You may not be able to test faith, but you can base faith on something that is concrete and testable.
Again, I refer you guys to the book,
The Case for Christ , by Lee Strobel.
There are more manuscripts of the Bible than any other ancient work. Vastly more. We are talking about thousands versus a dozen or fewer for most other works.
These documents are all essentially the same, with no material differences. Thus, what we read today is what the authors intended for us to read.
Although, the gospels were written 20-30 years after Christ's crucifixion and resurrection, they contain what is widely believed to be church creeds dating back to 1-2 years from that event. These creeds support the notion that Christ proclaimed himself divine and rose from the dead.
At the time the creeds came into being, and even years later when the gospels were written, there were still many witnesses alive. They would have disputed the version presented by the disciples, but there is no record that they did. This is spite of numerous extra-biblical references to Jesus.
Thus the church did not grow on a corrupted version of events. And it started in Jerusalem, an area where many people had personal knowledge of the events that transpired.
The Case for Christ also mentions an extra-biblical reference that supports the biblical statements about the darkness at mid-day when Jesus died. The Roman source states that authorities tried to pass it off as an eclipse.
Furthermore, I'd just like to point out that Jesus made many claims of deity and proved them, not only by rising from the dead, but by working miracles while alive. The statement that Jesus was a good teacher is not an option. If He was a good teacher and moral man, He would not have claimed to be something that He wasn't. He was either a madman, a liar (both of which are not supported by His actions), or He was and is the Messiah.
With respect to biology, have you guys ever heard of entropy? A system goes from more order to more disorder. This flies in the face of evolution. It's like expecting an explosion to result in the creation of a Swiss watch. The changes observe in nature usually reflect this in that they go from more to less complex. An example would be cave fish losing their eyesight as opposed to gaining sonar.
Second, Super80 is correct in that there are no transition fossils. Instead, even evolutionists admit that the fossils representing current animal's ancestors appeared over a relatively short period of time. This is known as the Cambrian Explosion.
Furthermore, I'd like to point out that not just any carcass makes a fossil. They have to become buried, perhaps in mud or volcanic ash, for a period of time under intense pressure. What could cause this? Oh, I dunno, maybe a worldwide flood that buried millions of animals in a torrent of mud?
One last point, for years, it was thought that it took millions of years to create a fossil. After the eruption of Mt. St. Helens in the 1980s, I remember reading that a fossilized baseball cap was found buried in the ash as they did the cleanup. I don't remember hearing that anyone thought this cap was from the Paleozoic or Cretaceous though.
