If he existed he was a raging homo - hung out with 12 lads all day, went for meals together etc. etc
Sounds like an Astro squad
An astro of faggots
One things for sure reading about Jesus and his buddies in primary school was a lot more interesting than reading about Tara and Ben.
Donât get me started on Busy with Maths.
Jesus banished the gay from many people around Galilee.
Sounds like a pretend ira gathering in the 51
A pretend Catholic would know alright
The scene where Jesus stops to give Judah a drop of water is on now, so powerful
Judah has just saved Quintus Arrius
sorry lads its Channel 5, I am getting really into it now
Your eyes are full of hate, forty-one. Thatâs good. Hate keeps a man alive. It gives him strength.
The finest example of a self inflicted head shot I have seen on the Internet.
Tacitus was born in 56AD and wrote the passage referencing Christus and Christians in 116AD. How can that be contemporary with the life of a man who supposedly died in 33AD? Tacitus was referencing the great fire of Rome which happened in 56AD, blamed on early Christians by Nero. Most non-biased scholars conclude he was referencing what Christians believed in his reference to the crucifixion.
@ChocolateMice is correct, there is no contemporary reference to Jesus by any historian of the time, which at the very least is a bit odd.
Itâs not that surprising the Romans didnât mention Jesus (assuming he existed), as why would the record him and not the many thousands of others they executed? If he existed he most likely was executed for being a bit of a rebel or terrorist as we would call them today.
What is truly odd though is that contemporary Jewish historians didnât mention him, considering he was one of their own.
No one mentioned him⌠at all.
The oddest one not to mention him is Flavius Josephus, the great Jewish historian of the first century. He lived a mile from Nazareth and never heard of him, odd that. The Dead Sea Scrolls were written in Qumran, 12 miles from Bethlehem, no mention of him there either.
Asked and answeredâ already
Who would have guessed that you are a Roman scholar as well now
Itâs most likely there was a rebel as you called him and some historians believe that Jesus was actually Barabas - a freedom fighter or pretend Judean Peopleâs Front if you will⌠Like all such historical characters, later biographers exaggerate their actions.
Youâve yet to provide a contemporary source, mate.