by jimwalton » Sun Apr 11, 2021 11:53 am
It is accurate to say that these uncorroborated events, conditions, and people, cannot yet be corroborated, but it's almost a minimalist argument to then claim (you haven't done this, but others have) that Luke is therefore unreliable. I doubt that it will ever be the case that everything is corroborated.
In my opinion, we still need to consider principles of reason in connection with this line of thinking. If an author has given us true and accurate information about places, cultural references, historical references, and religious references, and if his purpose in writing is to give us a carefully investigated account of what actually happened (Lk. 1.1-4), on what basis would someone claim "He was dead on accurate about all these things but lying through his teeth about x, y, and z"? If Luke is found to be above reproach in his historical method and reporting integrity, by what line of reasoning do we claim he's a crackpot about others of his alleged facts?