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09-13-2006, 08:31 AM | #21 | |
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The only reasonable answer to me is that whatever evidence there is for the resurrection of Jesus, it's not credible. The world doesn't seem to work that way. The evidence for Joseph Smith's golden plates is much more credible to me, and I think that's completely made up as well. Once you check the actual dates and contents of the evidence we have for the Jesus story, you'll see there's plenty of opportunity for the story to have grown. Assuming there was a Paul (and assume we must since there's no extrabiblical evidence for his existence), track the actual extant mss and explain how we know what Paul actually wrote circa 50CE. Something on the order of 1000 people saw David Copperfield make the Statue of Liberty disappear in 1997 (IIRC) inperson. Of course it is there now. Do you not think there is any possibilty of shenanigans regarding a body missing from a tomb? |
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09-13-2006, 01:24 PM | #22 | |||||
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First, you're right; the dead do not normally resurrect. But, does that necessarily mean that in Jesus' instance that normalcy applies? I mean, he wasn't just an ordinary man, he didn't die an ordinary death (I'm speaking prophetically), and the measures taken to make sure that he stayed in the tomb were not normal either. So, why should someone think that just because the dead do not normally arise, that that should necessarily apply to Jesus? Second, while the "gods" may not exist, there are some very good arguments for the existence of God which seem to rebut the idea that we're all just here by accident. And if God does exist, then why would it not be possible that because of his approval of what Jesus came to accomplish on earth, that he went ahead and resurrected him, as an example of what could be expected for others who placed their faith in him? Third, since your last comment is filled with many picturesque allusions, yet no specifics, all I can ask is, if there is a similarity between two subjects, does that necessarily mean that one borrowed from the other? In other words, just because there might be some semblance of a resurrection prior to what is reported in the Bible concerning Jesus, does that necessarily mean that the Bible's rendition received its origin from elsewhere? Personally speaking, I think one would be hard-pressed to affirm such a notion, because then what does one do with the ancestor belief if it is not an original? Where did it copy its belief from, and how far back does one go until an original is reached, other than the original, and that would be what? Quote:
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I hope those help you better understand what is meant by "minimal facts." Quote:
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09-13-2006, 01:38 PM | #23 |
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Dave, I agree with you that heresay evidence from second and third party sources is probably not the best way to prove anything. There are simply too many possibilities that the story could be corrupted somewhere along the way. But, in the case of the resurrection we're not dealing with testimony that is as far removed from the event as you suggest. For most scholars are now of the impression that what Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 15 was written with a couple of years of Jesus' death, meaning that Paul received a first hand account of what took place. And I'm pretty sure that eyewitness accounts of just about anything would hold up in any court of law, would you not agree?
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09-13-2006, 01:51 PM | #24 | ||||
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09-13-2006, 02:00 PM | #25 |
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Actually, while the former is true, the latter is not true. Paul most likely not only had the "vision" that you describe, but was actually taught by Jesus when he went away into the Arabian desert for three years. Furthermore, even though Paul may not have been at the resurrection event itself, given what he wrote to the Corinthians, he made first-hand contact with those who were at the crucifixion and were around after Jesus was resurrected. So, despite efforts to denounce Paul's integrity on the matter, when the evidence is examined, Paul's testimony is a valid source for what took place in reference to Jesus and the resurrection. It is not the only source, but a valid one.
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09-13-2006, 02:03 PM | #26 |
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Again, what was written down by Paul was not written decades after the fact. Instead, what Paul wrote to the Corinthians was most likely written within a couple of years of the resurrection, meaning that there was a very short interlude from event to putting it down in ink. Hence, there was no time for corruption to creep in, nor a nefarious legend to be started.
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09-13-2006, 02:10 PM | #27 |
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Actually Koy, Jesus' brother, James, was not as you suggest. He was a skeptic, and a hardened one at that. Furthermore, the apostle Paul was no friend to Christianity in the early going, for he had Christians tortured and killed for what they were propagating. And as for the generational comment, while wild stories can be dreamed up on the spot, the details surrounding the person of Jesus and the resurrection would have had to had many, many years to take shape, and would have been easily rebutted by the religious antagonists of Christianity at that time, and subsequently. But, nothing of the kind has ever taken place, and it only seems that the same kinds of hardened skeptics, like James, are the ones who continue to oppose the resurrection story, based on, what seems to be, emotively driven reasons rather than rational ones.
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09-13-2006, 02:18 PM | #28 | ||
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As for the mystics and David Blaine, I think the evidence speaks for itself, but not until a careful examination has been done first. We know that much of what the Indian mystics is nothing more than trickery, and we also know that the demonic world is able of empowering people to perform what appears to be the miraculous. The same applies to David Blaine. Yet, those are not the same things as what apparently took place with the resurrection of Jesus. And to my recollection, I do not know of anyone that the mystics or DB have resurrected, or have been resurrected, in the same manner as Jesus. Otherwise, I can assure you that it would not escape the attention of anyone, and people would be flocking to them, like they did Jesus, to have their friends and family members resurrected immediately. |
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09-13-2006, 02:19 PM | #29 | |
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09-13-2006, 02:23 PM | #30 | |
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