Nope. I don't have a faith so it can't compromise my critical thinking abilities.
Faith is just one form of mindset, jp. Critical thinking can be effected by any such mindset. The very fact that you can't see that suggests that your abilities have been compromised.
No it doesn't. Your acceptance of the gospels at face value is based on wishful thinking on your part.
The very fact that you use the term 'at face value' shows how little you understand about faith and mine in particular. Again, an example of your particular mindset compromising your critical thinking abilities.
Don't make me laugh. You have never come up with a rational argument for the resurrection. The fact that you claim you did on another secret site or on this one but it got deleted is no better than my claim that the dog ate my homework.
You are entitled to your opinion, jp, but since folk here have noted in the past that my arguments (and those of other Christians) have been rational - even if they disagree with them - suggests yet again that your critical faculties are compromised.
Name a non apologetic historian who regards the gospels as reliable.
'Scholars' don't have to be historians, but you know that already. However, since Roman writers referenced the events without providing any evidence to disprove it (something that both they and the Jewish leaders of the time could very easily have done) the historical reliability of the stories would seem to be greater than lesser. Interestingly, the very fact that the 3 synoptic gospels differ is some ways indicates, from a legal evidentiary pov, a greater chance of reliability than if they were all identical.