From: smayo@world.std.com (Scott A Mayo) Subject: Re: proof of resurection Organization: The World Public Access UNIX, Brookline, MA Lines: 33 jsledd@ssdc.sas.upenn.edu (James Sledd) writes: >Finally: >There is no proof of the resurrection of Christ, except in our spirits >communion with his, and the Father's. It is a matter of FAITH, belief >without logical proof. Incedently one of the largest stumbling blocks for >rational western man, myself included. >I hope that this is taken in the spirit it was intended and not as a >rejection of the resurrection's occurance. I beleive, but I wanted to point >out the weakness of logical proofs. Terms are being used in a loaded way here. "Logical proof" is an extremely messy thing to apply to real life. If you think otherwise, try to construct a proof that yesterday happened. Obviously it did; anyone old enough to be reading this was there for it and remembers that it happened. But *proof*? A proof starts with axioms and goes somewhere. You need axioms to talk about logical proof. You can say that you remember yesterday, and that you take as axiom that anything you clearly remember happened. I could counterclaim that you hallucinated the whole thing. To talk about proofs of historical events, you have to relax the terms a bit. You can show evidences, not proofs. Evidences of the resurrected Jesus exist. Proofs do not. I think Christianity goes down in flames if the resurrection is ever disproved. I also think that this will not happen, as the evidence for the resurrection is quite good as these things go. It is not entirely fair to claim that you can only take the resurrection on faith. There are reasons to believe it that appeal to the mind, too.