Arguing with minors is a waste of time, IMHO.
Especially when they know more than you do!

Arguing with minors is a waste of time, IMHO.
There you go again. I didn’t say they would drop. I questioned the idea that they would be any better in places like Galilee than they were in Judea 600 years earlier.Right, not as Helkenized as Jerusalem or Alexandria. But even in Galilee Hellenism made some modest inroads.
The atheist New Testament scholar Bart Ehrman wrote that after centuries of expansion of Greek cultural expansion into Palestine/Israel it is very possible Jesus might have been able to read a little Greek.
Not all of the apostles and evangelists were from Galilee, Paul and Luke are two I can think of off the top of my head.
The New Testament records that Jesus family made routine trips to Jerusalem, and during his ministry he and his followers made trips to Sidon and Tyre, so these people obviously weren't just stuck in Galilee.
My logical inference is that after centuries of Greek civilization and culture penetrating the Near East and the biblical lands of Israel, literacy rates would not have dropped from the First Temple period back in 600 BC.
The burden of proof is on you too. How do you logically infer that literacy would drop after centuries of inroads by Greek civilization end culture? Other than just guessing, how do you logically infer that?
If literacy stayed the same, then your agreeing with the study I posted that literacy rates in Judah were substantially higher than the one to three percent literacy rate that had been making the rounds.There you go again. I didn’t say they would drop. I questioned the idea that they would be any better in places like Galilee than they were in Judea 600 years earlier.
One last time. Galilee is not in Judah.If literacy stayed the same, then your agreeing with the study I posted that literacy rates in Judah were substantially higher than the one to three percent literacy rate that had been making the rounds.
I don't see you making a case for anything. Your just posting complaints about what I write.
History records that Hellenization was a great period of the expansion and flowering of Greek civilization, Greek culture, Greek intellectual traditions. The historical context gives me reason to believe literacy and intellectual life flowered during Hellenization.
Paul and Matthew in particular seem to be generally aware of Greek Platonic and Stoic thought.
Luke and Paul weren't even from Galilee.
If your just going to guess that literacy stayed the same, or even if it got worse, it would be nice if you have a chain of logical inferences to believe that, rather than just guessing.
Three of the most important authors in the New Testament weren't even from Galilee, so I can't believe I let myself get trapped in some banter about literacy rates in Galilee.Your mental gymnastics are astounding.
It's very possible they were anonymous. But that line of thinking requires one to believe the Bishops from the second century were lying.The fact still remains, one that you try to divert from, is that the gospels are anonymous and the names associated with them didn’t come along until the late 2nd century.
Three of the most important authors in the New Testament weren't even from Galilee, so I can't believe I let myself get trapped in some banter about literacy rates in Galilee.
Paul was from a Roman province in modern day Turkey,
But that line of thinking requires one to believe the Bishops from the second century were lying.
You avoided the question, Festus. Does it make you uncomfortable?
One last time. Galilee is not in Judah.
Luke, Mark, John, Matthew and Paul never knew Jesus, saw Jesus, talked with Jesus, heard Jesus. The names associated with the 4 gospels didn’t come along until about 180 CE.
Quit diverting
I might be the only poster on this thread acknowledging the validity of views other than my own.It bothers you greatly when someone disagrees with you!
It's very possible (the New Testament authors) were anonymous.
I cannot categorically rule (atheism) out.
I might be the only poster on this thread acknowledging the validity of views other than my own.
I have yet to see an atheist make a clear statement that atheism might be wrong
, or openly state that it's very possible the early church bishops knew exactly who wrote the gospels
And he wasn't an eye witness!
You have an agenda,
What’s wrong, Festus? Don’t like those two choices? It’s one or the other, Rufus. Which one?More rubbish and strawmen. It's obvious you're too stupid to find the answer. If you knew anything you wouldn't have embarrassed yourself with babbling these stupid claims you read somewhere and run around parroting.
Because I have read the Bible and know that Paul was NOT a direct witness of Jesus?
If is uncontested that Paul knew at least three of the eyewitnesses, Peter, John, Jesus' brother James. Your free to make the case all of them lied to him, or he just fabricated what they told him.
Luke was not a disciple.Well then, it certainly didn’t include any of the disciples, did it? Not Luke, nor Mark, nor Matthew, nor John. Just exactly what I’ve been saying.
Thanks for the validation, Jethro.
I've tried to explain that multiple times.Luke was not a disciple.
LOLMore rubbish and strawmen. It's obvious you're too stupid to find the answer. If you knew anything you wouldn't have embarrassed yourself with babbling these stupid claims you read somewhere and run around parroting.
Once again, literacy in Galilee isn't that important of an issue, and it's almost irrelevant. Three of the most important authors of the New Testament were not from Galilee. Paul, Luke, and Mark were from Roman provinces in Asia Minor, Syria, and North AfricaOne last time. Galilee is not in Judah.
You are selectively applying a standard for Christian authors that you never apply to any other authors of antiquity. We have no surviving witness testimony of Alexander the Great, and what we do have about him was written four centuries after he died. There are numerous figures from ancient history we don't have direct eyewitness testimony for.Luke, Mark, John, Matthew and Paul never knew Jesus, saw Jesus, talked with Jesus, heard Jesus.
You can't really learn anything in adequate detail by Googling for five minutes.The names associated with the 4 gospels didn’t come along until about 180 CE.
Quit diverting
You keep saying I'm wrong, but then you don't make a rational case for why you are right based on sound reasoning.Just stop with the juvenile "strawman". Again, you are the only person calling these folks "liars" and "morons". Stop it.
Stop calling Christians and Jews names. It's getting hard to read your posts.