Vlad,
No Ehrman says a historian is not obliged to deny miracles...
Which no-one disagrees with, any more than a cosmologist who believes on faith that there’s an orbiting teapot is obliged to deny the orbiting teapot. What he can’t do though is to claim that the tools and methods of cosmology justify his teapot belief, any more that a historian can claim that the tools and methods of academic history justify his belief in a resurrection.
Do you get it now?
Denial of miracles is not therefore necessary in the business of history, contrary to what you would have us believe.
No-one is saying otherwise. Stop lying.
Ehrman is not saying therefore that miracles fail the standards of history.
That’s exactly what he says: “
When they think or say this, however, they do so not in the capacity of the historian, but in the capacity of the believer”.
He may be saying that the only way to accept new testament miracles as a historian appears in his view is to believe them
a priori, but I note people who have said they have come to belief because, partly, of what they perceive as the historicity of
the gospels.
Wrong again. He says that a historian may well believe in miracles, but not by applying the tools and methods of academic history. The fact of being a historian (or a plumber for that matter) is irrelevant for the purpose of his beliefs about miracles.
Why are you still getting this wrong?
So far all I have been presented that all miracles never happened are a priori arguments that miracles don't happen or that history denies miracles a priori.
No you haven’t. Why are you still confused about how the burden of proof works? “
The miracles never happened” (ie, your straw man) and “
there are no sound reasons available for thinking the miracles did happen” are epistemically very different statements.
Can you see why?
I do not believe then that there is a naturalistic default in history that needs no justification.
Gibberish.
If one thinks it didn't happen as per the gospels then there is a duty to say what actually did happen
No there isn’t. I have no sound reasons to think that, say, the resurrection of Jesus happened. I can think of lots of reasons for the story to exist, but I have no “duty” at all to demonstrate which of them (if any) are most likely to be true.