There you go:
http://www.truthaccordingtoscripture.com/documents/apologetics/The%20New%20Testament%20Documents%20-%20Bruce.pdf
Haven't read in detail, just skimmed but cannot see anything revelatory - indeed seems pretty orthodox. Critically on the issue of miracles, he seems clear that these are a matter of faith, not of historical veracity. To quote:
'The question whether the miracle-stories are true must ultimately be answered by a personal response of faith-not merely faith in the events as historical but faith in the Christ who performed them, faith which appropriates the power by which these mighty works were done.'
In saying this he steps completely out of the world of history and into the world of theology.
I had a quick skim and will read more thoroughly when I get home (on holiday just now, with pesky grandchildren demanding to be entertained). It is very detailed for sure, but in that it seems incredibly self-referential, and reads like the apologetics it is. Much of the thinking seems sloppy though, with numerous bits that betray I think the bias of the author. For example;
'
Each of them was written in the first instance for a definite constituency, with the object of presenting Jesus of Nazareth as Son of God and Savior.' - a recipe for propaganda?
'
They may even be willing to accept the stories of raising the dead, in view of well authenticated cases of people who have been technically dead for a few minutes and have then been restored to life. ' - contrasting the restoration of a 3-day corpse is not the same as, say, recovery from cardiac arrest due to medical intervention (having been involved in a few during my working life). Bearing in mind too this was written in 1943 (the version used being revised in 1959) then recovery from cardiac arrest at the time of writing would be less likely than currently so I think the comparison he attempts with supernatural intervention is hopeless.
'
Or the disciples all with one consent became the victims of hallucination, or experienced something quite extraordinary in the nature of extrasensory perception. (The idea that they deliberately invented the tale is very properly discountenanced as a moral and psychological impossibility.) But the one interpretation which best accounts for all the data, as well as for the abiding sequel, is that Jesus' bodily resurrection from the dead was a real and objective event.' - an exercise in special pleading which also assumes that the disciples were immune from human artifice - hard not to laugh at this gem!
'
The miracle', if such it be, is that Jesus knew in advance hat Peter would find the coin there,' so that once more we are brought to realize that we must first make up our minds about Christ before coming to conclusions about he miracles attributed to Him.' - sounds like a recipe for confirmation bias.
No doubt this chap was a respected theologian with extensive knowledge of the bible - but this effort reeks of reification: a veritable fallacy-fest.