This is getting tiring.
Well, first of all, I never claimed that anyone was “lying.” I think in this situation, the most likely explanation is that a fanatical group of “true believers” – who sincerely believed supernatural things but were simply wrong about it – were willing to die for their beliefs.
I don’t, however, agree that their willingness to die “proves” that they weren’t lying about believing supernatural things.
I could imagine, for example, a scenario in which a group of followers of a popular teacher routinely peppered their stories of the man with embellishments and untrue tales of magic. They were fiercely devoted to their teacher and friend, and they chose to die out of loyalty to him and his message, not out of loyalty to the supernatural parts of the story.
Now that’s just speculation, but it’s an example of a situation – well within the bounds of possibility – wherein a person might “die for a lie.”
There’s also the consideration that anyone preaching the message of Jesus back then was considered a political subversive and would have been executed no matter what. A person like that who is caught might very well consider himself “in for a penny, in for a pound” and decide to go to his death as a glorious martyr for the cause, rather than recant and probably get executed anyway for being a dangerous political radical.
But again, to reiterate, I don’t think that we have enough evidence to think that the apostles really were martyred. And even if they were martyred, it doesn’t demonstrate the truth of their claims. They could have been mistaken, lying, dying for a mundane cause, or any number of other scenarios.
Two things:
- This is utterly tangential to our argument here, but these accounts certainly exist. Google “Allagash Alien Abduction” for one quick example that popped up when I ran a search. But stick to the topic, would you?
- You don’t have more reason to doubt that flying saucers appeared to eyewitnesses living on the earth today than you have to doubt that a man rose from the dead to people in stories written by anonymous hands. If you accept extraordinary claims on the basis of ancient texts, you cannot discount the numerous alien abduction stories and also accept the Jesus legends and still remain consistent.
I’m not quite sure how you could confirm that a magical event happened
thousands of years ago. I know that you certainly can’t confirm it by reading a couple of stories written by anonymous people decades at the earliest after the magic supposedly occurred.
You’re making the rudimentary error of confusing “credulous” for “open-minded-ness.” It’s not being “open-minded” to accept an account of an event that violates our understanding of the laws of the universe, simply because “well, it says so in these stories, and they don’t have any reason to lie, and gosh-darnit, isn’t it a moving story?”
I’m not trying to be mean or anything, but stories are a very poor basis on which to accept an event that you really should be skeptical about.