I think you'll find that this assertion is patently untrue as a matter of historical fact.
Quoting a verse from a book of the New Testament doesn't really suffice as evidence here, as it is well known that the current Christian canon of four agreed-upon Gospels were gleaned from more than 80 source gospels at the Council of Nicea (325 AD I think).
The problem with your take is that, the canonical Gospels were already circulating, either orally or written, long before 325 AD.
I live in Ireland, where a variant of Aryan Christianity was esablished circa 500 AD and persisted right up until the Albigensian Crusade in the Middle Ages.
Right throughout the Dark Ages a bodily resurrection of Christ was a minority view among Christians worldwide. As I said, many groups such as the Cathars, Bogomils, Aryans, Old Believers, (some) Albigensians and the Gnostics did NOT hold to the resurrection. Mandeans (Iraqi Swamp Kurds) deny such an occurrence to this day.
And......
At last check, those groups DO NOT comprise the entire body of Christians and long before those particular sects were even formed, Chirstians (1st and 2nd century, in particular) preached and taught the basis and foundation of the Christian faith: The RESURRECTION of Jesus Christ.
The Hibernian Church (Ireland) certainly didn't preach a bodily, earthly resurrection... neither did they believe in a holy trinity, nor the divinity of Jesus. In fact there is good evidence they retained many pagan aspects of early Christianity, they even practiced divorce and gay marriage.
Your point would be what??
Since the apostle Paul warned long ago, that people would stray from the faith and pervert it, groups like this are hardly a surprise.
Plus, I don't know what your point was for mentioning divorce, as Scripture allows such in specific cases (most notably, adultery).
Read up on this, Im not making it up... in fact, I think you might find that St Paul (Saul of Tarsus) was seemingly unaware of the vast majority of the Jesus story himself.
Wrong again, Luke. Again, Paul was taught about Christ by Jesus' disciples (i.e. Peter and John), as well as other Christians, some of whom met with the aforementioned fellow.
But this type of dismissal is probably the most dishonest tactic:
...but your claim makes Jesus into Christ?
No, my claim does not. The historical evidence does, as well as disqualifying this Issa guy buried in Kashmir (some cat named Yuz Asaf) as being Jesus Christ.
...why even bother to discuss these topics if dismissal is your preferred tactic?
None of this will persuade any undecided person reading this thread. Why even bother quoting my points if you can't even address them?
I've already address many of your points (some of which you tend to re-hash, while falsely claiming that I haven't talked about them).
Personally I dont see why this Issa character couldn't be Jesus... at the very least he seems to have been some sort of proto-Jesus, if not the source of the Jesus myth itself. You haven't provided any argument beyond your steadfast insistence to the contrary.
You might want to get your eyes checked, Luke.
The folks who tout this theory can't get to get their stories straight. One minute this "Issa" dies at 80; the next it's 110; later, it's 120.
Moreover, there's the flip-flopping between the "Swoon theory" and an actual resurrection. And, the saddest part is that those who support the later talk out both sides of their mouths, still claiming that Jesus Christ didn't exist.
There is no motivation for the Jews to fabricate a character like Jesus Christ. For starters, prophecies regarding Him were written up to a near-millenium before He was even born. Add to that, we have historical documents chronicling His life from several non-Christian sources, ones with absolutely NO MOTIVE to promote Christianity.
After all:
...we must consider that the orthodox New Testament Jesus is the imposter?
Ater all, isn't it far more likely that a holy man who had luckily survived three hours on a cross might run off to Kashmir (supposed homeland of the lost tribe of Israel whom the messiah was prophecised to find), more likely than him floating into the air leaving no trace?
Luckily survived the cross?
<<pause for hysterical laughter>>All you've done, Luke, is re-hash the tired (oft-dissected and dismissed) "Swoon Theory".
First, surviving crucifixion isn't "likely", As Dr. Gary Habermas puts it,
"Death by crucifixion is essentially death by asphyxiation; you don't come down off the cross alive" Add to that, Christ got stabbed in the side, which
"in short..would have killed Him, if He wasn't already dead."Then, there's the little matter that Pilate didn't even release custody of Jesus' body, UNTIL he got confirmation from one of his centurions that Jesus was actually DEAD (see Mark 15).
Sprinkle in the Pharisees' request for a guard for the tomb (which came with Pilate's seal) and the "Swoon Theory" gets squished, yet again.
Lost in all this is the minor fact that, it would have taken extensive medical care for Jesus to have had any chance of surviving the cross (as if the Roman guards are simply going to stand there and let doctors get to Jesus (whom they've been ordered to execute

).
A body is some sort of proof after all... better than no proof.
]
"A body" is NOT some sort of proof......THE BODY is proof.
The Romans knew the particulars with regards to Jesus' death (who, where, when).
As McDowell stated, producing Jesus' body ENDS Christianity before it even starts (i.e. No Cathars, Bogomils, Aryans, Old Believers, Albigensians, Gnostics, etc.).
One thing I think we can all agree upon... if McWay had been born in this remote part of Kashmir, he'd be the one making the argument for Issa.
And he'd have better evidence than he has for American Jesus.
The Luke
And if Scott Norwood's kick were 2 more feet to the left, the Buffalo Bills would have won the Super Bowl.
Again, your point would be......