An atheist's overview of historical apologetics
A blogger who goes by the moniker 'exapologist' has put together a pretty decent summary (for an ex-apologist!) of the standard evangelical case for the reliability of the Gospel portraits of Jesus, as well as various ancillary issues. What do you think? Is it on target? I found it pretty illuminating myself. Can anyone see any weak links?
Comments
Koester's thing about the dating of the pre Mark redaction containing the empty tomb and showing up around AD 50 is fantastic back up for the McDowell arguments about not enough time for myth to develop.
I generally see myself as a "liberal" but I back certain "conservative" view points.
Then there's the problem with using these labels which I think has gotten totally out of hand.
I am very stingy. If we had a bunch of eyewitnesses that said a resurrection happened yesterday, I'd be like 'Umm, whatever. Enjoy your crack pipe.' Show me video, multiple reliably skeptical types witnessing, preferably myself as well. News vans, lots of independent recording devices. Plus it has to be someone that we really know is dead. Not some BS with someone being pronounced dead in an ER and "miraculously" coming back in an hour.
Without such relatively strict standards, I'd waste my time exploring every nutball's alien abduction story.
Anyway, it's the above type of reasons that make me think many of these "skeptical" historical scholars aren't really thinking things through. What would make you believe it happened yesterday, much less 2000 years ago filtered through the writings of its advocates? And if it is impossible, in principle, for these ancient writings to meet your standards for yesterday, why do you even bother using your obvious intellectual talents to "debunk" this stuff?
That said, I do enjoy the historical scholarship, and that summary by exapologist is one of the less screechy one's I've seen by a skeptic on the internet (internet skeptics tend to give really crappy arguments against Christianity: even worse than in-person skeptics tend to give).
This reminds me that I've been meaning to write up a small series of entries considering the question I once raised while debating Keith Parsons in an exchange of posts on Victor's site: why would the Sanhedrin not have presented a body, even if they didn't have the body?
(I had to put off discussing what I expect the answer is, until I could put forward another argument--which I finally did more than a year ago here on the Cadre. I've been very busy on other projects since then, though. {lopsided g})
JRP