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NowAgnostic
Guest
I’ve got several epistemological questions about faith I’ll be posting over the next few days. I’ll start with this one.
For all but the most liberal branches of Christianity, a physical Resurrection is a touchstone doctrine. That means the veracity of faith absolutely depends on the reliability of the witnesses claiming to have seen the risen Christ (and on those reporting that testimony, but I’ll let that go for now).
It could be argued that one should believe based on Christ’s own promise instead of the testimony of the witnesses. But this only sets the argument back one step, as we have only the testimony of witnesses for what he actually did and said. So let’s stick with the Resurrection.
Now we may decide to trust the testimony of the witnesses because we see them as reliable, trustworthy people, who we judge very unlikely to have made the whole thing up (lying) or else being mistaken (e.g. hallucination). But this is only human faith. Human faith is not absolutely infallible. We can’t believe to the exclusion of any and all doubt.
But if we’re supposed to believe their testimony on divine faith, then it has to be somehow revealed by God that their testimony is true a priori. And how is that certainty to be obtained? Before so-and-so testifies to the risen Christ, how can we already accept him as speaking with absolute infallibility?
For all but the most liberal branches of Christianity, a physical Resurrection is a touchstone doctrine. That means the veracity of faith absolutely depends on the reliability of the witnesses claiming to have seen the risen Christ (and on those reporting that testimony, but I’ll let that go for now).
It could be argued that one should believe based on Christ’s own promise instead of the testimony of the witnesses. But this only sets the argument back one step, as we have only the testimony of witnesses for what he actually did and said. So let’s stick with the Resurrection.
Now we may decide to trust the testimony of the witnesses because we see them as reliable, trustworthy people, who we judge very unlikely to have made the whole thing up (lying) or else being mistaken (e.g. hallucination). But this is only human faith. Human faith is not absolutely infallible. We can’t believe to the exclusion of any and all doubt.
But if we’re supposed to believe their testimony on divine faith, then it has to be somehow revealed by God that their testimony is true a priori. And how is that certainty to be obtained? Before so-and-so testifies to the risen Christ, how can we already accept him as speaking with absolute infallibility?