Sunday, July 19, 2026

No, I'm Actually Not a Norse Pagan, But Perhaps a Beardo


Ignorance in Full Display: Pete Hegseth Banning Norse Pagans
Bjorn Andreas Bull-Hansen // Bjorn Talks | 18 July 2026
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BmM_NG_iMVY


4:27 While not a Norse Pagan, I believe Odin was a real person.

Meaning the one who came to Gylfi and fooled him into believing he was a god or even one of three creator gods.

In objective favour of my position, Jackson Crawford (though he didn't refer to it) verified that the Deyr fé stanza in Havamal, which resembles Ecclesiastes closely (Praekeren in Norwegian) would have been metric even if reconstructed as Proto-Norse, around the time when Odin would have come.

I am also a bearded man whom some consider a weirdo. However, you show some ignorance of US slang, the wiktionary entry on "beardo" starts in 2006.*

So, I kind of feel a bit targetted ... indirectly.

7:41 I must say, I'm thankful that Christianity allows me to be a Critic of Science, for instance ditch Evolution (like on the scale of microbes to trees or the radicality of ape to man).

You do you of course, but one day God will call you out for not being a Geocentric and concluding He exists, turning the universe around us, like St. Paul says in Romans 1.

8:48 "it doesn't become extreme, it doesn't infringe on other people's rights"

Somewhat rich from a person who just called himself a science believer.

Between 1934 and 1977, a total of slightly less than 44,000 sterilization procedures were performed in Norway under the 1934 act.


Now, I'm citing one who claims that those who were targetted involuntarily were only c. 2000, but even 2000 is 2000 too many, in the name of science.**

10:29 "a fundamentalist attitude towards other people"

What is that supposed to mean, even?

Fundamentalism is normally used of an attitude to one's religious texts. If one has any.

But you sound as if meaning a brutal attitude against someone because he has a different religion, guess what, killing monks is pretty brutal, whether it's done by Norse Pagans or by Lutherans or Calvinists, and doing it because Gregorian is regarded as seiðr or because shaving the beard is regarded as unmanly is hardly a motivation that excludes some high degree of religious exclusivism. Perhaps this wasn't done all through the Viking age, but at least a part of it.

And a motivation involving the cutting down of Irminsul in Saxony sounds pretty much like solid Fundamentalism about Norse and Saxon hallows ...

11:36 Nah, cruel and evil are not always synonymous.

Franco was cruel, my grandpa argued, in 1975 when he died, because he used the vile garrote.***

Franco was good, my ma argued in 1984, when stopping me from joining De Molays, because he had abortion banned in Spain.

I don't see any totally irreconcilable thing between the two.

Besides, if cruel were evil, where does that leave Gudrun's revenge or Ivar Boneless' revenge and so on? I don't think St. Olaf went as far as to "rista blodsörn"




* https://en.wiktionary.org/w/index.php?title=beardo&action=history

** https://www.eurozine.com/sterilization-in-norway-a-dark-chapter/

Citing further:

Free will was the guiding principle in the act. Physical coercion was not allowed. The person in question had to apply for or consent to the procedure him or herself – if he or she were able to do so – before the sterilization could be carried out. However, the act did open up for sterilization without consent of the “insane” and of persons of “deficient mental development and/or permanently impaired mental capacity”9 , but in these cases the procedure could not be carried out without the prior written consent of the person’s legal guardian or, if the legal guardian was incompetent, a person appointed to act on his or her behalf.


Mental institutions have a way of faking consent by extortion and things ... "dat don't impressin' me much" ... and in some cases the legal guardians could be foster parents aligned with the system rather than the patient.

*** Never the cruelty of forced sterilisation, though! In Badajoz, there was a case of castrations, but that was by ill disciplined troops, not on Franco's orders (and I'm not a fan of Yagüe under whose orders it happened, at all).

In Defense of Apostolic Succession


On Apostolic Succession
Dr. Jordan B Cooper | 30 Jan. 2019
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2xRwwCswp1I


4:20 Would you agree to two things:

a) while changing Sabbath to Sunday is reflected in a hinting way in Acts, the change itself is not in any NT Book, and not in any OT book either?
b) even so, sanctifying Sunday is obliging on us, up to Doomsday?

Bc if you do, how are you not defending tradition as infallible outside the purely theoretic framework of sola scriptura?

One commenter
has gone invisible.

I

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
@Tom-q9x2v "But when assessing the gravity or degree of difficulties of such a thing, this must be, in the end, a not-infallible judgment."

It can't, due to Matthew 28:20 saying "all days".

You probably get Sola Scriptura from a comment in St Athanasius whose point was that Arius was using, not tradition, but things totally extraneous to either Bible or Tradition.

Your first difficulty with Sacred Tradition is answered.

If you read up in St Paul's three epistles to Timothy and Titus, you see bishops are being trained as guardians of tradition.

While this includes all NT as well as OT books of the Bible, some points are not directly found in it.

II

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Tom-q9x2v I'd have to ask you (or if you prefer someone else to answer, not forcing you but I take this as public debate, not a private conversation with you):

1) does Malachi 1:11 indicate Mass is a sacrifice?
2) does the citation in Hebrews of "tu es sacerdos in aeternum secundum ordinem Melchisedec" in light of Genesis 14:18 indicate it?
3) supposing Mass were not instituted as a sacrifice, where was the Church not having it in 7th C AD?

Not just the one not directly stating it, but one stating or showing for them Mass was no sacrifice, and which can otherwise be defended, from the Bible, i e nothing like Gnostics, Manichaeans, Iconoclastic Emperors of Byzantine Empire, Paulicians etc. - was there one?

Matthew 28:20 says "all days". I don't believe in Sola Scriptura, I do believe in Tota Scriptura.

For good wishes, same to you. I am not an Inquisitor.

III

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Tom-q9x2v "The Bible's Letter to the Hebrews specifically rules out this possibility."

Only if you suppose the sacrifice of the Mass to be another sacrifice and not the same as that of Calvary.

We actually consider it the same.

Two Masses are not two separate sacrifices, they are the sacrifice of Calvary made present in two times and locations often outside Palestine and often after AD 33.

IV

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@Tom-q9x2v "Sola Scriptura as found in the New Testament,"

Sola Scriptura is specifically ruled out by the New Testament and nowhere found in it.

A

Josse
@josse9867
Hans-Georg Lundahl Sola Scriptura doesn’t deny tradition, it just denies counter biblical teachings, so Sola Scriptura doesn’t conflict with the changing of sabbath

Hans-Georg Lundahl
what, @josse9867 ?

"Sola Scriptura doesn’t deny tradition, it just denies counter biblical teachings"

Well, so does Catholicism!

B

Soteriology 400
@soteriology400
@hglundahl Acts 17:10—12.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
OK, @soteriology400 ... how is that supposed to relate either way to whether the Sabbath was changed or not?

Soteriology 400
@hglundahl The point I was making, we see an example of sola scriptura, so it is not ruled out which is the comment I was responding too.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
But, @soteriology400 , we do not see an example of sola scriptura at all.

We see Jews testing the NT against the Scriptures of the OT. The NT is far beyond "the OT only" the thing we see is a verification that the pretended truth from God actually can be such, because it does not contradict Scripture.

That's how you should go about with testing Catholic claims too, by the way, seeing they contradict neither OT nor NT Scripture!

JoshVanV
@joshvanv5281
@hglundahl but the only reason one would be Protestant is to believe the Catholic Church DOES contradict scripture. This is why Martin Luther protested, not because he didn’t want to accept tradition. He simply could not with good conscience accept the practices contrary to scripture that the church was forcing him to agree with. Sola scriptura is a practical rule, because if the church can be in error, there needs to be something outside of it to norm it, and that is scripture

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@joshvanv5281 "if the church can be in error,"

For the Church Universal, can it?

Matthew 28:16—20.

What was the task Christ gave His Church and did it involve not being in error?

What was the help offered the Church, and does it involve divine omnipotence?

A justified man can, but an elect cannot finally lose salvation. Note, being justified doesn't mean you know you are elect, here on earth you usually don't. So also a partical Church can, but the Church universal cannot lose truth which is salvific for the believers.





4:54 "aren't talking about sacramental authority"

Why would they when it is for one thing clear from the Bible (words of institution say "do this" to the twelve, John 20:21-23 promises the same body the power of forgiving or withholding forgiveness on God's behalf, St Paul to St Titus or more probably St Timothy says to recall the power given through his laying on of hands), and for another thing dangerous to reveal in an as yet Pagan world?

Gustav Wasa knew very well what a bishop and a non-bishop could do, so he forced one elderly Catholic bishop to lay hands on Laurentius Petri. This doesn't mean Laurentius Petri handed on the apostolic succession, has to do with verifiable intention.

5:15 "the way it develops later"

For reasons stated. And I object very strongly to "develops later" terminology, you pronounce it as if it were later a novum.

5:30 "it comes out of this idea of"

Ideas a and b are both stated in NT Bible books.

In Fathers, idea a is stated earlier than idea b.

Of the options:

1) Fathers had reason to mention a before they had reason to mention b
2) Fathers forgot b was in the Bible books and developed b independently from a, even if it logically doesn't follow

which one makes more sense in a Church given the promise "every day" in Matthew 28:20?




6:27 Obviously, with a broken link in some place, that place will have no valid bishops, priests or sacraments beyond those that laymen can confer at least in cases of necessity without a priest, that being baptism and matrimony (if a couple otherwise having the right to marry cannot find a priest willing to marry them within two months, they would make valid marriage vows even without a priest to bless them).

You cannot have any general anguish on "what if", since the Church has made sure to avoid broken links (up to changes after Vatican II, but that is in a Protestantising anti-Church, and doesn't affect all Catholic clergy, since some rejected these changes in time, like Catholics rejected changes of Protestant Reformations even when pretending to be episcopal).




7:14 It can be added, some consider Apostles were never Baptised either.

Therefore, that the laying of hands was not how they received orders doesn't mean it is not strictly necessary after them.

The character is there for three sacraments : Baptism, Confirmation and Deaconal or Sacerdotal Ordination / Episcopal Consecration.

That this is not explicitly treated of in Bible or very early Church Fathers doesn't change that that is tradition.

7:40 You are also confusing "call" with character.

A man can be called to priesthood, but as long as not ordained, he cannot be living that call.

The call is God's preference for your life, the ordination gives power to transsubstantiate, offer sacrifice of Mass, absolve.




I think I'll break off watching here, since subtitles are automatic and clearly garbled, and resume the refutation when I have a computer with headphones and sound. Feel free to answer before that happens, should you have occasion.

Saturday, July 18, 2026

Robert Sarah is Wrong


What are the Two Apocalyptic Beasts Devouring Europe?
17.VII.2026 | Dr Taylor Marshall
https://www.youtube.com/shorts/qrciVBhhfk8


Why do I think "Cardinal" Sarah is wrong?

Because, Islam, and mainly adapted Islam (Fundies are a minority) is part of a four headed leopard, and Sarah is not adressing the three other heads.

Because gender ideology is part of Communism, which as a whole is the fourth beast of a terrible aspect.

In Africa, notably Nigeria, an openly Fundamentalist Islam is the most horrible thing for Christians, since it easily gets weapons.

In Europe, adapted Islam is more horrible, since it easily gets influence and positions from which to persecute some singled out Christians.

Another Failed Attempt at Denying Genesis 5 and 11's Obvious Chronological Implications


Is It Even Our Math? What Biblical History Tells Us About Genesis
BLK SHP Bible Talk | 17 July 2026
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfdxxeeecBM


The Bible isn't divided into things that tell plain facts and call for deeper consideration.

Each passage, not one exception, does both jobs.

Do you want to know the real theological value of Genesis 5 and 11, beyond the face value?

Luke 3:22—38
https://drbo.org/cgi-bin/d?b=drb&bk=49&ch=3&l=22-38#x


Don't miss that Jesus was 72nd from Adam.

But that doesn't take away the face. And if you want to reexamine the life spans, but still admit Jesus is 72nd from Adam, that leaves an even shorter timespan for Earth.

If you pretend Jesus was 720th or 7200th from Adam, that changes God's covenant fidelity just as radically as if Antichrist got 1260 rather than 3 1/2 solar years.

2:50 What did you just say about camels?

Rebecca also, when she saw Isaac, lighted off the camel,
[Genesis 24:64]


3:08 I'm not sure Ur Kasdim is Woolley's Ur in South East Mesopotamia.

Ur basically means "city" and you find it in Ur, Uruk, to the best of my knowledge perhaps even Nipp-ur, so why not Ur-fa ... also known as Edessa, North West Mesopotamia, modern Turkey near the Syrian border. Modern name "venerable Urfa" or in Turkish: Şanlıurfa.

I am however pretty sure Genesis 14 carbon dates to 3500 BC. This means that we have no cuneiform texts (perhaps just inscriptions like "5 geese for temple of ..." and "this belongs to so and so" perhaps not even that). Which explains why the kings in that chapter are tricky to identify. I'd say Woolley's Ur was founded when Abram was very young, like a child of seven or perhaps newborn (carbon dating to 4000 BC).

3:34 If that Amorrhite migration came in carbon dated 2200 BC to 1800 BC, that would have been during the sojourn in Egypt. And yes, the 400 years would telescope into a shorter period. The 2200 BC date is misdated by more than the 1800 BC date.

So, no, Abraham came before that migration.

However, there were Amorrhites in Canaan in an on and off city called En Geddi, or back in that day Asason Tamar. Genesis 14 is presumably when their chalcolithic occupation thereof ended. If not, that would mean the carbon date of Genesis 14 would be even further back than 3500 BC.

5:04 1950 BC is not all bad. The Roman Martyrology for Christmas Day says Christ was born 5199 after Creation, 2957 after Flood and ... 2015 after the birth of Abraham.

The problem is, 2015 BC wouldn't line up with carbon dated 2000 BC, but with carbon dated 4000 BC.

5:17 I disagree. If Ur Kasdim really was Woolley's Ur, Abram left it in a stage of build-up.

Just as at 75 / 76, Abraham arrived in an Egypt in a build-up stage. The carbon date would have been 3500 BC, but like Abraham, so also the pharao would have died decades later which would carbon date to centuries later:

1916 BC
Isaac born.
83.166 pmC, dated as 3440 BC

1897 BC
83.568 pmC, dated as 3381 BC

1881 BC
Terah died

1877 BC
83.97 pmC, dated as 3321 BC
1857 BC
84.371 pmC, dated as 3262 BC

1856 BC
Jacob and Esau born
1841 BC
Abraham died

1838 BC
84.77 pmC, dated as 3204 BC


[Creation vs. Evolution: Newer Tables, Flood to Joseph in Egypt
https://creavsevolu.blogspot.com/2024/12/newer-tables-flood-to-joseph-in-egypt.html
]

5:47 What we know as the Sumerian King List may have been totally unknown to Abraham:

The Sumerian King List (abbreviated SKL) or Chronicle of the One Monarchy is an ancient literary composition written in Sumerian that was likely created and redacted to legitimize the claims to power of various city-states and kingdoms in southern Mesopotamia during the late third and early second millennium BC.[2][3][4] It does so by repetitively listing Sumerian cities, the kings that ruled there, and the lengths of their reigns. Especially in the early part of the list, these reigns often span thousands of years. In the oldest known version, dated to the Ur III period (c. 2112 – c. 2004 BC) but probably based on Akkadian source material, the SKL reflected a more linear transition of power from Kish, the first city to receive kingship, to Akkad.


Ur III was during the sojourn in Egypt.

5:55 "this was scribal school material, popular literature in Abram's youth"

Scribes were a very restricted élite by the time we get to the king's list.

It would apart from that kind of functionary also have included monarchs, so, Egypt functioned on a similar basis, Moses had the knowledge of Egyptian scribes. However supposing such scribes even existed back when Abram was young, nothing says he would himself have been involved with them.

8:43 Yes, the SKL does have a number of pre-Flood kings corresponding to Genesis 5 minus Adam and Noah.

That's also Genesis 4 plus one king after Lamech.

12:05 So, your point is basically, if a pair of stories in the Bible are related in a literary genre sort of way, they need to have at least one unliteral?

Did Eve not listen to the serpent? Or did Mary not listen to the word of God through Gabriel?

For me, obviously both literally did so, even if that makes them a literary pair and one which Medieval theology made very famous.

16:18 Thank you for not holding to pre-Adamism.

The Catholic Church condemned it.

18:09 "Already speaking different languages."

Does not follow.

I'd say that "and their languages" is here used proleptically, and the section ends in Genesis 11:1. In order to note that this division of languages hinted at hadn't happened yet.

Then the narrative starts in Genesis 11:2 with a subject given as "masculine plural" translated as an unspecified "they" which need not refer to mankind, unlike the previous verse.

20:17 In Matthew one, at least three of four omitted kings can be seen as omitted for a reason: the three cursed generations after Athaliah.

If there is an actual parallel in Genesis 5 or 11, it would probably be:

And Arphaxad lived thirty-five years, and begot Sale
[Genesis 11:12]


Where the LXX has:

12 And Arphaxad lived a hundred and thirty-five years, and begot Cainan. 13 And Arphaxad lived after he had begotten Cainan, four hundred years, and begot sons and daughters, and died. And Cainan lived a hundred and thirty years and begot Sala; and Cainan lived after he had begotten Sala, three hundred and thirty years, and begot sons and daughters, and died.


Now see this:

It is remarkable that, notwithstanding the omission of the name of Cainan from the Hebrew text, and the consequent general rejection of him by historians, there are more traditions preserved of him than of his son Salah. "The Alexandrine Chronicle derives the Samaritans from Cainan; Eustachius Antiochenus, the Saggodians; George Syncellus, the Gaspheni; Epiphanius the Cajani. Besides the particulars already mentioned, it is said Cainan was the first after the flood who invented astronomy, and that his sons made a god of him, and worshiped his image after his death. The founding of the city of Harran in Mesopotamia is also attributed to him; which, it is pretended, is so called from a son he had of that name." – Anc. Univ. Hist., vol. i, p. 96, note.


Quoted from The Patriarchal Age: or, the History and Religion of Mankind (1854), George Smith

Sounds like a good reason to omit him, if he existed.

21:00 Babel fits into the timeline if Peleg was born 401 or 531 after the Flood.

LXX without the second Cainan, as per Roman Martyrology, or standard LXX with him.

Archaeologically, Babel is carbon dated to 9500 to 8000 BC. For c. 40 years, though it covers 51 in my tables.

Yes, Babel is in Shinar, also known as Mesopotamia. Yes, Babel is the same name as Nebuchadnezzar's city.

This is a city sharing the name of a tea party famed one:

At the Dissolution of the Monasteries by Henry VIII during the English Reformation, Boston's Dominican, Franciscan, Carmelite, and Augustinian friaries—erected during the boom years of the 13th and 14th centuries—were all expropriated.


As you can imagine, this didn't involve offering fish more than just one cups of tea. But it also isn't the same place, even. There is an Atlantic between them.

21:16 "would have shown up clearly in the historical record"

Exactly what historical record?

Btw, Göbekli Tepe does show up in a cataclysm, starting the Neolithic / Agricultural revolution.

So, on that account clearly fits the bill. But as Göbekli Tepe was pre-preserved and deciphered writing, so was Nimrod's Babel. Just like the founding of Boston's friar convents was before the printing press. And before Publick Occurrences Both Forreign and Domestick in the other Boston.

22:01 David begat Solomon.

This is the normal meaning.

22:23 No ... 1) Adam didn't cease to head the covenant people at age 130 or 230. 2) Henoch never became head of the covenant people, since he was lifted up before his father died.

But, also, 3) even if you were right, that wouldn't prolong the timeline.

22:42 130 or 230 adds up with 105 or 205, regardless of whether it ends the times before Adam fathered Seth and Seth fathered Enosh, or it ends the time of Adam's covenant responsibility and than that of Seth's covenant responsibility.

As there has always been a covenant people, there are no gaps between these.

This is where your solution fails to accomodate standard dates from archaeology.

I'm usually for the Mass of Pope St. Pius V, not that said to be of "Pope Paul VI" but I have worshipped within the latter too, and I know by heart one line in Swedish:

"genom alla tider samlar du åt dig ett folk"
"Through all ages thou gatherest to thyself a people"


Unlike Islam or Mormonism, there is no time for a people of God to lapse before another is raised, but all generations from Abel to John on Patmos are included in the line that goes up to the New Covenant, to the Catholic Church.

Therefore there cannot be any gap between the 130 / 230 and the ensuing 105 / 205 years.

23:10 They do record biological birth.

500 years old reflects the iniquity Noah had to bear, either being deprived of earlier sons or being barred for unusually long from marrying.

Jesus said the last days would look like the days of Noah and St. Paul says the last days would include evil people who forbade (presumably not all, but the righteous) to marry.

I'm 57 and going on 58. I am unmarried and think we are in the last days.

[The following two comments have disappeared]


23:59 "same time, different cities"

Sumerian ideology believed in the unity of mankind. A reaction against Babel's cataclysm. A unity under one monarch (a bit like our world is likely to sadly see for 3 1/2 years). That's why, if they couldn't deny either of two parallel dynasties, they serialised them.

Egypt did the same, which gives sufficient room for cramming regnal years of Old and Mid Kingdoms to fit my carbon dates revision.

24:06 The Sumerian list maker was lying.

Instead of admitting that Nioppur and Lagash for instance were independent of each other, they pretended one had ruled the other before the other had ruled the one.

A horrible idea to put this move into the interpretation of Genesis 5 and 11 genealogies.

[Taking a pause now, before perhaps commenting more tomorrow]


24:18 "this was simply not what the SKL was trying to do"

Speculation.

We are not sure they weren't trying to overwhelm with a huge past.

Thursday, July 16, 2026

Answering Turek, WLC, Lennox (not the author of the video, who also included Ken Ham in it)


Young Earth VS Old Earth | Christians DEBATE the Age of the Earth
True Faith | 12 July 2023
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4e6y0z2IVRU


0:54 If the speed of light hasn't changed, and the universe is very much less big*, the constant speed of light has no bearing on the Biblical chronology.

2:42 The initial creation happened before the light of day 1.

3:39 You are making the assumption trees grew, that's about as much of an unwarranted assumption as Adam having been a baby.

13:42 And if Lennox had asked Lundahl, "amanuensis Lundahl, what do you think of Galileo" ... I think I'd have answered what I should.

He was wrong.

14:21 No, the fixed earthers have not all disappeared.*

I'm still here. So is Sungenis.

Solange Herz was a bit earlier, and so was Crombette.

Pope Michael II is now, and Pope Michael I was to 2022.

* Fixed earth and universe not being all that big go together, via the "parallax" angle, which on Heliocentric views enter into a trigonometrically relevant triangle with 2AU.

Hannah Crews on Conversion


At the end she gets to an appeal to Catholics:


Why it is Difficult for Protestants to Convert to Catholicism THIS IS WHY!
Hannah Crews | 13 July 2026
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2CkwfohiEJY


13:59 Well catechised?

Exactly why I'm Young Earth Creationist and Geocentric.

They aren't all that central in and of themselves, but when you see what they connect to, they aren't optional either, i e Young Earth Creationism to Genesis 3, Genesis 3:15 to Marian dogma.

Geocentrism to proof of God visible since Adam and Eve (flagellum of the bacterium only very recently became visible to some), and to universe being limlited and an Empyrean heaven beyond, which is where Jesus went on Ascension, and so to the Eucharist and for that matter, via Distant Starlight problem the denial prejudices Young Earth Creationism.

Spidey Fallacy Two Debunks


Eric Manning's debunk on his channel Testify:


This Terrible Atheist Meme About the Gospels Must Stop
Testify | 16 July 2026
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bYULmDa_NSo


My own:


There is more to the answer than that.

When two friends of mine (well, at least one's a friend) visited NYC, I asked them to take a photo of the Daily Bugle building.

For some reason, they didn't.

Almost seems as if Daily Bugle were a made up institution ...

Meanwhile, Gospels and Acts (etc) mention the Church. Seems to have been documented in other resources too, including Josephus calling them a "tribe" ...

Real stories don't leave just imaginary institutions.

Fake stories either do that or add some bends and flourishes on existing ones. D.D.T. = Direction départementale des Territoires exists. But it never had one Edmond Fouvreaux. (Yes, I'm a fan of Signé Furax). Baker Street preexisted certain stories, but Conan Doyle invented 221B (it later became a real adress).

Fake origin stories don't explain real institutions.

Alex Yordanov
@alexyordanov6250
That's what I am saying. Spiderman has multiple comics with different narratives that don't add up , have no date consistency, have many fictional celeberty characters and places, and many accounts contradicting it's otherwise massive events, as well as being explicitly stated by the writer as fiction and coming from source specifically from fiction writing .

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@hglundahl
@alexyordanov6250 "as well as being explicitly stated by the writer as fiction"

Even if it weren't, it would have been taken as fiction by the first known audience (and the only one so far).

Alex Yordanov
@hglundahl I was just saying on top of everything. The point is that the Spiderman falacy can be used to disprove Napoleon and is nothing more than a slogan.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@alexyordanov6250 Indeed, on top of everything.

I've seen other disproofs of Napoleon, care to spell out this one?

Alex Yordanov
@hglundahl I was saying that you can use this falacy to disprove any historical event , I could simply say , well Napoleon attacked real places, but Spiderman also visited real places.

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@alexyordanov6250 True.

The difference is, the original audience of Napoleon seems to have recalled him as a real person, the original audience of Spiderman as fiction.

That difference basically means, Gospels are historic, not fictional, as to basic genre.

This test is obviously not fine enough for divine authority, but it is fine enough for historicity on a basic level.

Alex Yordanov
@hglundahl
What do you mean,, Basic level " and what do you mean,,Not fit enough for devine athourity".

Hans-Georg Lundahl
@alexyordanov6250 Basic level = not yet ruling out error or lies. Just ruling out fiction, that's impossible if everyone from the first took it as history.

Not fit enough is not what I said, I said not fine enough.

What is however fine enough is the details of the story. Both to rule out lies and honest mistake and to establish the man who claimed to be God rose.