I tend to agree. I would take it a step further and suggest the Gospels, as evidence:SteelHead wrote:honorentheos wrote:I tend to go along with those who accept the available evidence as sufficient for there to have been a historical Jesus on whose life the Christian narratives have been built. Not being even remotely versed in historiography, the idea that common methodologies for piecing together ancient history allow what evidence is available for the historic Jesus to be considered reasonable is enough for me to accept it as such without any real concern. I'm not particularly invested in seeing Jesus the person relegated to myth any more than I am concerned in pin-pointing exactly how the Book of Mormon was composed. It would be nice to see both nailed down indisputably, of course, but the tangential evidence regarding Jesus' life and divinity mythology being a human construct in the first case and the Book of Mormon being a construct of the 19th century in the second are more compelling. And thus more interesting to me as topics.
So, I don't think requiring primary source documents to establish the plausible existence of a historical Jesus is necessary, neither for proper use of the methodologies of historic investigation nor to engage Christianity as a religion from a critical position.
ETA: Regarding the evidence, I had linked previously to a discussion between Kishkuman and Aristotle Smith where both discussed method and then evidence which is a pretty nice way to approach the question. It interested me that they both agreed the writings of Paul met a minimum criteria to establish that there was a historic person of some nature behind the narratives (in Kish's case apparently, perhaps barely so). While the quibbling over Josephus was interesting, to my mind it didn't affect the outcome substantially.
I think there is sufficient evidence to make Jesus as a real person plausible, but that the gospels fall far shy of being a historical narrative of his life. They are embellished mythology with the aim of promoting a nascent theology.
a) undermine the Christian narrative in that they demonstrate willful manipulation of facts in an attempt to promote Jesus as Christ and what that means
b) contain contradictory stories that demonstrate how wildly varied the mythology was that was being developed and passed around and, more importantly, specifically intended to prove something about Jesus that the audience would recognize as meaningful.
c) that the varied Gospels illustrate the Christ myth was evolving over time and geography, and being fleshed out into a more complex theology with time.
Tack on the manipulations of the Roman church apparent in the text, the canonized pseudepigrapha with its own contradictory issues, the New Testament's role in spreading anti-Semitism, etc, etc, and I'd say the plausibility that there likely was a historical Jesus is not really giving anything away.