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irenaeus1
Guest
If I recall correctly a short while back, a professor (I think a priest) at a Catholic university in Australia was reprimanded by Rome for teaching that the Resurrection of Jesus was not an historical event.Again I say, then apparently you do not accept the gospel of Luke as evidence. I guess the “good news” is nothing other than a ‘good story’?
Do you accept the Resurrection? There was no ‘witness’ to this; there was an empty tomb and there were ‘angel witnesses’ and there were statements from the apostles who saw Jesus afterward. . .but I guess historically speaking you can’t really accept the Resurrection because nobody really saw it actually happen?
You see, these concepts of yours strike me as not just silly but dangerous.
Because once you have accepted that “historical documentation” somehow is ‘above’ belief in that it can be proven but belief is just a ‘choice’. . .
then you have reduced God’s sending of His Son to suffer and die for us as ‘unreal.’
The whole point of Jesus’s life and death and resurrection was that it was a historical event. It happened in time. It deserves the same sort of recognition that it happened like any other event in time. Making it into something “outside of” or transcending time, and making it into something that is not ‘reasonable’ or able to be believed by reason. . . that makes it into some sort of gnostic ‘puzzle’. Since there is no ‘proof’ that Jesus was physical matter (flesh and blood) one falls back onto the ‘conceptual’ Jesus, the mythological Jesus, the ‘pure faith’ Jesus.
Ignoring the man who lived and walked the earth. . . Jesus.