Thank you for your time and response! I have some counter points:
> "Exhibit #1: We all know from physics class that there are some things that have more than one property, viz., light. It can be perceived as a wave, and it acts like a wave, but it can also be perceived as particles, and it acts like particles. So which is? It is yet to be resolved."
The wave/particle duality is a concept, a Model that is used to describe the quantum world. Similarly a map of the world is a graphic model of the geography of our planet. Theories on quantum electrodynamics (QED) are continuously being refined. And, while the wave/particle duality might seem “unresolved”, i.e., it’s got to be a particle or a wave it can’t be both, physicists would say this is the wrong way to think about photons. These models from QED do not themselves provide support for a hypothesis of some sort of non-material, material.
> "Exhibit #2: The stuff of fairy tales. Scientists have discovered that sub-atomic particles, at a quantum level, "don't have one fixed location" and are able to pass through barriers as if they weren't even there. (
http://www.foxnews.com/science/2014/06/ ... -barriers/)"
Jesus passing through walls is not impossible. This is sufficiently proven because there are physics experiments that have used a phenomenon known as “interaction-shifted tunneling resonance” in which high energy particles passed through a lattes of super cooled cesium up to 5 atoms thick. If I have represented your position correctly then I don’t agree.
> "Exhibit #3: Dark matter. Stuff that is there but isn't there. It accounts for most of the universe, but it's still hypothetical and has never been directly detected. It is hypothesized because of discrepancies."
This is not quite correct either. Scientists “infer” the existence of dark matter because it seems to exert gravitational effects on normal, visible matter. It was hypothesized in order to account for the discrepancies between the calculations of the mass of galaxies. Dark matter can’t be directly observed because it doesn’t absorb or emit light, hence its name.
> "Given the nature of these scientific observations, the teachings of the Bible are in good company. Heaven has some properties of being a physical place, but a different kind of physical place than the stuff of earth. Wave or particle?"
Unfortunately all you’ve given is a heaven (god) of the gaps argument.
> "Resurrected bodies of Matthew 27. If we grant the existence of God (which I don't know if you do or not), who has power over matter (which he created), there is nothing to cause us to doubt the possibility of what we read here. But you have some of the facts wrong. They appear at Jesus' death. There no assemblage and waiting around for a day and a half. When Jesus died, the text says there was a physical resurrection of some dead people (we don't know how many), who walked around the city for (we don't know short or long) a period of time on that day. Nor does the text say that nobody notices. Then they were gone, as far as we know. How possible is this? For those who believe Jesus rose from the dead, it's a no-brainer than he can also raise others. That's Paul's exact point in 1 Cor. 15.
None of us should without substantial and compelling evidence just grant “the existence of God”. There have been many Gods in the past and there are many Gods today. I don’t know what God can and can’t do and from what I gather neither can anyone else.
Next: When Jesus died the graves were opened; and many bodies of the saints which slept arose. And came out of the graves ”after his resurrection”, and went into the holy city, and appeared unto many. I suppose one can read it both ways. The saints could have been awoken the same day as Jesus resurrected but another point was that nobody noticing these saints returning to Jerusalem. My point was that if many people came back to life and were seen by many people, it must have created quite a stir (even if the corpses were in pretty good shape!). Yet Matthew seems to be the only person aware of this happening. No historians of that time or later reported anything of this, neither do the other gospel writers. This was maybe the greatest miracles of Jesus’ time.