Talk:Christ myth theory/Sources
Appearance
This is a list of the sources for Christ myth theory, any relevant qualifications, positions held, and publications.
Comtemporary
- G.A. Wells (born 1926)
- Education: Degrees in German, philosophy, and natural science. Phd, specialization unknown.
- Position: Professor emeritus of German, Birkbeck College, London
- Relevant specialization:
- Relevant publications:
- The Jesus of the Early Christians (Pemberton 1971);
- Did Jesus exist? (Prometheus Books 1987);
- The Jesus Myth (Open Court 1998);
- Religious Postures: Essays on Modern Christian Apologists and Religious Problems (Open Court 1988);
- The Historical Evidence for Jesus (Prometheus 1988);
- Who Was Jesus?: A Critique of the New Testament Record (Open Court 1989);
- The Jesus Legend (Open Court 1996);
- Can We Trust the New Testament? (Open Court 2003);
- Belief and Make-Believe (Open Court 2003);
- Cutting Jesus Down to Size (Open Court 2009).
- Basic position: Casts doubt that there is contemporaneous evidence of Jesus's existence.
- Views of others: Graham Stanton regards Well's arguments as the most sophisticated of the Christ myth theorists, though he rejects them. Michael Martin argues that Wells's arguments are sound though controversial.
- Michael Martin (born 1932)
- Education: Phd in philosophy from Harvard University
- Position: Professor emeritus of philosophy, Boston University
- Relevant specialization: philosophy of religion
- Relevant publications:
- Atheism: A Philosophical Justification (Temple University Press 1989);
- The Case Against Christianity (Temple University Press 1991);
- Atheism, Morality, and Meaning (Prometheus 2002);
- The Impossibility of God (ed, Prometheus 2003);
- The Improbability of God (ed, Prometheus 2006);
- The Cambridge Companion to Atheism (ed, Cambridge University Press 2006).
- Basic position: Argues that a strong prima facie challenge can be made to the argument for Jesus's existence, though he acknowledges it as a minority position; argues that the position of G.A. Wells is solid.
- Views of others:
- Graham Stanton (1940-2009)
- Education: Bachelor of Divinity and MA, University of Otago; PhD Westminster College, Cambridge, a theological college of the United Reformed Church
- Position: Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge
- Relevant specialization: New Testament; Gospels, particularly Matthew's
- Relevant publications:
- Jesus of Nazareth in New Testament Preaching (Cambridge University Press 1974)
- The Gospels and Jesus'' (Oxford University Press 1989)
- Gospel for a New People: Studies in Matthew (T. & T. Clark Publishers 1992)
- Gospel Truth? New Light on Jesus and the Gospels (Zondervan 1997)
- Jesus and Gospel (Cambridge University Press 2004)
- Basic position: Today nearly all historians accept that Jesus existed and that the gospels contain valuable evidence about him
- Views of others:
- Education: BA Hope College, MDiv Western Theological Seminary, PhD in New Testament, Union Theological Seminary [1]
- Position: Professor of New Testament Studies, Western Theological Seminary
- Relevant specialization: New Testament
- Relevant publications:
- Jesus Outside the New Testament (Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing 2000)
- Reading the New Testament Today (2004)
- The Jesus Legend: A Case for the Historical Reliability of the Synoptic Jesus Tradition (co-author, 2007)
- Basic position: Argues that even G. A. Wells no longer subscribes to the Christ myth theory.
- Views of others: