Here’s the words of Wilford Woodruff. His wife seems to have had a “near death” experience, an experience that many people have reported. He is ascribing some power to himself (the Power of Faith…how do we know?) of which there is no evidence in that it may have happened without him. This experience varies greatly with the raising of Lazarus where he was dead for days, a stench had developed, Jesus called him out of the tomb and there were many witnesses. Now that was truly “raising the dead”. I don’t see the description below as qualifying. Plus all we have is his testimony and his wifes words are herasay.
Yes, yes. And I’m able, with my own similar casuistry, to dismiss
all accounts of miraculous events such as these. Since we can’t reproduce the circumstances and results at will, all such stories become “anecdotal” in spite of alleged multiple witnesses and careful(?) documentation. There is no objective way to affirm them. Woodruff’s account is one of several I have been made aware of. Whatever it was, it seems miraculous if it’s true. What of the others?
You brought up the story of Lazarus as some sort of more legitimate example of raising the dead. Let me remind you that this story is
only found in the fourth gospel and is not synoptic. The author of the gospel is unknown and it is thought that there was more than one author who all based their work on a Johanine tradition. Textual evidence suggests that the New Testament source for this gospel has been redacted and it is apparent from the writing that the author was not even an eyewitness to the events. It’s not really known when the gospel was organized, but is thought to have been at least a decade after the events they describe and likely much later. The oldest textual source for the gospel is fragmentary and of no earlier date than 100 AD, with more complete sources coming on the scene much later. The gospel itself claims that the remarkable raising of Lazarus was the immediate cause of the crucifixion and Higher Criticism therefore suggests that, because the synoptic gospels omit this crucial point, it
stands to reason that the story is meant to be symbolic and not literal. Historically speaking, the story doesn’t even count as hearsay since it is difficult to p(name removed by moderator)oint with certainty where it even came from. It’s like an attributed accounting of hearsay–weaker than weak. Jesus may have raised Lazarus from the dead, but you’ll have to take it on faith, apparently.
Historically speaking, the Woodfruff account is a much better source. We have a well-known historic figure giving a detailed first-person account of the incident. I notice that you conveniently left out the parts of that account which also claim there were multiple witnesses present and that they all thought the woman was dead. You also didn’t report Woodruff’s experience immediately prior to the seeming miracle. Woodruff could have been making it all up, of course; just like the author(s) of the book of John could have been making it all up.
We only apply critical thinking to other people’s miracles, I guess. Our own are off-limits and beyond criticism.
My apologies to the OP… I’m off topic.