C
ccmnxc
Guest
There is an important distinction to be made here though. That they were willing to die (not commenting on the historical support for this, take it as a given for this example), is a good indication that they were not following something they believed or knew to be a lie. It is evidence that they truly believed what they were saying instead of concocting some story about the resurrection of their teacher. The people you listed tend not to die for something they know to be a lie. Most if not all martyrs die for something they believe in as opposed to something they know to be false. I will allow that there may be occasional exceptions. However, let’s assume in this case that it is factually established that 11 of the 12 of them were martyred. While individuals in the past may have died for something they knew to be a lie, it does not happen often. When one takes into account that this was a group of 12 men (1 of which was supposedly exiled and 11 of which were supposedly martyred), and none of them are on the record for rejecting what they had been advancing, that provides compelling evidence that they truly believed it. When one also takes into account the fact that they had little to gain (not only everything to lose), the probability that they all were persecuted and mostly died for something they knew to be a lie becomes vanishingly small.I have a problem with points 3 & 4. The apostles were obviously fully convinced, but so were the martyrs of Islam, Judaism, Sikhism, revolutionary movements and so on, along with soldiers who die for their country, sometimes in great pain. Those who die for what they believe must be respected, but it can’t prove their beliefs are true.
Now, frankly, I am not a fan of this type of argumentation (it is better than nothing, though). This is because history is really grey, and I frankly doubt one could easily convince a skeptic that the Gospels were:
a. written by Jesus’ immediate followers who were killed (at least not all of them)
b. relatively unblemished since their writing down in the late first century, and
c. accurate portrayals of what actually occurred.
I’ll admit, when it comes to history and Biblical scholarship, I am very weak on the apologetics front. Give me philosophy, give me science, but I really don’t know that much about history. Due to the lack of solid, empirical verification, I think history, while an important and meaningful endeavor, can hardly put up concrete-solid points. Maybe I am just biased, but that is they way I see it, and that is why I do not find such arguments particularly convincing. Now, if all the facts about Jesus death, burial, empty tomb, the death of the Apostles, etc. was strongly established, I think one would have a very dangerous argument.