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Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

The only detailed source for Apollonius is Philostratus, writing around 215–225 AD — approximately 125 years after Apollonius's death. Philostratus himself expresses uncertainty about details, contradicts himself (e.g., says Apollonius had incredible memory at 100, then says he doesn't know how old he was when he died), and was commissioned by Empress Julia Domna to promote Apollonius worship in Rome.

historical reliability apologetics Apollonius of Tyana
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

The Life of Apollonius is an enormous text (~15 hours of reading). Its sheer length makes cherry-picking parallels easy — you could find parallels to Paul, Pythagoras, George Bush, or anyone. The vast majority of the book describes Apollonius traveling beyond the Roman world to India, meeting kings and Brahmins, with content wildly unlike the Gospels.

critical thinking apologetics Apollonius of Tyana
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

Unlike the Gospels, which are classified as ancient biography (bios), the Life of Apollonius is likely a novel or hagiographic fiction. It includes fire-breathing dragons on every hill in India, fish-cows, hobgoblins, and other fantastical content not treated as miraculous but as straightforward description of faraway places.

apologetics Apollonius of Tyana genre
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

The Life of Apollonius explicitly names his father on page 11 of the text. There is no virgin birth. His mother has a dream telling her to go to a meadow, swans startle her into premature labor, and a lightning bolt curves upward at his birth — none of these constitute a virgin birth parallel. Even Bart Ehrman publicly agrees there are no parallels to the virgin birth of Jesus.

apologetics Apollonius of Tyana virgin birth
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

The 'visitor from heaven' to Apollonius's mother is Proteus — a shape-shifting pagan deity who lives near the mouth of the Nile ('the old man of the sea') — who tells her the child will be a version of himself. This is categorically different from Gabriel's announcement to Mary, who declared she would bear the Son of God Almighty.

apologetics Apollonius of Tyana annunciation
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

Ehrman claims Apollonius engaged in an 'itinerant preaching ministry' like Jesus, but shortly after leaving home Apollonius took a five-year vow of silence, communicating only with head gestures. He did not primarily preach; he traveled meeting famous people and engaged in philosophical dialogues. This is not a parallel to Jesus's preaching ministry.

apologetics Apollonius of Tyana preaching ministry
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

Calling Apollonius a 'son of God' in a pagan Greco-Roman sense (some divine energy or lower-case god quality) is fundamentally different from Jesus being declared Son of God in the Jewish context, where it meant equality with God (John 5). The New Testament is a Jewish document, not a pagan one, and conflating Jewish and pagan divine-sonship language muddies the comparison.

Jewish context Christology apologetics
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

The healings attributed to Apollonius are based on his superior insight and knowledge — massage therapy for a dislocated hip, carrying a rabbit around a laboring woman, eating owl eggs to prevent a child from wanting wine. These are presented as natural knowledge, not divine miraculous power. This is not parallel to Jesus commanding 'Lazarus, come forth' or 'stretch out your hand.'

apologetics Apollonius of Tyana healing miracles
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

Apollonius's two main 'exorcism' stories involve (1) handing a woman a pre-written threatening letter addressed to the possessing spirit — the spirit stays, just agrees not to harm the boy — and (2) pointing out a disguised demon (a blind beggar) at Ephesus during a plague and having the crowd stone him to death, revealing a monster underneath. Neither constitutes casting out a demon by spiritual authority as Jesus did.

apologetics Apollonius of Tyana exorcism
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

The single raising-the-dead story in the Life of Apollonius (book 4, ch. 45) is immediately qualified — Philostratus himself says he doesn't know if the woman was really dead (steam rising from her face in the rain suggests she may have been breathing) or if Apollonius actually raised her. This is not comparable to the bodily resurrection of Christ.

resurrection apologetics Apollonius of Tyana
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

Ehrman says Apollonius 'aroused opposition among ruling authorities of Rome and was put on trial' — but he was simply acquitted and released. Ehrman's phrase 'they could not kill his soul' is rhetorically misleading; no one tried to kill him, no one succeeded, and his body was not executed. A man being tried and acquitted is not parallel to Jesus being crucified.

apologetics Apollonius of Tyana trial
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

Philostratus records four possible accounts of what happened to Apollonius at the end of his life: (1) no one saw him die because he deliberately sent Damus away, (2) he died in Ephesus tended by two maidservants, (3) he walked into the temple of Athena at Lindus and disappeared, (4) he walked into a Cretan temple at night, the dogs fawned on him, he loosened his bonds, and a chorus of maidens sang 'hasten to heaven.' None of these accounts is a death and resurrection.

resurrection ascension apologetics
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

The single post-mortem appearance of Apollonius is to one unnamed young skeptic who sees him in a semi-waking state while others present see nothing. The purpose is to prove souls are immortal in general, not to validate Apollonius's own resurrection. By contrast, Jesus appeared bodily to multiple named witnesses including those who had not previously believed, and they ate and drank with him.

apologetics Apollonius of Tyana post-mortem appearance
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

Apollonius was born around 15 AD — meaning when Jesus was crucified, Apollonius was still a young man. His public career began after Jesus's ministry and death. More critically, all New Testament documents were written within the first century AD, within the lifetimes of eyewitnesses, while Philostratus wrote 125+ years after Apollonius died. If any borrowing occurred, Philostratus likely borrowed from Christian categories.

apologetics Apollonius of Tyana chronology
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

The primary literary parallel Philostratus is drawing is between Apollonius and Pythagoras, not Jesus. He explicitly says Apollonius 'performed the same feat as Pythagoras' at Ephesus. Apollonius even claims to be a reincarnation of Euphorbus, a fighter at the Battle of Troy. Any apparent parallels to Jesus are incidental or deliberate anti-Christian swipes by Philostratus.

apologetics Apollonius of Tyana Pythagoras
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

Apollonius: not from eyewitnesses; authored as paid commission; written 125+ years after the fact; probably a novel not biography; parallels Pythagoras not Jesus; opposed animal sacrifice (Jesus was the sacrifice); offered no salvation (Jesus was salvation); healed by skill and wisdom (Jesus by miraculous power); claimed reincarnation of Euphorbus (Jesus is God incarnate); was a vegetarian (Jesus ate meat); did not die and rise bodily.

Christology apologetics Apollonius of Tyana
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

Finding surface parallels between two stories does not establish literary dependence or undermine historicity. The correct standard is whether the parallels are specific, numerous, and converge — not whether a single generic similarity can be identified in a massive text. The fact that Apollonius of Tyana is skeptics' 'best example' and still fails means the whole category of argument is weak.

critical thinking apologetics epistemology
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

When skeptics or scholars cite evidence you've never encountered (like Apollonius of Tyana) using academic language and a confident tone, the response should not be to abandon faith but to demand that the argument be explained clearly and rationally enough to evaluate. Abandoning faith because a smart person asserts you should is not rational — the reasons themselves must be examined.

critical thinking apologetics epistemology
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

The Gospels are recognized in New Testament scholarship as ancient biography (bios), a genre focused on carefully portraying a real person's life and character. The Life of Apollonius does not meet this standard — it is more likely a literary novel meant to inspire devotion, as evidenced by its fantastical content, internal contradictions, and the explicit political agenda behind its commissioning.

apologetics Apollonius of Tyana genre
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-28

When multiple critics produce hours of content attacking your views in a short time, the appropriate response is to welcome it (it means your content is reaching skeptics), acknowledge you cannot respond immediately to everything, remain open to being wrong on specific points, and maintain confidence that Christianity as a whole is true and withstands scrutiny.

apologetics pastoral responding to critics
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

The one invalid way to use the Bible to prove itself is simple circularity: 'The Bible says it's God's Word, therefore it is.' This same logic could be applied to the Book of Mormon or the Quran, and Winger agrees with skeptics that this form of reasoning is illegitimate.

circular reasoning apologetics Bible reliability
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Claims from the biblical text can be tested against external archaeological evidence. Confirming one claim does not prove everything, but verification increases the text's historical credibility. When archaeology confirms a claim, it lends 'historicity' to the surrounding narrative.

apologetics archaeology Bible reliability
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Beyond David and Pilate, archaeological and historical sources have confirmed the existence of Gallio, Erastus, Caiaphas, Annas, James the brother of Jesus, Peter, and Jesus himself — showing the NT was not fabricating characters wholesale.

apologetics archaeology New Testament historicity
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Winger notes that skeptical scholars frequently assume biblical characters or events are fabricated while treating other ancient sources as valid by default. He characterizes this as an unjustified bias rather than sound historical methodology.

scholarly bias apologetics Bible reliability
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Textual criticism — comparing thousands of manuscript copies, locating them geographically, and dating them — has demonstrated that every New Testament book was written within the first century, much earlier than 19th-century skeptics claimed (~200s AD). It also shows the biblical text has been transmitted with remarkable fidelity.

textual criticism apologetics Bible reliability
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Winger argues Ehrman's book creates a false impression of radical biblical change by using technically true statements in a misleading way. When pressed in an interview, Ehrman himself admitted the Gospels 'pretty much say exactly what they say in your Bible now,' undermining the impression his book creates.

textual criticism apologetics Bible reliability
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Winger's favorite counter to 'the Bible has been changed' claims: ask the person what specific doctrine or belief should be different based on their view of how the text has been altered. He says no one ever answers because the manuscript tradition is so stable that no theology would change.

textual criticism debate strategy apologetics
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

The Bible is 66 books by 40+ authors spanning over 1,500 years in multiple languages. This provides the kind of multiple independent attestation historians look for when establishing historical reliability. Historians prize multiple witnesses close in time to events — criteria the New Testament's 27 first-century documents meet.

multiple attestation apologetics Bible reliability
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Treating the Gospels as ordinary historical documents and applying standard historical methodology, scholars (even skeptical ones) reach broad consensus on a set of historical facts about Jesus. These facts, assembled together, constitute a powerful cumulative case for the Gospel narrative.

scholarly consensus apologetics historical methodology
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

The vast majority of historians — including skeptics — affirm Jesus' historical existence. Only a tiny handful of scholars (Price, Carrier) deny it, and Winger notes they represent a fringe position.

scholarly consensus apologetics historical Jesus
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Scholars broadly agree that during his ministry, people viewed Jesus as a miracle worker and exorcist. Even without affirming the miracles themselves occurred, historians confirm this was the contemporary popular perception.

scholarly consensus apologetics miracles
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Even Bart Ehrman — one of the most prominent critical scholars — acknowledges that the New Testament documents are the earliest and best sources for historical knowledge about Jesus, undercutting the dismissal of the Gospels as unreliable.

apologetics Bart Ehrman New Testament reliability
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Genuine predictive prophecy — written and datable before events — is a test that secular authors cannot pass. Psalm 22 and Isaiah 52-53 describe crucifixion details before the method was invented; Ezekiel 26 predicts the destruction of Tyre. Combined with historical confirmation that the events occurred, fulfilled prophecy supports divine inspiration.

Psalm 22 Isaiah 53 Ezekiel 26 prophecy fulfilled prophecy apologetics
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Valid prophecy requires dateable pre-event writing. Manuscript evidence (e.g., Dead Sea Scrolls) places Isaiah and the Psalms before Jesus, making their messianic content genuine prediction rather than post-hoc composition. This distinguishes biblical prophecy from the Book of Mormon or Quran examples.

Dead Sea Scrolls prophecy apologetics
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Despite being written by 40+ authors across 1,500+ years in multiple languages, the Bible displays cohesive internal unity — including undesigned coincidences and a sweeping meta-narrative centered on Christ. This coherence is evidence of a single divine author superintending the whole.

apologetics Bible reliability divine inspiration
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Undesigned coincidences are places where one biblical document unexpectedly explains or fills in a detail from another without any apparent coordination between authors. The example given: Mark 14 records that witnesses at Jesus' trial quoted a saying about 'destroying this temple' but their testimonies disagreed — without explaining why. John 2 supplies the original context (Jesus meant his body), even though John doesn't include the trial scene. This kind of interlocking detail is characteristic of authentic historical accounts, not coordinated invention.

apologetics Gospels historicity
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

The Old Testament was already understood by Jews — not just Christians — as pointing to a coming Messiah. The breadth and robustness of typological and prophetic connections to Jesus across the OT (seed of the woman, angel of the Lord, Melchizedek, prophet like Moses, bronze serpent, Joseph, High Priest, kinsman redeemer, Davidic King, last Adam) constitutes a meta-narrative that could only exist by design.

typology apologetics divine inspiration
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

In contrast to the Bible's meta-narrative, Star Wars' first film (Episode 4) did not present Darth Vader as Anakin Skywalker — that identity was added later, showing retroactive plot construction. The Bible's Christ-centered meta-narrative runs consistently from beginning to end, unlike narratives that bolt on significance after the fact.

apologetics meta-narrative illustration
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

The Bible is not merely informational — it calls people to live a certain way, and doing so demonstrates its truth experientially. Winger cites his marriage as an example: following biblical principles in a family culture with ~95% divorce rates resulted in a thriving ten-year marriage. The Bible's insights into human nature, psychology, and practical wisdom prove accurate when lived out.

Proverbs marriage apologetics experiential apologetics
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Winger's approach to skeptical worldviews: challenge the person to live consistently with their beliefs. He recounts a conversation with a man who believed reality was an illusion and 'all is one' — but who refused to give away his possessions, proving he didn't actually believe what he claimed. Atheism similarly cannot be lived consistently (e.g., pretending moral values exist).

worldview apologetics epistemology
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

An eighth, somewhat informal way to use the Bible to prove itself: simply look at Jesus as a person — his words, his historical reality, his life. Engaging seriously with who Jesus is, what he claimed, and what he did produces its own evidential force, especially when combined with the historical bedrock facts scholars agree on.

apologetics Jesus Gospels
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Winger explicitly frames his approach as a cumulative case: archaeology, textual criticism, multiple attestation, historical reconstruction, prophecy, unity/meta-narrative, and experiential evidence are each like different tests on a $100 bill — no single test is definitive, but together they build a compelling case for the Bible's authenticity and divine inspiration.

cumulative case apologetics Bible reliability
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

In a Q&A exchange, Winger clarifies that verifying one claim in a text archaeologically does not automatically validate all other claims. Historical credibility is built incrementally, not wholesale. This is a guard against both over-claiming and the skeptical misuse of the argument.

apologetics archaeology epistemology
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Whether it is 'reasonable' to think some biblical claims are false depends entirely on one's prior conclusion about inspiration. If the Bible is demonstrated to be inspired by God, then assuming it contains errors becomes unreasonable, because God is reliable and dependable by nature.

apologetics Bible reliability epistemology
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Winger addresses the claim that Paul's 'not with words of eloquent wisdom' (1 Cor 1:17) condemns the use of apologetics. He argues this is a misreading: Paul is saying his persuasion was not merely rhetorical — the gospel itself had power in Corinth. Acts shows Paul regularly reasoning and persuading. Apologetics serves as a 'crowbar' to open doors, but the gospel message itself is what saves.

1 Corinthians 1 hermeneutics evangelism gospel
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Winger's illustration: apologetics is like the jaws of life — it opens the door for someone to receive help, but it is not the thing that actually saves. Salvation comes through the gospel (Christ crucified, sin resolved through Christ). This keeps apologetics in its proper place without dismissing it.

evangelism salvation gospel
Mike Winger idea 2018-11-07

Winger recommends Mike Licona's 'The Resurrection of Jesus: A Historiographical Approach' as a scholarly source for the consensus historical facts about Jesus. He directs readers specifically to the 'historical bedrock' chapters for the data on scholarly agreements about the baptism, crucifixion, post-resurrection appearances, and related facts.

resurrection apologetics historical Jesus
Mike Winger idea 2018-12-01

Introduction: surprise livestream responding to a video by Jim Majors, CEO of Atheist Republic, to help atheists and skeptics who may be receiving bad information

Mike explains he was prompted by a Twitter tip to respond to a specific atheist leader's claims about Christianity

methodology apologetics atheism
Mike Winger idea 2018-12-01

Jim Majors, CEO of Atheist Republic (2.2M Facebook followers), is promoting a forthcoming book critiquing Christianity called 'Holy Proofreading: Correcting Christianity'

Mike introduces Jim's credentials and the context of the interview

apologetics atheism Atheist Republic
Mike Winger idea 2018-12-01

Jim issued a fact-check challenge to his audience; Mike takes up that challenge, emphasizing that Jim is sincere but simply misinformed — not deliberately lying

Mike establishes the spirit of the response before diving into specifics

intellectual honesty methodology apologetics