marco wrote:Claire Evans wrote:
This is an evasion. You must acknowledge that people who knew Jesus well would know His voice and see that it differs from His brother's. Anyway, we have to assume that all the witnesses actually met Jesus and I don't think that is likely.
marco wrote:Claire, when I start to be evasive (perish the thought) I will knock on a church door. I have not the slightest reason to evade anything you say.
I am methodically going through EACH item you said had been refuted and I am illustrating possibilities. We know little or nothing about Christ's family and for all the apostles knew (remember he appeared out of the blue) he COULD have had a twin brother. And I told you it is easy to confuse twins - for I do so. This is not as improbable as a resurrection, therefore worth consideration. There may have been a bigger reason, such as a planned insurrection, behind Jesus.
Wouldn't it have been in the Bible if Jesus had a twin brother? I think that would have been very important to mention. There is no iota of evidence to suggest that there was any planned insurrection. They didn't have to wait until Jesus' death to have an insurrection. They could have done it while He was still alive. The disciples showed no propensity for violence. What would it have achieved? They would probably face execution from the Romans for sedition.
marco wrote:The medical facts you give are not facts at all. You blithely say: "His bladder wasn't pierced. The water wasn't urine." How on earth do you know this? Are you suffering from that awful confirmation bias virus you passed on to me?
If His bladder was pierced, urine would have come out of it in a trickle because He was seriously dehydrated. Agreed? They would be no gushing out of water. The Romans knew where to pierce.
Are you saying pleural effusions from trauma is not a medical fact?
Claire Evans wrote:
Are you going to break the legs of someone who is dead or at least unconscious? They didn't break legs for fun. It was to kill a person within minutes. The whole point of a crucifixion was to let them hang there for days.
marco wrote:Well I am not personally going to break anybody's legs but the Roman soldiers or mercenaries posted there would have certainly been capable of breaking legs just for the fun of it. They already, according to Mel, were over-enthusiastic in their scourging. The crucifix often had a foot support so that the victim could push up. When legs were broken he was incapable of doing this and his body weight would make it eventually impossible to breathe and he would die of asphyxiation. It didn't happen to Christ because a 21st century doctor declared him dead, depriving the soldiers of some further fun.
Thanks for acknowledging that breaking of the legs was meant to kill quickly. Crucifixion was meant to last for days as a deterrent to the public. So why kill the other criminals so quickly? In fact, that would have killed the fun.
Claire Evans wrote:
How would the Essenes have benefited from a made up resurrection story? I think that rumours of a resurrection would certainly have gotten the attention of the disciples.
marco wrote:I take it you mean "rumours of an insurrection". So nothing would have evaded the cleverness of the disciples? Hmmm. The politics of the time would have given rise to plots and perhaps the appearance of a sacrificial figure would have served a purpose. Speculation- yes - but better than rising corpses.
Let us ask ourselves: why have an insurrection? What would motivate them? They went into hiding when Jesus was crucified. Why? I ask you again. How would the Essenes have benefited from a made up resurrection story? They didn't become apostles.
I did not say that the Fatima story was based on a hallucination. Post 1149:marco wrote:You say that Fatima was based on hallucination. That was one of the theories you discarded about the Resurrection, since SO MANY witnessed it and they could not all be hallucinating. But of course Catholics are especially prone to hallucinations, but not the disciples and their friends! Sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. Dismiss X and you must also dismiss Y lest we start accepting the miraculous rather than an earthly explanation.
rikuoamero wrote:
"Just chiming in to say that it's interesting that Claire says fatima was not a hallucination and apparently believes herself that it was a genuine miracle...a miracle recognised as such by the Romans Catholic Church...declared as such by popes."
Claire wrote:
"It needs to be proven that it was a hallucination by doctors. I rule that out. However, mass hysteria is a possibility. Plain lying is also. Or they really had visions of the sun stopping in the middle of the sky and believed it really happened. In one believes in the supernatural, it is very possible for spirits to make people see what really isn't there."
Mass hallucinations are not possible unless all witnesses have something medically wrong with them at the same time which I see no case of.
Please don't evade this question. What other medical explanation is there that would account for the water coming out of Jesus' side when pierced?