Xamonas Chegwé wrote:
There is every reason to doubt the testimony of a 2000 year old text for which I have no independent proof. Especially when you consider that it forms part of a notoriously historically inaccurate and self-contradictory larger work.
This statement is so irrational. First, there are thousands of ancient Greek manuscripts that contain portions of the Pauline epistles. Have you ever read the United Bible Societies 3rd edition Greek text and looked at the critical apparatus contained therein? It explains very clearly the evidentiary basis for the general scholastic position regarding the content of the Pauline epistles. It's historical evidence. Take a little time and see the wealth of information that has been accumulated.
Second, the idea that the Pauline epistles are are less credible because they have been bound together along with other writings by men a few centuries later is risible. When written, Paul's epistles were not part of "the bible." The fact that a couple of hundred years later a religious/political council decided to call them "scripture" has no effect whatsoever on their intrinsic historical value. If a group of men decided to tack Einstein's Theory of General Relativity onto the end of the bible, would that make the theory less credible?
Xamonas Chegwé wrote: The fact that a group of the epistles are in the same hand may simply be down to the fact that they were rewritten by the same scribe to suit some later holy man's religio-political ends.
It is simply too far in the past to know for certain that they were written by the claimed author. And it is certainly too far in the past to confirm any of the facts in them.
In history, you go with the available evidence. There is an eyewitness account and no contrary evidence. In a legal case, that would be grounds for summary judgment. We cannot be certain, that is true. But we can arrive at a conclusion base upon a preponderance of the evidence. Historians and juries make assessments based upon what is available.
Xamonas Chegwé wrote: Why not take the Iliad as a faithful account of the fall of Troy? Or the Baghavad Gita as an accurate account of Kurukshetra War? Or the (relatively) much more recent Qu'ran as an accurate account of the conversations between Mohammed and god?
Homer (whoever he was or wasn't) did not claim to be a contemporary of the Trojan War. You tell me whether the Baghavad Gita' author claimed to be an eyewitness. If he did, that is some evidence. Regarding the Qu'ran, any statements by Mohammed about factual issues would be entitled to historical value. Subjective encounters with the divine are just that - subjective. I am not citing Paul for information about his subjective experiences. I am only interested in the evidence he gives about the historical Jesus.
There is simply no reason to trust anything about the writings in the bible. They were written, edited and selectively collated by firm believers many years after the events which they claim to describe.[/quote]