> When I speak of the historical evidence, I am referring to facts that any reasonable person would also admit. There are thousands of elements of the Bible that have been confirmed by archaeology and historiography, geography and cultural studies.
This is not being contested and lends nothing to the discussion. Sure there was an Egypt, a Cyrus the Great and there are other facts that are mentioned in the bible. There are always facts included in fictional writing.
The heart of the problem is the unbelievable claims made in the bible such as this gem found in Matthew. The anonymous writer says an earthquake ripped open tombs and graves, then many saints were awoken from death. Now, these "many" saints can't go anywhere for two days because they have to wait on Jesus to stop being dead. What do you think all those saints were doing while they were waiting for Jesus to wake up? Since the graves were "opened" anyone could look inside the graves. What would a passerby see? Naked, dirty and rotted animated corpses? When and where did they get clothes? What about that first meal they had after being revived? What about legal issues concerning their return? Were they able to repossess their property and what kind of legalistic earthquake would that have set off with the Jewish leaders? Really, If this really happened it is remarkable that there is no surviving record of this anywhere, not even from the other supposed witnesses. Paul never mentions it either.
I'm going to toss out a couple other examples, not for you to specifically respond to, but for you to see what seems ridiculous to me. You have a donkey giving advice to its rider; an ax head that floats; a man that swallows a whale, no wait, I got that backwards, but it would have been a better miracle than a great fish that swallows a man, particularly if you want a "sign"; 5,000 Jews instantly converting to Christianity in a single day; 3 hours of darkness throughout the entire world during the crucifiction story; the unreconcilable testimony of the empty tomb story from the anonymous authors of the gospels. These are the things that are too fantastic to believe and require the "faith" that the OP was referring to.
My counter claim is simply this: If you have evidence then demonstrate that evidence and quit using the word faith altogether. If you mean "trust" or "confidence" then use trust and confidence.
Do you think your confidence and trust is justifiable? If your evidence is factually trustworthy and justifiable then it will need no testimonial from you or anyone else, just like facts and truth it will stand on it's own and speak for itself.