Well, historians seem to report that people believed (and believe) in the resurrection, but I've never seen one who would factually report it as an event. That would be like reporting that Caesar was a god, and not simply that people believed it.
Yes but here's the point. The jesus mythers put forward a history in which jesus does not even exist. Some also argue that it couldn't have happened because naturalism rules against it. I would argue that the former group are putting forward a history but the latter group are not.
Opposing the Jesus myth historians are the historians who produced the New Testament account.
Now how are we to judge these historians? By their history or by their naturalism.
How also would history, and I've asked this a couple of times, treat an intersubjective event not explicable by methodological naturalism?
Would it pack up it's tools and throw it's hands up? or would it report it?
If history is done as methodological naturalism that is a choice rather than a necessity....and one has immediately switched in any case from methodological naturalism to philosophical naturalism.
History has no necessary commitment to methodological naturalism...unlike science which actually is methodological naturalism.