Not really. Only radicals deny the holocaust. I don't think denying the empty tomb is radical.
No. I've given lines of evidence supporting the historicity of the empty tomb. Just because you aren't convinced by them doesn't mean they aren't evidence.You've been asserting it.
Well if Matthew, Mark, Luke and John (or whoever wrote the Gospels) all got together to make up the story of the empty tomb wouldn't you think there would be absolute conformity? In any case, one writer reporting something another writer didn't does not mean what they report didn't happen. Some on the Titanic said the ship broke in two and sank and other said the ship went down intact. That doesn't mean the ship never sank.So stories not agreeing makes them more believable? Um....
Go read a NT Introduction or, if you want, start a thread and we can discuss in detail.How about when? Or where?
For what? Affirming the historicity of the empty tomb? He does and I've told them to you. The fact that women are described as discovering the tomb and the apparent reality that the writers disagree over which women exactly discovered it are convincing to him, a non-Christian scholar. This doesn't mean he accepts the resurrection of Jesus, however.I'm sure he has his reasons.
I'm saying the idea that Jesus never existed is not an accepted belief among historians just like the idea the holocaust never happened is not an accepted belief. You, in all your wisdom, apparently think differently.So now all fringe beliefs are the same.
Jesus Christ left behind a great religion. His contemporaries wrote about him. It seems to me Jesus is in the same category. I would ask you to show me a contemporary source for Alexander the Great that was written during his lifetime.Alexander the Great left behind an empire. His contemporaries wrote about him. Jesus is just not in that category.
This is absolutely ridiculous. It doesn't matter if some person with a history degree denies the existence of Jesus any more than it matters that a person with a history degree denies the holocaust. It is not a scholarly credible belief that Jesus never existed. That's a stone cold fact. Christians and non-Christians agree on it. Your insistence that it is a valid belief is the highest absurdness I can think of. I think all people who have read this discussion can see that it is so.You've gone and collected people who support your contention. that doesn't mean that differing opinions do not exist. You would just rather not acknowledge them. No, I'm not going to cite them here.
Not when dealing with ancient sources.Well that seems significant.
For starters they don't believe they need to have a written source written during the lifetime of the person they write about to have historically credible information.Do tell.
I Don't see the objection here.They're not even in the same language.
I don't think this is comparable. Did you repeat what happened to you to everybody who would listen for all the years of your life? Do you live in the same type of culture the early disciples lived in?I've had life-changing events that I can't recall completely. And that's just one day, not years in someone's life.
That's right, that's what I've been saying.Evidence is not the same as proof.
Yet you keep comparing the two. Whatever.
"Women found it" does not seem like compelling evidence.No. I've given lines of evidence supporting the historicity of the empty tomb. Just because you aren't convinced by them doesn't mean they aren't evidence.
Since they were written at different times in different places by different people, no.
Well if Matthew, Mark, Luke and John (or whoever wrote the Gospels) all got together to make up the story of the empty tomb wouldn't you think there would be absolute conformity?
No one is presenting the differing accounts as evidence that the ship sank, either.In any case, one writer reporting something another writer didn't does not mean what they report didn't happen. Some on the Titanic said the ship broke in two and sank and other said the ship went down intact. That doesn't mean the ship never sank.
Perhaps I will.Go read a NT Introduction or, if you want, start a thread and we can discuss in detail.
If eh has compelling reasons by all means he should share them. "Women found it" is not compelling.
For what? Affirming the historicity of the empty tomb? He does and I've told them to you. The fact that women are described as discovering the tomb and the apparent reality that the writers disagree over which women exactly discovered it are convincing to him, a non-Christian scholar. This doesn't mean he accepts the resurrection of Jesus, however.
What historians.I'm saying the idea that Jesus never existed is not an accepted belief among historians
I might posit that those who wrote about him left behind the religion. Especially Paul.Jesus Christ left behind a great religion. His contemporaries wrote about him. It seems to me Jesus is in the same category.
Amazingly we have more information about him than about Jesus. We know the date and year of his birth and his death. Of course there's also all kind of mythological nonsense associated with him, but no one argues that those things are historical. Right?I would ask you to show me a contemporary source for Alexander the Great that was written during his lifetime.
Shrug. Or I'm more open minded than you are.
This is absolutely ridiculous. It doesn't matter if some person with a history degree denies the existence of Jesus any more than it matters that a person with a history degree denies the holocaust. It is not a scholarly credible belief that Jesus never existed. That's a stone cold fact. Christians and non-Christians agree on it. Your insistence that it is a valid belief is the highest absurdness I can think of. I think all people who have read this discussion can see that it is so.
Aha.Not when dealing with ancient sources.
Including disappearing bodies?For starters they don't believe they need to have a written source written during the lifetime of the person they write about to have historically credible information.
No, you wouldn't.I Don't see the objection here.
It was handed down "orally" but written in a different language than the original speaker.
I cant even remember all the events of one day, let alone three years in another person's life.I don't think this is comparable. Did you repeat what happened to you to everybody who would listen for all the years of your life?
Great! then we're in agreement.That's right, that's what I've been saying.
Hear the word of the Lord, O nations, and declare it on the islands from afar, and say, "He Who scattered Israel will gather them together and watch them as a shepherd his flock."
Jeremiah 31:9
Spin off topic:
http://bibleforums.org/showthread.ph...of-the-Gospels
Hear the word of the Lord, O nations, and declare it on the islands from afar, and say, "He Who scattered Israel will gather them together and watch them as a shepherd his flock."
Jeremiah 31:9

Hear the word of the Lord, O nations, and declare it on the islands from afar, and say, "He Who scattered Israel will gather them together and watch them as a shepherd his flock."
Jeremiah 31:9

Hear the word of the Lord, O nations, and declare it on the islands from afar, and say, "He Who scattered Israel will gather them together and watch them as a shepherd his flock."
Jeremiah 31:9

OK, So it is all relative is it not. Many innocent people have been convicted on strong circumstantial evidence. The body they produced may not have been JFK, it could have been his double. It is doubtful they did a DNA on the body. The possibilities are numerous. Now of course I believe JFK was shot, but my belief is only belief though it may well be a fact that JFK died the day they said he did.
There have been manifold many more people who have testified that Jesus is the Saviour than have testified that the holocaust had occurred.
I am not trying to convert you because you have heard it all. Besides, conversion is a heart thing, not an intellectual endeavor.
Hear the word of the Lord, O nations, and declare it on the islands from afar, and say, "He Who scattered Israel will gather them together and watch them as a shepherd his flock."
Jeremiah 31:9

Hear the word of the Lord, O nations, and declare it on the islands from afar, and say, "He Who scattered Israel will gather them together and watch them as a shepherd his flock."
Jeremiah 31:9

Maybe it doesn't count as evidence to you, but to the millions that have met God it is evidence. Each one of those persons are evidence in their own right. That is what is called heart knowledge and not head knowledge.
Having your birth acknowledged on almost every thing that is sold, and on everything that is mailed internationally should be stark evidence to any logical thinking person.
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