Why would that be?
After the talk, Elle made herself available to individuals who wished to converse. Even amongst Christians, there could well have been a number amongst the audience of two thousand who were sceptical of her claims
If they were sceptical of claims about so-called miraculous healings they wouldn't have been Christians in the first place, one would have thought, given their prevalence in the Christian narrative.
so she would need to be prepared to back up her claims to any sceptics.
But previously you said there were no sceptics in the audience:
The people she gave this talk to were not sceptics, they were fellow Christians who would naturally assume she was telling the truth.
(Reply #136, page 6 on this thread, originally posted May 25th 2015, 11:11:44pm).
Were there sceptics or were there not?
Why would anyone simply
assume that anyone telling such an implausible tale would be telling the truth?
Did anybody raise their hand and raise objections? Ask questions? Probe further? Require specifics?
I feel a story being changed in the telling here ... which given the context is rather apt really