mikeynov said:
The entirety of Christian faith is stacked on Christ's sacrifice on the cross for the atonement of our sins.
Without the resurrection, Jesus is just another crucified Jewish zealot. The resurrection is our assurance of His identity and our hope for eternity.
mikeynov said:
Making that a matter of the weight of empirical evidence instead of faith seems theologically dangerous to me from a Christian perspective.
Dangerous only because you do not understand the meaning of Biblical faith.
mikeynov said:
And please answer my challenge regarding the historicity of Christ's resurrection, and how we could ever empirically verify this. In your own words.
This really would take a long time to explain. First, we would have to establish that we live in a theistic universe. To do so, Big Bang cosmology and the Kalaam cosmological argument, etc. must be considered.
From there, we would have to compare and contrast the truth claims of the major world religions and then question as to which ones are actually verifiable. By process of elimination, we would eventually be led to the Christian faith. Then, we would scrutinize the reliability of the Gospels as primary source documents, treating them with the same standards that we would use for any ancient document. This would lead us to the resurrection, the most crucial event in understanding the identity of Christ, and whether or not the testimony of His resurrection is reliable.
And hopefully, you would get past your false intellectualism silliness and realize what those who have undertaken a serious impartial investigation of the facts have realized; the resurrection is a historical fact.
On the other hand, if you cannot be convinced, then I hope that you can write a chapter by chapter refutation of Josh McDowell's More than a Carpenter. I know that he isn't the best of scholars but he is a good introduction and rather easy to read.