DeWayne Ruggles

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The impersonator would need to be familiar enough with Jesus’s mannerisms and statements to convince the disciples. The disciples knew the topic of the con better than anyone who might con them. 2. Many of the disciples were skeptical and displayed none of the necessary naïveté that would be required for the con artist to succeed. Thomas, for example, was openly skeptical from the beginning. 3. The impersonator would need to possess miraculous powers; the disciples reported the resurrected Jesus performed many miracles and “convincing proofs” (Acts 1:2–3). 4. Who would seek to start a world ...more
Cold-Case Christianity (Updated & Expanded Edition): A Homicide Detective Investigates the Claims of the Gospels
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