillars in Jerusalem than the Corinthians because they were much closer. Paul could
afford to give his predecessors more credit when writing to the Corinthians because they were less likely to
encounter anyone from Jerusalem who would contradict Paul’s message.

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 9 :33 AM

The Galatians were not appreciably closer to Judea than the Corinthians in the sense you
must have in mind. Galatia is in central Turkey on the other side of a mountain range (500
miles from Jerusalem); Corinth is on the Greek coast (North Peloponnesus, but accessible
from the south by the famous Isthmus of Corinth). And sea travel was faster than land
travel (especially over mountains). Just FYI.

On the methodological point, contrafactuals are idle here. Because we have Galatians. And it
uses the exact same words as 1 Corinthians 15 of received and transmitted revelation. We
therefore have no evidence of Paul using those words in any other way with respect to the
Gospel, and Paul’s argument in Galatians 1 entails he could not have (the whole point of it is
that oral transmission was apparently not trusted by Christian congregations–contrary to the
attitude a century later; one had to receive the gospel by revelation or one wasn’t an apostle,
that’s the argument Paul is clearly faced with there, and if there, everywhere).

R E P LY

VIN N Y JH 57 • DEC EMBER 21, 2012, 10:11 AM

I am not familiar with the relative merits of the various theories about the recipients of
Galatians, although I have seen Antioch mentioned as one possibility. In any case, we know
that whoever the recipients were, they were vulnerable (at least in Paul’s mind) to false
teachings that seemed to have their root in Jerusalem. I think we have to at least consider the
possibility that he might take a different attitude when writing a community that he did not
view as similarly threatened.

We may have no evidence of Paul using the words in any other way with respect to how he
himself received the gospel, but in 1 Corinthians 15:1, he describes the Corinthians as
receiving the gospel other than by revelation. Also with respect to the words Paul used in
describing how he himself received the gospel, our sample size seems to be pretty small.

R E P LY

RICHARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012,

11:01 AM

We do have another example: he uses the same words in 1 Cor. 11:23,


and there for revelation (he received “from the Lord” what he “delivered”
to them; indeed, this appears to be a ritual phrase in Paul, nearly
identically formed every time).

And we can’t argue from evidence we don’t have. So, even if it’s possible
that Paul changed tack and meant “oral tradition” in 1 Cor. 15, we have
no way to know that, and thus cannot argue from the premise of assuming
he did. In other words, “Paul meant oral tradition there, therefore Jesus
existed” is an unsound argument, because the premise cannot be
established. All the evidence we have in the matter argues for a different
meaning.

There are other points to make along the same lines reinforcing all this, but
that’s getting into duplicating my book.

R E P LY

VIN N Y JH 57 • DEC EMBER 21, 2012, 11:42 AM

I agree that we cannot argue from evidence we don’t have, but I still think we have to allow
for reasonable possibilities that are not precluded by the evidence we do have. In 1
Corinthians 15, Paul refers to a number of appearances, some of which at least I am guessing
he heard about from other people. He may have viewed them all as part of the revelation he
received from God, but my first assumption wouldn’t be that his knowledge of these
appearances all came to him in some vision. I think we must allow for the possibility that
Peter and James told him about their experiences.

I don’t think that this makes the case for a historical Jesus any stronger. I just don’t think that
we can take Paul’s claim that he learned nothing from men at face value. I think we must
allow for the possibility that some of it was just bluster.
R E P LY

RICHARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012,

6 :38 PM

Logically, “allowing for reasonable possibilities” doesn’t get you


anywhere. If your premise is just a “reasonable possibility” then so must
your conclusion be. So “it’s a reasonable possibility that Paul meant oral
tradition” can only get you to “it’s a reasonable possibility that Jesus
existed.” That’s a long yawning chasm away from “Jesus existed.”

That’s why you have to take a real risk and start talking about what
probability you think it has. That you would then have to defend the
probability you pick is precisely why you have to pick one. Because if you
can’t defend the probability you picked…

R E P LY

VIN N Y JH 57 • DEC EMBER 21, 2012, 8:10 P M

I don’t think that it’s a matter of getting anywhere as much as not expressing any greater
certainty than the evidence warrants. There are many questions for which the best a historian
can do is lay out a range of possibilities that the evidence allows. I don’t actually think “it’s a
reasonable possibility that Paul meant oral tradition” has all that much impact on the
probability that Jesus existed since the oral tradition could have originated with visions of a
celestial being just as well as with an actual person.

Just to be clear on you position, do you think Paul is saying that he came to know of all the
appearances described in 1 Cor. 15:5-8t through some sort of supernatural revelation? If so,
do you actually think that he came to know of them through some sort of subjective visionary
experience or do you think he may have been told about some of them?

R E P LY

RICHARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 31, 2012,

8:52 AM

Paul is claiming it all came by revelation, yes.

Whether that “revelation” was affected by things he already knew (and


whether he was aware of that, and thus lying, or not aware of that, and
thus a victim of common cognitive errors of memory contamination) is
another question.
I would say that given the information available of Paul’s history from Paul
himself and what we know from cognitive science, Paul had picked up a
lot of the gospel already, and thus his “vision” of Jesus contained that and
more.

Paul’s argument with the Galatians shows they would have rejected him as
an apostle if he was passing off oral tradition to them. An apostle had to
have “seen the Lord” directly. Human tradition was not trusted by the
Galatians–and thus, evidently, by anyone in the church then (that’s the
whole point throughout Galatians 1, and the argument Paul is struggling to
rescue himself from), so the Corinthians would also have rejected him as a
fraud if he had tried to pass off oral tradition to them while still claiming to
be an apostle. It simply seems that hearsay was not deemed reliable,
unless you heard it directly from God. For an apocalyptic cult expecting
the world to end in a matter of years, that made sense. It could no longer
make sense once all the apostles were dead, so a new idea of authority
had to be invented later.

Accordingly, one can be cynical and say Paul is protesting too much in
Gal. 1 and thus is trying to hide the fact that his revelation repeated things
he actually had already learned indirectly; or be charitable and say Paul is
unaware of how much that was the case. For the question of historicity,
however, it doesn’t matter which.

R E P LY

TH AUMAS TH EMELIOS • D EC EMBER 28, 201 2, 1 1 :06 AM

I think vinnyjh57 makes a good and relevant point, worth considering in full at least, and in
Bayesian terms it amounts to selecting a non-informative prior probability distribution, which
is perhaps a bit more into advanced Bayesian reasoning than you’re shooting for (I think you
have good reasons for using simpler forms of Bayesian reasoning; to make it more accessible
to historians and lay people).

If we try to begin with a non-informative prior, we should base it on what was common in
that time and place, without any reference to our beliefs about what Paul intended to mean.
Then, based on evidence from Paul’s writings, the non-informative prior would adapt to the
evidence, to point more towards Paul’s actual intentions, but with significant room (i.e.
statistical ‘variance’ in the posterior distribution; in other words, a significant ‘spread’) for the
possibility that despite Paul’s *apparent* emphasis on revelation, there also remains some
not insignificant possibility that this apparent emphasis is just some statistical fluke. Vinny’s
point about small sample sizes seems apt to me. I’m basing this on my reading of Jaynes’
Probability Theory: The Logic of Science, particularly Chapters 4 and 6.

To resolve this kind of specific question about word usage, it would be good, IMHO, to
survey all specific references to a word, use as uninformative of a prior as is reasonable, and
then try to estimate the parameter ‘which meaning so-and-so meant in this particular context’
based on Jaynes’ examples. Sounds like it would be pretty complex to do, though, and I
imagine overkill for something like this historical hypothesis. Still, it seems to me to explain
where objections/cautions like vinny’s are intuitively coming from. I’m looking forward to
seeing what kinds of ‘intermediate level’ analyses you’ll be making in your upcoming book,
as I’m very interested in the trade-off between over-simplified inaccuracy vs. overly-complex
models.

R E P LY

VIN N Y JH 57 • DEC EMBER 29 , 2012, 9 :03 AM

BTW, it seems to me that it is incorrect to say “[w]e therefore have no evidence of Paul using
those words in any other way with respect to the Gospel.” We have the example two verses
earlier where Paul uses “received” to mean “received by oral tradition” in describing how the
Corinthians learned the gospel from him. On the other hand, in the examples where it is
indisputable that Paul intends “received by revelation,” it is indisputable because he uses
language that makes that intention clear, e.g., “received from the Lord.”

Once again, the fact that Paul may have received oral tradition doesn’t mean that any of that
oral tradition included a historical Jesus. Nevertheless, I question whether we can take
Galatians 1:11-12 at face value.

R E P LY

VI N N Y JH 5 7 • JAN UAR Y 1 , 201 3, 1 1 :50 AM

How do we know it was the case that the Galatians didn’t trust human tradition rather than it
merely being the case that Paul didn’t want them to trust human tradition? My understanding
is that Galatians was written to communities that Paul had founded based on his revelation.
Sometime later false brothers came along with contrary teachings that the Galatians accepted.
Did the false brothers base their teachings on human tradition or on their own revelation (or is
it even clear which)? If the former, then it would seem that Paul is disabusing the Galatians of
their acceptance of human tradition rather than appealing to their established preference for
revelation.

R E P LY

R IC H AR D C AR R IER • JAN UAR Y 4, 201 3, 1 2:00

PM


How do we know it was the case that the Galatians didn’t
trust human tradition rather than it merely being the case
that Paul didn’t want them to trust human tradition?
Because he swears to his account and labors mightily to prove he didn’t
rely on human tradition. That entails he was accused of doing so, hence
his defense is to prove he didn’t, and swear to it.

If he wanted to persuade the Galatians to discount human tradition, the


argument of Gal. 1 would be entirely different.

Indeed, I would expect it to have been, had Jesus existed. As then Paul
would have to make the very argument you suggest: that his revelations
can trump the men who lived and walked with Jesus (or that they at least
were as good as). He would have to make that argument constantly and
repeatedly, not just to the Galatians. Yet he never makes that argument.
Anywhere. Not in Galatians, nor in any other letter.

(As to where the false teachers got their gospels, Paul says some got it
from angels, others from humans or their own contrivance.)

R E P LY

G. SH ELLEY • DEC EMBER 20, 2012, 11:14 AM

Also, “Goodacre argues Paul had a hard time explaining the idea of a crucified savior to people. But that would
have been just as true of a crucified celestial messiah as an earthly one. So that argument is a wash. ”

I think you talk about this in one of your other books (Probably Not the Impossible Faith, but I have a couple on
my Nook), but Paul would have had a much harder time explaining the idea of a saviour who was a great
military leader who defeated the Roman Empire and led Israel to glory.

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 9 :38 AM

Yes. But that’s not in my books, it’s a point I made on my blog in response to an illogical
argument from Ehrman. An argument Goodacre wasn’t making.

R E P LY

N EIL GODF REY • DECEMBER 20, 2012, 12:13 PM

The debate has also been outlined, a mix of paraphrase and transcription, in two posts on Vridar. Mark
Goodacre has been engaged in some discussion there, too. The Carrier-Goodacre Exchange (Part 1) on the
Historicity of Jesus and Carrier-Goodacre (part 2) on the Historicity of Jesus.

R E P LY

C OELSBLOG • DEC EMBER 20, 2012, 12:26 P M


If I had to guess, a more likely reason Paul persecuted the early church is the fact that its
gospel replaced the temple cult … but we don’t really know, because Paul never says.

Is it established that Paul *did* persecute the early church? We only have his later testimony for that claim, don’t
we? And, today, it is a common apologetic ploy for Christians to claim “I to was an atheist until …”. Paul’s
claim could be similarly rhetorical.

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 9 :43 AM

Though possible, I consider that to be unlikely.

In Galatians 1 he clearly claims he persecuted the church and was widely known to have
persecuted the church by both the Galatians and the Judean Christians–who widely knew it
even just by report, it was that well known. It’s very unlikely that he could get away with
making that up.

What isn’t true is that he persecuted anyone in Judea (so Acts is bullshit). Paul says there
that he was never known “by face” to the churches in Judea until fourteen years after his
conversion; he was known only by reputation there. Which means he must have been
persecuting the church elsewhere (most likely in or around Damascus).

R E P LY

MAR K ER IC K S ON • D EC EMBER 21 , 201 2, 7:47 P M

Is there anything in Acts that is not bullshit?

R E P LY
RICHARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 31, 2012,

8:42 AM

I struggle to find it.

I think just about all there is to trust (and even that not as much as we
might like) is the color commentary, i.e. the cultural and social and
economic details of ancient society that the author of Acts assumes–as
with almost any historical fiction.

I did not use to think this. It’s just the more I studied the scholarship on
Acts the more I had to face the fact that it’s fiction. And not always good
fiction.

(I summarize the evidence of this in my next book.)

R E P LY

N A TEP • DECEMBER 20, 2012, 12:28 PM

Richard, I thought you did a splendid job on the show, given its format, time constraints, etc. I too was amazed
at a few of the things that came out of Goodacre’s mouth. He is a solid scholar, I told him as much, on another
blog, where I also informed him that I almost came to Duke to study under him. But he, like the scholars I did
study with and countless others, will just blithely assert that Paul thought/believed/said X, when X is exactly the
opposite of what Paul does in fact say. After Ehrman weighed in with his disappointing book, I’ve been on the
lookout for scholars that will defend the indefensible – and much to my chagrin, they seem to be coming out of
the woodwork. And in the moderate-liberal circles I’m in, it’s not even to defend a position of faith or a
particular theology. And in the absence of such motives, I can’t figure out why they consider mythicist arguments
such a threat to quality NT scholarship, especially when many of them have argued vehemently for other “fringe”
views in the past – not because they want to be controversial, but because they want to be thorough, honest with
the evidence, and unafraid to ask startling questions if that’s where the evidence leads.

Anyway, wanted to applaud you for championing real intellectual honesty, and for your intrepid work in
establishing a consistent method for historical research. Proving History is a gem that I’ve recommended to
many, and I look forward to its counterpart. Six months of eager anticipation ahead!

R E P LY

J. QUIN TON • D EC EMBER 20, 201 2, 1 2:39 P M

“Paul does indeed say Jesus’ flesh was ‘descended from the seed of David’ ”

What do you think about the idea that this part of Romans (1.2-6) is an interpolation, and the real Paul didn’t
think of Jesus as a Davidic messiah? I remember reading an argument from a scholar (R. Price?) that seemed
compelling, but it still seems like a fringe idea… mainly critiqued these days to claim that mythicists like to posit
interpolations everywhere.
R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 9 :47 AM

I’m not convinced that’s an interpolation (the arguments for it being so are too weak to
credit). And it’s essentially corroborated in Hebrews (a classic mythicist prooftext, so if the
author of Hebrews thought it, surely Paul would have).

The messiah of course was always known to have to be Davidic. Thus any ancient mythic
Jesus proponents had to find a way to make their messiah conform to that expectation. So
it’s not at all unlikely that they would have.

R E P LY

JAS ON GOER TZEN • D EC EMBER 20, 201 2, 1 2:55 P M

I was so pleased to see you were having a discussion with Mark Goodacre. He’s great!

I mean no disrespect for the moderator, but I felt his presence was a distraction–often interrupting good
discussion before it was able to get into the meat of it.

I hope he reads your book when it comes out, as I think his evaluation of it will be valuable. I got the impression
throughout that he was frequently making critiques of mythicism generally, and not your own specific claims, so it
will be good to see his reaction once your position has been laid out clearly, and the evidence for it made, well,
evident.

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 9 :51 AM

To be fair, Justin did a great job of preventing the discussion from getting too arcane for the
audience or going too long on the same point. One has to realize not everything can get
discussed, much less thoroughly, in a time budget of an hour. He’s clearly very experienced
at that, realizing that he has to scatter the conversation across as many points as possible
before the clock runs out, and keep at a level a broad audience can follow. When you look
at it from that perspective, he was actually a model to follow.

On Goodacre, to be fair, it wouldn’t be easy for him to know how I differ from other
mythicists, so I can’t fault him for that. Indeed, a show like this is exactly the kind of
opportunity we all need to make distinctions regarding what is or isn’t plausible in defense of
mythicism.

R E P LY
N ON S TAMP C OLLEC TOR • D EC EMBER 20, 201 2, 1 :43 P M

I thought this was one of the best episodes of Unbelievable I’ve heard in a long time, and I’ve barely missed one
in the last three years. (I’m on one myself, I believe to be aired in a few weeks.)

It’s the first time I’ve heard your argument, and I found it absolutely riveting and I look forward to your book
coming out. I thought you were clear and eloquent on the radio, which isn’t easy, so I’m keen to check your
case out in writing. (rushing through breakfast right now, yet to finish reading this post…!)

I hope I have the opportunity at some stage to do some post-grad work on this stuff. I’ve only recently been
turned on to the whole thing of biblical scholarship and it’s blowing my mind all over the place.

Justin B is cool, right? But man oh man, I don’t know HOW he manages to keep his faith, with the guests he has
on such as yourself, who raise so many questions that he can’t possibly have even a shred of an answer for!

Great

R E P LY

C OELSBLOG • DEC EMBER 20, 2012, 1:48 P M

Richard, I know you’ve written about Paul’s phrase “brother of the Lord” and what it implies; have you ever
commented on Origen’s quote in Contra Celsum (Ch XLVII) which says: “Paul, a genuine disciple of Jesus,
says that he regarded this James as a brother of the Lord, not so much on account of their relationship by blood,
or of their being brought up together, as because of his virtue and doctrine”?

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 11:22 AM

That’s 1.47.

That has some use, but not as much as you might hope, since he was writing in the early 3rd
century, so a historicist could ask, “How would he know that?”

Origen doctrinally insisted that Jesus had brothers by a different mother (so, all sons of
Joseph) prior to his betrothal to Mary. He didn’t have evidence for this. He just needed it to
be true. But that still means Origen was not thinking that Jesus had no brothers. What
motivates his remark in CC 1.47 is therefore unclear.

R E P LY

C JO • DECEMBER 20, 2012, 2:54 PM

Paul talks about knowing some moral teachings of Jesus (for example, 1 Cor. 7:10)
First of all, this apologetic has always struck me as giving off a whiff of desperation to find any of the wisdom
material from the gospels in the epistles. That’s what made the cut? A teaching on divorce that wouldn’t be out
of place in Akiva’s or Yohanan ben Zakai’s mouth, against all of the striking and distinctive stuff in the major
parables, the Olivet discourse, the Sermons on the Mount and the Plain, etc.?

Second, it’s from scripture , and so, if it’s evidence for anything, it’s just more evidence for the whole of early
Christian revelation being from scripture, “according to the scriptures.” I think it’s much more likely that Paul is
referring to Malachi 2:16. Malachi as a whole was certainly instrumental in formulating a number of early
Christian revelations. Which, by the way…

When Paul says he and others “saw” Jesus in revelations (and thereby “learned,” from that or scripture
or both, that this Jesus had recently undergone an atoning sacrifice)

I think “both”. It seems to me that the Christ was found in scripture, and to be “in Christ” was to be blessed with
the “eyes to see” this. Paul contrasts prophesying and speaking in tongues, and he much favors the former.
Ecstatic experiential revelation not based clearly on scripture was not the path he favored. As in Galatians 1,
where the crucifixion is “forewritten” and the historicist games of rehetorical hopscotch to not construe that as a
clear indication that Paul is thinking of something other than a workaday Roman execution, distant in time and
place, that he is nevertheless able to “publicly demonstrate”.

Overall, like you, I was surprised at Dr. Goodacre’s conventional “mainstream NT scholar” answers. They
really do have a domesticated Paul who says all the right things even when he doesn’t, and it’s just staggering to
me how unable they are to step back and see him in his natural (mystic) habitat.

R E P LY

ERLEN D • DECEMBER 20, 2012, 3:40 PM

I notice that you often reference Romulus as being a clear example of someone who certainly did not exist, and
shows how a fictitious person could be historicized. Are you aware that at least one scholar has argued that
Romulus was historical- Andrea Carandini’s “Rome: Day One?”

Also there is a journal article that might support a part of your argument:
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract?
fromPage=online&aid=8781701&fulltextType=RA&fileId=S0028688512000239

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 11:17 AM

Romulus and Remus are based on Greek heroes of a different name (thus not Roman), and
Romulus cult originates in the 4th century BC. So to argue there really was a Romulus in the
8th century is like arguing there really was a Moses or an Abraham: it’s special pleading.
Indeed, Carandini’s book is very much like a fundamentalist talking about the magnificent
glories of OT Jerusalem (“It’s all true! All true!”). Seethis review. He has indeed
established a walled city was built where Rome is in the 8th century. But there was also an
Egypt and a Canaan, too. That doesn’t make Moses real.
The article you reference is interesting (“The Two Angels in John 20.12: An Egyptian Icon of
Resurrection”), but the two angels in John most likely come from Luke. Though mimicking
Egyptian iconography is not impossible (especially for John) it can’t inform Christian origins,
since John is the latest and least reliable account, and is inventing material freely. We cannot
tie his imagery to the time of Paul, for example. It therefore won’t be useful for defending
Jesus mythicism. However, it can be useful for his bibliography on the resurrection of Osiris,
which for some strange reason historicists still keep trying to deny was a thing. In an
anthology being prepared by Zindler I am forced to cite the Pyramid Texts in further proof,
as evidently they just won’t be bothered to look at ancient Egyptian religious texts
themselves.

R E P LY

SI LI • DEC EMBER 20, 2012, 5:13 P M

I think you first put me on to Goodacre, and I have to thank you for that. He’s an excellent, succinct (no Oxford
comma) and entertaining author.

If anyone can present a coherent case for historicity, it’s him. I sorta hope he does it, but I have to admit that
there are plenty of stuff I’m more interested in seeing him spend his limited time on (did Matthew have any
sources, now that Q is off the table, and we can group that material with ‘special’ M? Ditto for Luke. Based on
a throwaway remark by Ellegård, I’d rather like to know if Ignatius is quoting Matthew or Matthew is quoting
Ignatius. And then there’s the whole Luke/Marcion thing.)

Incidentally, I’d love to see a Bayesian analysis applied to his Q work. His book on Thomas seems eminently
suited for that treatment as well.

R E P LY

SI LI • DEC EMBER 20, 2012, 5:22 P M

Sorry to hog the comments like this, but I think it’s a bit sad that Christians are so resistant to mythicism. They
seem to forget that if mythicism is correct, then that is what Paul himself believed. Whatever accretions the
concept “Christianity” has acquired, I think most would agree that Paul was a Christian and what he preached
was Christianity. So in that respect mythicism is no less true than historicism from a theological point of view. In
many way a cosmic, sublunar Jesus is far easier to defend as a faith exactly because it doesn’t rely on
demonstrably false empirical claims.

The only one who could really have a problem with a celestial Jesus is the Pope, since he was stupid enough not
to stick with the title Vicar or St. Peter, but tried to go whole hog Vicar of Christ.

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 11:26 AM


Well, also Evangelicals, who have banked their religion on the Gospels being literally true and
inerrant (in some non-trivial way).

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PA U L D . • D E C E M B E R 2 1 , 2 0 1 2 , 5 : 0 8 P M

The same thing has occurred to me as well. Christians should be eager to embrace the
mythical Christ if it can be demonstrated that’s what the early NT writers believed in. Brodie
seems to have no trouble doing this.

R E P LY

SI LI • DEC EMBER 22, 2012, 6 :45 AM

Ah. Of course.

I’d made the mistake of buying into the whole Reasonable, Real Christians shpiel of the
sophisticated theologians.

R E P LY

MARK ERICKS ON • DECEMBER 20, 2012, 6 :32 PM

On Philo, I recently discovered that his Wikipedia article was almost completely copying and paraphrasing of the
Jewish Encyclopedia of 1906 (thus not copyright). I’m looking for editors to help me improve the article.
Thanks.

R E P LY

MARK ERICKS ON • DECEMBER 20, 2012, 6 :38 PM

Richard, also related to Philo, but on topic, you often hear that Platonism was a major influence on early
Christianity, but I don’t recall reading about it on this blog or in other writings or videos. You’re a philosopher
too, right? Can you write up a post on this sometime or am I missing something? Been reading for a bit less than
a year.

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 11:38 AM


It’s too wishy washy a topic, IMO. Ancient thought was not so neatly divided into schools of
thought like that. Ideas one could call “Platonist” not only often predate Plato (and thus can
have sources other than Platonism yet look just like Platonism), but even ideas from
Platonists were also picked up and used by philosophers of other schools. So thinkers who
did that were not necessarily “Platonists.” Thus, that there are Platonist ideas in Paul (there
are also Stoic and Aristotelian ideas in Paul) does not mean Paul was a Platonist or
embraced any other Platonist ideas than the ones he uses. And as for Paul, so for all the first
Christians. Philo, by comparison, was certainly very “Platonist,” but it’s very much a Jewish
Platonism, and thus not point-for-point equivalent to the Platonism of Plato. And so on.

In short, this is generally not a very fruitful or simple subject to tackle. Yes, Platonism was an
influence on early Judaism and Christianity, but it could have been so in many ways–Judeo-
Platonic ideas inherited by Christians from Judaism, unaware of their Platonist pedigree;
Platonist ideas inherited indirectly by emulating mystery cults, without being aware that those
ideas originated in Platonist thought; Platonist ideas inherited from general cultural notions that
pervaded the population and not actually from Platonist schools or books, and possibly not
even identified anymore as “Platonist”; and Platonist ideas inherited from actual schools and
books (whether Platonist, or Platonist-influenced, or talking about Platonism); etc. We simply
don’t have the kind of documentation anymore for the dawn of Christianity or early Palestine
to allow us to tease out these options.

The most we can say is that such ideas were out there, and some did get into Paul’s thought,
and thus probably all early Christian thought, just as they had done all Jewish thought (claims
now that the Jews were culturally isolationist and thus absorbed nothing from surrounding and
infiltrating cultures is just so much apologetic nonsense lacking in any evidence). We can’t
really get much more specific than that.

R E P LY

BLOOD • DECEMBER 20, 2012, 8:07 PM

“I am certain on listening back that he meant the famous passage that most experts deem an interpolation: 1
Thessalonians 2:14-16, where Paul says the Jews have finally been punished once and for all for killing Jesus. As
that is plainly a reference to the Jewish War, which hadn’t happened when Paul was alive, it’s plainly an
interpolation. He never wrote it. For the arguments and scholarship on this point see my past blog on Pauline
Interpolations.”

So you’re quick to pull out the “scholarly consensus” argument as well when it’s convenient to you.

The only reason we have to think that “Paul” was dead before 70 is based on the same lazy historicizing-of-a-
myth that informs the historicist view of Jesus. It is also uncertain that this passage is “plainly” a reference to the
Jewish War, but it’s a good guess — and therefore reasonable to conclude that the letter was written after 70.
Assuming that a historical “Paul” couldn’t have written it because some other mythical church document says that
Paul died in the early 60s is simply begging the question, something I expect from Ehrman but not yourself.

Like Doherty, you are placing way too much faith in the historicity of both “Paul” and the authenticity of the
epistles. I believe they are part of the same myth cycle that informed the gospels — neither were historic.
R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 11:49 AM

My blog post (that I linked to) explains why it is more than a “good guess” that the Jewish
War was meant. As to the possibility that Paul was alive after 70 and wrote to Thessaly then,
that’s another possibiliter fallacy (Proving History, pp. 26-29. That it’s possible doesn’t
make it probable. It therefore can’t be a premise in any argument for historicity.

I am sympathetic to your more general point that the chronology for Paul is as much a
modern fabrication as each scholar’s reconstructed “historical Jesus” is, but the fact is that
Paul’s own letters firmly establish him as writing in the 50s, after a conversion some 15 or so
years earlier. Average life expectancy for an adult was 48. If Paul was converted at age 20
in the year 40, the odds of his having been alive in 70 are less than half; if Paul was converted
nearer to age 40 (more likely), those odds plummet.

As to the more skeptical point that the epistles are a fabrication altogether, that is simply not a
tenable premise to use in this debate–even if it could be argued, any argument depending on it
becomes less probable than the same conclusion reached without it. Rhetorically, therefore,
you need to prove Jesus didn’t exist without relying on that premise. If you then want to
argue that even Paul didn’t exist, that’s a whole other challenge. One I have no interest in.
See my remarks previously.

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BEN S C H ULDT • DEC EMBER 20, 2012, 9 :50 P M

I thought Paul thought himself lesser than the other apostles, because of his shame of having been a persecutor of
Christians before converting. I suppose a speech impediment might help, too, but that doesn’t seem to have
anything to do with the phrase “abnormally born.”

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 12:28 PM

That’s in 1 Cor. 15:8-10, where he does not call the other apostles “apostles super
exceedingly.” It’s therefore a different context.

He does there say he is the “least” of the apostles and “not fit” to be called an apostle
because he was a persecutor. But this is preacher stuff. His point is that God should not have
made him an apostle, yet God was so gracious he did. He is not saying his authority is less
than the other apostles because of it. At most there might be evidence of his concern at not
having been first (and having resisted God): elachistos tôn apostolôn (least of the apostles)
is a play on eschaton de pantôn (but last of all) of the previous verse.
His reference to being “an aborted fetus” (the actual meaning of ektrôma) is also not a
reference to the thorn in his side (which I only infer from its own context is a speech
impediment), but to his being a monster which the Lord nevertheless singled out for
apostleship.

Paul refers again to God having chosen him “from the womb” to receive a revelation of Christ
in Galatians 1:15-16, where he also refers to his being a persecutor (vv. 13-14, he “ravaged”
the church as a “zealot”). The pairing of a birth metaphor with his past as a persecutor in both
places suggests he may have been thinking the same thing in each. Scholars debate what
exactly he meant, though (monster? his being reborn at the wrong time? his having been
rejected?).

Finally, in Galatians 1:22-24 Paul says his having been a persecutor (and then an apostle)
was seen by Christians as cause of rejoicing, not of doubting his merits as an apostle (if
anything, as you can imagine, this switcheroo gave him more credibility, which I’m sure he
used to the hilt in his evangelism).

R E P LY

PA U L D . • D E C E M B E R 2 1 , 2 0 1 2 , 5 : 1 4 P M

One passage I’m surprised doesn’t come up much in such debates is the Philippians hymn, which clearly
presents the crucified Christ as receiving the name of Jesus after his death and ascension. That seems like a
devastating argument against historical Jesus.

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 21, 2012, 6 :35 PM

It does look bad for them. But they can “interpret” it their way; and some resort to insisting it
must be an interpolation (with a circular argument: Paul can’t have written it, because he
doesn’t write it anywhere else, therefore he didn’t write it here; with such logic, half of
everything Paul wrote is an interpolation…huzzah!).

Larry Hurtado blogged on a really good recent article about this (rather, more generally, on
the whole notion of early “high” Christology): see “Early High Christology”: A Recent
Assessment of Scholarly Debate. In the comments there Geza Vermes gets into a snippy
debate with Hurtado, insisting the Philippians hymn is surely an interpolation, and Hurtado
keeps asking him what evidence he bases that on, and Vermes keeps avoiding the question.
Pretty much a typical debate in Jesus studies these days.

R E P LY

R O GE R PA R VU S • D E C E MBE R 21 , 201 2, 1 0:1 7 P M


[Corrected version of previously submitted comment]

Richard,

In the debate you said that, as you see it, “there is only one defensible, plausible theory that Jesus did not exist.”
And you summarize the theory this way:

“This is the view that Christianity actually began with revelations, actual or purported, of a divine being named
Jesus who underwent a death and resurrection in the lower heavens and preached through revelations. If you
look at the letters of Paul, Paul never refers to Jesus having a ministry, he never refers to anyone seeing or
meeting him while he was alive. He only talks about people receiving revelations of Jesus. That’s what made
someone an apostle. It was having a revelation of the Christ.”

I’m on board with everything in that statement except the phrase “in the lower heavens.” I grant that a lower
heavens location for the death and resurrection of the divine being is defensible and plausible, but so is an “on
earth” location. In the religious literature of the relevant time are there not many examples of gods taking on the
guise of men to perform some task on earth? And even the Old Testament contains several episodes of angels
appearing to men in human disguise. In Genesis angels disguised as men visit Abraham and Lot. And, closer to
intertestamental times, the book of Tobit describes the archangel Raphael as disguising himself as a man
(Azarias), not to live for some protracted time on earth, but for a limited specific task. And then there is the early
Christian belief attributed to Basilides that some kind of disguise and switching of places occurred between
Simon of Cyrene and the original cross-bearer. So I think it also defensible that the original Christian belief was
that a divine Son of God descended to earth for a few hours disguised as a man in order to undergo an incognito
crucifixion. (No birth, no public ministry, no prolonged stay). And after having returned to heaven, he appeared
to certain chosen individuals, revealed to them the redemptive trick he had played, and commissioned them to
tell others.

Is there something you see in Paul’s letters that makes such a scenario implausible and indefensible?

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 31, 2012, 9 :05 AM

In the religious literature of the relevant time are there not many examples of gods
taking on the guise of men to perform some task on earth?

Yes, but those would be deemed historical events on earth. That corresponds to Docetism.
Docetism is not mythicism; it’s historicity: a historical Jesus who is “interpreted” to have been
an illusion of some form. (It’s possible the original Docetists were other-worlders and thus
mythicists, since we only have writings of their later enemies, and not what the original
Docetists actually wrote or claimed, but here I am referring to the Docetism described by its
opponents in the second century.)

Although the more extreme scenario you envision, of a Jesus who comes all the way to earth
only for a few hours and is crucified where no one is around to see it, is mythically possible,
but it would require more ad hoc reasoning than the sublunar theory. It has no precedent
(unlike sublunar deaths and burials) and does not correspond to the earlier redaction of the
Ascension of Isaiah (which clearly places the crucifixion in space) and is theologically
unnecessary (a sublunar death accomplishes everything one needs, including an explanation of
why only apostles could see it: it could only be witnessed by revelation) and not supported by
anything Paul says (and though neither is it explicitly ruled out, lacking evidence for a theory
is generally a good reason not to adopt it–to avoid the possibiliter fallacy: Proving History,
pp. 25-29).

I would subsume such a notion as a subset of “minimal mythicism” and thus not trouble myself
over whether it’s truer than standard sublunar theory (since the probability of A or B is
always higher than the probability of just B, we don’t need to decide between A and B to
prove that “probably A or B,” so defining mythicism by the latter is the sounder approach,
and when there is a lot of background evidence to support A, adding B as a possibility would
only increase the probability of mythicism–then arguing only for A becomes arguing a
fortiori, which is most desirable when that argument is successful on its own: Proving
History, pp. 85-88).

R E P LY

R O GE R PA R VU S • JAN UAR Y 1 , 201 3, 1 :1 2 P M

All the extant versions of the Vision of Isaiah (i.e., chapters 6 – 11 of the Ascension of
Isaiah) show signs of tampering, so it is difficult to know or prove whether in the original
version its Son descended for crucifixion to earth, or only to the sublunar heaven.

One often overlooked piece of information that may be pertinent for determining the Son’s
destination is what the early record says about Simon of Samaria. For Simon claimed to be a
new manifestation of the Son and—-from the few fragments regarding his claim that have
survived—-the Son he had in view may very well be the one in the Ascension of Isaiah:


“He (Simon), therefore, was glorified by many as a god; and he taught that it
was he himself who appeared among the Jews as the Son… For as the angels
were misgoverning the world, since each of them desired the sovereignty, he
(Simon) had come to set matters right; and that he had descended,
transforming himself and being made like to the Powers and Principalities
and Angels; so that he appeared to men as a man although he was not really
a man, and was thought to have suffered in Judaea, although he did not
really suffer.” (Irenaeus, Against Heresies, 1, 23, 1 and 3)


“And in each heaven I changed my form,” he (Simon) says, “in order that I
might not be perceived by my Angelic Powers…” (Epiphanius, Panarion,
2,2).
Now if (and I realize that is still an “if) Simon was claiming to be a new manifestation of the
Ascension of Isaiah’s Son, it becomes clear that the Son was believed to have descended to
earth, for: (1) He “APPEARED AMONG THE JEWS;” (2) He “APPEARED TO MEN
AS A MAN” and (3) “was thought to have suffered IN JUDAEA… ” (my emphases).

But note that there is nothing in the early record about Simon claiming to be the Son who had
a public ministry. As far as can be determined, he did not claim to be the Son who had
preached the Good News in Galilee; or the Son who had wandered around healing people
and working miracles; or the Son who had gathered together a band of disciples and founded
his church on them. This again makes me suspect that in Simon’s day (the same time as the
Pauline letters) there was as yet no public ministry for the Son. He was believed to have
descended to earth incognito only for a few hours in order to switch places with a failed
messiah that the Romans were leading out for crucifixion. It was only later that someone (the
Simonian author of gMark) came up with the idea of a public ministry. And that public
ministry of the Son is just an allegorical portrayal of the ministry of Simon/”Paul.”

R E P LY

R P A R V U S • J U LY 1 , 2 0 1 3 , 1 : 0 9 P M

You wrote:


Although the more extreme scenario you envision, of a Jesus who comes all
the way to earth only for a few hours and is crucified where no one is around
to see it, is mythically possible, but it would require more ad hoc reasoning
than the sublunar theory. It has no precedent (unlike sublunar deaths and
burials) and does not correspond to the earlier redaction of the Ascension of
Isaiah (which clearly places the crucifixion in space) and is theologically
unnecessary (a sublunar death accomplishes everything one needs, including
an explanation of why only apostles could see it: it could only be witnessed by
revelation) and not supported by anything Paul says (and though neither is it
explicitly ruled out, lacking evidence for a theory is generally a good reason
not to adopt it–to avoid the possibiliter fallacy: Proving History, pp. 25-29).

I agree that my more extreme scenario requires more ad hoc reasoning. But I wouldn’ t say
that it has no precedent. As I pointed out in my first comment, in the religious literature of the
time, including the Old Testament and intertestamental literature, there are examples of gods
and angels taking on the mere guise of men to perform some limited, particular task on earth.
And, as I explained in my second comment, I don’t think it can be shown that the original
version of the Ascension of Isaiah clearly placed the crucifixion in space. However, I am
writing this follow-up comment to clarify a few other points.

First, you wrote:



Although the more extreme scenario you envision, of a Jesus who comes all
the way to earth only for a few hours and is crucified where no one is around
to see it…

No, in the scenario I propose the crucifixion occurred in Judaea and there would have been
people around to see it. It is just that they would not have realized that they were seeing the
crucifixion of the Son of God. To all appearances the one being crucified looked like a man.
Just as, in the Ascension of Isaiah, the Son who descends through the heavens attracts no
attention because he had changed his appearance, so when he descended for a few hours
into the world to change places with a man being crucified he would not have attracted any
special attention either. The way that designated individuals (apostles) learned that the Son of
God had in fact been crucified was by way of a subsequent revelation to them. The Son,
having risen back to heaven, appeared to them and told them that Isaiah’s prophecy had
been accomplished.

And, in line with this, I think it may be incorrect to say:


a sublunar death accomplishes everything one needs, including an
explanation of why only apostles could see it: it could only be witnessed by
revelation.

Paul nowhere says that he witnessed the crucifixion—-even by way of revelation—-does he?
Paul knows that the Son’s crucifixion and return to heaven have occurred, but for that to be
true wouldn’t it be enough that those *facts* were revealed to him? If the Son revealed to the
apostles and Paul that those events had been accomplished, wouldn’t that have been
sufficient, without giving them some kind of private viewing of the events? And one indication
that they were given no private viewing is that they apparently had recourse to the Scriptures
for further details, not to their memory.

So while I agree that a sublunar death could explain why only the apostles knew of it, in my
extreme scenario of the Son’s death on earth a revelation to the apostles would be required
too. The Son’s transformation of himself so as to escape detection would have made the
subsequent revelation of his crucifixion necessary.

R E P LY

R I C H A R D C A R R I E R • J U LY 1 , 2 0 1 3 , 2 : 2 7 P M



I wouldn’ t say that it has no precedent. As I pointed out in
my first comment, in the religious literature of the time,
including the Old Testament and intertestamental
literature, there are examples of gods and angels taking on
the mere guise of men to perform some limited, particular
task on earth.

That’s a valid point. Satan visiting Jesus in the desert and flying him
around is a case of that. Jacob wresting with God is another. So, there are
indeed precedents of a sort, although not as apposite as the
Osiris/Ascension of Isaiah/Life of Adam parallels.


No, in the scenario I propose the crucifixion occurred in
Judaea and there would have been people around to see it.
It is just that they would not have realized that they were
seeing the crucifixion of the Son of God. To all appearances
the one being crucified looked like a man.

I’m not sure I understand. How would this not be a historical Jesus? If
there was an actual man seen crucified outside Jerusalem in the ordinary
way, that’s a historical person, not a mythical one. And why would the
apostles confuse a man they didn’t know as being the messiah after the
fact? It doesn’t make sense that they’d see some random stranger
crucified and then “dream” later that he was the Jesus Lord. And if that’s
not what you are proposing, why would we need anyone to have seen
some random stranger crucified to explain Christianity? That seems to
violate Occham’s Razor, when the revelation alone would suffice;
whereas a revelation that it occurred recently on earth would be verifiable
(so why wouldn’t the apostles have verified it?). And so on. I realize there
must be something about your theory I’m not understanding. I’m just
trying to pose the possibilities I don’t get, in the hopes you can clarify the
theory I must be overlooking. So far, your theory appears to fall under
historicity, not myth.

R E P LY

R P A R V U S • J U LY 2 , 2 0 1 3 , 6 : 1 2 A M
It would be mythical in the sense that it didn’t really happen. You and I both know that the
Son of God didn’t descend to earth for a few hours, transform his appearance and
surreptitiously change places with a man being led out for crucifixion by the Romans. But I
think the first Christians did believe this. They believed it was historical. But because the Son
had transformed himself, the only way they had to “prove” it was by way of Scriptural
prophecy and their personal testimony that the Son, once he had risen back to heaven,
appeared to them and confirmed it.

For illustration purposes only:

Suppose that a few years ago (say, around 2010) some nut composed a phony prophecy in
which he has Nostradamus foretell that in the last days the Son of God will descend to earth,
transform his appearance so as to change places with some homeless man who is in the
process of being beaten to death in New York City, and then rise back to his Father in
heaven. The nut manages to convince some people that the prophecy is authentic and that,
indeed, when it comes to pass the generation that is alive will be the last.

Next suppose that I am one of those who believes in that prophecy. And as I’m sitting in my
living room watching TV the Son of God appears to me and says: “The great event has come
to pass. I was beaten to death and have risen back to my Father. I need you to go out and
preach this good news to the world. Only those who believe it will be saved from the coming
cataclysm.” I go out and describe my experience to some of the others who believe in the
phony prophecy. Soon some of them claim the same thing: “The Son appeared to me too!
Yes, he said he was killed and has arisen! The end is near!”

Now it seems to me that in this kind of scenario the believers would not necessarily go to
New York City and search among the dead bodies of recently killed homeless people. There
would be no point to that. The Son’s choice of homeless man was random. And even if the
dead body of a homeless man could be found, it would not really constitute any kind of proof
that the Son of God had switched places with him. No, the purported “proof” would consist
in connecting the prophecy with the testimony of the people who claim to have seen the risen
Son. And that is what we see in the earliest Christian literature: they appeal to Scripture and
to their visions of the risen Christ.

So, as I see it, the phony prophecy would correspond to the Ascension of Isaiah where it
foretells in curt fashion that the Son of God will descend (transforming himself as he goes)
and trick the princes of this world into crucifying him. True, in the text of the Ascension as it
currently stands there is no switching of places between the condemned cross-bearer and
Simon coming in from the field. (That dual transformation is present in Irenaeus’ garbled
account of the teaching of Basilides on the passion.) But the short “Et cum hominibus habitare
et in mundo” that currently stands at the critical spot in the Latin version of the Ascension
(11:2) looks too compressed. And it looks Johannine (Jn. 1:14). If Johannine-inspired, it
could be a late replacement for something unorthodox that stood there previously. The Greek
version has a more extensive and Synoptic-inspired interpolation at that point in the
Ascension. Thus we appear to have two types of correction to the passage: one longer and
Synoptic, the other short and Johannine.

So, yes, I think the first Christians believed the Son descended to earth for a few hours and
succeeded, according to plan, to get himself crucified. They believed it because they had a
prophecy foretelling it and because the Son, after the alleged event, appeared to them to
confirm its fulfillment: “God foretold it, God confirmed it, I believe it.”And I maintain that is
why we do not find a switchover from mythical to historical in what those early Christians
wrote. In their eyes it was historical from the beginning. What they eventually did was add a
public ministry for the Son and suppressed the transformations and surreptitious switching of
places on the road to Calvary. (I know that Earl Doherty holds that the switchover from
mythical to historical is discernible in the Ignatian Letters. I disagree. I have laid out my
position regarding the Ignatians on Neil Godfrey’s Vridar blog in a series of posts entitled:
“The Letters Supposedly Written by Ignatius of Antioch.”)

R E P LY

R P A R V U S • J U LY 8 , 2 0 1 3 , 1 2 : 2 7 P M

One more afterthought about seeing the Ascension of Isaiah as Scripture—-or, even more,
as the original gospel message:

Paul, as part of his 1 Cor. 2 passage about the wisdom that was hidden from the princes of
this world who crucified the Son of God, quotes a Scripture whose provenance has never
been definitively identified:


But as it is written, “What no eye has seen, and no ear has heard, and neither
has it entered the heart of man what things God has prepared for those who
love him.” (1 Cor. 2:9)

The citation formula “as it is written” almost certainly means that Paul believed he was quoting
from some divinely authoritative Scripture. But there is no good fit among the canonical ones.
Some scholars have argued that Paul was trying to quote Isaiah 64:3 from memory and that
he badly mangled it. But others recognize that 64:3 is just too different to plausibly support
that claim. These acknowledge that we just don’t know what Scripture he had in mind. It has
been a problem passage for the proto-orthodox from the beginning. Origen, for example,
suggested that maybe Paul was quoting from the apocryphal Apocalypse of Elijah.

But as I see it, the context of the quote fits best with another non-canonical writing:The
Ascension of Isaiah. The quote in question is present in both the Latin and Slavonic versions
at 11:34. And, as you know, the Ascension speaks about the princes of this world. And
about how the Son of God deceived them. And the Ascension does present itself as a hidden
prophecy/wisdom that will not be revealed until the last times:


Consummatio saeculi hujus et omnis haec visio implebitur in novissima
generatione. Et prohibuit eos, ne annunciarent filiis Israel, nec verba haec
darent ad scribendum omni homini. (11:38-39)

Thus the context of the Ascension of Isaiah is a good fit for the quote that Paul quotes as
Scripture. Here in 1 Cor. 2:9 we may have the first indication of the existence of that writing.
Probably around 30 CE some nut composed the prophecy and managed to pass it off to a
few others as an authentic but long-hidden prophecy of Isaiah. Paul believed it and ran with
it. If so, here we have a plausible origin for Paul’s “gospel… according to the revelation of
the mystery that was kept secret for long ages but has now been disclosed.” (Rom. 16: 25-
26)

An objection: But the quote “What no eye has seen etc” is absent from the Greek version of
the Ascension</em?. Why would anyone have cut out such a harmless quote?

Response: Perhaps because some considered it too identifiable a feature of the


Ascension. If I am right about its original content and its status as the original gospel
message, it would be understandable that the later proto-orthodox would not only interpolate
passages like 11: 2-19 into it, but also suppress any verses too recognizably associated with
it. This may explain why Hegesippus (according to Stephen Gobarus) repudiated the quote
and said that those who used it were liars:


“The good things prepared for the righteous neither eye saw, nor ear heard,
nor entered they into the heart of man”. Hegesippus, however, an ancient
and apostolic man, how moved I know not, says in the fifth book of his
Memoirs that these words are vainly spoken, and that those who say these
things give the lie to the Holy Scripture and to the Lord who said: “Blessed
are your eyes that see, and your ears that hear.” (Stephen Gobarus on
Hegesippus)

A final observation: The early church believed that Scripture foretold the resurrection of the
Son “on the third day.” But, again, there is no clear indication of that to be found in the
canonical Old Testament. Perhaps scholars have been looking in the wrong place. If in fact
the earliest gospel was the message of the Ascension of Isaiah the mystery would be solved,
for in that writing we find this prophecy: “et surget tertia die” (9:16).

R E P LY

MAN OJ JOS EP H • D EC EMBER 23, 201 2, 1 2:54 AM

Richard, you say,


“As to the more skeptical point that the epistles are a fabrication altogether, that is simply not a tenable premise
to use in this debate–even if it could be argued, any argument depending on it becomes less probable than the
same conclusion reached without it. Rhetorically, therefore, you need to prove Jesus didn’t exist without relying
on that premise.”

Isn’t it a problem that by considering the Pauline epistles to be one


of the earliest Christian writings, your argument needs the Pauline
epistles to be early?

For arguments sake, if the Pauline epistles are from the 2nd century,
can’t the cosmic Christ that is seen in it be one of the many variants
of Christ that people believed in, in the 2nd century and can not be
used to argue the Christ myth theory?

“the fact is that Paul’s own letters firmly establish him as writing
in the 50s”

Could you explain this dating?

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 31, 2012, 9 :54 AM


Isn’t it a problem that by considering the Pauline epistles to be one of the
earliest Christian writings, your argument needs the Pauline epistles to be
early?

This question was specifically answered by Robert Price inIs This Not the Carpenter?. If
you are really curious, you should read that.

But mathematically, P(myth|e.b) = [P(myth|e.b.letters late) x P(letters late)] +


[P(myth|e.b.letters early) x P(letters early)]. So if P(letters late) is low, it doesn’t matter
whether I rely on the letters being early. Not only can I get a high enough probability on that
(the tiny probability of the evidence being radically different than we think, like all Cartesian
Demon arguments, becomes moot), but the probability of “A or B” is always higher than the
probability of A or the probability of B. Therefore, at worst, “letters late” can shrink
P(myth|e.b.letters late), but it’s still always above zero, and thus still always adds to
P(myth|e.b.letters early) and thus always increases P(myth|e.b), no matter how low
P(myth|e.b.letters late) is.

A problem for me only arises if P(letters late) is high. But there is no way to argue that it is on
present evidence. I could be wrong about that, but it’s someone else’s job to prove it (the
burden is always on the claimant; and an effective consensus constitutes meeting a prima
facie burden: Proving History, pp. 29-30).


For arguments sake, if the Pauline epistles are from the 2nd century, can’t
the cosmic Christ that is seen in it be one of the many variants of Christ that
people believed in, in the 2nd century and can not be used to argue the Christ
myth theory?

One would then be burdened with explaining how or why Christ would become de-
historicized that way. It is actually historically easier to see a mythical person historicized than
a historical person removed from history and placed in outer space (in fact I cannot think of a
single precedent for that, although if anyone knows one I’m interested in seeing it). But more
problematic is the fact that Paul’s letters show no awareness of the alternative, e.g. they never
once struggle to argue against a prevailing historicizing view, contain no reference to anyone
believing or preaching such a thing, and so on (and indeed no knowledge of the Gospels or
anything in them, with the possible exception of the eucharist, which one could argue reverse
causation for), which is always improbable unless there was none. Thus even late letters
would not entail a low P(myth).

This is all academic, however, since I have yet to see any sound argument that P(letters late)
is anywhere high enough to matter.


“the fact is that Paul’s own letters firmly establish him as writing
in the 50s”

Could you explain this dating?

Paul wrote before the Jewish War, which began in 66, and probably before the Neronian
persecution of 64 (if such there was), as neither are ever mentioned in his letters (yet both,
and their consequences, would have been too huge not to affect anything he said, esp. in
Romans); and he wrote well after Aretas assumed control of Damascus (which he mentions
in 2 Corinthians 11:32), which was between the years of 37 and 40; and most (if not all) of
his literary activity came 14 to 17 years after his conversion (Galatians 1:15-18, 2:1; possibly
also 2 Corinthians 12:2); all of which argues for his letters being written in the 50s.

For a detailed analysis: Gerd Lüdemann, Paul, The Founder of Christianity (2002),
which also details why we should trust a chronology derived only from Paul’s letters and not
from Acts.

One can avoid this conclusion only by assuming these are all lies and the letters are fabricated
to look like they were written in the 50s. That’s an enormous ad hoc assumption, which has
no inherent probability (even out of the gate, much less after considering how little the forgers
even bothered to polemicize against the Gospel version of Jesus etc., or do or say anything
distinctive of the second century or even intelligible in that context–as opposed to, for
example, the Pastorals).

R E P LY

DA VID H ILLMA N • DEC EMBER 23, 2012, 6 :22 AM

The story of Paul’s persecution of the early church is a puzzle, since it is difficult to see how he would have had
any authority to literally ravage the early church. Luke’s reckless elaboration of the story is clearly fabricated, but
the references in the epistles need some explanation.
The Greek word translated as persecuted means to go after someone and in its negative sense may mean no
more than bad mouthing people to mutual acquaintances. I do not know the nuances of the word translated as
ravage, but I suggest that Paul is exaggerating the extent of his zeal for persecuting.
Philip Harland in his podcast on 1 peter convincingly argues that early descriptions of persecutingmeant being
subject to verbal abuse or criticism- here
http://archive.org/details/Podcast6.12JesusGroupsAsAssociationsAndCulturalMinoritiesPart21 (nicely
argued, though slow and didactic ).
The reason for this exaggeration of Paul’s zeal is ideological – rewriting Paul as the new Elijah with a difference,
as is well argued by NT wright here: http://ntwrightpage.com/Wright_Paul_Arabia_Elijah.pdf .
The alternative, as argued by Robert Price, is that the story of Paul as persecuter is a later fabrication or
interpolation based on a distortion of Ebionite criticism of Paul as enemy of the torah, but when a follower of
Christ Jesus.

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 31, 2012, 10:16 AM

Price’s theory requires interpolations in both Galatians and 1 Corinthians, without any actual
evidence beyond the desire that it be so. That’s a non-starter if you want to use it to argue for
mythicism. The prior probability of two interpolations convenient to a scholar in two separate
letters is around one in a million (the rate of undiscovered interpolations can be calculated to
be in the vicinity of 1 in 1000; and 1000 x 1000 = 1,000,000). So, you need very damn
good evidence to defend such a thesis. The mere possibility of it is useless.

The Harland hypothesis is more defensible. Because Paul never says anything about killing
anyone, for example. Even beyond just polemical oratory, or persuading converts to
apostasize, there are all manner of ways he could harass the Christians–such as in civil courts
or with extralegal devices like intrigues and corruption, e.g. Acts depicts Paul being
railroaded on false charges, a tactic we know was all too common between enemies in those
days; likewise assassination, which was illegal but common, as Acts also depicts was planned
for Paul, and as Lucian says was attempted even on him when he tried “harassing” the
Glycon cult himself by exposing its trickery.

Since Paul doesn’t explain, and clearly assumes his readers were well familiar with the details,
we are in the dark on specifics. But for that same reason we also can’t assume he didn’t get
people convicted of capital crimes under Jewish laws (which were honored in many places
outside Judea, though only Jews were subject to them, and only if they could not play a
citizenship card somewhere). These executions just won’t have been for things like claiming
the messiah was crucified (which was not illegal in Torah or Mishnah law).

A combination is possible, too: if the Jewish elite found Christians troubling to their authority
and had the ear of King Aretas, for example, they could convince him to have Christians
killed on spurious charges or his own laws or royal whim, and then task ranking Jews like
Paul with hunting them down in places he controlled like Damascus (Paul says he was never
in Judea at the time, so he didn’t “persecute” any churches there, contrary to modern myth).
That would explain why, when Paul was flipped and became an agent of the Christians,
Aretas would try to have him killed (as Paul says he did: 2 Cor. 11:32). Thus, it need not
have been Jewish laws Paul was using to arrange executions; just Jewish interests, using
secular authority as their weapon.

R E P LY

VIN N Y JH 57 • DEC EMBER 31, 2012, 11:22 AM

One thing I think we can say in general about religious persecutions is that the perpetrators
often lack a particularly clear picture of what it is that their victims actually believe, e.g., the
Romans thought the Christians practiced cannibalism and incest and Christians later accused
Jews of ritual infanticide. This is often true because the victims are being scapegoated for
problems that have little if anything to do with what they actually believe. Moreover, the
reasons that are given to motivate those who carry out the persecution are often very different
from the purposes of those who instigate them.

If Paul was carrying out the persecution at the behest of some greater political power, is it
more likely than not that Christians were being scapegoated for some problem that had little
to do with their beliefs in much the same way that Nero blamed the later for the fire in Rome?
Before his conversion, Paul’s knowledge of the Christians’ beliefs might not have gone
beyond whatever baseless allegations had been used to whip up the persecution.

R E P LY

A F ZA L • DECEMBER 26 , 2012, 5:47 PM

Hullo Richard

Q meaning ‘source’: people like nehemiah gordon point out the hebraisms, aramaisms, calques present in the
greek gospels intail a hebrew primacy. Hebrew manuscripts (shem tov) that offer ‘new’ understandings. e.g. the
pun about peter = petros, being the petra also works in hebrew ‘even’ (a stone) and I shall build ‘evneh’…

Any Q implications there ?

Thanks
Afzal

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 31, 2012, 10:34 AM

No. On the fallacies inherent in the “argument from Aramaic” see Proving History, pp.
185-86.

(But as to the question of Peter’s name, which indeed may translate the Aramaic “Cephas,”
see Markus Bockmuehl, “Simon Peter’s Names in Jewish Sources,”Journal of Jewish
Studies 55, no. 1 (Spring 2004): 58-80.)

R E P LY

WILL • DECEMBER 30, 2012, 9 :17 AM

Richard, one aspect of the Pauline material that i find especially interesting is the “born of a woman” statement
and the “from the seed of David” statement. I think this is one area that will require the more extensive exposition
to fully make sense of on the mythicist theory. Because the whole cosmological system that would make such
statements compatible with secular nonhistoricity is probably not widely understood.

One thing I was wondering is whether or not there is evidence that ancient Jewish peasant families actually
tracked their geneological lineage back that far. Was this a common practice? because if we have no other case
of this happening among lower class 1st century Jews, then it would seem like the prior probability of Jesus
actually being from the seed of David would shrink significantly, thus favoring the understanding that such an
attribution was not based on actual knowledge… therefore being just as likely on the mythicist paradigm as on
the historicist.

Also the “born of a woman” statement seems very odd. It seems to me like a step towards euhemerizing an
originally very high Christology (ala the Philipian hymn). I noticed that Ehrman posits that the original christians
had a very low Christology that steadily climbed until you hit John and the later gnostic material. But it would
seem like the Pauline “born of a woman” statement fits better with a very early high christology instead… which
seems more amenable to mythicism than Ehrman’s proposed historicist reconstruction. Or it is another case of
something that works out in the lower heavens rather than on Earth. I know that this is an area that will probably
require a lengthy explanation in your next book, but I wonder if you could comment a bit more on these two
areas. thanks.

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 31, 2012, 10:51 AM

To be fair, I don’t think most historicists mean to say that Paul was talking about or knew
anything about an actual genealogy (there is some evidence some people kept such things; the
elite certainly did, although IMO a lot of those were likely fictional, “convenient fictions” we
would say; poor families might have had oral traditions of the same sort).

They mean to say it was claimed Jesus had Davidic lineage (regardless of whether that claim
was based on anything). Because that alone would be enough to entail historicity, unless such
a claim could be made of a celestial being. Personally I would say not, if what Paul meant
was a long line of descent; but in fact Paul does not mention descent or lineage, he only says
“made from the sperm of David,” as if directly (this would then entail membership in the seed
of Abraham and the tribe of Judah, without any lineage or ancestry required).

As to the oddness of saying Jesus was “born of a woman,” you are right. That’s particularly
odd when you stop to ask what possible purpose that point could serve in Paul’s argument in
Galatians 4. Why on earth does he mention it there? The answer becomes obvious when you
read the whole chapter and understand what his argument is. But that doesn’t end up
supporting the historicists (IMO).

R E P LY

B R YA N • D E C E M B E R 3 0 , 2 0 1 2 , 1 : 0 8 P M

Dr. Carrier, what do you think of the “failed apocalyptic prophet” portrait of Jesus as an argument for his
existence? It seems that this portrait was mined from the most primitive Jesus traditions and such a person would
fit well in that era.

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • DECEMBER 31, 2012, 10:54 AM

A revealed being can be as failed an apocayptic prophet as a historical one. For example, the
angel Gabriel delivers apocalyptic prophecy to Daniel (in Daniel 9) which also ends up being
false. So the angel Gabriel is also a failed apocalyptic prophet. That doesn’t make him
historical.

This is an example of evidence that is simply non-determinative. That the apostles “saw” a
being telling them the end was nigh is as expected on both historicity and myth. It therefore
argues for (or against) neither.

R E P LY

GR EG G • DECEMBER 31, 2012, 5:12 PM

The “failed apocalyptic prophet” that was exaggerated in to the Messiah is just backward of
what we see. The Messiah was invented because of the failed prophecy that David’s seed
would continue on the throne of Israel. To argue that the exaggeration preceded the kernel of
truth seems very backward. There may have been many failed apocalyptic prophets named
Jesus but the New Testament isn’t about any of them.
R E P LY

MAN OJ JOS EP H • D EC EMBER 31 , 201 2, 1 1 :51 AM

“One would then be burdened with explaining how or why Christ would become de-historicized that way. It is
actually historically easier to see a mythical person historicized than a historical person removed from history and
placed in outer space (in fact I cannot think of a single precedent for that, although if anyone knows one I’m
interested in seeing it).”

In a sense, isn’t that what happened to say, Jeshua son of Jehozadak


in Philo’s hands? Or is a cultic interpretation significantly
different from Philo’s that it can’t be considered a precedent?

Given that some early Christians could think of Jesus in many


different ways – as a phantasm, as fully human being, as fully divine
and as simultaniously fully human and divine – I fail to wrap my head
around why mystery cultists could not just as easily have stepped in
to claim an interpretation at some time in the middle of the march
towards 4th century Catholicism. Which is why I think there is a need
to argue that the cultist expression is early.

Thank you for the note on the dating of Pauline epistles. It is far
more informative than any of the bits and pieces I have read about it
so far!

R E P LY

R IC H AR D C AR R IER • JAN UAR Y 4, 201 3, 1 0:58 AM


In a sense, isn’t that what happened to say, Jeshua son of Jehozadak in
Philo’s hands?

Philo didn’t say that guy didn’t exist except in outer space. He said that passage wasn’t about
that guy, but someone else (the one in outer space).

By analogy, this is like someone saying they weren’t worshipping Jesus of Nazareth but the
outer-space Jesus of Philo; rather than saying there was no Jesus of Nazareth, but only the
outer-space Jesus of Philo.

But this does remind me of a near example: Philo denies the historicity of Adam and Eve, and
partly allegorizes and partly celestializes them (in Philo’s view there is an outer-space Adam,
of whom the terrestrial Adam was a copy, by which Philo meant the first human, whose
actual name and story Philo would have regarded as lost to history).

This is only a near example, of course, since Adam and Eve were actually mythical. But the
relevant point here is that Philo acknowledges the popular view and argues against it. He
doesn’t just assume there was no Adam and Eve. The letters of Paul would have to do the
same if they were composed in the second century. Instead their author shows no awareness
that Jesus had ever been historicized at all, much less popularly so. Even a forger who
wanted to pretend no such historicization had occurred would have Paul more clearly and
explicitly declare facts contrary to it so as to refute it covertly.

By comparison, Paul’s two-body resurrection theory in 1 Corinthians 15 was dogmatically


unacceptable to many second century Christians so they forged another letter from him, 3
Corinthians, in which he explicitly and unambiguously argues for a one-body resurrection.
The forger doesn’t have Paul claim there is a two-body resurrection theory and then rebut it;
he just has Paul argue vigorously for the one-body theory, knowing full well that would do the
trick as far as the forger needed.

This is actually how forgeries typically operate: the purpose of the forgery is obvious from the
absurdly ginned up content promoting whatever the forgery was created for. And sometimes
they even acknowledge this objective openly (as when 2 Thessalonians was forged saying
that 1 Thessalonians was a forgery–amusingly–in order to then have their fictional Paul
reverse what the actual Paul had said).

R E P LY

MR GOODWR A ITH • DECEMBER 31, 2012, 1:16 PM

Richard, it’s interesting to me that


The messiah of course was always known to have to be Davidic

but according to some “Why Jews Don’t Believe in Jesus” sites I’ve seen, the Messiah was also “always
known” to have to not be a descendant of Jeconiah (based on Jeremiah 22:28-30), and yet the author(s) of
Matthew, the “most Jewish” gospel, included Jeconiah among Jesus’ ancestors (Matt. 1:12). Even if you credit
the arguments put forward at http://www.jewsforjesus.org/answers/prophecy/jeconiah and elsewhere that
seem to point to a (not well explained) lifting of the curse on Jeconiah’s line, why would the Jewish Christian(s)
who ginned up Jesus’ genealogy have included Jeconiah at all? Why not have him descend from David through
some other (fictitious) line, as in Luke? Any theories about that?

R E P LY
R IC H AR D C AR R IER • JAN UAR Y 4, 201 3, 1 1 :1 6 AM

That’s a modern thing. I’m not aware of any ancient source making that argument. Indeed,
it’s a pretty desperate Jewish apologetic. I’m not surprised it would never have occurred to
ancient Jews. The Jews for Jesus analysis you link to is correct about that (b.Sanhedrin 37b-
38a shows you what ancient Jews thought about that kind of argument).

As you must well know, contradictions are routine even in the OT by itself, much less
between the OT and NT. The Jews were never deterred by ignoring prophecies in the Bible
and as a result saying contradictory things. The whole OT is proof of that. That the NT would
continue to be written with the same disregard for consistency as the whole OT had already
been is thus what we should expect. Not something we should deem surprising.

As to why Jechoniah was chosen, a more pressing question is to ask why the only women
named in Matthew’s genealogy are OT whores (several articles have been written on that
point). Compared to that, explaining Jechoniah is easy: there was no one else available. He
was the last living king at the start of the exile. Therefore any genealogy to continue David’s
male line had to go through Jechoniah.

Which points up the fact that God promised in the OT elsewhere that a son of David would
always rule, and in Jer. 22:28-30 that a son of David would never rule. So the contradiction
already exists in the OT, before Matthew even got started.

R E P LY

GR EG G • DECEMBER 31, 2012, 5:45 PM

Dr. Carrier,

Could the definition of Q be too restrictive in that it excludes Mark? Mark 8:34 says you should “deny yourself”
and “take up one’s cross”. Matthew 16:24 and Luke 9:23 are nearly verbatim copies of that verse. Matthew
10:37-38 and Luke 14:27 have harsher sayings about “leaving” or “hating” your parent and taking up the cross
and they are very similar to Saying 55 in the Gospel of Thomas.

Mark seems to be familiar with the verse but may be quoting it from memory, as if he wasn’t rich enough to have
a text in front of him. Matthew and Luke copied his version but didn’t recognize it when they saw it in the Q.
Thomas also had the benefit of the text, apparently.

If I recall correctly there is at least one place where Mark and the Gospel of Thomas have similar passages not
found in Matthew and Luke. Other topics are found in Mark and Thomas and either Matthew or Luke. This
seems to indicate a common source.

If Mark was quoting Q from memory while Matthew and Luke were correcting Mark from their texts, wouldn’t
that explain their agreements against Mark that Goodacre uses in his argument?

I’ve been reading some of Goodacre’s arguments online but I haven’t seen him mention the Gospel of Thomas.
Does his theory of non-Q touch on that?
R E P LY

R IC H AR D C AR R IER • JAN UAR Y 4, 201 3, 1 1 :29 AM


Could the definition of Q be too restrictive in that it excludes Mark?

Yes. This has been pointed out extensively by Goodacre and others. McDonald makes use
of it to propose an alternative to Q (see my past review).

And there are more examples than you mention, too. The idea that Q excluded Markan
details like the passion is simply wholly untenable and I cannot believe scholars still can
possibly think this. Examples like that prove only two possibilities: Luke used Matthew and
Mark, or all the Synoptics used a previous (now lost) complete Gospel (which is not Q as Q
is usually defined). MacDonald’s is the best case I know for the latter thesis, but I am
ultimately not convinced. He cuts too many logical corners, IMO. Indeed, MacDonald is
aware of the fact that there is abundant evidence that Luke did use Matthew (and thus not
just some lost Gospel in common), so his thesis incorporates Matthew also as one of Luke’s
sources, making for a rather complicated theory. A far simpler hypothesis is that Luke simply
used Mark and Matthew. Full stop.

Goodacre has argued that GThomas is based on the Synoptics, not Q (inhis latest book).
I’ve seen some of his case, and others who’ve read it confirm that his argument is fairly
conclusive.

There just isn’t any evidence left for Q. One can say “possibly there was a lost Gospel used
by all the Synoptics” but possibly does not get you to probably. And there aren’t many
arguments you can make from a merely possible premise.

R E P LY

N A T EP • JAN UAR Y 4, 201 3, 5:58 P M

Greg, I think you make a decent point. And although I’m certainly aware that Q has quite a
few problems (and I’m not trying to defend it outright), isn’t there a much more direct reason
that many scholars reject the idea that Luke used Matthew and Mark? Namely, any instance
where Matthew adds extra material to a triple tradition pericope, Luke never adopts those
additions into his Gospel. Never. That is a little telling isn’t it? Dr. Carrier, do you have
convincing reason to assume that Luke, using Matthew, would be accepting of whole
episodes that Mark didn’t have, but would otherwise tow the line in copying Markan material
and never including Matthean additions to that material? Am I missing something in calling this
at least some evidence for Q?
R E P LY

RICHARD CARRIER • JAN UAR Y 8 , 201 3, 9 :1 7

AM

First, even were that true, that would simply not be sufficient evidence to
reject all the other evidence. You don’t get to run the numbers on only
the evidence you want. You have to run the numbers on all the evidence.
The balance of evidence is simply overwhelmingly in favor of Luke using
Matthew. There is no getting around that.

Second, your premise is false. Luke 22:63-64 essentially combines Mark


14:65a with Matthew 26:67-68, quoting Matthew verbatim in the
process. So much for him “never” using triple tradition material. And this
is in a section Q is not supposed to contain (the passion/crucifixion
narrative). So, double evidence against the Q hypothesis. Done and
dusted.

It’s worse than that since the pro-Q argument is absurdly circular. For
example, Matthew adds material to Mark’s discussion of Judas and John
the Baptist, which Luke then uses. So in what way is Luke “not” using
Matthew’s additions to Mark? Luke does that often! Only by defining
“Q” in a circular way can those instances be ignored. Which is illogical.
The evidence plainly shows that sometimes Luke used Matthew’s
additions and changes, and sometimes he didn’t. You can’t dodge that
with semantics. Yet this is what Q advocates do: they call these “Mark-Q
overlaps” and dismiss them, telling people like you that Luke never used
Matthew’s redactions of Mark. Yet what is a Mark-Q overlap? A place
where Luke uses Matthew’s redaction of Mark. D’oop!

It’s even worse than that, since the notion that redaction was expected to
be verbatim is absurdly naive and against all we know of redaction of
other works in the classical age. Thus, for example, it has been extensively
shown that Luke uses Matthew’s nativity narrative by rewriting it. Luke
in fact deliberately reverses elements of Matthew’s narrative, specifically
to argue against the themes and messages of Matthew. That he doesn’t
use the exact words of Matthew is irrelevant; because redactors often did
not.

Another example, is that Matthew precedes his Sermon on the Mount


with a generic healing of many and follows it with the unrelated event of
healing the Centurion’s son; Luke follows the exact same sequence when
he converts the Sermon on the Mount to a Sermon on the Plain. The Q
hypothesis cannot explain this (as this entails a Gospel narrative with
events in temporal sequence). It looks like Luke just lazily followed
Matthew’s sequence at this point, with some simplifications and changes.
And I’ve just given some examples. Goodacre deals with this argument
extensively in his works. It should be a dead argument by now.

R E P LY

N A T EP • JAN UAR Y 8 , 201 3, 1 2:21 P M

Richard, I hope you’ll note from my previous post (6 above, I think), that I’m a big fan of
yours and do not wish to argue with you over things that I don’t believe are of critical
importance. Whether or not there was a Q or whether Luke used Matthew, makes little
difference to me in my overall understanding and assessment of the New Testament,
especially if the Historical Jesus wasn’t even historical in the first place. (here’s the newly
deconverted atheist coming out in me). That said, before I deconverted, I was a biblical
studies student focusing on the synoptic gospels for much of my coursework and my thesis
material. So please know that, even though I don’t have time to write out every point that
could be brought, I HAVE indeed done my homework on this issue. You implied that I’m
selecting only evidence that I find pertinent and weeding out the rest. Trust me, that’s not the
case. I in fact started my post by saying “I’m not trying to defend it (Q) outright”, and I’m
truly not. I am aware of the lines of reasoning that call Q into question. I see both side of the
convoluted argument. But for you to fast-fowarard to a conclusion that Q is “done and
dusted” and “should be a dead argument” is really not warranted. Let me implore you to stick
to your brilliantly laid-out methodology proposed in Proving History….what I mean
is….you’re right to instruct students of history to 1) acknowledge where a consensus exists,
2) reject the notion that a consensus = established truth, but 3) respectfully address the
consensus with all the evidence you can muster, with the posture of understanding that the
burden is on you, when you have the currently minority view. This is why you instruct
doubters of a HJ to NOT say “Richard Carrier has proven that Jesus is a myth” because that
conclusion has to be argued for convincingly, and not taken as having overturned the
consensus until the argument has been vetted, etc. That’s great stuff, truly! I have and will
continue to applaud you for it.

But I think you need to do the same thing regarding Q. You’d be right to say that Q is far
from the current consensus that an HJ enjoys. But Q (as opposed to Lk using Matthew) is by
far the dominant view in amongst current NT scholars. That is a fact. Goodacre would tell
you as much. So on to Step 2 then…we should reject the idea that Q exists merely because
the 2SH is the more dominant theory. Doing both these steps (acknowledging the majority
view AND denying it as established truth) are equally important.

Again, I’m not in the business of defending Q, but let’s be honest enough to say that
numerous scholars, no slouches in their fields, concur that Lk using Matthew is a tough claim
to justify, the “minor agreements” (to which I think you’re referencing) notwithstanding, as
they in some sense truly are a different category of agreement than what one would expect if
Luke’s source was Matt. and not Q. I think you’re giving those multiple (and very detailed
arguments) a rather short shrift. To put it in perspective, Goodacre links (on his very own
site) to an article written by Timothy Friedrichsen
(http://www.markgoodacre.org/synoptic-l/friedrichsen.pdf) where the 2-Gospel
Hypothesis (as opposed to the 2SH) is taken up and evaluated in a thorough analysis.
Friedrichsen points out that the “Team” deals very little with the secondary literature that has
been a part of this debate for ages. Notably, he’s glad the Team at least TRIED to address
the arguments of J.Fitzmyer, which are these:

“1. Luke never reproduces ìthe typically Matthean additions within the Triple Tradition.
2.Luke occasionally has versions of material similar to Matthew but in a different form.
3.Why would Luke have wanted to break up Matthewís sermons, especially the Sermon on
the Mount, incorporating only part of it into his Sermon on the Plain and scattering the rest of
it in an unconnected form in the loose context of the travel account?
4.Apart from [the preaching of John the Baptist and the Temptation], Luke never inserted the
material [common with Matthew] in the same Marcan context as Matthew.
5.Analysis of the [material shared with Matthew] reveals that it is sometimes Luke and some-
times Matthew who preservesÖthe more original setting of a given episode.
6.If Luke depended on Matthew, why did he constantly omit Matthean material in episodes
lacking Marcan parallels?”

But ultimately he concludes that they don’t deal satisfactorily with the majority of these
arguments. You, Richard, might very well differ with Friedrichsen here, as I’m sure Goodacre
would. The point is that arguments like these from Fitzmyer (and indeed Kummel, and
Sanders, and Stein, and Kloppenborg), can’t be dismissed out of hand as “done and
dusted”. They’re still being argued out, and vehemently so. It may turn out that arguments for
Q are ultimately discredited, but that’s far from having occurred already. So with the highest
amount of respect conceivability, I encourage you to forge on in your analysis of NT sources,
I think it will yield much fruit, as much of your work has already. Just please don’t fall into the
very trap that you warn your readers of – don’t call a debate dead when it’s far from it. Take
on Step 3 with all the gusto in to the world, take current trends of thought into account, but
put them under the scrutiny of evidence, as you would with all things.

R E P LY

RICHARD CARRIER • JAN UAR Y 8 , 201 3, 2:1 5

PM

I’m sorry, but yes, we can say their arguments are done and dusted. That
they keep using them only establishes their lack of understanding of logic
and their irrational dismissal of evidence. If everyone uses fallacious
arguments and ignores evidence, they cannot constitute an authoritative
consensus no matter what degrees they have or how much prestige is
attached to their names. Bad arguments are bad arguments. Clearly and
plainly refuted arguments are clearly and plainly refuted arguments. No
consensus of experts can ever tell you the sky is green, when you can
plainly see it’s blue.

As for when an argument from consensus is valid, see my discussion of


that point in Proving History (index, “consensus”). Notably, I there
prove that biblical historians are the worst at generating valid consensuses.
They are driven more by desire and opinion and post-hoc rationalizations
of traditional or personal views (and I’m not the only one who has said so:
I cite several other scholars in the field who have reached the same
conclusion). In this case, the evidence is clear-and-away in Goodacre’s
favor, and indeed my examples alone prove the arguments your
“consensus” has been leaning on are devoid of fact or logic. Goodacre
only nails the coffin shut with hundreds more. It is therefore appalling to
me that there are still deniers clinging to tradition like a religious dogma in
this field. It’s like Galileo and Riccioli all over again. Only Riccioli had
better arguments.

We must stop deifying consensus in the field of biblical studies when the
evidence simply isn’t there to support it.

I do not claim this for historicity, since there the evidence is at least
ambiguous enough that the truth isn’t obvious. In the case of Luke’s
reliance on Matthew, however, the evidence is clear, obvious, and
unambiguous. Reason and evidence are therefore not guiding those who
oppose it.

R E P LY

N A T EP • JAN UAR Y 1 0, 201 3, 2:01 AM

Richard, I do love how strongly you stick to your guns, and how you champion logic/reason
against any would-be adversity, but I still need to push back a little. Forgive my many typos,
past and future, please, as I’m typing fast in all these posts. I will, however, spend some time
amending comments that I made previously that, I see now, were overstated or stated badly.
Those amendments will be sprinkled throughout this…

“As for when an argument from consensus is valid, see my discussion of that point in Proving
History (index, “consensus”)”…

Please understand that I’m making no such argument from consensus, as I do not in fact
claim to support Q with any strong confidence at all. In fact, what I’m really doing is
suggesting that it’s unwise to call any argument “dead by now” when it has a LACK of
consensus, or even wide agreement. I’ve not had a chance to read any of Goodacre’s books
on Q (though I have now read a lot of the content on his Q-related website), but the point is
that the relevant NT scholars have read his books. Kloppenborg even wrote a praising
review for “The Case Against Q”, while he was writing his Critical Text of Q.This example,
and others, simply show that many NT scholars are not “deifying consensus” regarding Q,
but rather reading Farrer, Goulder, and Goodacre, wresting at length with their points,
conceding some blows to the 2SH at times, and raising counter-questions at other times. In
short, the debate (maybe we should say conversation) IS happening, but it’s NOT over, and
just because a scholar doesn’t see Goodacre’s proposal as air-tight and sufficiently
explanatory does not mean that they’re “rejecting reason and evidence”. If they were so
obviously rejecting reason and evidence, even after carefully reading the “clear, obvious, and
unambiguous” evidence against Q, then you (or I) would be right to call for the resignation of
these men and women, since they would be unashamedly mocking all the basic principles of
historical and literary research. The fact that no champion of reason/evidence is calling for
such a widespread exposé shows that, in the same way as the HJ debate (though not the
same degree, obv.), there’s much more convincing to do. So, far from being an argument
from consensus, this is a call to patience and diligence, due to utter lack of consensus. No
deifying here

“I’m sorry, but yes, we can say their arguments are done and dusted. That they keep using
them only establishes their lack of understanding of logic and their irrational dismissal of
evidence… Bad arguments are bad arguments. Clearly and plainly refuted arguments are
clearly and plainly refuted arguments.”

To the specifics, then. We agree here, btw, and I’m guilty of making some bad arguments
earlier. Unless I plan to defend my “Never” statement with much semantic gymnastics and
equivocating, I must admit that I overstated the case in that instance. It’s a more
straightforward process if we don’t try to endlessly categorize the types of agreements that
Mt/Lk have against Mark, which ultimately just aims to minimize the force of those
agreements…better to just admit that there are substantial agreements, and proceed from
there. I can even agree with you that a lot of the Mark-Q Overlap points do reduce to
semantic dodging. However, these points are raised in response to the problematic
agreements, and they’re just one response among many that don’t necessitate Luke knowing
Matthew. Furthermore, they have less to explain (amount of text-wise) than does a critic of
Q (since although my “Never” statement was far overstated, there still are FAR more
pericopes where there is double-tradition additions/omissions/changes to Mark where Luke
doesn’t seem to use Mt. at all). All of these instances must be explained away by saying that
Luke was editorializing in his own distinct fashion, so we shouldn’t expect him to copy
Matthew. This is a fair argument, convincing to some, not convincing to others, and still far
from proven, obvious or settled. The numerous instances of “doublets” remain problematic
for many students of the synoptic problem, especially so on a theory that Lk knew Mt. Since,
I do not have a copy of Goodacre’s books handy, I cannot say he fails to address the
doublet problem in them, but after looking in vain on his website for any mention of that issue,
it’s hard to call it a “clearly and plainly refuted argument”. Could you point me to a place
where that problem has been soundly and definitively solved? I did a word search in Google
Books’ preview of Case Against Q, and I was perplexed by the fact that Goodacre interacts
with key scholars like Fitzmyer and Kummel a time or two in the whole book, and maybe 2-
3 times with a scholar like Friedrichsen with whom Goodacre has acknowledged a good
banter about the central issues. Why not much more in-depth interaction with those that it
would behoove you most win over? Certainly we can’t call these scholars guilty of an
“irrational dismissal of evidence” if their ideas/arguments aren’t being interacted with in a
thorough manner when a “Case Against [them]” is put forth. When I wrote papers on source
crit. and redaction crit., my professors would never have let me get away with referencing
key pioneers of that field only once or twice. They taught me that if your goal is to question or
overturn the dominant view, you MUST engage the “biggies”, show that you understand
them, and pick them apart in detail. Again, I haven’t read Goodacre’s book, but I’m puzzled
as to how he could accomplish this if he hardly ever references the best opponents he could
be dialoguing with (Kloppenborg indeed yields zero references). I’m just puzzled by this.

Lastly, the most insightful treatment of the synoptic problem that I’ve read is
Sanders/M.Davies. Earlier I perhaps made it sound like I thought Sanders was a Q
supporter. He clearly is not a simple 2ST advocate. My point in mentioning him was to say
that there exists many variations on this particular theme. Just when you think one argument is
settled (and even that is often debatable, as per above), another problematic horn seems to
arise in this synoptic sh*tstorm. Sanders/Davies conclude that Goulder’s theory has much
more going for it than the classic 2ST does, but also that Goulder (and Farrer) could be
improved by positing a multi-tiered complex of gospel relations. The exact diagram of
relations could never be known exactly, as some may involve a proto-Mark and/or a
deutero-Mark, and/or an intermediate form of Matt or Luke, and/or a sayings source (that
we could call Q), and/or even a passion narrative source. Probabilistic statements could be
made about all these different elements, but nothing that most scholars would feel confident in
classifying as relatively certain (in Bayesian terms). Some diagrams are better understood
with a dependence of Lk upon Matt, and others are better understood with a complete
independence. Derivatively, then, the claim about Lk knowing Matt is likewise probabilistic at
best. Sanders seems keen on a theory by Boismard, who would agree with Goodacre that
the Luke we have today used an early form of Matthew, but even this schematic maintains a
skeletal Q that Matthew drew from. And this is just one of many possible
schematics….bottom line, my good man Richard….until I see Goodacre (and company)
thoroughly refute all these more complex alternatives, or show the superiority of his case with
something more than Ockham’s Razor to discourage complexity (whereas we’ve observed
that redaction and dissemination processes were often quite complex)…until one of these
happens, surely we would do well to avoid saying “case closed” regarding Q. Sorry this
turned out to be much longer than I imagined it would – thanks for reading it all. Cheers!

R E P LY

R IC H AR D C AR R IER • JAN UAR Y 1 1 , 201 3, 9 :39

AM

My previous comments are already adequate refutation of even your


revised argument at this point. For example, “they have less to explain
(amount of text-wise) than does a critic of Q” is false: they don’t even
have an explanation for how Luke can quote Matthew’s crucifixion
narrative verbatim, and stitch together elements Mark and Matthew put
there. The Q theory is completely incapable of explaining that, as the Q
theory denies any crucifixion material was in Q. That passage alone kills
Q.

That’s just one example. Of hundreds. The sky is blue. No matter how
many Kloppenborgs claim it’s green. So we know there is some serious
malfunction in the way opinions are being formed on this matter. The Q
advocates are not listening to reason nor attending to evidence. And we
can demonstrate that conclusively. That eliminates their opinion as having
any weight in this debate. Just as astrologers’ opinions don’t carry weight
in astronomy.

Goodacre has also written more books than just Case on this subject. Yet
now you are talking about what’s in Case as if that’s all he has done. And
indeed you even confess to not having read Case anyway. This is not how
to proceed.

Even your general point is weird–I don’t have to “name” a person to


refute their arguments. For example, in my chapter on the resurrection in
The Christian Delusion I crafted it to conclusively refute the arguments
of the McGrews. Without ever having to name them or waste word count
quoting “their” versions of apologetic arguments. I just present the facts
and logic as it actually is. That it refutes them is thus simply an efficient
outcome. Given that hundreds of scholars may have written on any given
point, that is the better way to proceed, rather than to name drop and
waste massive wordcount on useless historiographies, when all we want
to know is what the evidence is and what it logically entails. That’s why
you need to attend to what the evidence is and what it logically
entails. Not whose name gets dropped where.

Since you don’t really seem to know what the evidence is that I’m talking
about, I’ll help you out here (and again, this is just one example):

Mark 14:65a reads “and some began to spit on him, and to cover his
face, and to buffet him, and to say to him, ‘Prophesy!’” which Matthew
26:67-68 expanded to “then did they spit in his face and buffet him: and
some smote him with the palms of their hands, saying, ‘Prophesy unto
us, Christ! Who is he that struck thee?’” Luke 22:63-64 combines
Mark with Matthew, repeating the concluding text of Matthew verbatim:
“and the men that held Jesus mocked him, and beat him; and they
blindfolded him, and asked him, saying, ‘Prophesy! Who is he that
struck thee?” Except for dropping “unto us, Christ” to economize the
passage, the Greek of Luke here is identical to that of Matthew (legontes,
Prophêteuson [hêmin Christe]! Tis estin ho paisas se?). Luke then
combines this with Mark’s detail that they covered his eyes, which
Matthew omitted (or rather altered: in Matthew they spit “on his face”
instead of covering it). Luke thus combined Mark with Matthew, recast
mostly but not entirely in his own words, to make what he deemed to be a
better passage. That Luke knows the details Matthew added, and even
borrows his exact words, is sufficient proof that Luke knew and used
Matthew.

This is not the only instance of this. But it’s one of the most important,
because it’s in the crucifixion narrative, where Q is not supposed to exist.

R E P LY

N A T EP • JAN UAR Y 1 3, 201 3, 1 2:41 AM

3 things: a) this post was originally about the HJ debate and not the synoptic problem, and b)
I’m finding it hard parse out the specific point I’m wanting to make, as opposed to a classic
defense of an under-nuanced 2SH (which apparently is what you take me to be advocating)
…don’t worry, I’ll take the blame for the lack of clarity, though it’s never a subject that one
should speak in blacks&whites about…and c) we both have much bigger fish to fry in our
lives.

Because A-C are all true, it’s probably prudent for me to not push things further on this topic.
Maybe one day, if there’s a way to make my devil’s advocate case more clearly (to
distinguish it from the many indefensible arguments that I’m not, and would never, posit), we
could resume this discussion. If that never happens, I will worry not, for that will mean that
you’ve had more time at your disposal to discuss mythicism with Goodacre and other NT
scholars. I really believe that’s a much better use of your time, and I remain behind you
100% in your endeavors toward such important ends. Cheers.

R E P LY

JO H N A N D R EW MA C D O N A LD • JAN UAR Y 1 , 201 3, 9 :46 AM

Hi Dr. Carrier. Seasons Greetings! A brief thought on note 19 above: Paul was originally going after Christians,
until he switched sides and became a Christian. This is problematic from the point of view of history because if
this is what actually happened, Paul’s former employer would have gone after him for desertion. Here are a
couple books (one online) that explore the idea that Paul lied about his conversion experience: (1) Operation
M e s s i a h http://www.amazon.com/Operation-Messiah-Roman-Intelligence-
Christianity/dp/0853037027/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1357061854&sr=8-
1&keywords=operation+messiah (2)The Eternal Returnhttp://www.caseagainstfaith.com/the-eternal-
return.html

R E P LY

R IC H AR D C AR R IER • JAN UAR Y 4, 201 3, 1 1 :57 AM

Actually, it’s possible Paul’s former employer did actually go after him. See my remarks
earlier.

As to the linked theories, speculation is idle. You don’t get knowledge from it. “Possibly,
therefore probably” is a fallacy. Sometimes we have to just admit we don’t know what
happened.

R E P LY

WI LL • JAN UAR Y 5, 201 3, 9 :32 AM

Richard, one thing i was wondering about is this. Does mimesis and literary emulation show up prominently in
ancient greco-roman biographies of ACTUAL historical figures?Or is it more exclusively the earmeark of fictive
narratives? The reason i was wondering this is that such a verifiable correlation showing an inversely proportional
relationship between emulation and historicity could strongly reduce the prior probability that the gospels are
about a historical man. (since the level of emulation in the gospels has been proven to be very extensive.) I
realize that that wouldn’t necessarily negate the potential relevance of the Pauline material in support of
historicity.. but it would seem to show the so called ‘biographies’ of Jesus are existing in a void of actual
historical data about an HJ. And such an observation could have strong implications for the whole historicity
debate. What are your thoughts on approaching it from this angle?
R E P LY

R IC H AR D C AR R IER • JAN UAR Y 8 , 201 3, 9 :40 AM

The unfortunate answer to your question is that classicists have pretty much shown almost all
biographies are fiction–even those of historical people. The only likely exception are political
figures for whom biographers had actual contemporary histories and documents to work
from, yet even those are peppered with anecdotes that are probably fictional. It’s frustrating.
But alas, appears to be the case. See my previous discussion and bibliography.

We generally can’t trust biography unless (a) we can corroborate a detail in some way (e.g.
as when we found an inscription recording the official words of Claudius that Tacitus would
paraphrase in his Annals) or (b) we can identify there having been a reliable source available
to the author at least in concept (e.g., Arrian’s use of eyewitness sources, or the general fact
that certain details like when a battle occurred were kept in state records or public
inscriptions). And both can be done by degrees (e.g. finding Tacitus corroborated on a
speech once allows some trust in his other speeches where (b) would apply, i.e. we can
reasonably expect there may have been a reliable source for him to work from, but not to the
same probability, hence we’d still have a lingering warranted doubt).

That said, to your literary question, for such biographies I haven’t looked into mimesis of the
sort MacDonald explores (since once I confirmed biographies were bogus in general, it
became moot), but I can confirm, for example, that Suetonius uses ring composition (an
artificial way of building narratives also present in the Gospels) to compose his biographies of
historical persons. This entails a certain disregard of historical facts like chronology and a
certain tendency to make things up to force a fit with the resulting chiastic structure. And I am
certain mimesis of some sort did occur in biographical writing, too; for example, for my
dissertation I studied the repeated use of the “olive monopoly” legend, in which the same
(wholly implausible) story is told of some five or six different “wise men,” sometimes tweaked
to convey a slightly different “moral to the story.” Thus, biographies of real people were being
built by copying stories told about other people–stories that often were never actually true
about anyone (as even Aristotle was sharp enough to conclude when he relates one of the
earliest known examples of olive monopoly legend…he knew enough business economics to
tell the story was simply impossible and could never have actually happened).

So, with respect to what you were hoping, unfortunately, no, we can’t build a reference class
favoring ahistoricity out of markers like mimesis. Bullshit was written about everyone,
whether they were historical or not. All the presence of mimesis allows us is the ability to
eliminate evidence, i.e. the more a biographer does that, the less we can trust they are doing
real biography, hence the less we can trust the rest of their biography (except maybe where
we can do (a) or (b) above). But a completely fake biography could just as easily be
composed for a historical person as a non-historical one. Therefore, eliminating the Gospels
(which I can conclusively do, for this and many other reasons, as I explain in my next book)
only gets us a 1:1 ratio of consequents, i.e. they become evidence for neither historicity nor
myth.

There is only one conceptual exception, but it is exactly the kind of thing we can’t do with
Jesus: it was proved that the second half of the biographies of emperors in the Historia
Augusta are entirely fake based on the fact that, unlike the first half, the second half did not
match up any names or facts with persons and events confirmed in inscriptions. That did not
permit concluding the emperors didn’t exist, since they at least could be corroborated in
inscriptions (and numismatics and so on), but had that not been the case, then we could
certainly conclude they were non-existent. But alas, we can’t do this for Jesus, since we have
no reason to expect any such corroborating evidence to survive (e.g., his being mentioned in
contemporary inscriptions and coins).

R E P LY

SI LI • JAN UAR Y 5, 201 3, 3:29 P M

Are there any good books on the martyrdom of Paul? I made the mistake of buying one with the title, that
unfortunately turned out to be hella uncritical catholic hagiography.

I’m curious as to why we think Paul was martyred in Rome when 1) he says he wants to go to Spain and 2) he
plans to first go to Jerusalem with The Collection. Yet Luke-Acts very conspicuously says nothing of The
Collection, as if it in the end wasn’t accepted, or otherwise proved an embarrassment to Paul. Is it possible (or
rather is it probable) that Paul never returned from Jerusalem?

R E P LY

R IC H AR D C AR R IER • JAN UAR Y 8 , 201 3, 9 :46 AM

We can’t really know. 1 Clement says Paul died in Spain. Which entails (a) the legend that
Paul died in Rome did not exist in the first century (and is therefore a second century
fabrication) and possibly (b) Paul actually did die in Spain. That’s my take. We can’t really
know for sure, though, since we have few to no sources of any worth. (Luke, for his part, is
making almost everything up.)

R E P LY

ELLE8 7 • APRIL 3, 2013, 10:03 AM

This is extremely interesting. Goodacre seems to be a good scholar whose work is largely underappreciated.

Just out of curiosity, is he a Christian (not that really matters, since if I’m not mistaken he has spoken against
faith-based scholarship)?

R E P LY

RICH ARD CARRIER • APRIL 3, 2013, 3:34 PM


I don’t know what Goodacre’s religious beliefs are. His scholarship is consistently objective,
so his beliefs don’t really matter in my view. They only matter to me when they appear to be
undermining a scholar’s objectivity. But if I were to place a bet, I’d put my money on him
being secular, but not more money than I could afford to lose.

R E P LY

P ET ER SC H A R F • JUN E 25, 201 3, 6 :44 AM

Hi Dr. Carrier.
What about 2 Corinthians 5:16? Here Paul teaches about Christ as a historical figure.

” TH ER EF OR E F R OM N OW ON WE R EC OGN I Z E N O ON E A C C OR DI N G TO TH E F LESH ;
EVEN TH OU GH WE H A VE K N OWN C H R I ST A C C OR DI N G TO TH E F LESH , Y ET N OW WE
K N OW H I M I N TH I S WA Y N O LON GER . ” (N A SV)

Paul teaches that something radically new happened when Christ died and rose from the dead. Now everything
is new. He who is in Christ (is a believer in Christ) is a new creature. Paul teaches that now when Christ doesn’t
live here on earth, now when He has the ressurected body, body form heaven (1 Cor 15) and lives in Heaven
above, he says, we shouldn’t know ( recall) Christ according to flesh, “even though we have known Christ
according to the flesh” once. So Paul admits that in the past christians knew Christ according to the flesh.
How do you cope with that passage? Perhabs, here is the key why Paul is notoriously uninterested in recalling
Christ’s life when he lived in the flesh and why in his letters we can hardly find historical informations about
Christ. Kind of Pauline mysticism propagated in the early christianity.

R E P LY

R IC H AR D C AR R IER • JUN E 25, 201 3, 5:1 7 P M

Paul is not talking about Christ there but the Christians, i.e. it is our flesh (and the whole
world of flesh) he is referring to, not Christ’s. That’s evident from the context (no one Paul is
writing to ever knew Christ in the flesh…not even he did). See Romans 7-8 for what Paul is
talking about (our being in the flesh or not). Hence the NIV transl. is “So from now on we
regard no-one from a worldly point of view. Though we once regarded Christ in this way, we
do so no longer”; NRSV, “From now on, therefore, we regard no one from a human point of
view; even though we once knew Christ from a human point of view, we know him no longer
in that way”; etc.

That’s why Paul says we know “no one” (not even each other) “according to the flesh.” It’s
not as if we all have lost our flesh and no men of flesh exist in the church. So clearly he isn’t
referring to the flesh of the person known, but the fleshly existence of the person doing the
knowing: they know each other not in the way men attached to the flesh know things, but in
the way men attached to the spirit know things. Thus, knowing Christ “according to the flesh”
means being materially aware of the story of Christ, physically hearing it told, and so on,
which is not enough–and no longer the case once you are baptized, as then you are “in”
Christ (2 Cor. 5:17) and thus know him spiritually. Which makes you a new man.
R E P LY

A F Z A L • J U LY 6 , 2 0 1 3 , 1 : 3 9 A M

Philippians 2: 6-11 is styled as a pre-pauline xtian hymn. does this mean -in spite of his own perhaps
exaggerated protestations as God authorised spokesperson – got this bit from ‘those in christ before him” as per
Goodacre?

on timing:Paul’s 2 Thessalonians 2:3 ‘sons of perdition’ is that an oblique reference to Hadrian and his assult on
the temple?

R E P LY

R I C H A R D C A R R I E R • J U LY 8 , 2 0 1 3 , 1 0 : 0 0 A M

(1) One must distinguish underlying fact from marketed narrative. Paul will certainly have
learned all sorts of things from Christians before him (he himself says he persecuted the
church), but he insists he learned it all by revelation, because if that were not true, he could
not be an apostle (Gal. 1). The assumption Christians held (and thus he was forced to hold as
well) was that revelation was the only legitimate way to learn the things of the gospel and thus
be an apostle (as opposed to merely another Christian brother).

(2) 2 Thess. is a forgery. Consequently, I have not studied it for this project.

R E P LY

V I N C E H A R T • J U LY 8 , 2 0 1 3 , 1 0 : 2 5 P M

It seems to me that the perpetrators of religious persecution are not generally known for having a particularly
clear idea of what it is that their victims actually believe or practice. At various times and places, Jews were
accused of practicing ritual infanticide. The early Christians were accused of incest and cannibalism. I have no
doubt that Paul had all sorts of ideas about what the Christians before him believed and practiced, but I see little
reason to think that they would have been accurate. I can’t imagine that we have any way to assess the degree
of continuity between Paul and his predecessors, particularly as he never tells us why he was opposed to the
Christians in the first place.

R E P LY

SI LI • AUGUS T 24, 2013, 11:23 AM

I’m going through some of Goodacre’s (excellent) archives, and it appears he’s long held that Paul changed his
story between 1 Cor and Gal:http://ntweblog.blogspot.dk/2008/10/dating-game-ii-getting-pauls-letters-
in.html

I’m trying to read C.K. Barrett on Paul’s thought at the moment, and he suggests that “Paul, an apostle—sent
not from men nor by a man, but by Jesus Christ and God the Father, who raised him from the dead” is a result
of Paul having the lost the support of the Antioch congregation who first commissioned him to evangelise.

R E P LY

R IC H AR D C AR R IER • AUGUS T 26 , 2013, 12:47 P M

That violates Ockham’s razor. There is no evidence Paul changed his story. He uses, in fact,
the exact same vocabulary in both places, and in both places mentions no other source of
information but visions (and scripture). So one would have to add an ad hoc supposition to
get Goodacre’s position, which actually halves the relative probability of his theory being true
(Proving History, pp. 80-81).

Barrett’s thesis is even more wildly ad hoc (it is full of unattested assumptions). It’s
probability plummets geometrically compared even to Goodacre’s.

R E P LY

MA TTH EW MOR A LES • AUGUS T 24, 2013, 6 :00 P M

Dr. Carrier,

I just found this debate the other day, and I thought you did an admirable job in representing the case for a
mythical Christ. I also respect Dr. Goodacre and find myself largely agreeing with his Case Against Q. I do think
that he takes a bit too much for granted when it comes to the historical Jesus, however. A couple of questions:

1) I noticed that you do not call into question the Pauline Epistles in the debate. What are your thoughts on the
seven so-called “authentic” epistles? Are they authentic? And if so, do you see the possibility of there being
interpolations within them?

2) The notion of a Pre-Christian Jesus cult is something I had not yet heard convincingly argued. The verse of
Zechariah which Philo quotes is interesting. While all extant manuscripts have only the High Priest Jesus being
crowned, it seems clear that Zerubbabel originally appeared in this passage alongside him. In the text as we now
have it, it seems unclear as to whom the title “East/Branch/Rising” applies. In English translations at least, the
third person is utilized, and so it seems unlikely that it is Jesus, who is to be told to “behold” himself. Is it not
possible that Philo capitalized on this uncertainty in order to insert his Logos as the receptor of the title? That is,
Philo might have believed that this Jesus beheld the one called “Rises”, whom he identifies as the incorporeal
Logos, since prior readers were left in the dark as to whom “Rises” was.

In any case, Zechariah certainly has much to do with the formation of Christianity, with its messianic concepts
and even the quote that, “They shall drink blood like wine” in Ch 9. I look forward to more from you on the
topic.
R E P LY

R IC H AR D C AR R IER • AUGUS T 26 , 2013, 1:06 P M

1) Very high probability they are authentic (except Philemon, which is more questionable, but
that contains nothing relevant to historicity). I have read Detering, and his case against them is
fallacious and ignores strong counter-arguments. Yet I am not aware of any better case than
Detering’s.

2) Note that one must distinguish a Jesus belief from a Jesuscult. That there was a
theological entity known as Jesus before Christianity does not mean any cult was paid to him
(possibly, but we have no actual evidence of that). As to the grammatical point, probably not.
Zechariah is told to put a crown on Jesus and sayto him (Jesus) that God says “behold, the
man.” There is no other figure present or mentioned, much less any other priest there (so it
can’t be some other priest this Jesus would then at that moment be seeing…the scene clearly
establishes Jesus, the one crowned, as the priest being described by God, whom God calls
the priest who will build the temple, which of course is correct for the originally intended
meaning of the verse, as Jesus ben Jehozadak was the legendary first priest of the second
temple–and that is specifically the interpretation Philo says is incorrect, because no human
man would be so described; at most one might infer Philo thought the divine Jesus descended
to found the second temple, but that would be going beyond the evidence available).

R E P LY

MA TTI A S DA VI DSSON • AP R IL 12, 2015, 10:40 P M

Regarding #5 in the list I just once again listened to the debate, and it struck me when Goodacre said something
like: “It would be an insult to James [meaning Jesus biological brother] if somebody claimed he never existed”.

I mean, yes, I guess James would find that weird if he indeed was the bio-brother of Jesus and actually met him,
talked to him, fought with him, dined with him…

BUT on the other hand, in that case (James actually being the bio-brother of Jesus) is it not very weird that not
once is Paul using the information he got about the actualy physical, on earth, brother of James? Would James
not be equally upset about Paul not using ANY of the knowledge that surely James could (and would have?)
passed on to Paul? And is it even slightly likely that Paul would not use this knowledge? To me and my present
understanding, this is really a clear case AGAINST historicity.

R E P LY

MA TTI A S DA VI DSSON • AP R IL 12, 2015, 10:46 P M

…getting so used to being able to edit comments. Anyhow, I forgot the followin point:

Would not James be pissed-off if Paul specifically claimed that he did NOT get any information about Jesus
from him (James), or any other living being by means of them speaking to Jesus? Would he not be pissed if Paul
instead claimed it was HIS firsthand (relevatory) conversation with Jesus that gave him the information he now
preaches?

R E P LY

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Richard Carrier is the author of many books and numerous articles online and in print. His avid readers span the world from Hong Kong to
Poland. With a Ph.D. in ancient history from Columbia University, he specializes in the modern philosophy of naturalism and humanism, and the
origins of Christianity and the intellectual history of Greece and Rome, with particular expertise in ancient philosophy, science and technology. He
is also a noted defender of scientific and moral realism, Bayesian reasoning, and historical methods.

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