If we compare the account of Jesus' life, death and resurrection with other historical accounts, it compares very favorably in terms of reliability, stands up well to textual criticism, and has not yet been shown to be wrong archeologically. If we can trust that which has been confirmed by archeology to be historically accurate, why should we not trust the rest of it? It clearly had a huge impact on the ancient world, was not really questioned in the immediate aftermath of Jesus' earthly life, and has continued to grow without coercion.PaulB007 wrote:So from an outsiders perspective, looking at the bible and the non new testement accounts of Jesus, do you truly believe there is enough evidence to conclude this is God's son who was resurrected?
I know that many seekers focus on the resurrection as something that is unheard of, just because it simply is not seen today. (Our friend BW may differ from us on that assessment.) And while the resurrection is a key doctrine of Christianity, so is ex-nihilo creation, and at least for me, that is a much bigger deal than Jesus waking up from the dead.
My direct answer to your question though, is this: The existence of God is everywhere, in everything. It does not depend on just a single historical, or scientific, or philosophical argument.It is the very nature of this type of inductive inquiry that makes it a bottomless pit, a never-ending quest. One cannot start from a specific issue, such as the resurrection, or the historicity of Paul, or the argument of evil, and arrive at a deductive conclusion that God exists. Logically, that simply does not work, like a square circle.
There is an abundance of evidence that there is something greater than ourselves, a first cause that put an ordered and life-friendly universe around us. While the examination of all that evidence may lead you on a seesaw ride of yes-no-yes-no, it is only when one realizes that there must have been a first cause greater than the universe that one can conceive of God.
Skepticism, and a conviction of the non-existence of God, is a personal experience, just like gaining faith in God. And through personal experience, just like one can arrive at a disbelief in a greater Being, one becomes a Christian.