........and appealing to Tacitus
You really are talking non-sense Vlad.
I never 'appealed to Tacitus' - show me where I did. Indeed I actually did the opposite, may argument being that
even if we accept that the teeny tiny reference to Jesus in his work was in the original (a bit
if and one I made clear was just for the sake of the argument), that it provides little comfort to christians because it is neither contemporary (being from about 110AD -
if it is in the original), nor do we have evidence that it is genuinely independent. Indeed, quite the reverse as Tacitus refers to christians and therefore must have been aware of their existence and likely of their views and claims. Thus the
evidence that Jesus was sentenced to death by Pilot could easily have come from christians themselves rather than independently. And, of course, what is in Tacitus is hardly 'hold the front page' news - merely suggesting that christians existed, that they worshiped Jesus and (they believed) that Pilot sentenced Jesus to death. None of that is controversial really, is it.
None of that negates the issue of whether the Jesus bit in Tacitus is in the original or added later.
, earliest extant copy from the 9th century. This is particularly odd since you discount christian literature dating centuries earlier.I think i've more than proved that not only is your opinion jumbled nonsense but there are two of them!!!! Both, are diametrically opposed to each other.
I'm sorry - again you are talking non-sense. The situation is much more complicated than your naive and simplistic that earlier must equate to more accurate. That simply isn't necessarily true. Here are a few reasons why not.
1. We need to consider number of times copied rather than just length of time. A text copied 20 times over 200 years is likely to be more susceptible to change than one copies once in 500 years.
2. We need to consider the quality and 'agenda' of the copyists.
3. We need to consider who the author was and whether there are other texts attributed to that author in existence that allow linguistic analysis to be performed.
4. We need to look for other corroborating evidence - so if Tacitus mentions Nero and we have coins with Nero on them, that provides supporting evidence for the veracity of that claim of the existence of Nero. Likewise if Tacitus talks of the Roman occupation in a particular land and the dates when they were there and we have archeological evidence of Roman occupation during those dates again it provides supporting evidence for the veracity of that claim.
There are others too, but I suspect in your Vlad-blinkered way you will simply ignore these points.