Learner
Veteran Member
Good to see support and encouragement for each other. 
( I should be doing more of it myself )

( I should be doing more of it myself )
Learner, just a polite reminder that there is a question pending related to one of your posts. You made certain claims regarding the resurrection story, and I am trying to figure out what you were trying to say.
How do you know that a new body was provided, and that the old body wasn't reanimated? Where did this new body come from? Was it made in some kind of a celestial factory, or did a human have to give birth to a soulless baby that grew into a soulless full size body that was stored somewhere, and later used as a container for Jesus's soul?
And more importantly, do you agree that stories involving reanimated, flying corpses should be treated with skepticism, as remez did?
Where did Jesus's soul go after it left the old body and before it could be inserted into the new body? What is a soul and how does it move around between bodies? Your statements lead to even more questions that need to be answered.
New bodies is mentioned in 2 Corinthians 5
I do like that one meme, imagining my wife giving my eulogy as: Keith will probably be best remembered for all the times he faked his death, only to show up at the funeral and- Oh. There he is. In the back, wearing the big goofy hat. I'd like to thank everyone for coming, and also apologize. Again.Is it a common occurrence for you to be tricked by people you thought were dead only to find out, nope! All a ruse!
The weird thing is... if the resurrection would violate physics, why isn't Christianity already disproven?That was one weird video. Christian apologists really need to take a course in logic. If you think that this video was convincing then I could equally argue (and 'prove') to you that I was abducted by aliens last weekend and spent a couple days orbiting Saturn in their flying saucer by challenging anyone who didn't believe me to prove that I wasn't.
Great, that was not clearly stated originally. BUT all the same, I clearly should have reasoned that from what you wrote. I withdraw that contention.No, I placed it down near alchemy because, just like alchemy, it describes events that contradict physical law. People do not come back from the dead, in the same way that lead does not transmute into gold.
That was important.It's a question if whether or not it's a plausible event. Plausibility is determined by the frequency with which an event is observed in the real world. Crucifixions were a common event in the Roman period. Resurrections were not.
YESIt's got nothing to do with absurdity; It's a question if whether or not it's a plausible event.
YES and YESCrucifixions were a common event in the Roman period. Resurrections were not.
Not even close. Frequency is but one of the criterion for plausibility. Your reasoning reminds of Hume's failed argument against miracles. If Hume were alive today he would most plausibly believe that life began to exist. That the big bang theory is plausible. The genesis of a new life form. That his own birth was plausible. All countering his third premise.Plausibility is determined by the frequency with which an event is observed in the real world.
Others have just been trashing straw men.I’m asking you if you can provide a natural explanation that better explanations those four facts
They are not facts. ……… You need to show your 'facts' to be true, before I will start believing you. You can't just say that they are facts, and expect them to pass unchallenged.
I’m not blindly accepting them because they are in the Bible. There are many facts in the Bible that don’t require the Bible to be true. I thought the ones I provided were quite minimal and readily accepted as fact by most scholars. Including leading atheists.If you blindly accept the premise that claims from the Bible are facts, you can reach your desired conclusions; But reaching false conclusions from false premises is trivial and unimpressive.
Absolutely. I fully understand my burden. I presented an argument. You are finally challenging that none of those facts are true. So it is now it is incumbent upon me to show you that each one is far more plausible than its alternative. Again shall we begin with if Jesus was crucified or not?You need to demonstrate with evidence that what you claim is factual. You haven't done that; So nobody needs to accept your claims nor any conclusions you derive from them.
At some point you, as well, will need to demonstrate that that alleged fact with evidence. Something other than because it contains miracles it therefore contains no true testimony.The Bible is very weak evidence indeed. It's not even close to being sufficient to support important and implausible claims - such as that someone came back from the dead.
That extraordinary claim sounds good but it is not the case. In reality any claim only needs sufficient evidence for beliefThat's an extraordinary claim, and requires extraordinary evidence.
Court has begun. I have repeatedly given you 4 pieces of evidence and an explanation. Together they formed the argument of my opening statement. I have re-quoted it to you several times. You have quoted it several times.So provide the evidence and shut us all up. But you are not going to do that, are you?
You don't even see it.You have not yet made an argument for your case, other than to state that you find the stories plausible.
I have repeatedly presented a precise argument for discussion. You have provided a vague alternative and believe all discussion is over and concluded. It's not by along shot.A naturalistic explanation has been provided multiple times. You don't like the explanation, but that is not my problem. Repeating the same absurd nonsense over and over is not going to get you a different answer.
Even though you quoted them again.You haven't given me any historical facts.
I gave no stories. I provided four facts and an explanation. You are free to specifically challenge any or all of them. Calling them stories doesn't make your case.You have simply presupposed that the stories should be considered credible.
I"M Missing the point? Not at all.......It very well may be my point.And demanded that I explain what the motivations of the people involved in the story are. Stories, and the characters in them, say and do whatever the author wants them to say and do, which is the point you are missing.
Yes it is. Deism is a subset of theism. Some are mono some are poly, for all purposes here it matters not.Deism. It's not there in the "logically exhaustive" list.
NO. But I note your concern. The original request that I responded to was how can a Christian reasonably believe that miracles are possible. Thus God's existence was a given. Therefore, I was providing the reason that if God exists then miracles are possible. That simple. However, I clearly stated ....thus the bigger question is.....Is it reasonable that God exists? So the presumption you are decrying was actually assumed in the context.I just wanted to more directly address the "if God exists then miracles are reasonable" proposition. People keep saying "God" as if which God is just obvious. In a christocentric culture, Jehovah will seem obvious. So, aside from how the miracles themselves need better evidence, the God ... even when granted only for the sake of argument that a deity exists... needs greater specificity than just "exists" and "makes universes".
You're relying on assumptions based on cultural tradition maybe more than you know.
Again why is that abstract?
Jehovah's less abstract than monotheism. Jesus is the son of the father Jehovah -- that is less abstract still. Jesus died because scapegoatism does something to 'sin"... that's less abstract still. This is what I call "putting the clothes back onto the mythology" (after they got stripped off in order to help things seem more "reasonable").
Let's not avoid details. Let's look at how sensible mythology is. Want to make sense of that blood sacrifice stuff? "God exists" doesn't help much, it doesn't make just any crazy thing possible. What sense does a blood sacrifice of a human, or man-god, make? I'm not looking at this with moral outrage but just seeking "the logic" in it...................
It doesn’t matter how you took it. What matters is what was there and what wasn’t.
Notice when he presented his well thought out spectrum and provided reasons as to why he placed events where they belonged. But with the resurrection he first greatly understated its historical support and only mocked the resurrection into his spectrum. He doesn’t like it so he arbitrarily placed it down near alchemy.
So does that give you some special privilege of not having to support your position?
I get it all the time. I very rarely get the reasons that should go with that statement of absurdity. You don’t like it so it is all absurd.
No that is not an argument.The consequences to one's own life by way of one's world view and one's system of beliefs that come from accepting the resurrection of Jesus and all it entails demands far more corroborating evidence than what was written so long ago in the NT. That's the basis for bilby's argument as well as the point atrib was trying to make.
That is only the basis of his preference. No argument was given. He simply mocked that which he didn’t like.
Well then…..it should be easy for you quote the reasons stated. Good luck because all he gave was mockery.The entire story is in doubt up to the resurrection for the reasons stated,
Further…………..
The point taken from bilby's argument should be that the need for doubt increases in proportion to the consequences of what is implied by the presented evidence.
Again he gave no argument. He was addressing my contention with atrib’s reasoning regarding history. And he did a great job in developing that historical spectrum. But it was not an argument. He mocked the resurrection into his well-developed historical spectrum. With the other events he placed in the spectrum he provided reasons for their placement. Your take on his preferences have nothing to do with that fact. I’m well aware of his preference that extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. I don’t agree with it because I found it philosophically unsound and arbitrary. But regardless his preference and my contentions with them have nothing to do with my request for his reasoning as to where he places the resurrection into his historical spectrum.
You seem to be suggesting that if you think some event has great consequences then you can toss it into the alchemy side of the spectrum because…… it would require an extraordinary amount of evidence……. that you have arbitrarily predetermined could not be met. A kind of get out of reason pass.
No, I placed it down near alchemy because, just like alchemy, it describes events that contradict physical law. People do not come back from the dead, in the same way that lead does not transmute into gold.
Great, that was not clearly stated originally. BUT all the same, I clearly should have reasoned that from what you wrote. I withdraw that contention.
...
That has nothing to do with my request.I'm sure you'd agree that it implies a major commitment is required in one's world view.
Now….
You (not bilby) may be trying to counter my original argument for the resurrection with …..You need more evidence to match to consequences. To that I say fine. I’m not asking you to believe me. I’m asking you if you can provide a natural explanation that better explanations those four facts than a miracle occurred. Even if you can’t it does not mean you have to determine the argument to be compelling. So just be honest.
Let's got to the tape, shall we? Mark:
43 Joseph of Arimathea, a prominent member of the Council, who was himself waiting for the kingdom of God, went boldly to Pilate and asked for Jesus’ body. 44 Pilate was surprised to hear that he was already dead. Summoning the centurion, he asked him if Jesus had already died. 45 When he learned from the centurion that it was so, he gave the body to Joseph. 46 So Joseph bought some linen cloth, took down the body, wrapped it in the linen, and placed it in a tomb cut out of rock. Then he rolled a stone against the entrance of the tomb. 47 Mary Magdalene and Mary the mother of Joseph saw where he was laid.
So, at least according to the author who first wrote the story, it was just one guy doing it all. A "prominent member of the Council" no less, so really not someone who had too much first hand experience with dead bodies would be my guess.
...
Fascinating. So much I didn't know about the story, and making it much more credible. But my intuition says it all stemmed from this one simple act of compassion by this Joseph of Arimathea, who nursed Jesus' wounds and later set him free from the cave. And then kept the secret to himself to protect all concerned. One altruistic lie from which an entire world religion unfolds. That just fits so well.
No. Go back and read it carefully. I addressed the topic as IF that was what he was inferring, because it seemed that way. It is a very common objection. Probably the most common.You suggested that atrib discounted the reliability of the NT based soley on his disbelief in miracles.
Nope. I was not trying to prove the NT by using miracles. I was addressing the reasonableness of rejecting of the NT because it contained miracles.It really seems to me you're basing your reliance on the NT soley on the stories of miracles. The resurrection in and of itself wouldn't be sufficient. The loaves and fishes, the raising of Lazarus from the dead, walking on water, smiting the fig tree, water to wine, etc, etc, are made to seem conventional but essential in supporting the idea that God is a necessary being.
Only in the same practical terms you have to understand the Bible first in order to be convinced he does not exist.In practical terms you need to believe in the Bible first (or going through Jesus) in order to be convinced there is a God.
Think about it.
While you are at it look up Natural Theology.
...
Wait.If you want to make the case that Jesus existed
If you are going to deny that Jesus was a real historical figure, then we really have nothing to talk about. You stand outside of collective reasoning. Your skepticism is too severe and likely inconsistent and thus arbitrary.
Did Jesus Exist?
Even if a rabbi with that name did exist at that time,Here are the four minimal facts regarding the Resurrection.....
1- Jesus was crucified and buried
2- the tomb was empty and no one ever produced a body
3- the disciples believed they saw the risen Jesus
4- the disciples were transformed following their alleged Resurrection observations
why should these be considered facts?
remez said:I have given no story.
I really want to discuss the argument.......which is the best explanation for these four historical facts...............
1- Jesus was crucified and placed in a tomb.
2- the tomb was empty and no one ever produced a body
3- the disciples believed they saw the risen Jesus
4- the disciples were transformed following their alleged Resurrection observations
I contend that these four pieces of evidence can best be explained by the miraculous occurrence of the resurrection.
That is the argument.
I have provided it again and again and again.
Not by a long shot. Your confidence is as misplaced as your aim. Your bird shot presentation of wild possibilities are one thing. What is reasonable is yet another.And it has been refuted again and again and again.
The simple undefended assumption behind your assertion infers that the authorship of the NT is somehow crucial to determining them to be credible historical sources for the life of Jesus. That is an assumption without merit in today's historical criticism regarding the ancient documents. Your smoke screen of authorship has little to no effect on NT reliability.And now I'll do it again. First, your "four historical facts" are not facts. They are assertions from mythological stories, the origin of which we do not know and the original authorship we do not know.
...1. ok I see no real issues.So right out of the gate, you are wrong. Objectively, conclusively, irretrievably wrong. Those are NOT "facts."
Second, they are not even accurate. Once again, I will correct you:
1. It is claimed by an anonymous Roman author allegedly writing circa 70 CE that a man named Jesus was crucified forty or so years prior and placed in a cave-like tomb with a rock rolled into place to cover the opening.
2. The cave was allegedly found to be open and NOT empty; a young man was allegedly found sitting inside of it who told the visitors that Jesus (aka, "the body") had gone ahead of them to Galilee and that they should tell the disciples and go see him (which sure as shit implies that they "produced a body" and that it was the same Jesus/body that was placed into the cave in the first place).
3. We are then told by other later anonymous third parties that the disciples believed they saw the risen Jesus
4. No one knows what the disciples actually thought, of course, since we do not have a single piece of papyrus that can be definitively tied to any particular OG disciple.
Examine that carefully with the mind of a historian. Try! That is full of Semitisms and characteristics (use of Cephas) that are not Paul like. Paul employs paredoka and parelabon, the equivalent Greek terms for delivering and receiving rabbinic tradition 1 Cor. 11:23. Examine his use of sentence structure and verbal parallelism, diction, and the triple sequence of kai hoti. And it is those characteristics and details (and many more) that convince scholars that Paul reciting tradition that he himself received long ago. Look it up, many prominent scholars place this tradition within years of the cross. Your wild possibilities do not reflect any scholarship. You seem to think if you can make something possible, it is therefore reasonable. I was looking for a serious discussion, not bird shot fantasies and insulting characterizations. Once again even prominent atheist Gerd Ludemann maintains that "the elements in the tradition are to be dated to the first two years after the crucifixion of Jesus. . . . not later than three years. . . . the formation of the appearance traditions mentioned in I Cor.15.3-8 falls into the time between 30 and 33 CE. . . ." ....from his book The Resurrection of Jesus. Further note.......the authorship and date of Corinthians are undisputed and greatly enhance the reasonableness of my position but that is still secondary to what is the crucial...... we have an extraordinary early source outlining the core events of Jesus' death and resurrection. Thus these traditions (my minimal facts) even precede Mark and certainly circa 70 CE.For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received:
. . . that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures,
and that he was buried,
and that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures,
and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the Twelve (I Cor. 15.3-5).
All you have actually demonstrated is.....That's your undefended opinion is based on wild speculation only. You simply choose what you like and don't like based on only what you choose to wildly spectate against. Give me some evidence to back that up. Again simply quoting something and wildly speculating about it won't fly. Make the case that dissimilarity is a weakness and not a strength.IN SHORT: We have nothing but unverified claims from unreliable sources...
You have not made this case. But I think that this..................ONE............and an abundance of contradictory evidence.....
............(which is hardly an abundance)..... was meant to evidence a contradiction.I (from "Paul" and at least one later gospel author--John--whoever he may be and fully accepting it may be hundreds if not thousands adding and subtracting over the past two thousand years following) demonstrating that even back then and as recent as circa 55 CE to the alleged event in 33 CE, a significant number of gentile* followers of the nascent cult did not believe the claim that Jesus resurrected from the dead and had to be vehemently convinced by Paul, with additional evidence the same was still an issue over half a century later with John and the embellishment of the nonsensical and contradictory nonsense of "doubting Thomas."
Again your confidence is amusing. Reread what you wrote there. I'm sure it was clear to you. So I'm assuming this is what you meant.................Setting ALL of that aside, your contention that "resurrection is the best explanation" for anything, let alone the facts that are not actual facts is disproven conclusively by all of the alternative explanations I and others have provided.
Does that mean you just took back the four historical facts that you just granted for sake of discussion? I'll guess no and simply label that childish name calling? You have made no case for legend. The alternative of “it was a legend” does not reasonably match the time restraints here. These facts were pre-Gospel.Again, every single element of the mythology can be "best" explained
With an opening like that you want me to consider you serious?Again, every single element of the mythology can be "best" explained (or, certainly better explained) by any of the following that do not rely upon magic being real:
First off that is an equation not an explanation. It is an equation you have not defended only asserted. So you MUST transform that into an actually explanation and be prepared to defend it. I'm ready. Until you do so that non-explanation equation is not a more plausible explanation.1. It's all just a made-up cult based on a popular martyr like any other such cult that has ever or since existed;
2. A real man named Jesus was crucified and excessively tortured, which led to a condition that eventually resulted in the appearance of death, but not actual death, from which he soon recovered and this gave rise to the honest (but wrong) belief that he had resurrected from the dead and a cult was made up around him accordingly like any other such cult that has ever or since existed;
At least this one is an explanation of sorts. So let’s reason through your conspiracy theory.3. It was a simple conspiracy by the disciples who stole the body and then claimed Jesus had resurrected from the dead and they made up a cult around him accordingly like any other such cult that has ever or since existed.
I agree that does happen. But disagree with your assumption that my theism is such. That is your belief created out of ignoring the evidence and reasoning I presented to you. See it IS a matter of reasoning and evidence. Your simple reasoning by blunt equation is insufficient to make your case that my theism lacks evidence and reasoning. We all have reasons for what we believe.All anyone need do is look to Mormonism or Scientology for incontrovertible evidence that very large and very powerful cults can be created literally out of nothing but a story…….
I disagree. I have witnessed people change their worldviews based upon evidence and reasoning. Many atheists here claim that is personally their case. I profess that my doubts in theism have reversed because of science and philosophy.…….. and that no amount of counter argument or lack of verifiable evidence can shake its adherents from honestly and sincerely believing that it is the absolute unvarnished truth of all existence.
………… conclusion. Where anyone reading this post can clearly see (not agree but clearly see) that I have put before the prosecution, the judge and the jury a case supported by evidence and reason.You have no explanation. You have no facts. You have no counter-argument.
Not at all. I interpreted his placement of the resurrection (into his historical spectrum) in the wrong context. I was missing his argument for the context that he was bailing out atrib with regards to the faulty notion that since people make things up then all history is rejected as unreasonable. I like his history construct up to the point his naturalism trips him up. But I'll let that play out in my conversation with him.So I take it you've been able to accept the argument after all.
That's your choice.Then we'd have something to talk about. I freely admit that I don't know and will never know for sure whether those four points of your's are true.
That misses my position several ways.But if you're not basing it on the Bible as the evidence for miracles then they are trivial matters and hardly worth being considered as facts.
Your terminology strangles the conversation here.And it seems that you're simply trying to be provocative by claiming they are facts without making the case.
No.1. You assume for some reason that the gospel tales are true and not an embellishment or outright fiction.
So?2. There is no contemporary corporation of the gospels. A letter from Tuberous to his friend, 'Hey man you won't believe it I saw this guy walk on water.
If all of your witnesses were in perfect agreement, wouldn’t you suspect the fix was in? The historical concept is called dissimilarity. Look it up, it’s a good read. It is a strength not a detriment.3. The gospels do not all agree.
I recommend everyone should read more and not jump to conclusions.4. I read that from a literary view the gospels were in the form of an action adventure fiction of the day. In the story the main character says 'I'll be back'. And later in the story he does. A fictional story meant to attract new believers.
There are NO witnesses that attested to seeing Jesus' miracles, only a few much later writers offering hearsay at best. That is my understanding... if I am misinformed then name two witnesses.If all of your witnesses were in perfect agreement, wouldn’t you suspect the fix was in? The historical concept is called dissimilarity. Look it up, it’s a good read. It is a strength not a detriment.3. The gospels do not all agree.
No.
So?
If all of your witnesses were in perfect agreement, wouldn’t you suspect the fix was in? The historical concept is called dissimilarity. Look it up, it’s a good read. It is a strength not a detriment.3. The gospels do not all agree.
I recommend everyone should read more and not jump to conclusions.4. I read that from a literary view the gospels were in the form of an action adventure fiction of the day. In the story the main character says 'I'll be back'. And later in the story he does. A fictional story meant to attract new believers.
Your confidence is as misplaced as your aim. Your bird shot presentation of wild possibilities are one thing. What is reasonable is yet another.
For example............
The simple undefended assumption behind your assertion infers that the authorship of the NT is somehow crucial to determining them to be credible historical sources for the life of Jesus.
remez said:...1. ok I see no real issues.Koy said:Second, they are not even accurate. Once again, I will correct you:
1. It is claimed by an anonymous Roman author allegedly writing circa 70 CE that a man named Jesus was crucified forty or so years prior and placed in a cave-like tomb with a rock rolled into place to cover the opening.
2. The cave was allegedly found to be open and NOT empty; a young man was allegedly found sitting inside of it who told the visitors that Jesus (aka, "the body") had gone ahead of them to Galilee and that they should tell the disciples and go see him (which sure as shit implies that they "produced a body" and that it was the same Jesus/body that was placed into the cave in the first place).
3. We are then told by other later anonymous third parties that the disciples believed they saw the risen Jesus
4. No one knows what the disciples actually thought, of course, since we do not have a single piece of papyrus that can be definitively tied to any particular OG disciple.
...2. based on your uncommon interpretation/speculation and it reasons from only one source.
...3. an assertion not only without evidence but in spite of the evidence to the contrary.
The term Synoptic Problem is a technical term for a specific issue, namely why Matthew, Mark, and Luke have so many similarities – in which stories they tell, the sequence in which they tell them, and the words with which they tell them (verbatim, word-for-word agreements in places!) – and yet also have so many differences. If there were not extensive similarities, there would be no “problem.” But how does one explain these similarities (and these differences)? The answer that has been around for a very long time indeed is that the similarities are there because these books utilize some of the same sources (they, or two of them, are copying) and the differences are there because the authors have altered the sources they have used.
I sometimes have difficulty convincing my students that if two documents have word-for-word agreements(whether a newspaper article, an ancient narrative, or a plagiarized term paper), then someone is copying someone. And so I do a little experiment with them. I did it this last week. I walk into class, and start fussing around in front of the room (of 240 students). I put down my bag; I take out my books; I take off my coat; I put my books back in the bag; I fiddle with the powerpoint; I walk around; I put my coat back on – I do things. Students are puzzled. And then I tell them each to take out a piece of paper and a pen and to write down everything they’ve seen me do since I came into the room.
I then collect four papers, at random, and tell everyone that we are going to do a synoptic comparison. And I read, one by one, each paper, asking everyone else if anyone has a *single sentence* that is just like one of the four. The four are always completely different. And no one – ever, in my 30 years of teaching – has a sentence (or even four or five words in sequence) the same as any of the four.
Then I ask them what they would think if I picked up four papers from the class, and two of them had an entire paragraph, word for word the same. What would they think then? And of course they say “Someone was cheating.” Yes, of course! Someone was copying someone else. But then I ask, what if I didn’t do this exercise today, but I waited forty, fifty, or sixty years, and I didn’t ask you, but I asked four people each of whom knew someone who had a cousin whose wife was next door neighbors with someone whose brother once knew someone in the class to write what happened that day – and they had entire sentences that were exactly alike, word for word?
Inevitably someone cries out from the back row: It’s a miracle!!!
Yup, it’s a miracle. Or someone’s copying someone. Or both. But if someone’s copying someone, it’s important to know who’s copying whom, and once that problem is solved, and if it turns out that one of the Gospels was a source for the other two, then you can see how the other two changed that one, and by doing so, you can figure out what was of utmost importance to them in their retelling of the stories.
...4. faulty reasoning. Assumes authorship is the only means to your conclusion.
Also..... Do you understand the criterion of dissimilarity when it comes to multiple sources? Seriously do you?
So to counter your four points I offer............this pre-Gospel source.....
For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received
*sigh* . You're hanging your hat on the presumption that magic is "reasonable." That's simply unsupportable all on its own, so you've already self-defeated long before the gish gallop.