What about when he stands before the people and says, "Before Abraham, I am."?
He is saying to them that he is the Messiah. That the Messiah himself has a God is certain; he says that he does and acts in ways that show that he does. It’s also certain that his God is none other than Yahweh, the God of Abraham. There is no God besides his God. Everything else is idolatry.
It has not been proven. If it were, there would be no need for faith.
The apostles (and others) saw him, touched him, spoke with him, ate with him, were taught by him following his death, burial and resurrection. They didn’t just have faith that he was resurrected. They new it for a fact. The Christian faith is based, in large part, on believing them.
I agree. The thing is, why does he believe it if it's written by fallible human beings and is therefore, subject to error? For example, you don't see the dinosaurs mentioned in the Genesis creation. The most likely explanation is that the writers did not know these creatures had ever existed.
He believed it was written by Moses and that Moses is a prophet of his God. Prophets are inspired by God.
I can't believe that he turned water into wine or didn't because I didn't witness it.
Others witnessed it.
Anyone can write whatever they want in a book. Especially if it was written decades after the event supposedly took place.
Events happen every day that we don’t witness. It has been that way since the day since man was created by God. If we have to witness everything in person in order to believe it then we can’t believe very much of anything.
Your member profile says that you are 36 years old. You didn’t witness anything before you were brought into existence. Would you say that you cannot believe anything that happened 37 or more years ago?
But how is it evidence? If I wrote a book and claimed to levitate or something, you wouldn't say it's evidence that I actually levitated. You would want to see me do it before you believed me.
It would be your personal testimony, and your personal testimony is evidence. Is it the only evidence? I would want to know if there is any additional evidence? Did someone else see you do it? How many saw you do it? When did they see you do it? Where did they see you do it? Why did they see you do it? How many times did they see you do it? Are there others who didn’t see you do it but spoke to people who said they did? Are there people who saw you do it but thought it was a trick; that you didn’t actually do it? Who are they? What us their stake in the experience? Were there any news reports about your action? What are they; what do they say?
Will you arrange for me to see you do it in person? What if something were to happen to you before I was able to see you do it? Would it be reasonable for me to conclude that it never happened? Unless I see your dead body and attend your funeral, can I not believe you are dead? Even if I attended your graveside service, could I not believe you are in the casket without insisting that the casket be open as they lower it into the ground? Must I wait until the casket is covered with soil - and how long must I wait after it is? - to know that it is true that you are dead? If I’m unable to do any of that but I read your obituary, is there reason for me to believe that it cannot be known to have happened?
I don’t have to see you do it in order to believe that you did.
Faith in the scientific method, yes. But science itself is all about evidence that supports a theory. Its not like Darwin found a two thousand year old book that contained the secrets of evolution. There was a lot more work involved.
There is no proof that evolution took place. Even if there were, how could you believe it? You didn’t see it happen. Those who believe in evolution do so by faith. They have no hope for their future after they die. Those who believe in Jesus do.
If the bodily resurrection of Jesus didn’t happen, then what?
The apostle Paul - whom you’ve not seen and therefore, apparently, can’t believe existed - wrote, ”If the Messiah has not been raised, then our message means nothing and your faith means nothing.”
You haven’t literally seen the Messiah. If that truly is what it would take for you to believe, then you wouldn’t believe in Jesus of Nazareth.
You / we believe in Jesus of Nazareth because you / we believe the evidence you / we are confronted with in the scriptures. You / we should also believe in him because you / we have our own respective personal experiences with him.