You what?
It's not funny that we have places where great weight is placed on eye-witness testimony, it's tragic. It's not even vaguely contentious that eye-witness testimony is terribly unreliable.
Rome.....Now that WAS a vested interest
Right... that doesn't actually even begin to address the point that I made.
People don't commit to a dead man, they have to believe he is still around in living spiritual form. I would have thought.
If he's only around in spiritual form - assuming that's a valid assumption in the first place - the presumably they very much are committing to a dead man.
And your literary qualifications stretch further than ''I know what I like.''?
Your literary qualifications need to stretch as far as being able to read - it's readily apparent that the two characters are different to anyone that reads it. If it wasn't widely reported that they were supposed to be the same person you'd assume that they were entirely separate claims.
What's wrong with that? (god depicted as a nurturing Earth-mother type with a beard)
Intrinsically, nothing. As part of a claim of a continuous line from the previous depiction of a fragile hatemonger, it represents a massive attack on the suspension of disbelief required to buy into the story.
Er Human History? everyday experience?
Human history is a gradual progression from primitive to more advanced, from savage to increasingly restrained, and from prone to the violent predations of life to exerting more control. History, to date, is the story of the rise of man, not the fall. Which is not to avoid pointing out that the 'fall of man' referenced was the specifics of the allegation of Adam and Eve and the forbidden fruit nonsense.
That's extreme...
Really? You have any number of 'divine' entities of varying power: father, Jesus, holy spirit, angels of varying degrees, Lucifer, other fallen angels, arguably saints... how does that constitute a 'monotheism'?
...are you a jesus Myther too?
Do I think there was actually someone upon which the whole 'son of god' story is hung? Far more well-read scholars than I are of the general opinion that there was probably a real life figure upon whom the stories are based.
Do I buy the whole 'divine magician resurrected from the dead' bit? No, not even slightly. At best I think there may have been a pacifist preacher of some sort, but I'm not even confident of putting any weight in classifying his output, given that we have so few accounts of what it might have been, and those are hopelessly unreliable by this point.
O.