A religiously charged context is just that, a context of a person, event or thing that is charged with religious significance. I explained that it's purpose isn't to establish miracles but to provide a symmetry breaker between the life and death of Jesus and the life and death of regular people.
It only provides a "symmetry breaker" (another odd phrase) if Jesus
actually did miracles. Did he? What do most scholars think? What is the evidence?
Most people aren't miracle workers and exorcists who proclaim themselves to be God's eschatological agents and so you can't point to them to show that since whatever supernatural force there may be out there didn't raise them, it also didn't raise Jesus.
Actually I can. How many people who proclaim themselves to be miracles workers actually do miracles?
You said you were familiar with Licona's work so I assumed you'd know what I'm referring to in the previous paragraph and this. The bedrock presented in the OP is the historical bedrock for the fate of Jesus. What I'm talking about here is a historical bedrock for the life of Jesus, that is facts about Jesus' life that enjoy the support of a virtually unanimous consensus. The two I mentioned are a part of it. I don't feel the need to argue much for them for the same reason I don't feel the need to argue for the 3 facts from the OP. I can if you want, but that they're accepted by scholars from atheists to Christians should tell you enough already.
Everything you've mentioned, aside from the existence of the supernatural, does not help your case, as I've explained to you now point by point.
You're being uncharitable here. It should be obvious I was referring to people who would deny the supernatural aspect of such an occurence if they witnessed it, instead chalking it up to unknown natural phenomena.
You're arguing for a patently absurd event that contradicts all available data of how the world works. It isn't uncharitable of me, when you bring up another absurd hypothetical, for me to wonder if you think such things are real, or even possible.
It is the 3 facts that are claiming the resurrection.
And again, as we've now gone over, those three facts are insufficient. You have to add more to get to a resurrection.
It is up to a scholar to construct a hypothesis that explains these facts. Making a hypothesis that involves the resurrection actually happening is no more backwards than making a hypothesis that it didn't happen. Your attempt at dismissing one side as not being objective or critical in their thinking is just a sign that you're not open to hypotheses that might challenge your worldview.
This is silly. It's not my job to prove something
didn't happen. This is an attempt to shift the burden of proof. If you want to argue that the resurrection happened, it's your job to prove it
did, not everyone else's to prove it didn't. You are promoting a claim that contradicts all the available evidence of how human bodies work. By your own definition, that makes your claim implausible.
A serious discussion could be had about whether the supernatural is an explanation and I actually have an objection to the argument that goes along those lines, but saying the above is just a cheap retort of dismissing the opposition as dishonest which has no place in a meaningful discussion like this.
I didn't accuse you of dishonesty. Don't make false accusations, now. Let's take the temperature down. I don't think you're lying. I think you genuinely believe in the resurrection. I don't think you arrived at that belief through rational, objective analysis of the evidence, though.
When I said known option I mean something that can conceivably happen, something that could provide an explanation. It doesn't have to do with whether we've observed it or not.
It absolutely does. If you're alleging an event that not only you've never seen happen, but that also contradicts all the evidence we have of how the world actually works, then you have no clue if resurrection is even
possible, let alone that it's a "known option
." No reasonable definition of "known option" means, "anything I can think of, no matter how absurd."
And to your claim that it's not something I'd come up on my own I repeat that it is in the facts that the resurrection is mentioned.
The resurrection being something that was
believed by people is in the facts. That it
happened isn't. Resurrection would be as absurd now as it was then. If I told you my grandma was resurrected, would you buy it?
The disciples who had these experiences and Paul believed that they were appearances of the risen Jesus. You're acting like the resurrection is being shoehorned into a case that has nothing to do with it. The question is did it happen and if not what else best explains these facts.
People have all kinds of experiences of what they think are supernatural phenomena. The question is - are they? How often do you believe them?
You seem to have trouble understanding the point of bracketing worldviews. You shouldn't approach the data with an assumption that supernaturalism is true or false. Instead, you look at the data and compare hypotheses. If the data is best explained by the supernatural then so be it. To do otherwise is to just not allow any explanations that would go against your horizon. Historians need to follow the data not their ideology.
On the contrary sir, with all due respect it seems to be
you who has difficulty understanding this concept.
Both the naturalist and the supernaturalist agree that natural phenomena occur. They don't agree that supernatural events occur. So if they are both bracketing their worldviews, the only candidate explanations they're going to entertain will be
natural ones. Supernatural ones, while hypothetically possible, would be outside the purview of the bracketed historical analysis of the facts. This is why you don't see historians outside of religious apologetics making supernatural claims to explain historical data.
And this is exactly the point that I was getting at with my example of a headless man. If you would look at that and conclude that it's not supernatural but just an unknown natural explanation then you are ignoring an explanation that's available because you don't want to accept the supernatural.
Hang on a minute. You didn't answer my question about this. How would you tell the difference? How would you tell if an event you're seeing is caused by something supernatural or something natural that you don't understand?
I am honestly doubting that you have engaged Licona's work at any serious length when you claim this sort of ignorance of what he's saying. Why don't you honestly say what exactly did you read from him, if nothing else so that I can know what parts I need to elaborate on and what you will understand.
The person I'm engaging with today is you. Let's pretend I've never heard of Michael Licona before or heard or read a word he's ever said. That isn't true, but it's also irrelevant. My replies here remain the same. And you will need to reproduce here whatever features of his arguments that you think are pertinent for purposes of making the case that Jesus rose from the dead.