Not saying anything at all is not arguing for somebody else's assumptions.
Not that I said that it was; rather I said that when one argues in support of what they have assumed or - in Floo's case - claimed, you are party to the misinformation.
You tell me, you are the one who thinks God's morality is unchanging.
Why would God's morality preclude someone from getting married at 12 or 13, 20 centuries ago, when that is the 20th/21st century equivalent - in terms of maturity and life expectancy of 19 or 20? You and Shakes seem to want to use modern conditions of life and life expectancy to judge a society that had very different maturity and life expectancy ages.
That article is another example of your poor critical thinking skills. All it argues is that the age of puberty has been dropping over recent history. It does not say anything which allows you to infer the age of puberty was 10 or even 12 in the first century.
Again, you show your own lack of critical thinking. I was challenged as to my claim that the age of puberty differs markedly over time - full stop. There was no immediate reference to the circumstances 20 centuries ago, though obviously that had been mentioned on a number of occasions in a wider context. I appreciate, as I have said to Shakes, that the staright-forward scientific, historical and sociological detail does suit your argue - but that is your look-out.
But it does mean the evidence in their favour is extremely weak and if it was an event that is important in the life of Jesus that all four gospels would be expected to mention and they don't, it counts against, not for its veracity.
Not really, I can think of lots of reports of the same event, but from different forms of the media, that have elements missing depending on the audience.
Bullshit. We are not talking about an unruly child, we are talking about a child that Mary should have known was a god.
Except that, rather than merely being divine, he was human as well.
The story does not hang together. It was fabricated.
The problem is that, when one uses lit.crit. techniques on the Synoptic Gospels, they hang together surprisingly well, both individually and as a trio.