I started with Gordon's claim that dead people NEVER rise from the dead and stated that this ignored the problem of induction. Also, if the study of history is methodologically naturalistic. Even the strongest evidence of a physical resurrection eg video of the event could not lead to a verdict of divine intervention and the hunt for a natural explanation continues. I don't confuse the divine substance though with physical. A risen human would though be a physical entity.
Have a chat with some undertakers, Vlad. A video would be of no help since it a) could be fake, b) it provides no evidence of either clinical death or recovery from death.
I suggest then that there is a problem when philosophical naturalist argument argues that a resurrection must be a total supernatural event and therefore cannot be
Apart from the fact that I'm not a philosophical naturalist, you problem is still that you need a method to show that an event occurred as the result of supernatural intervention - without that method you can't demonstrate anything supernatural and, therefore, it is easy-peasy to simply conclude that perhaps there was no event in the first place or, if there was, the accounts cannot be trusted.
This problem is methodological naturalism has no view on the supernatural one way or another, has techniques now to record a physical raised body, and the problem of induction renders a never invalid.
If you want to say a resurrection is a natural event then please show how clinical death can be reversed after three days - and I think you'll struggle with that, since there are some situations that seem irreversible. You are, I'm afraid wedded to a supernatural explanation - but the problems is you have no means/method to make that case. Apparently the NT says that Jesus walked on water - give that a try and let us know how you get on: my guess is that you'll immediately find yourself swimming (or drowning if you can't swim).
You're thrashing about trying to find a way to portray supernatural events, such as miracles, as being real-world happenings even though they can't have a natural explanation (because by definition they ain't natural). Your crusade is hopeless, since if you could ever provide a testable explanation for a miracle it then ceases to be a miracle, and 'faith' is no longer required.