Quote from kut2k2:
Of course Christians were real. Without Christians there would be no Christianity.
The question is about Jesus. Tacitus did not live during the time of Jesus; he was born over two decades after Jesus' alleged crucifixion (and resurrection). Why was no historical record made during the lifetime of Jesus? Not just by the Romans, not even by the Christians themselves. The earliest Gospel wasn't written until at least a quarter century after the life of Jesus:
"Scholars generally date the synoptic gospels as having been written after the epistles of Paul and before the gospel according to John, thus between 60 and 115 AD."
So Paul, who admits never having met Jesus during his life, was writing about Jesus before the so-called Apostles who actually lived with Jesus. How interesting, or, as ET theists might put it, how convenient!
I was replying to your statement..."There's no record of such a person in the Roman records, and the Romans kept better records than the Jews...", which is incorrect.
Also, you seem to be suggesting that since no documents have yet been found that were written during the same timeframe that Jesus walked the earth as a good reason to not believe He even existed at all. Is that a very good reason to discredit what has been written about Him?
The New Testament manuscripts go back closer in time to the originals than for any other ancient documents. Compare that with these examples:
Plato wrote his Tetralogies in 427-347 BC yet the earliest manuscripts we have date to 900 AD - a 1200 year gap. Aristotle wrote between 384-322 BC but the earliest manuscripts we have are from 1100 AD â a 1400 year gap. Suetonius wrote his De Vita Caeasarun = 75 AD - 160 AD, earliest manuscripts found = 950 AD - an 800 year gap. Etc, etc, etc... There are lots more, but you see where I'm coming from.
The New Testament, which was written between 50 â 100AD, and the earliest manuscripts we have are from 125AD â a gap of only 25 years.
It's just something to think about.
RC