You have asserted that these are (just) claims and not facts. That is a positive claim for something. What evidence to you have that the claims made by the NT-writers were (just) claims and not facts? You have gone beyond "I see no good reason to believe they these claims are correct."
These are anecdotal claims, Alan, made in an ancient book of imprecise provenance, that haven't been shown to be undisputed historical facts - you who say they are more than claims have the burden of proof here: I'm quite happy to stick at claims since I see no route from them to historical facts since you guys haven't provided a method that can be used to confirm supernatural agency.
But why were they supporters/followers of Jesus. I'm sure you can see the risk that they were genuine and accurate.
Indeed - effective propaganda tends to have the effect of encouraging people to believe certain things: but where these no doubt sincere beliefs involve claims that a dead person was resurrected then their sincerity alone isn't really sufficient grounds to accept that their beliefs are true.
This is, again, where you need a method that can satisfactorily remove the problems of human artifice.
Update: Just to add, Alan, since I know you are fond of dictionary definitions, this one seems to support my use of 'claim' since the NT anecdotes about resurrection and Jesus being seen and interacted with fit this definition of 'claim' - 'State or assert that something is the case, typically without providing evidence or proof:'
http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/claim
Another OED definition. "Anecdotal" is "(Of an account) not necessarily true or reliable, because based on personal accounts rather than facts or research." That sounds to me like relying on my mate down the pub whose aunt heard at the launderette that someone had heard... If so, then your description of the NT accounts as anecdotal is incorrect or, at least, ambiguous. Luke, for starters, claimed to have researched his sources "Many have undertaken to draw up an account of the things that have been fulfilled among us, just as they were handed down (
παραδίδωμι) to us by those who from the first were eyewitnesses and servants of the word. With this in mind, since
I myself have carefully investigated everything from the beginning, I too decided to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus,..." (first verses of his gospel). Paul too, as well his own personal experience, checked things out with witnesses of Jesus life, death and resurrection (Galatians 1:18, 19 which says he met with Peter and Jesus' formerly unbelieving half-brother, James. He was also in Jerusalem with the apostles and others on other occasions). The early church, much nearer in time and geography to the time and and location of what went on, understood Matthew's gospel to have been authored by Matthew the apostle, Mark's by Mark basing it on what Peter had told him and John's gospel to be by the apostle and eye-witness. You say it is of "imprecise provenance". Surely those nearer in time and geography would, other things being equal, be better placed to know where those documents came from. Do you have any good reason to doubt the sincerity and ability of the early church to get that correct?
You speak of things "that haven't been shown to be undisputed historical facts".
Anyone can dispute
anything, but so what? Disputed by whom? You? JeremyP? As for them being claims, I am saying that it seems reasonable to accept that Jesus did die, was buried in a known tomb, that the tomb was empty a couple of days later and that on a dozen or so occasions individuals and groups were convinced that they met, spoke and sometimes ate with Jesus. For me, the best explanation of those
generally accepted facts is that Jesus really was alive.
You keep repeating that we have no method "that can be used to confirm supernatural agency", but that is incorrect. If Jesus had been killed and was indeed alive again a couple of days later, right as ninepence, then feel free to propose a naturalistic method for that happening. No-one will here. Jesus is recorded as predicting his death and resurrection and the witnesses were convinced Jesus was indeed alive again. As it is, it seems obvious to me (first as a science student but not, I would say, in thrall to science as the answer to everything and still thinking the same 36 years later), that the best explanation was that proposed by the bloke who was dead and then was alive, i.e. that God raised him from the dead.
You speak of the NT possibly being propaganda yet refuse to give any sensible motive for the production of such propaganda. Please, would you give such a motive. A means would also be interesting.
Cheers,
Alan