SEVEN CLAIMS IN THE CORE ARGUMENT
In Part 2 of this series, I showed that the core argument of Craig's case for the resurrection of Jesus was a deductive argument that consists of at least the following claims:
1. IF these three facts can be historically established with a reasonable degree of confidence AND alternative naturalistic explanations for these three facts can be shown to be implausible, THEN IF IT IS NOT THE CASE THAT the resurrection hypothesis (i.e. God raised Jesus from the dead) has been shown to be more implausible than the alternative naturalistic explanations for these three facts, THEN the preferred explanation for these three facts ought to be the resurrection hypothesis (i.e., God raised Jesus from the dead).
2. These three facts can be historically established with a reasonable degree of confidence AND alternative naturalistic explanations for these three facts can be shown to be implausible.
3. IF IT IS NOT THE CASE THAT the resurrection hypothesis (i.e. God raised Jesus from the dead) has been shown to be more implausible than the alternative naturalistic explanations for these three facts, THEN the preferred explanation for these three facts ought to be the resurrection hypothesis (i.e., God raised Jesus from the dead).
4. IT IS NOT THE CASE THAT the resurrection hypothesis (i.e. God raised Jesus from the dead) has been shown to be more implausible than the alternative naturalistic explanations for these three facts.
5. The preferred explanation for these three facts ought to be the resurrection hypothesis (i.e., God raised Jesus from the dead).
6. These three facts can be historically established with a reasonable degree of confidence.
7. Alternative naturalistic explanations for these three facts can be shown to be implausible.
THE RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN THE SEVEN CLAIMS
The following argument diagram shows the logical relationships between these claims in Craig's core argument:
The seven claims constitute three sub-arguments and three inferences in the core argument of Craig's case. The three inferences represented by the red arrows in the above argument diagram are all valid deductive inferences.
Here is the previous part of the paragraph that specifies what the phrase "these three facts" means:
In my estimation the hypothesis "God raised Jesus from the dead" furnishes the best explanation of the historical data relevant to Jesus' final fate. The inductive grounds for the inference of this explanation consist primarily of the evidence of three independently established facts: (1) the tomb of Jesus was found empty by a group of his women followers on the first day of the week following his crucifixion, (2) various individuals and groups thereafter experienced on different occasions and under varying circumstances appearrances of Jesus alive, and (3) the first disciples came sincerely to believe in Jesus' resurrection in the absence of sufficient antecedent historical influences from either Judaism or pagan religions. ... (Reasonable Faith, 3rd ed., p.360)
The phrase "these three facts", which occurs repeatedly in the rest of the core argument, clearly refers to the following three claims or premises that are asserted in the above quotation[1]:
8. It is an established historical fact that: the tomb of Jesus was found empty by a group of his women followers on the first day of the week following his crucifixion.
9. It is an established historical fact that: beginning on the first day of the week following Jesus' crucifixion, various individuals and groups experienced on different occasions and under varying circumstances appearances of Jesus alive.
10. It is an established historical fact that: the first disciples of Jesus came sincerely to believe in Jesus' resurrection in the absence of sufficient antecedent historical influences from either Judaism or pagan religions.
The Meaning of the Phrase "These Three Facts"
To state the obvious, there are billions of facts, not just three! That is part of the reason the phrase "these three facts" is unclear and problematic. In this context, however, we can specify the scope of "facts" with some qualifications. First, Craig is concerned with "historical data", so his three facts are historical facts.
Craig also uses the qualification "established". This term seems a bit redundant, because one should clearly distinguish the difference between a historical claim and a historical fact, and this distinction corresponds directly to the question of whether the historical claim in question has been firmly established on the basis of evidence or not. If a historical claim has NOT been firmly established on the basis of evidence, then that claim does NOT constitute a historical fact. Thus, the qualification "established" is redundant.
However, this redundancy is a good reminder of the important distinction between historical claims and historical facts, so I am going to retain Craig's phrase "established facts" and just add the qualification "historical" to narrow down the general kind of facts that Craig has in mind:
established historical facts
Nevertheless, it still remains the case that there are millions or billions of "established historical facts", so there is still something unclear and problematic about the phrase "these three established historical facts".
The context indicated in the first sentence of the key paragraph that we have been closely examining provides a further narrowing of the scope of "established historical facts":
In my estimation the hypothesis "God raised Jesus from the dead" furnishes the best explanation of the historical data relevant to Jesus' final fate. (Reasonable Faith, 3rd ed., p.360)
Craig is focused on "the historical data relevant to Jesus' final fate." Some established historical facts are relevant to Jesus' final fate, and other established historical facts are NOT relevant to Jesus' final fate. It is the former collection of established historical facts that Craig is interested in for the purpose of evaluating "the hypothesis 'God raised Jesus from the dead'". So, the scope of facts has been narrowed to this:
established historical facts that are relevant to Jesus' final fate
HOW MANY SUCH FACTS EXIST?
Because there are billions or trillions of "established facts", the phrase "these three facts" is both unclear and problematic. However, we have narrowed the scope of facts that Craig is focused on to: established historical facts that are relevant to Jesus' final fate.
This narrowing of the scope helps to reduce the number of facts that we need to consider, but it is still clearly the case that there are probably hundreds or thousands of facts that fall under this scope.
Does Craig believe that there are ONLY THREE CLAIMS that constitute established historical facts that are relevant to Jesus' final fate? This assumption seems very dubious, especially in terms of the historical claims and beliefs of Christian apologists concerning the trials, crucifixion, death, and burial of Jesus.
END NOTES
1. Craig asserts that these are "independently" established facts, but it is not clear what he means by this, and it is not clear why this is significant. So, I have dropped that qualification for now. If at some point in Craig's presentation of his case, he explains what he means by this term and why this is significant, then we will probably need to add this qualification back into these three premises.



















