Wine Journals

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wine journals
Why didn’t many people write about Jesus when he existed and did stuff?

You’d think if you saw a dead guy walking around you might want to write about it in a journal. Or if someone turned water into wine, it should be an interesting point in your day.
The bible claims Jesus knew many writers and other important people, but none of them wrote about him, why? Did something more interesting happen to Pontious Pilate the day Jesus rose from the dead: “OMG, Mary kissed Thatius. Thatius isn’t even hot!”

First gospel written was Gospel of Mark (written after 70 AD, and it was some 40+ years after the “crucifixion”). Mark was not an eye-witness. According to Eusebius who wrote that Papias claimed to hear things from non-written oral tradition that Mark was interpreter of Peter – and therefore, Mark heard from Peter. Who was Peter? So, the myth of Jesus was based on 4th or 5th hand account of people claiming to hear from people, etc.

But when we refer to those contemporaries of Jesus (those living at the same time as Jesus), we find that their writings did not mention a “living” Jesus nor his works nor his sayings. The most damning evidence came from Paul: Paul never mentioned a Jesus who worked miracles, his works, his sayings, his teaching. Instead, Paul referred to “Christ as according to the scriptures” when the gospels were not in existence, yet. Philo (25 BC – 47 AD) in all his 850,000 words on god did not mention Jesus in his 30+ manuscripts. Instead, Philo was trying to fuse and harmonize Hebrew god with Greek Logos, and expounded ‘Word’ as the concealed wisdom, in which christology writers later adopted as in John 1:1 in the beginning was the word, and the word was with god, and the word was god. **That was how christology fused Jesus as the WORD.

Do we have other evidence for existence of Jesus? No! Not in Roman historical records nor in Hebrew Rabbinic records. Instead, there were attempts of forgeries by Christians – forged into Josephus texts and into Tacitus’ words (altering chrestianos into christianos [giving appearance that christianos, or christians, was being mentioned]). These forgeries could only mean one thing: in the absence of evidence for Jesus, Christians desperately forged documents to fabricate evidence for Jesus.

STARTING A WINE JOURNAL

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