If I may ask you: what makes you certain that the reports are definitely correct?
Well, Bradksi, of course you may ask me! I thought we were past that by now.
I would glare at you if we met on my patio and you asked me how the weather was.
My answer:
I first believed because I was told it happened by people I know and love and trust. Then I investigated. And it made sense.
And then I read some more and everything just fell into place.
And it was confirmed by logic, reason and evidence.
The best logical argument for the resurrection I’ve read is this:
Evidence for the Resurrection of Christ
by Peter Kreeft and Ron Tacelli
The Strategy: Five Possible Theories
We believe Christ’s resurrection can be proved with at least as much certainty as any universally believed and well-documented event in ancient history. To prove this, we do not need to presuppose anything controversial (e.g. that miracles happen). But the skeptic must also not presuppose anything (e.g. that they do not). We do not need to presuppose that the New Testament is infallible, or divinely inspired or even true. We do not need to presuppose that there really was an empty tomb or post-resurrection appearances, as recorded. We need to presuppose only two things, both of which are hard data, empirical data, which no one denies: The existence of the New Testament texts as we have them, and the existence (but not necessarily the truth) of the Christian religion as we find it today.
The question is this: Which theory about what really happened in Jerusalem on that first Easter Sunday can account for the data?
There are five possible theories: Christianity, hallucination, myth, conspiracy and swoon.
1 Jesus died Jesus rose Christianity
2 Jesus died Jesus didn’t rise—apostles deceived Hallucination
3 Jesus died Jesus didn’t rise—apostles myth-makers Myth
4 Jesus died Jesus didn’t rise—apostles deceivers Conspiracy
5 Jesus didn’t die Swoon