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- Jan 15, 2006
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You're confusing two different issues. Even though one may have doubts about it, one doesn't have to challenge your notions of standard scholarship as to the historical chain of title that you assert. All one needs to do is to point to the fact that you have no way of knowing whether what was reported initially actually happened or not. The integrity of the transmission process you seem to put so much faith into is worthless if elements like the resurrection were made up by wishful thinking believers. Maybe all those elements did happen to source their historical transmission. But maybe they didn't. That you can't accept any doubt or uncertainty on that issue tells one that your considerations are faith orientated. Nothing wrong with that and good luck to you if you have the strength of faith that you appear to. But don't expect to convince others, who may be a tad more skeptical and questioning.
The "made it up" hypothesis fails: why would people die for something they made up? And of all the peoples in the Roman Empire at the time, the Jews would be the last people to come up with such a thing! If it had been made up, Paul would never have gotten away with his claim that hundreds had seen the Resurrected Christ; it would have been too easy to call him on it.
Every avenue of analysis indicates that all the conjectures about the thing being invented are just that -- conjecture, with no substantive basis.
The only way you can conclude that my "considerations are faith-oriented" is to start with that assumption. I argue no differently on this topic than on geology, astronomy, economics, or anything else: I go with the evidence.


