He does state that it's not conclusive proof.
Addressed this one in my last post.
Spud - would you now like to address the elephant in the room please. To quote:
'And there is, of course, the elephant in the room. Williams argument is all about the credibility of eye witnesses. So using his argument that because they were right about trees and names etc their witness of miracles must be correct too why on earth didn't those eye witnesses (the people in that time and place) accept the miracles, which we know they didn't as Christianity failed to gain a foothold in that time and place. The actual eye witnesses, the people around at the time (by and large) rejected the claims in the gospels. Had they accepted them they would have surely have rejected Judaism and accepted Christianity - but they didn't.
And Christianity is alone amongst the major religions in failing to persuade those about in the time and place of its forming that their religion was correct.'And Williams use of the feeding of the 5,000 is a fantastic example of that. Note too that I think in the gospels 5000 is only the men, so perhaps double that number were (if you believe the gospels) direct eye witnesses to an incredible miracle. Assume each told another 4 people about this amazing thing they had witnesses. So straight away you'd have 50,000 people who are either direct witnesses or told first hand by a direct witness. And that's jus tone 'miracle' - as Williams states there are countless purported miracles.
Given this - surely, if what was claimed was actually witnesses by the people, the developing Christianity would have spread like wildfire. But it didn't - it failed to take a foothold amongst the people there in the place and time. So in effect those eye witnesses, by and large, rejected the claims of Jesus despite all these 'miracles' they'd witnessed. So either they were bizarrely unimpressed by incredible 'miracles' which seems totally implausible if they'd actually seen them as claimed. Or, of course, they didn't witness anything of the sort - the miracles as claimed in the gospels never happened.