NorthOfNorth wrote on Apr 8
th, 2014 at 9:50pm:
What we do know is what (starting with Paul) evangelists have made him and that is the relevant figure... The Jesus of Christianity... The eternally good man - the personification of good, in fact. I could say in the same way as king Arthur and Sir Galahad are the personification of courage, nobility and chivalry, but I think figures central to a religion clearly occupy a higher plane in our collective psyche than mythical figures of folklore.
Something else that I find intriguing is the possibility that the Jesus of Christianity (in that he is cast as the personification of good), is how the concept parallels Plato's form of the GOOD. While Plato asserts that we may have notions of good, those notions are just pale reflections of the form of GOODNESS. Christianity, it could be said, casts Jesus incarnate as the materialised Platonic form of the GOOD.
The Platonic GOODNESS in Christianity now has a human body and mind that walks, talks and even dies. But Platonic forms cannot die, they are ideas (in the Greek sense), so he is resurrected and returns to the world of the forms (the Christian Heaven), where he becomes the co-personification of the Jewish Yahweh and the Platonic form of the GOOD.
The rest, the stories of his life, are just that... They are fillers to keep wondering minds satisfied... many of them are even carelessly defined, with little to no interest in associating them with actual history occurring around them, nor even with the facts of that history, except where convenient to do so.
Another interesting point to me is that while 1st century Palestine must have been a hellish place of eternal conflicts, The gospels has Jesus wandering around for a few years as if in the grounds of Plato's Academy, having philosophical debates with Jewish leaders as if he were a latter day Socrates. Only at the end, do we glimpse the brutality of Roman Palestine (as Socrates finally witnesses the injustice of the Athenians and also pays the ultimate price).