I agree that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. For myself, the evidence of Christianity is in my daily experience of the world, in my sense of the meaning of the cosmos, in my understanding that death and life are intimately connected, in my awe before the mythopoetic significance of human language and its fulfillment in the person of Christ, in my respect for the lasting teachings of the Catholic and Orthodox churches, in my conviction that human lives are valuable irrespective of people âvaluingâ them, in the oft-ignored humble places in my heart that whisper that I am utterly and wholly dependent.
You may rightly claim that you have not received extraordinary evidence, but I wonder whether you would claim that the personal evidence I have listed above is ordinary. We believe in the Apollo landing because we trust our sources, and we have reason to trust them. Which source listed above do I have reason to distrust â my heart or my intelligence?
Are you willing to admit that, though some people may not have extraordinary evidence of some claim, another person may have extraordinary evidence of the same claim? But at this point the burden becomes:
is my evidence communicable? I will admit: it is not. It is a reason for me to believe, but not as much of a reason for you to believe. And you may have access to incommunicable evidence that I donât have.
At any rate, it is hardly reasonable to discard another personâs evidence, sight unseen. That is cynicism. An important step here is to realize: not all evidence is scientifically verified evidence. The historicity of the moon landing is not, perhaps, scientifically verifiable, but we have reason to believe it. What reason do I have to discard non-scientific, non-verifiable evidence?