Again? That's an outside source that helps confirm what took place who else would they be talking about?
Well, while I agree that it's
probably whoever the character of Jesus was based upon that they are talking about, considering that there were several people in Judea around the beginning of the first century who were considered as the prophesised Messiah, it could
still really be any of a number of people, the Samaritan 'Simon Magus' for example immediately springs to mind because he was apparently a Messiah claimant who lived at the same time as Jesus, visited many of the same places as Jesus, was associated with several of the same people as Jesus and had similar miraculous powers to Jesus. Although the apocryphal 'Acts of Peter' says that Simon met his end after miraculously levitating in the forum when the apostle Peter prayed to God to stop his flying, causing him to stop in mid-air and fall to the ground breaking his legs and is then stoned to death by the previously non-hostile crowd, that's actualy just one of several contradicting accounts of how he died, so we don't actualy know how he really died... he
could have been crucified for claiming to be the Messiah and rightful heir to the throne for all we know.
Look, consider this for a moment, for every gospel that was eventualy included in the compilation of the New Testament and the Christian Bible, there are lots more that didn't make it, such as for example;
Gospel of Basilides.
Gospel of Truth.
Gospel of the Four Heavenly Realms
Gospel of Mary
Gospel of Judas
Greek Gospel of the Egyptians
Gospel of Philip
Gospel of Perfection
Gospel of the Hebrews
Gospel of the Nazarenes
Gospel of the Ebionites
Gospel of the Twelve
Gospel of Peter
Gospel of Matthias
Gospel of Cerinthus
Gospel of Apelles
Gospel of Valentinus
Gospel of Andrew
Gospel of Barnabas
Gospel of Bartholomew
Gospel of Hesychius
Gospel of Lucius
Gospel of Merinthus
Gospel of the Adversary of the Law and the Prophets
....and those are just
some of the ones that we
know about, there could potentialy have been many more that have since been lost to history. But the interesting thing is, many of them tell quite different stories about the character of Jesus to the Biblical ones that we're more familiar with, and while the 4 Biblical Gospels agree with each other on the whole, although there
are still contradictions between some of them, some of the non-Biblical gospels agree with each other too.
The point I'm making is that Jesus could quite easily have been quite a different character to the one we are familiar with. Remember, the New Testament canon, as it now appears, wasn't considered as canon until it was accepted at the Third Council of Carthage in 397, and even then it took until 419 for the Book of Revelation to be added.
The New Testament was effectively compiled by ordinary mortals hundreds of years after Jesus' death by picking just a
few books from lots of equaly plausable but contradicting books. Now, of course that contradiction would normaly make us consider that many of the non-canon books about Jesus were simply fictional, but what is
equally possible is that the
character of Jesus was actualy based upon several
different people. This isn't as far fetched as you might consider it to be because that's exactly what many historians think about the characters of Robin Hood and King Arthur.
So, were the Christians named after someone who was killed by the Romans? According to Tacitus, who's a trusted source of Roman history, the answer to that is a resounding 'yes', but that 'someone' could easily have been just one of several people that the character of Jesus is based upon.
It doesn't confirm the whole bible.
It doesn't confirm
any of the Bible. It simply says that a man who was considered to be the Messiah (Christ) by a particular group of people was killed by the Romans. Remember, as I said earlier, 'Christ' was a title, not a name, so there could possibly have been several 'Christs' and several different groups who considered themselves as 'Christians'.
Not only that but what you aren't is a believer if you were then you would see what I see and experiance what I have till you get it.
But that's hardly a sufficient argument. If it was then someone saying that they 'believe' in Thor, the Norse god of thunder, because they've 'experienced' the power of a thunder storm, would make their belief in the Norse pantheon of gods
just as plausable as your belief in the existence of the Abrahamic God.
How would you feel if a Hindu, or a Pagan, or someone from
any other faith said that exact same thing to you about their
own beliefs?
Would you just dismiss it as something that's meaningless to you? Would you consider that
your beliefs based upon
your experiences is somehow more meaningful than anyone elses?