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Old 06-19-2008, 10:12 AM   #21
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Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post

We love Occam's Razor. With it, we don't have to prove where every last word came from, but only point to the best and most probable explanation.
That is your mantra, you don't have to prove anything.

However, whenever another person makes a statement that contradicts you, all of a sudden you want proof.

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Originally Posted by FatomFFI View Post
The best and most probable explanation according to all the evidence is that Christus is Jesus, and Tacitus used Roman historical and imperial records to write about Christus in his Annals.
I think I can use Occam's Razor, too.

You position is probably wrong, that is the best and most probable explanation.

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Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
There is no evidence at all to contest this. Are you aware that the Tacitus record is the best non-religious record of Jesus there is? No one has ever been able to refute this record ever. The best on the planet have tried, and they all failed.
No Christian writer used Tacitus Annals 15.44.

I will use Occams razor on you.

The best and most probable explanation is that you are wrong about Tacitus Annals 15.44.

In Ozzam's Razor we don't have to prove where every last word came from.
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Old 06-19-2008, 10:19 AM   #22
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Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post
Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post

We love Occam's Razor. With it, we don't have to prove where every last word came from, but only point to the best and most probable explanation.
That is your mantra, you don't have to prove anything.

However, whenever another person makes a statement that contradicts you, all of a sudden you want proof.



I think I can use Occam's Razor, too.

You position is probably wrong, that is the best and most probable explanation.

Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
There is no evidence at all to contest this. Are you aware that the Tacitus record is the best non-religious record of Jesus there is? No one has ever been able to refute this record ever. The best on the planet have tried, and they all failed.
No Christian writer used Tacitus Annals 15.44.

I will use Occams razor on you.

The best and most probable explanation is that you are wrong about Tacitus Annals 15.44.

In Ozzam's Razor we don't have to prove where every last word came from.
Firstly, you made no statements that contradicted anything I have said.

Secondly, you have not used reason or rationality to demonstrate that I am "probably wrong." (That is part of using Occam's Razor btw)

Thirdly, you have not demonstrated why any Christian writer would need Tacitus for anything, and it's also an argument from silence.

Fourthly, you lost this debate before it ever started, and not because of me, but because of yourself.
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Old 06-19-2008, 10:21 AM   #23
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Originally Posted by aa5874 View Post


What is this?

I am having great difficulty following you. What really are you implying here.

You must mean it is very difficult to follow Eusebius, Origen, Tertullian, Irenaeus, Justin Martyr and the anonymous writers of the NT.

I have difficulty following them, I don't pretend.
You wouldn't have such difficulty if you actually studied history. I mean dude, if you are going to argue about this stuff, at least study it.

To anyone who has read this, they will know that you don't have the education. All I am trying to encourage you to do is take some times to actually study this. The books are all online for free.

Educate yourself. Knowledge is power.

I am an agnostic, with a slant towards atheism. But I don't let my anti-religious views get in the way of reason and rationality. That's just wrong.
Now, you are trying to derail the thread.

MR. EDUCATOR, We are dealing with Tacitus' Annals 15.44 and Christus.

Tell me how old was Christus when he died and who was his mother, MR EDUCATOR?
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Old 06-19-2008, 10:23 AM   #24
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MR. EDUCATOR, We are dealing with Tacitus' Annals 15.44 and Christus.

Tell me how old was Christus when he died and who was his mother, MR EDUCATOR?
Who cares how old he was or who his mother was? How does that change anything?
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Old 06-19-2008, 03:36 PM   #25
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Greetings,

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Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
Firstly, Jesus, son of Joseph for a Roman reference regarding a Jew? The Jews do that for themselves, but the Romans wouldn't do that much for the Jews.
Really?
All of the evidence is that the Romans DID use such a naming system - for Jews and others.

Are are actually claiming that the Romans named Jews differently than their usual naming systems?
Can you provide some evidence for that claim please?
And a few examples please?
And a historian who agrees with this claim please?


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Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
The Romans would not have respected Jesus enough to care who his father was.
Respect? It's nothing to do with respect.
It's how the Romans actually named people - we SEE them name people "X, son of Y" in many many cases (along with some other forms such as "X of (place) Z".)
Can you provide any evidence that Romans dropped the name of the father of people they didn't respect?
Can you provide a few examples please?
Can you cite some historians who agree with this claim?


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Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
As far as they would have been concerned, they would be crucifying somebody named Christ, and one Jew was as good as another. They probably didn't even know his name was Jesus, only that the record stated that Pilate crucified someone who was called the Christ.
But Christ means "anointed", chosen, or by extention - "the Messiah".

Do you really believe there were Romans records which referred to crucifying the Messiah?
"Calends April, Tiberius 16 - crucified the Messiah".
You really believe that Roman records named someone they didn't respect "The Messiah"?

It is obvious that Roman records could not possibly have referred to crucifying the Messiah.

Thus it is quite clear that Tacitus did not get this from any Roman records.



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Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
Secondly, its quite possible that Pilate had other titles other than just the ones listed in the Gospel.
Posible?
That's all you've got?
Now whose hand-waving the evidence away.

Did Pilate have both titles Prefect and Procurator?
No.
Did Tacitus get it wrong?
Yes.
Would Roman records get it wrong?
No.

Thus it is quite clear that Tacitus did not get this from Roman records.


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
What most of those who try to claim Tacitus as being meaningless do is assert that the following statement means something:
No-one here said Tacitus is meaningless.
Please stop with the straw-men.


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Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
Only the desperate make such statements as shown above, because if the statement above was rational, then we could examine every book ever written, find one single paragraph we don't like, and say it can't be true because the author didn't list his source for that one paragraph.
But yet you are now doing exactly the same, but in the opposite direction - you are now arguing that because Tacitus sourced SOME of his claims from Roman records, that means EVERY statement in Tacitus came from Roman records records.


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
The real question that needs to be asked and answered is this:
"Did Tacitus source ancient Roman historical records and imperial records for his Book, Annals?'"
No it isn't.
Did you think we wouldn't notice you moving the goal-posts?
Your claim was that you can DEMONSTRATE that the Tacitus passage about Jesus came from Roman records.

Showing that Tacitus used Roman records for SOME of his book does NOT demonstrate that Tacitus used Roman records for the Jesus passage.

Do you think it does?


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
Right off the bat, in the very first paragraph, Tacitus tells you the reason he is writing this Roman history book called Annals. He says clearly that the history of many of the emperors used terror to falsify their own history, and then after those emperors died, other history was written by those who hated the dead emperors. Tacitus is telling us that there were some historical records that were falsified, and then tells us he's going to tell us the facts, and do it with no bitterness or partiality.
Are you claiming that this proves that EVERY SINGLE statement in Tacitus comes from Roman records?
Because it most certainly does not - a historican claiming his work is accurate proves nothing.


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Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
Therefore, we can reasonably expect that his Annals will, at least for the most part,
Ah - for the "most part".
So, you agree that not all of Tacitus can be considered accurate?


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
reflect an accounting of history written by a man who has nothing better to do then correct history with a few facts.
As if Tacitus writes only accurate facts, 100% of the time.
As if Tacitus has only "facts" in it.
In fact Tacitus is no more perfect than any other ancient work. yet you seem to be claiming it is 100% accurate facts (while also admitting it's only for the "most part".)


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
Above, we have Tacitus quoting historian Caius Plinius regarding the German wars; we have him expressing his knowledge of conflicting reports of the historians; we have him accessing the daily Roman register; and we have him blatantly telling us he followed the narratives of the best Roman historians.
Do we know Tacitus used various written sources?
Yes
Does that prove he never ever used hearsay?
No.
Do you believe it does ?


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
Both the quotes above have Tacitus accessing the Roman Imperial records right around the crucifixion paragraph in the book on Nero.
So, we now have no doubts that Tacitus sourced his Annals from official records.
Did Tacitus use official records for some of his information?
Yes.
Does this prove he never ever used hearsay?
No.
Do you think it does ?


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
That has been conclusive.
Um, conslusive of what?
That Tacitus SOMETIMES used official records for his sources?
So what?

Your argument seems to be this :
* Tacitus apparently uses official sources for some statements
* Therefore, Tacitus NEVER ever used hearsay

It's the old all-or-nothing canard.

But it's obviously a false argument.
Tacitus wrote a large book covering many people and events. It is simply nonsense to claim everthing in it came from official sources just because some other things in the book apparently did.


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
However, the naysayers will still continue to insist that Tacitus likely used hearsay for the crucifixion paragraph.
Of course they, and I, will.
Because that's what the evidence points to (but not proves.)

Does Tacitus indicate the T.F. is from official sources?
No.
Does Tacitus use the usual name form that Roman records would have used?
No.
Does Tacitus get Pilate's title right for his times?
No.
Would Roman records get Pilate's title wrong?
No.

You claimed you could DEMONSTRATE that the T.F. was based on Roman records.

But you have conspicuously failed to do so.
Firstly -
you have failed to show any direct connection between the T.F. and any alleged records
Secondly -
you dismissed the issues with Pilate's title and Jesus' name which argue against it coming from Roman records

Your ENTIRE argument amounts to :
* Tacitus apparently uses official sources for some statements
* Therefore, Tacitus never ever used hearsay for anything in his book
* Therefore, the T.F. is from Roman records.

Do you really stand by the claim that every single thing in Tacitus is supported by Roman records?


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
To counter that, we get the information right from the horses mouth of Tacitus himself, and he'll tell you what he thinks of "hearsay:"
Yes, he refers to putting down hearsay about a particular story.
So what?
Are you claiming that this proves he never ever used hearsay, not once?

Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
Tacitus clearly shows his disdain for hearsay in the story he's refuting, and opts to not use it in favor of genuine history.
Yes, when he knows the genuine history of a story, he refutes the hear-say.
Do you claim that means he knew the genuine history of every story in the book?


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Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
We can clearly see Tacitus did not like hearsay, but preferred genuine history,
Yes, if he actually HAD the genuine history, along with the common hearsay - THEN he preferred the history.
Do you claim that means he DID HAVE the genuine history for EVERY story (including the crucifixion) ?


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
therefore we have no reason to think he's used "hearsay" for the crucifixion passage, and instead used official records.
In fact we have several reasons :
* he cites no records
* he gets Pilate's title wrong
* he gets Jesus' name wrong


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
Besides, Tacitus tells us the Christian beliefs are nothing but superstitions, and it would be quite unbecoming for an elite historian like him to use Christian hearsay superstition about their idea of the death of Jesus, which included his supposed resurrection.
He didn't support any Christian superstition, (and he most certainly did not say anything about the resurrection) - quite the opposite - he ridicules them and shows Roman power putting down a religious upstart - just the sort of thing that suited his book and quite becoming to a historian currying favour with the Romans.


Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
The Christians were still a Jewish sect back then, and I can't see Tacitus ever using Christian superstitions in his prized Annals.
What nonsense.
The story of Jesus being crucified is not a superstition.

It's just the thing the Romans would like to hear - a religious upstart being put down by Roman power.
It's just what Tacitus would like to put in his book - a tale of Roman power triumphing over some religious crazy.
It's just the sort of story a Jew would like to tell and hear - a new religious threat being trampled.

Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
He'd be laughed out of Rome.
In fact the exact opposite is true -
The story of Roman power triumphing over a Jewish religious upstart is exactly what we would expect in Tacitus.

In short -
you failed to demonstrate that Tacitus used Roman records for the T.F.


(All you managed to show is that he apparently used records for some other issues, and that he put down hearsay on another issue.)


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Old 06-19-2008, 04:32 PM   #26
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Originally Posted by aa5874
No Christian writer used Tacitus Annals 15.44.
You just can't see it, can you! No one, NO ONE, thought Jesus was a fiction at the time, therefore NO ONE felt any necessity of proving his existence. The fact that you think Jesus was a fiction is completely irrelevant to what the ancients thought. And please don't bring up the Jesus-as-apparition argument that Jesus was a fiction. As far as the Gnostics were concerned, that "apparition" was never a fiction and could not have been under any circumstances because their beliefs required his "appearance" in history.

Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
Tell me how old was Christus when he died and who was his mother, MR EDUCATOR?
LOL. You've used this before. Please try to find a context in which it would matter!

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Originally Posted by aa5874
Team FFI has been destroyed.
And I thought vaudeville was dead.
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Old 06-19-2008, 05:16 PM   #27
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And how did I know enough that your response would demonstrate the lack of rationality that I implied when I asked you how serious you could be?

Let me demonstrate to you how your rebuttal falls apart, rationally.

1. You have NO evidence of your claims that the Romans would mark Jewish grave sites in the manner you've described. Therefore, your assertion is meaningless.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Iasion
Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI
As far as they would have been concerned, they would be crucifying somebody named Christ, and one Jew was as good as another. They probably didn't even know his name was Jesus, only that the record stated that Pilate crucified someone who was called the Christ.
But Christ means "anointed", chosen, or by extention - "the Messiah".

Do you really believe there were Romans records which referred to crucifying the Messiah?
"Calends April, Tiberius 16 - crucified the Messiah".
You really believe that Roman records named someone they didn't respect "The Messiah"?

It is obvious that Roman records could not possibly have referred to crucifying the Messiah.

Thus it is quite clear that Tacitus did not get this from any Roman records.
Correction: All "Christ" means is "annointed." It was translated from the Hebrew Maš�*aḥ. Here is the full understanding:

Quote:
The term Christ appears in English and most European languages, owing to the Greek usage of khristos in the New Testament as a description for Jesus. In the Septuagint version of the Hebrew Bible, it was used to translate into Greek the Hebrew mashiach (messiah), meaning "[one who is] anointed".

Khristos in classical Greek usage could mean covered in oil, and is thus a literal translation of messiah. The Greek term is thought to derive from the Proto-Indo-European root of *ghrei- ("to rub"), which in Germanic languages, such as English, mutated into gris- and grim-. Hence the English words grisly, grim, grime, gizm and grease, are thought to be cognate with Christ, though these terms came to have a negative connotation, where the Greek word had a positive connotation. In French the Greek term mutated first to creŝme and then to crème, due to the loss of certain 's' usages in French, which was loaned into English as cream.

The word was used by extension in Hellenic and Jewish contexts to refer to the office, role or status of the person, not to their actually being an oily person, as a strict reading of the etymology might imply. Indian ghee, from Sanskrit ghṛtə घृत ("sprinkled") is another obvious cognate, and indeed, has a sacred role in Vedic and modern Hindu libation and anointment rituals.
Therefore, the way the Romans understood the meaning of the word "Christ" was considerably different than that of the Jews in that the Jews regarded a person of religious authority to be the Messiah, but the Romans held to no such view. A Jewish Messiah was meaningless to the Romans, as was the word "Christ," for it had no religious significance to the Romans whatsoever.

All they understood that word to mean was "one covered in oil," just like the Hindus. The term "Messiah" is Hebrew, and it's meaning is clearly in regards to a promised anointed savior. But not so to the Romans or the Hindus.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Iasion
Posible?
That's all you've got?
Now whose hand-waving the evidence away.

Did Pilate have both titles Prefect and Procurator?
No.
Did Tacitus get it wrong?
Yes.
Would Roman records get it wrong?
No.

Thus it is quite clear that Tacitus did not get this from Roman records.
Are you even aware that the titles of Prefect and Procurator are identical in meaning? They connote no difference in rank or function whatsoever. They are interchangeable and referring to someone with either title would be correct on both counts. The procurators' and prefects' primary functions were military, but as representatives of the empire they were responsible for the collection of imperial taxes.

Contemporary archaeological finds and documents such as the Pilate Inscription from Caesarea attest to the governor's more accurate official title only for the period of 6 AD through 44 AD as being prefect.

However, after Herod Agrippa's death in 44 AD, when Judea reverted to direct Roman rule, the governors of Judea were given the title of procurator, which became the standard title to refer to those governors.

Therefore, the history shows that the titles of "prefect" were changed to "procurator" after the death of Agrippa in 44 AD, and that is precisely why you see Tacitus regarding Pilate as a Procurator instead of a Prefect, because in AD 110 when Tacitus wrote his Annals, the Roman title for a governor of Judea was "Procurator."

And now you know. Isn't history beautiful?

I have read the rest of your arguments and seen that it refutes absolutely nothing I have said. All your responses are speculative at best, and offer no contradictory evidence.

So is there any sense in wasting any time in replying to a whole lot of nothing? :huh:

One other thing ...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Iasion
In short -
you failed to demonstrate that Tacitus used Roman records for the T.F.


(All you managed to show is that he apparently used records for some other issues, and that he put down hearsay on another issue.)


Iasion
You're right, I have absolutely failed to demonstrate that Tacitus used Roman records for the Testimonium Flavium.

How the hell could I forget that?

:Cheeky:
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Old 06-19-2008, 05:42 PM   #28
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Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post

So is there any sense in wasting any time in replying to a whole lot of nothing? :huh:

One other thing ...

Quote:
Originally Posted by Iasion
In short -
you failed to demonstrate that Tacitus used Roman records for the T.F.


(All you managed to show is that he apparently used records for some other issues, and that he put down hearsay on another issue.)


Iasion
You're right, I have absolutely failed to demonstrate that Tacitus used Roman records for the Testimonium Flavium.

How the hell could I forget that?

:Cheeky:
what a cop-out!
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Old 06-19-2008, 05:50 PM   #29
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 2-J
Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI

So is there any sense in wasting any time in replying to a whole lot of nothing? :huh:

One other thing ...



You're right, I have absolutely failed to demonstrate that Tacitus used Roman records for the Testimonium Flavium.

How the hell could I forget that?

:Cheeky:
what a cop-out!
Show me one single relevant question that required a reply? All the rest of his replies only demonstrate he personally doesn't agree with the evidence, and he offers nothing new to refute the evidence.

Should I just post the same evidence all over again? If it didn't make any difference the first time, then why do it again? Just to watch him say he doesn't personally agree with it again? What's the point?

All I did was post a case for Tacitus that he used official Roman records to source his Annals, and post that he preferred not to use hearsay in preference to genuine history. Nobody can refute that that evidence exists. What the evidence does is substantiate the argument that Tacitus used official records regarding Christus. The idea was not to prove anything conclusively, but for all rational minds to come to the best conclusion based upon the evidence presented.

He has shown no evidence to refute what was posted, but mostly asserts other possibilities with no supporting evidence. So what is there to debate about? He's posted nothing but empty possibilities, and anybody can do that. If he wants a debate, post evidence, not empty words.

He hasn't provided an argument against the evidence that's worthy of debate for the simple reason that he hasn't introduced any evidence to argue the actual textual evidence I posted.

He's obviously gung-ho on absolutely not accepting Tacitus under any circumstances. Therefore, all rationality and reason do not exist with him. After all, he asserts that I have I made the following claims when I have done no such thing:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Iaison
Quote:
Originally Posted by FathomFFI
The Christians were still a Jewish sect back then, and I can't see Tacitus ever using Christian superstitions in his prized Annals
.
What nonsense. The story of Jesus being crucified is not a superstition.

Do you claim that means he knew the genuine history of every story in the book?

Are you claiming that this proves he never ever used hearsay, not once?

Do you really stand by the claim that every single thing in Tacitus is supported by Roman records?
I don't wish to engage with anyone who resorts to such immature tactics as demonstrated above. It is dishonest and intolerable, and not worth the effort of even typing out "Where did I say that?" to each and every one of these statements of his.

And guess what? I can live with that.
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Old 06-20-2008, 11:05 AM   #30
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Originally Posted by FathomFFI View Post
The best and most probable explanation according to all the evidence is that Christus is Jesus, and Tacitus used Roman historical and imperial records to write about Christus in his Annals.

There is no evidence at all to contest this. Are you aware that the Tacitus record is the best non-religious record of Jesus there is? No one has ever been able to refute this record ever. The best on the planet have tried, and they all failed.

And so did you.
Your obviously right team FathomFFI, both Pliny and Tacitus must have both had access to Roman records regarding Jesus Christ because they both agree that Christianity is a superstition. The Romans never called religious beliefs superstitions unless they had irrefutable evidence that it was false.

There were probably documents in Roman records that absolutely proved that Jesus of Nazareth, and his crucifixion were just a fictions. They probably investigated it and they had the census records showing that Joseph, Mary, Jesus and the 12 apostles never existed; they had the execution records that showed that no Jesus Christ was ever executed; they had records that there was no Nazareth, and that Bethlehem was abandoned at the time that Jesus was supposedly born; and there was no murder of the innocent babies and no rumors of miracles by anyone in Judea at the time; they probably had sworn statements by Mark that his gospel was just a fictional stories and statements by Paul that his epistles were just a hoax.

Tacitus says:

"Christus, the founder of the name, had undergone the death penalty in the reign of Tiberius, by sentence of the procurator Pontius Pilate, and the pernicious superstition was checked for a moment, only to break out once more, not merely in Judea, the home of the disease, but in the capital itself, where all things horrible or shameful in the world collect and find a vogue."

Tacitus' irrefutable testimony from Roman records is that it is a mischievous superstition that "Christus, the founder of the name, had undergone the death penalty in the reign of Tiberius, by sentence of the procurator Pontius Pilate". Thanks for establishing irrefutably that Christianity is just an ignorant superstitious fiction.
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