That's all very well Jeremy but do you consistently apply your doubts?
Jeremy will answer that for himself.
But for me there is a fundamental principle that needs to be recognised - namely that where you are being asked to belief something, the level of incredulity that is in the claim is critical to the requirement for evidence.
So imagine if someone made a claim that a red car passed them on a zebra crossing, and that claim only came to light 50 years after the event. Now the 'radio silence' between the event and its reporting would certainly lead to a degree of scepticism, but the unremarkable nature of the claim might lead us to conclude 'fine, if you say so' - effectively a nominal acceptance because, frankly accepting or rejecting the claim has no ramifications.
Take another example - someone claimed that an alien spaceship passed them on a zebra crossing, abducted them and returned them a day later. And that now certain people can have special powers but only if they accept the story as true. And, again only reported 50 years after the event. Well now the claim is extraordinary and therefore a shrugging 'if you say so' will not do - there needs to serious evidence to back up that extraordinary claim or my scepticism will lead me to reject it until or unless that evidence is forthcoming.
And that is where many Christian apologists play a deeply disingenuous game. The notion that because there are certain things in the bible that are of the 'fine, if you say so' variety, that therefore we should accept all that is in there. And the presence of little details that seem plausible, or even can be proved to be correct, makes no difference whatsoever as to scepticism over the extraordinary claims - just as were the alien abduction story to claim that the weather was bright and sunny on that particular day, and that to be true, wouldn't make one iota of difference in accepting the alien abduction to be true without extraordinary evidence.