jeremyp,
Well, each to his own I guess. Me, I find "It rings true to me" type statements to be vapid and dull, to be ploughed through looking for an actual argument that never comes. Others though have different tastes.
I'm supposed to be retired here by the way ; - ) All best, over and out.
Hi blue of happy memory,
One wonders just what 'ringing truth' he perceived when comparing Mark's account with Matthew's. The latter says an angel came down in front of them and did the job, Mark's says the stone was already rolled, and the ladies went inside the tomb and saw a young man. Morrison's critical faculties seem very limited.
That's supposing there was any bloody tomb in the first place. If Jesus was indeed crucified, he may well have been left to decompose on the cross, and had his corpse picked away by vultures. That happened often enough. Not the sort of thing you want told about your hero after he's been deified.
St Paul made something of the less salubrious aspects of crucifixion, by saying that "Jesus had become a curse for us" (referring to some text in Leviticus, I believe). This was one way he tried to present Jesus as a scapegoat, atoning for the sins of the world.