M
Maranatha
Guest
There are multiple standards when discussing scholarly historical analysis. If the standard presupposes a world view that miracles can’t happen in nature and thus can’t be historical, then you are right - the CC would not agree with that standard. If the standard is open minded, then the CC maintains the events in the Gospels far surpass the standard scholarly historical standard to certify the gospels as an ancient historical events.I don’t think that is exactly correct. The church does state that the resurrection definitely occured and that you must believe it. But I doubt the church states that “according to the standards of scholarly historical analysis, the resurrection (or any other miracle) can be proven to have occured”.
We know that some people, even today, claim miracles and supernatural powers. Most of these people are fakes. This does not prove that miracles can’t or haven’t happened.I don’t see the connection. Miracles were often attributed to people in the ancient world in order to increase their stature in the eyes of readers. There is significant documentation that there were many Jewish holy men and women to whom the same miracles Jesus performed (and others) were attributed. So in reality, Jesus’ miracles tell us nothing about him except that the authors considered him to be a typical Jewish holy man.
Posthumously assigning extra accomplishments to a renowned person is a common practice throughout history, so common that it has been given a literary term: epic concentration. The Dominican theologian Edward Schillebeeckx cites a straightforward example in Matthew, where tax collectors confront Jesus and Peter about paying the Temple tax. They have no money. Jesus tells Peter to cast a line into the lake; the first fish he catches, he says, will have a coin in its mouth. The coin in the mouth of the fish, Schillebeeckx says, was a motif common in ancient folk literature: “Obviously, a fabulous motif is being employed here simply to say that should he need it, Jesus has everything readily available, because the Father is looking after him. No reader at that time would have taken the passage literally.”