David Blaine has produced illusions that we do not know how to duplicate. He has also accomplished physically extreme feats, such as fasting for 44 days and holding his breath for 17 minutes.
Suppose he were to die and that three days later some of his fans claimed his grave was empty. Don't you think someone would bother to go check if it actually happened? Couldn't it be an illusion or perhaps some other extreme physical feat in which he has feigned death?
So why is it that Jesus, who apparently performed more miracles than all of the books in the whole world could record, was said to have risen from the dead and yet no one bothered to go look? Whether sympathetic, antagonistic, or merely fascinated as a neutral observer, there was plenty of motivation to go and see for oneself that the tomb was empty. And yet there is no record of anyone visiting the tomb after Easter Sunday, and there was certainly no record of a neutral party making the trip.
Or did skeptics actually go visit? Why would it be the case that skeptics actually did visit the tomb, and yet the gospels did not record this? That would seem to cut against the narrative of the gospels, since everyone - including the disciples - were always skeptical of Jesus, and the gospels were always making a point of this.
The complete lack of an investigation for a miraculous event is in fact evidence that no miracle occurred in the first place.
Suppose he were to die and that three days later some of his fans claimed his grave was empty. Don't you think someone would bother to go check if it actually happened? Couldn't it be an illusion or perhaps some other extreme physical feat in which he has feigned death?
So why is it that Jesus, who apparently performed more miracles than all of the books in the whole world could record, was said to have risen from the dead and yet no one bothered to go look? Whether sympathetic, antagonistic, or merely fascinated as a neutral observer, there was plenty of motivation to go and see for oneself that the tomb was empty. And yet there is no record of anyone visiting the tomb after Easter Sunday, and there was certainly no record of a neutral party making the trip.
Or did skeptics actually go visit? Why would it be the case that skeptics actually did visit the tomb, and yet the gospels did not record this? That would seem to cut against the narrative of the gospels, since everyone - including the disciples - were always skeptical of Jesus, and the gospels were always making a point of this.
The complete lack of an investigation for a miraculous event is in fact evidence that no miracle occurred in the first place.