The fact that something is written down on paper doesn't make it confirmed, you know.
But it does go some way to demonstrate the lack of substance in BA's assertions, for which he has displayed no conclusive arguments whatsoever, other than the odd quote or two, and shouting 'Midrash' like someone with a nervous tick every time Matthew's gospel is mentioned.
It should be noted that some of Ad-O's quotes come from Mark's gospel, and certainly reinforce the claim that Jesus was indebted to the teachings of the OT, and an orthodox Jew through and through.
It is in fact possible to argue a strong case that the
historical Jesus' teachings and mission were exclusively to the Jewish diaspora (and a number of scholars have done so), and that all 'universalist' texts were inventions of the evangelists. There are certainly criteria to establish such a view, beyond mere cherry-picking. Such an approach wouldn't please either Ad-O or BA, the former determined to retain everything in the gospels, and the latter everything that doesn't accord with his 'gentle Jesus meek and mild' view.
I could begin a thread on this elsewhere, but as a non-believer, my interest is largely academic, and I suspect the interest would be minimal. It's no skin off my nose that such a view can't
ultimately be substantiated any more than the other views, but believers have obviously much more hanging on the rightness or wrongness of what they've signed up for.
BTW, I rather wish BA's view of Jesus had some definite scholarly rigour to support it - it would certainly be better for society if this were the case. But if there is any such rigour, I'm afraid our old friend has done little to substantiate it, other than insisting N number of times "I've got a 'cesstifficut'" and "I've wiped a lot of sweat away"