D
danserr
Guest
By whom and on what grounds?And Pesch is hardly undisputed.
That Paul was in contact with an early tradition saying that Jesus was buried supports the empty tomb because if the burial story is early a reliable, then the location of Jesus tomb would be well known. Hence, it would be easy to verify that the tomb was really empty.Paul does not mention the empty tomb. Sure it implies that Jesus had been buried.
That is true if they were truly written as history, which the gospels may not have been, and the hard core of historical facts has to be identified as such.A.N. Sherwin-White, a Roman historian in Roman Society and Roman Law points out that sources for Greco-Roman history are typically biased and at least 1-2 generations removed from actual events, but historians use them confidently to reconstruct events. He says that tests show that even 1-2 generations is not enough time to wipe out the hard core of historical fact.
Excellent, you now agree that if the gospels are types of sources similar to history, then 2 generations is not enough time for legendary development to wipe out the core of historical fact in them.
-Sherwin-White compares the gospels favorably to historical accounts and says they are clearly comparable to ancient biography.
- Or consider Luke, who in the preface to his gospel identifies himself as writing as a historian, Inasmuch as many have undertaken to compile a narrative of the things which have been accomplished among us, just as they were delivered to us by those who from the beginning were eyewitnesses and ministers of the word, it seemed good to me also, having followed all things closely for some time past, to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus, that you may know the truth concerning the things of which you have been informed. (Lk. 1.1-4)
The style here is that of a classical greek historian.
-Next, Luke evidently traveled with Paul and because at various places in Luke, the third person switches to the first. This suggests that Luke was an eyewitness to the events he is writing about in acts. - Sherwin-White says: “For Acts the confirmation of historicity is overwhelming. Any attempt to reject its basic historicity even in matters of detail must now appear absurd.”
- William Ramsey, the famous archeologist: “Luke is a historian of the first rank . . . . This author should be placed along with the very greatest of historians”
Have you checked their stories?Your fondness for referencing a handful people who may claim to see Michael Jackson then, is irrelevant. Why? Among other reasons, there is no comparison to the wide groups of people, close to the event, all agreeing on the burial, empty tomb, appearance, and resurrection of Jesus. Second this fails for reasons I give under the hallucination hypothesis.
non sequitur.
give me even a shred of evidence they are comparable and that the historical/doctrinal context is in any way similar.
Why do you doubt their motivation? Their motivation was to crush the disciples, which they persecuted and killed them to do (as I show above). Obviously, they would have also been motivated to produce the body. But there is no evidence that they tried to produce any body, Jesus’ or anyone else’s and claim it was Jesus. There is evidence that when confronted with the claim of the empty tomb, they accepted it and tried to explain it away by claiming that Jesus’ disciples’ stole the body. By which they admitted the tomb was indeed empty.If they were truly motivated to do so , which I very much doubt, then they would have produced some body and claimed it was Jesus. Who could have proven it wasn’t Jesus?
The fact that you have been forced into so many strange, and contradictory positions should make you wonder if the Resurrection really is the best explanation of the evidence. The evidence is widely accepted, I have shown why and you have not even tried to offer reasons to the contrary, only thrown out possibilities and challenged me to disprove them. This I have done. In light of this, and you admitting that you have no evidence in support of any of your positions, you should consider the evidence with an open mind and consider whether the Resurrection is historically probable after all.