r_claypool retooled the question as: “the chance that Jesus of Nazareth is a resurrected God”. Like most on this thread, I can’t come up with a number aside from “exceedingly improbable”.
Kudos to TheOtherDave for an excellent comment.
IMHO, Kierkegaard nailed it when he observed that faith in Christianity is imcompatible with reason. While the latest flavour du jour for Christian apologists in support of the truth of the resurrection is the minimalist three facts approach (i.e. death of the cross, empty tomb and reports of post-resurrection appreances), most will back peddle when asked whether they accept all of the other miraculous reports contained in the New Testament.
r_claypool retooled the question as: “the chance that Jesus of Nazareth is a resurrected God”. Like most on this thread, I can’t come up with a number aside from “exceedingly improbable”.
Kudos to TheOtherDave for an excellent comment.
IMHO, Kierkegaard nailed it when he observed that faith in Christianity is imcompatible with reason. While the latest flavour du jour for Christian apologists in support of the truth of the resurrection is the minimalist three facts approach (i.e. death of the cross, empty tomb and reports of post-resurrection appreances), most will back peddle when asked whether they accept all of the other miraculous reports contained in the New Testament.
‘Leap of faith – yes, but only after reflection’ -Kierkegaard