It's special pleading on your part if you are suggesting that a dating error invalidates everything in the NT.
I didn't say that.
In terms of not knowing the extent of the mistakes in the bible that is true for the whole of ancient historical literature for that period unless of course you specially plead.
I agree with you, since the risks of human error and human artifice apply to all anecdotal accounts and presentations of events and people: hence the need to consider these risks.
The new testament reads in many places like slices of life.
It may well do, as do many other documents and even acknowledged fiction. For instance 'To Kill a Mockingbird' reads like a 'slice of life'.
You seem to be going in the opposite direction though that none of the NT is history. Well, that is special pleading to for reasons I've just outlined. That is why the NT as fiction is a fringe belief.
I didn't say that, and I'm not special pleading: there may well be elements in the NT that are trivially true and there may well be clear errors, as noted in this thread, but the main claims involving Jesus (such as him being dead and then not) need to be assessed so as to exclude the risks - and that is what you are avoiding like the plague.
What you have to show therefore is that the community described in the earliest parts new testament did not exist since the Gospel is already implicit and explicit in there.
No I don't - I'm simply asking how the risks of mistakes and lies in the NT have been assessed, so stop evading.
If you are not satisfied with the new testament then there must be another history which is more satisfactory and true.
There is certainly a history: but we are dealing with what the NT presents as being history.
What then is this history and when was it written? I believe you are mistaking history for an entity. The world can be without an entity but not a history i'm afraid.
No idea: remember I'm just asking
you how
you have assessed the risks of mistakes and lies in the version of history
you've signed up to.
Given all of that. The statement that everything portrayed as historical in the new testament is false is i'm afraid the Fred and Ginger of bias and your low attempt to imbue such a totality of your own tendency onto the biblical writers is laughable.
Indeed it would be laughable: but then I haven't said that, but I can spot a straw man when I see one.
I mention the Christian message because that is the call to practice and partake of precisely the same process as described historically in the New testament.
Super: but that says nothing other than your personal commitment to the NT and ignores the risk that what you have committed to may involve mistakes and lies - this should worry you greatly.