[Paul] says that he saw and heard the Lord at the time of his conversion.
We know he says that. The whole basis of modern Christianity is that Paul believed that he saw the risen Jesus. But we only have Paul's word on that. We know Paul never met the person known as Jesus of Galilee. The similarities between the Jesus myth and that of Heracles are striking. The fact that Christianity's number one publicist came from Tarsus where Heracles was worshipped, makes a coincidence unlikely.
The canon that we have now was based on a number of factors. One of which was that the writings and teachings in the selected books were used by the early churches, were recognized by the apostles as being accurate, were consistent with each other, appeared to avoid outside influence among others. The books that did not make it did not stand up to this analysis.
So despite Paul's saying that "
all scripture is inspired of God" the Council of Nicea in the fourth century removed those books which they felt didn't fit in with their belief system and kept those which they thought gave an account consistent with what Christianity had evolved into.
The question that says suppose the Gospels were written to make it look as if the prophecies were fulfilled and there " is no proof they were not" is turning the burden of proof around.
No it's not. You readily admit that the church removed books of the Bible which weren't consistent, which could conceivably have included accounts of Jesus' life that didn't fulfill prophecy. The earliest extant manuscripts of the gospels date from the third or fourth century, plenty of time for revisions. The only records of an event are documents written three hundred years after the events they describe. Of course the burden of proof should not be on the skeptics here.
They told the story of women being the first to see the empty tomb when at the time women were not deemed credible and could not even testify in court
Coincidentally, Heracles also first appeared to women after his resurrection. He was also born of a virgin in a far away town, was of royal descent, escaped from mortal danger as an infant, was tempted in the wilderness, performed miracles, died an excruciating death, was resurrected and ascended to heaven, his return eagerly awaited by his disciples.
They preached about it days after it happened at a time when it clearly could have been debunked from the start.
Not according to any surviving contemporary records. Nobody writing in the first century seems to have heard of Jesus at all.
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"The world is my country, all mankind are my brethren, and to do good is my religion." - Thomas Paine, The Age of Reason, 1794.