I am not lying. No atheist will "show me how to get crucified, get buried in a tomb and then two days later appear to people right as rain and have an empty tomb." Are you saying there is an atheist who will show me how to do it? If so, please name that person? Is it you? Will you show me how to do it?
This is your belief, Alan, and is a faith position.
My only claim/belief here is that no atheist will"show me how to get crucified, get buried in a tomb and then two days later appear to people right as rain and have an empty tomb." Why is that a "faith position"?
This account is indistinguishable from fiction,
Er, that is your claim. Indistinguishable by whom? You?
and it is possible than none of this actually happened in terms of historical facts.
Yes, possible, but IMO very unlikely to be substantially wrong. Speaking of possibilities doesn't get us too far. What we need are probabilities.
After all, this is surely the kind of thing that propagandists for Jesus would say, wouldn't they.
And that is the sort of thing an atheist would say.
Do you not see how pointless such statements are? To try to determine whether the NT writers would say such stuff we need to look at means and motive. What motive would they have for making it up?
So, to keep saying, as you do, that people saw Jesus after he was thought to be dead etc etc, and challenging atheists to show you 'how to do it' assumes that 'it', happened in the first place in terms of the NT narrative presenting only historical facts, and to conclude this you would have to eliminate the tendency of humans getting it wrong or making it up.
So, as I have asked many times of you and others, why would they make it up? How would they get it wrong? We have 5 apparently independent reports of Jesus' death and appearances to people.
You seem unable to even grasp the possibility that it didn't happen as told, or possibly at all, and that you may be a victim of propaganda.
That is incorrect. It is a possibility, but we need probabilities.
Perhaps you re taking the NT too literally, and in doing so avoiding the possibility that it isn't reliable.
You what? The gospels are ancient autobiographies (or very similar). They tell of what people do. You are muddled up.