A lot to respond to here. The following arguments from Athetotheist, brunumb, and Diogenes are scriptural arguments. Responding to those will require a separate in-depth discussion. Not exactly sure when is the best time to do that, but I was originally intending to do that after all the non-Biblical evidence has been presented, since I was assuming non-Biblical evidence is more important than Biblical evidence for skeptics.
Athetotheist wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 9:07 am
The beloved disciple saw the linen clothes and believed
according to the fourth gospel's narrative. That version has Simon Peter running to the tomb after being told by Mary Magdalene that the body had been removed by someone. Luke's version has the women, including MM, having told the disciples about seeing angels at the tomb by this time.
Why is the author of Matthew the only writer who says anything about there being a guard at the tomb? (Scholars tend to agree that Mark's account came first, and after that ending the disciples taking the body would be a logical conclusion.) If there actually was a guard at the tomb, how could a story of the disciples removing the body----also mentioned by Matthew----even get started? What Roman soldier would have trusted Jewish authorities to smooth things over with their commander after pleading guilty to the death-penalty offense of sleeping on duty? Who would have believed that ALL of them were asleep at the same time?
It's more plausible that the disciples did remove the body and that Matthew and/or other early Christians attempted damage control by making up a story about Roman guards put at the tomb.
brunumb wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 10:03 am
If the body was washed and anointed before wrapping there would be little or no blood stain at all. In my opinion, the blood stains on the shroud have been faked.
Diogenes wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 1:40 pm
There are multiple contradictions in the accounts:
How Long Was Jesus in the Tomb?
How the Tomb was Guarded
How He Is Anointed Before Burial
Who Visited Jesus’ Tomb?
When Did they visit?
It’s not clear what the women saw when they arrived at the tomb.
Who Greets the Women?
What did the Women Do?
https://www.learnreligions.com/contradi ... omb-250141
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JoeMama wrote: ↑Sat Apr 15, 2023 2:02 pm
This, from St. Augustine, may be relevant to this discussion:
St. Augustine (354-430) was one of the founders of the Roman Catholic Church. He well understood that Christianity was like a house of cards; if the church dared to admit to even a single error in the Bible, who could say there wasn't an error on every page? The resurrection story might then be false and everyone's hopes are in vain. This is what he said:
"The most disastrous consequences must follow upon our believing that
anything false is found in the sacred books....If you [even] once admit into such a high sanctuary of authority one false statement, there will not be left a single sentence of those books, which, if appearing to anyone difficult in practice or hard to believe, may not by the same fatal rule be explained away as a statement, in which intentionally, the author declared what was not true.--St. Augustine in Epistula, p. 28.
Obviously I don't agree with St. Augustine on this issue. And in this thread, I'm arguing we can reject inerrancy and
still be able to justify the belief the Bible is trustworthy and authoritative.
As for the resurrection, I'm not even using the Bible as a primary source yet. I'm arguing for the resurrection now through the artifact evidence of the TS and what we can deduce from it.