Chuns,
I think you start with a fixed idea that the communities were more than two decades away from the events and that the people are 100 degrees of separation.
Of course the full gospel is that Jesus is risen. Paul of course is the well known model for this, the encounter with the risen christ and his accounts are those which tell us about the established communities within two decades....(think 1995) of course the communities are established which suggests that people were meeting the personnel much earlier than two decades.
You miss the point entirely. Even allowing for the passage of time and for the changes stories undergo in multiple re-tellings, that still says nothing to how accurate or otherwise the account would have been of the first person on the spot. There are many possible but material explanations for a miracle story, and even if Person A genuinely thought he had seen a genuine miracle that says nothing whatever to whether he actually
did see a genuine miracle. How then, many re-tellings down the line, would anyone
else be able to verify the genuineness of the miracle explanation rather than just re-report that Fred
thought he'd seen a miracle?
You also seem to say that Christianity is believing somebody else's story and experience. This is not the Christianity of the epistles which talk about appropriating a living risen Christ for one's self with that in place resurrection is the logical explanation.
Sort of. Religious faiths
are "believing somebody else's story and experience" - do you seriously suggest that if you'd been abandoned as a child on a desert island you'd have come up with the stories in which you happen to believe all on your own? You might think that you've "appropriated a living Christ" but the more prosaic explanation is that instead you've had some experiences you find to be profound, and the religious stories with which you happen to be most familiar offer a convenient causal explanation.
Do you seriously think that, if you'd been born in a different time and at a different place, you wouldn't just as readily be saying something like, "that'll be the Nigerian Ant God then" for your causal explanation?
Seriously?
Oh, and whatever else you may think you have please don't ever suggest that it's a "logical" explanation given the absence of any method of any kind to distinguish your claims from wishful thinking and just guessing.
Survivor bias is no good for establishing Christianity in a person. It's not appropriate to bring it up.
It's precisely "appropriate" because it's what you did with your implied, "how come Christianity flourished and other faiths fell away if not for Christianity being true" mistake. I set out the bad thinking this entials in several points that you just ignored, so here they are again:
First, how exactly would you suggest that anyone would "check the stories and accounts" when they happened decades earlier and no-one thought them important enough to write down?
Second, on what basis would you dismiss the countless other communities that believed in different supernatural claims entirely and became just as established as the one you selected?
Third, why would you think survivorship has anything to do with truthfulness given the countless examples of chance and happenstance in other areas that can also lead to survival?
Fourth, if you really want to commit the fallacy why then would you dismiss, say, Islam when it satisfies the same criterion?
Fifth, what makes you think that time and place in which you happen to exist so special that the prevalent religion must be the true one, whereas the Aztec, Norse, Sumerians etc would have been wrong for doing just the same thing?