And although a more credible and probable explanation would have been that a person/s entered the sepulchre and removed the body of the person known as Jesus Christ.
Probably with the intention of denying the people making him a martyr. Notwithstanding the fact that, if that was the intention, it has failed.
And how did I get hear; to be in the process of, by analysis, trying to ascertain whether the Jesus Christ of the Bible or Christian faith could have or really existed?
Well, I guess I have arrived here because, I am putting forward the case that, it is very unlikely that, the kind of 'life after death - which is a most paradoxical concept - is so improbable that it really is not going to happen.
And that one of the reasons why it is not going to happen, is that the Biblical account of Christ having come back to life is highly improbable.
And, secondly, that, despite the evidence of billions of people having died since our human species have existed. There is no evidence of a dead person or people coming back to life in a 'spiritual form', nor that such a phenomenon is probable.
And, yes, even if, as improbable as biology, science and empirical observation have shown the 'life after death' concept or hypothesis to be, were there to be 'life after death.'
What would or could be its implication for those who experience or will experience such a state?
After all, the existence of 'life after death' would not, ipso fact, be proof of the existence of 'God.' Neither would it be proof of the authenticity of Christianity, Jewish, Islamic and other theistic religious doctrines.
No, more likely, if there were to be 'life after dearth', for humans, and, logically, other living creatures', its true implications, and, depending on how it is lived, might be an eternity of boredom.
As such, may there be no 'life after death', and that death, unlike life, be a permanent state of nothingness, of unconsciousness.
After all, it is the cross or psychological burden of all human that we, consciously or subconsciously, are daily rehearsing our eventual and inevitable execution or death.
So, why would any rational human, having died, would want or desire to come back to life to live forever to live forever.
Whether it be to 'burn in the mythical hell' or 'to lazily and with doubtlessly perpetual boredom 'enjoy the promised pleasures of the mythical paradise'?
No, it makes no sense, except that it, 'life after death or the return to life after dying', is the basis upon which Christianity and Islam, and, probably Judaism, have their raison detre, their rational.
Their purpose for being, existing. In other words, if there is no life after death for humanity - and, logically other creatures - then, these religions will have lied to and deceive their followers, and to humanity. As I have concluded that they have done.
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