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Replying to post 1 by SkyChief]
Resurrection is a miracle that can only be attributed, directly or indirectly, to God. Being supernatural in nature, science can not prove or disprove it inasmuch as science's domain is the natural world. As Professor of Nuclear Science and Engineering of MIT, Ian Hutchinson puts it:
"Science offers natural explanations of natural events. It has no power or need to assert that only natural events happen." -
http://www.veritas.org/can-scientist-be ... ypotheses/
God can restore to life anyone who could have been dead for millenniums (Acts 24:15). As such, forensic science, and particularly, rigor mortis is of no consequence.
The literal resurrection of Jesus is a cornerstone of Christian faith. With all due respect to your "Christian" friend, no one who rejects it for what it really is - a rising from the dead not from a pretend death - can rightly call himself a Christian. The apostle Paul at 1 Corinthians 15:14, 15 (KJV) puts it bluntly:
"And
if Christ be not risen, then is our preaching vain, and
your faith is also vain. Yea, and
we are found false witnesses of God; because we have testified of God that he raised up Christ."
If Jesus were only pretending to be dead then he would have pulled off the greatest, cruelest hoax perpetrated in human history for all his Apostles - eyewitnesses of his resurrection (1 Cor 15:3-8) - and countless others, willingly submitted to martyrdom in defense of their faith in a genuine resurrection. I doubt if any will be willing to die for a pretend event especially if he were contemporary to the said event. The only sensible conclusion is that it was a genuine resurrection.
Professor Ian Hutchinson, makes this argument more compelling when he said in his talk "Can a Scientist Believe in the Resurrection? Three Hypotheses (
http://www.veritas.org/can-scientist-be ... ypotheses/):
"... the first disciples attested to a physical resurrection.
How could an untruth logically support high moral character? How could it have sustained the apostles through the extremes of persecution they experienced founding Christianity?
"Contrary to increasingly popular opinion,
science is not our only means for accessing truth. In the case of Jesus' resurrection, we must consider the historical evidence, and the historical evidence for the resurrection is as good as for almost any event of ancient history. The extraordinary character of the event, and its significance, provide a unique context, and ancient history is necessarily hard to establish. But
a bare presumption that science has shown the resurrection to be impossible is an intellectual cop-out. Science shows no such thing."
He is backed up by Matt J. Rossano, Professor of Psychology Southeastern Louisiana University in his article "Does Resurrection Contradict Science" who said (
https://www.huffpost.com/entry/does-res ... d_b_848577):
"Now, what convinces the believer that Resurrection merits such authority when other imaginative possibilities such as extraterrestrial life or time-travel do not?
The answer here appears to be historical commitment. There's no record of people committing themselves to the point of martyrdom to other imaginative possibilities as they have to Resurrection. The earliest example of such commitment being found, of course, in the dramatic post-crucifixion turn-around of the Apostles. Such an astounding change of heart, followed by an unwavering commitment capable of altering human history demands a categorically unique explanation: Resurrection."
Moreover, the resurrection doctrine is certainly not lacking in scientific underpinnings. Scientists now have the ability to recreate or clone (remember Dolly the sheep) an individual or any organism based on DNA. Also, people sometimes preserve their dead loved ones through cryonics in the hope of being able to restore them back to life, preserving, not only their DNA, but the brain. Note what this recent article says:
"Using a technique developed three years ago, researchers from MIT and 21st Century Medicine have shown that it's possible to preserve the microscopic structures contained within a large mammalian brain. The breakthrough means scientists now have the means to store and study samples of the human brain over longer timescales -
but the method could eventually, maybe, be used to resurrect the dead." -
https://gizmodo.com/new-brain-preservat ... 1823741147
This lends credence to neurologist Richard M. Restak who commented about the human brain and its neurons. "All that we are and all that we have done could be read by an observer capable of deciphering the connections and circuits that have been established within our 50 billion nerve cells." -
https://wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/1101998029#h=74
This opens up the opportunity to recreate not only the body thru it's DNA but also the person's memory thru digitizing his brain connections and downloading it.
I'm not saying that this is how God will do it. What I'm saying is that science backs Him up - not that God needs its support.
Recreating an individual is a miracle now but it may be understood better in the future as the following quote suggests:
'As to miracles in the Bible, Akira Yamada, professor emeritus of Kyoto University in Japan, says: "
While it is correct to say that [a miracle] cannot be understood as of now from the standpoint of the science in which one is involved (or from the status quo of science), it is wrong to conclude that it did not happen, simply on the authority of advanced modern physics or advanced modern Bibliology. Ten years from now, today's modern science will be a science of the past. The faster science progresses the greater the possibility that scientists of today will become the target of jokes, such as 'Scientists of ten years ago seriously believed such and such.' " - Gods in the Age of Science.' -
https://wol.jw.org/en/wol/d/r1/lp-e/1101998027#h=69
Peace mate!