I hope it's all right if I hop in here even though the question is addressed to John. (I won't be home for most of the rest of the day, so if I don't post this now it won't get posted until at least tomorrow afternoon, and it seems important.)
iwpoe wrote:
John, I hope this doesn't go too far afield, but is it even right to say that confirmation of just the resurrection is sufficient to confirm Christianity *full stop*? Why wouldn't it merely confirm that Christ was himself paranormal in some respect or some other limited aspect of the complex that is the tradition? Wouldn't you need additional considerations to confirm the rest?
Of course, and that's part of the point. In fact, it's entirely possible to think the Resurrection was a literal, historical event that nevertheless doesn't support anything like the whole of Christianity -- even the belief that Jesus Himself was in any way "paranormal," let alone the sole Way of salvation (or indeed any such Way).
That's exactly why John is focusing on the specific claim of Christian particularism. His very question expressly assumes that one has accepted the Resurrection as a real paranormal event on the basis of historical evidence and probabilities, and he's suggesting that drawing (um) "Christianly particularist" conclusions from that belief may be making too much stew from one oyster.
Last edited by Scott (7/16/2015 1:23 pm)