Oh, please. Someone is making psychiatric diagnosis of him based on the writing? Really? Why would you change from a neuro-surgeon to a preacher? The latter is much lower paying job and less prestigious. |
No, she was pronounced dead. She had no pulse and no heart beat. |
It was a mistake. She wasn't dead, because she wasn't warm and dead. You can have a person who is very, very cold and they don't seem to have a heart beat. When you warm them up, the heart starts beating normally again. The brain isn't dead and the organs aren't dead, but the heart seems to have stopped. This is such a well known occurrence that they teach it to EMTs, which is the most basic, basic level of prehospital care. |
Did you really overlook the part about his repeated medical malpractice? |
Being "pronounced dead" is not the same as being wholly dead. |
I can write that you are a troll, or anything else I want to say about you. I could do a real hit job on you. Based on your writing, and based on me making stuff up. Does that make it true? You tell me. |
There's plenty of supported evidence if you care to spend 5 seconds on Google. But I understand - facts and information are irrelevant for you. |
Why don't you give us a link, then, ducky. This is on you, because you're the one that wants to trash the guy. And no links to atheist sites with obvious agendas, please. |
Wikipedia The woman was clinically dead for like 3 hours. |
That's not unusual. A few cases like it happen every year. You're not dead until you are warm and dead. The cold stopped her heart, but lowered her need for oxygen and energy. Her brain, organs, and tissues didn't start to die. As she warmed up while laying the morque, her brain and her autonomic system kicked back in and her heart restarted. It happens quite a bit. It's not a miracle. It's science. Other stories: http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/story/2013/02/19/toronto-baby-among-cases-children-survive-cold-temperatures.html http://www.coolantarctica.com/Antarctica%20fact%20file/science/cold_hypothermia.htm This study looked at using a cardiac bypass pump on clinically dead victims of hypothermia to rewarm them and found that it could be helpful and increase the chances of survival. The mean time they were doing this was 90 minutes to 3 hours and ten minutes. They had some survivors in that group. http://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/NEJM199711203372103 |
That's because God is NOT polytheistic, and is not vengeful. |
The story of Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead is pretty convincing. He was dead for several days. He initially used the euphamism that Lazarus had gone to sleep, but then plaininly stated "Lazarus has died". His sisters feared that when his tomb was opened there would be a disgusting stench. Jesus raised him from death in front of many people. This is amongst the most brazen and audacious miracles of Jesus. Even if you think the bible is made up stuff, don't you think that people reading this story shortly after it was written would call bull crap on this? As I believer, I say, yes to that question. I think people would describe this story as false if there were not many, many actual first hand witnesses to this event. |
Two points: First, weren't all those who were there long dead when it was written down? Second: Aren't emotional crowds among the most easily misled observers? |
The story is in the Gospel of John. Authorship of that book of the bible is generally attributed to John the Apostle. He would have been a first hand witness of these events. As to when the story was put into writing, the earliest dates are likely to be around 60 AD. I think nearly every credible source would date it before the end of the first century (100 AD). So, it is most likely the story was written down and put into the "Book" of John about 30 to 70 years after the death of Jesus. As a believer, I am perfectly willing to state the the collective memory of the town of Bethany (where this miracle occurred) is sufficient that if the story was a bunch of baloney, somebody from Bethany would have said so. But I fully admit that I have a rather huge bias as a Christian. However, I still think that there is some logic in the reasoning I just stated. I alway wonder why none of the early opponents of Christianity (of which there were many) did not just completely call "BS" on those who professed that Jesus (and Peter were miracle performers. Acts of the Apostles recounts more than a couple of miracles performed by Peter, in the name of Jesus. Sorry to derail the thread, I'm not trying to proselytize. |