Let's bring this over from the other string. I wouldn't want you to miss it.
aglassdarkly wrote:
The subject of this string is the resurrection of Jesus, not resurrections in general. I've responded to what you have said about the resurrection of Jesus. Your questions about a hypothetical missing corpse is unrelated and irrelevant. POST #394
aglassdarkly wrote: Common experience could be useful, if the common experience were actually relevant to the debate at hand.
Let's look at this situation from a less hypothetical and a more specific point of view. According to Acts, while on the road to Damascus Paul became sick and disoriented. In fact he had symptoms consistent with heat stroke and dehydration, or possibly dysentery which also produces dehydration. At any rate Paul had to be helped into the city by his traveling companions who then left him at the home of a Christian man to be cared for. Sick and delirious, unable to eat or drink for three days, Paul believed after his recovery that during his illness he had experienced a vision of Jesus, who had been executed some years earlier. This experience proved to be life changing for Paul and after his recovery Paul became a confirmed Christian. So we are left to conclude either that Paul, in his delirium, and while being tended to and prayed over by a Christian, hallucinated a vision of Jesus. Or, that Paul actually MET WITH AND TALKED WITH A DEAD MAN.
On the one hand:
(1). Is there any reason to
suppose that Paul might have had a hallucination while he was very ill? Lack of water for three days will make even a healthy person hallucinate. Paul had all of the symptoms of being very ill and it's certainly not uncommon for people to hallucinate when they have a high fever. I know personally because it's happened to me a couple of times in my life. And Paul WAS being tended to and prayed over by a Christian at the time of his hallucinations. That certainly would serve to explain a lot. Ooops! ARGUMENT FROM COMMON EXPERIENCE IS NOT RELEVANT TO THE DEBATE AT HAND AND IS THEREFORE FORBIDDEN!
(2). Is there any reason to
doubt that Paul had a hallucination while he was very ill? Well Paul certainly seemed to believe that the experience was completely real.
On the other hand:
(3).Is there any reason to
suppose that Paul actually had a conversation with Jesus, a man who had been executed some years earlier? Well Paul seemed to have been convinced of it and the author of Acts recorded it as fact.
(4). Is there any reason to
doubt that Paul had a conversation with Jesus years after Jesus was executed? Well, all common experience with people who have died...
ALTO! ARGUMENT FROM COMMON EXPERIENCE IS NOT RELEVANT TO THE DEBATE AT HAND AND IS THEREFORE
VERBOTEN!
By decree arguments (1) and (4) are not relevant and are disallowed. Therefore the only possible conclusion is that Paul actually had a conservation with Jesus years after Jesus was executed because Paul was fully convinced that it occurred.
And once again the unquestionable truth of Christianity has been sustained, praise the lord.