His religion was not resurrected in three days. For all the great things said by Abdul Baha, this, to me, is the worst thing said. We have the empty tomb. We have disciples go to the tomb. We have disciples talk with, eat with and touch Jesus. But all those verses are symbolic of the disciples being the real resurrected body of Jesus? Okay, if Abdul Baha is right, then the gospel story is the dumbest thing ever written.
I'm sticking with, if the gospel story isn't literally, historically true, then the gospel writers made it up or based it on legends and traditions that were floating around. But really? All those verses being symbolic? Why? Why... if after three days they started spreading the word about what Jesus taught, then why not say so? Because later the NT does say so. They did start teaching about a resurrected savior, but that was after they met with Jesus and saw him alive. I question it. I doubt it really happened literally, but I doubt the Baha'i "symbolic" explanation even more. Really? Why would four gospel writers all tell a make believe story about Jesus, and then expect people to know they were being allegorical?
And Paul also said that if Christ hasn't been raised from the dead, that they were all still lost in their sins. And Christians also read the Bible carefully and found Satan and Jesus everywhere. They found a sin curse that God put on Adam that needed Jesus, the perfect sacrifice, to fix. They found one verse where a young woman has a baby and they make that into a prophecy about Jesus being born of a virgin. If the Bible interprets itself the way the Christians see it, then the Holy Spirit is the Comforter that came on Pentecost.
And Baha'is "carefully" find verses here and there that they can use... just like Christians did. But is it the Bible interpreting itself, or each religion picking through verses that justifies their beliefs?