No, I'm not. And your statement that what one misses another tells is baseless, and utterly misrepresents the individual texts.You seem to be treating the stories as if each story has to have all the details, but the truth is that what one misses out on another tells.
Who went there? No agreement. What did they see? No agreement. What did they then do? No agreement. To whom did Jesus first appear? No agreement. Second appear? No agreement. Third appear? No agreement. Where did he say to meet the disciples? No agreement. Did he ascend from Jerusalem or from Galilee? No agreement.
AND no eyewitness account, not a single one. No contemporary account, all stories from between two and six decades ago. No independent account, neither at the time nor later. AND a basically incredible claim, demanding instead the highest quality of evidence, of which there is, as you can see, absolutely none.
No, you can't. To make the tales fit the reader's demands, when they've already spoken for themselves, and where the circumstances are so strongly in favor of their being fictions in the first place (as in my third para above) is outright dishonesty.In this way we can reconstruct the whole story and end up with a few details that appear to be contradictions on the surface, but not when examined in more detail.