No, Gordon thinks that resurrection is a supernatural claim and wonders why I suggest it might natural and he has said they never happen. These are positive assertions.
You entertained the idea of resurrection being natural and then said let's though get back to reality. The reality being that resurrection is a supernatural claim.
If as you seem to be saying you now aren't arguing either, then goodnight.
Hey ho - back to basics Vlad. You really need to scrutinise those ancient texts from which you derive your beliefs. That you believe that Christ was raised from the dead, I don't dispute. However, you seem stuck on this idea of the resurrection of a physical body, and this you suggest is a natural claim. The argument is ultimately futile, because of the contradictory nature of the original, already no doubt corrupted texts.
The first accounts that concern the Resurrection are of course St Paul's (and we need not concern ourselves here whether his accounts of his experience of the risen Christ was a real event). However, he did go to some lengths to describe what he meant by resurrection, and it certainly did not refer to a resurrection of a physical body - "flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of heaven". And of Christ "So it is written; the first Adam became a living soul; the last Adam, a life-giving spirit". Further, in the 15th chapter of Corinthians, he goes on to strongly imply that the physical body dies "It is sown in weakness, it is raised in power. It is sown a physical body, it is raised a spiritual
body " He also refers to Christ as "the first fruits of them that sleep", indicating that such a
spiritual resurrection had never occurred before. It is important in all this to understand that Paul is still talking about
bodies, except that he didn't believe the resurrected body of Christ - or any following - was
physical.
This of course raises the question of how the much later gospel accounts of the Resurrection in Luke and John are at great pains to stress the physicality of Jesus' resurrected body. Apart from the fact that the idea of any eye-witness testimony there is much in doubt, I'd say that the already emerging beliefs of Gnosticism and Docetism were becoming a threat to the established idea that Jesus did walk on earth in a physical body, and that physical body suffered and died. These later beliefs insisted there was no real incarnation of a divine spirit, and that Jesus earthly appearance was just that - an appearance, or at best a mortal man who had temporarily been inhabited by the divine. So the writers of Luke and John did their bit to counter these beliefs, as did the writer of the much later letter of 1John.
In the light of this, I'd say that we are indeed faced with accounts of the supernatural, and I really don't see any methodology to determine the veracity of such claims. Have there been 'further fruits' of resurrected people since?