> How do you get from belief in "existence of God" to "making Christianity the rational conclusion"? Do you acknowledge that your statement skips some key steps?
Of course I have skipped some steps. I don't write a wall of text for every question asked. I basically answered in 6 brief paragraphs, which makes it obvious I have not been thorough, but instead only cursory.
The evidences for the existence of God only take us to theism, not to Christianity in particular. To accomplish that, one must weigh the evidences for the credibility and authority of the Bible, the claims of Jesus, the evidences for the resurrection, and the early history of the Church. To do all of these in one post is both unwieldy and unwise. They each require a forum of their own to be dealt with properly, and even that is restrictive, as you likely know.
Am I being fair to assume that as an honest inquirer you have studied the primary documents, that you have read the cases by Christians and atheists, that you have listened to the debates between the two camps, and that you have evaluated the historical, logical, scientific, and philosophical data and arguments? I will assume these things, in which case I don't need to write a book in response to your question. You know the arguments, and you know the strengths and weaknesses of the various positions. You know the rationale and the evidences. If you have done these things, as I have, then you stand among those few atheists I had this discussion with who have actually engaged the data and arguments.
> Evidence for the resurrection is LITERALLY only the Bible.
This is not true. Some of the strongest evidence for the resurrection comes to us from the historical record: the growth of the new movement (the Church) in the very heartland of the root movement (Judaism)—and not only that, but also its expansion in the very locale of the crucifixion and alleged resurrection. If ever there were a place where the eyewitnesses could confirm or refute the resurrection, it was in Jerusalem within months of the dirty deed done dirt cheap.
A literal and historical resurrection is the most reasonable conclusion to explain why many staunch first-century Jews would abandon the Sabbath, the sacrifices, and the Law of Moses and claim the reality of a physical resurrection in the city in which it recently occurred. The Jews were fanatically attached to their Sabbath. Since the early Church was almost exclusively Jewish, it must have required an event of deep and startling significance to make them switch. The institution of Christian worship on Sunday traces back to the place and date of the resurrection. The resurrection alone accounts for this transition. If the story were false, the movement would have been quickly and easily stamped out.
N.T. Wright says, "Neither the empty tomb by itself…nor the appearances by themselves (both from the biblical record) could have generated the early Christian belief. The empty tomb alone would be a puzzle and a tragedy. Sightings of an apparently alive Jesus, by themselves, would have been classified as visions or hallucinations, which were well enough known in the ancient world. However, an empty tomb and appearances of a living Jesus, taken together, would have presented a powerful reason for the emergence of the belief."
In other words, it's the undeniable historical record that gives us a more credible basis for the veracity of the resurrection than the material evidence (which in our era cannot be confirmed).
> case against which includes EVERYTHING we currently understand about biology, physics, and all other sciences.
It's precisely the nature of the resurrection against EVERYTHING we will EVER know about biology, physics, and all other sciences that makes the resurrection what it is. We will never get to a place where we can say, "OK, science can explain Jesus's resurrection from the dead." And that's exactly the point: What happened there was supernatural, not natural. It was an absurd claim that would get them nowhere unless it were convincingly and confirmably true at the time.
> Just to be crystal clear, I am NOT giving you this. Your baseless assertions are convincing to nobody but yourself and others who already believe. This is the definition of irrational.
See, this is what I get. I was assuming, as I mentioned, that you've done plenty of reading and engaging of the material. I was assuming that you've studied and wrestled with the arguments for theism (cosmological, teleological, language, fine-tuning, axiological, the argument of other minds, and experience, among others. The assertions are far from baseless.
Am I left to understand that you have arrived at your conclusion without serious study of these matters? That's the definition of bias.
> Your baseless assertions are convincing to nobody but yourself and others who already believe.
They are convincing to many who didn't previously believe. That's what "conversion" means. An Oxford don named C.S. Lewis converted from atheism to Christianity on its weight of evidence. Philosopher Dr. Rosalind Picard from MIT; biologist Francis Collins; biochemist Alister McGrath; Dr. Gunter Bechly; and thousands of others (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_c ... _nontheism)
> Yet you've provided literally zero data. When you re-read your comment, do you honestly believe it to be a valid explanation for why EVERYONE should find it rational to believe in Christianity?
Of course I haven't provided data. The conversation at hand is "Do you understand why thinking people reject Christianity," not "Give me the entire case for theism and Christianity in 10,000 characters or less." I was assuming, hopefully rightly so, that you have investigated the case for yourself. If you haven't, but have drawn a conclusion before assessing the evidence, that's the definition of bias.
I have read works such as "The Existence of God" by Richard Swinburne, and "God and Other Minds" by Alvin Plantinga. Christianity is not only rational, but the case for theism and Christianity are stronger than anything put out by Dawkins, Harris, Hitchens, and certainly Carrier. I've listened to debates between Hitchens and Craig. I've read the debate between Kai Nielson and J.P. Moreland. Christianity is the most rational case on the block.
> Does the fact that the VAST majority of humans consider Christianity to be false imply that the vast majority of humans are irrational in regard to religion or that Christianity is not rational?
The majority has never been good at displaying truth. One just needs to breeze even cursorily through history to see that majority positions are not how we determine truth positions (mythology, flat Earth, any particular religion, doctors not washing hands, etc. ad infinitum).
> I try to take a new perspective and alter my views.
That's good, and respectable. All people should be like this, myself included.
> I rarely see this type of honest re-assessment among Christians. When I do, they usually cease to be Christians very shortly thereafter.
I obviously don't know in what circles of Christians you circulate. My experience has been the opposite. I've met and had conversations with Stephen Schaffner (The Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT), Francis Collins (the genome project), Jennifer Wiseman (in charge of the Hubble telescope), Denis Alexander (molecular biologist at Cambridge), and so many others: philosophers, scientists—giants in their fields, and all Christians. And you must certainly be aware that the scientific giants of history—Newton, Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, Pascal, to name a few—were all Christians. Christianity is the most rational case on the block.