I'm not saying this to hurt you, or discourage you. I would normally not even mention this, but you have specifically brought it up. I don't think anyone has ever risen from the dead after three days. Grief hallucinations are extremely common. I remember when my brother passed, at the service I kept seeing him in the crowd. A think there were people who loved Jesus very much who had experiences much like that. As the stories were told, they grew. It means they loved him. Nothing more.
Okay... Grief hallucination... Let's see what Dr. Habermas has to say about that...
"Closer to Kent, Michael Goulder applies a related explanation to the experiences of Peter, Paul, and some of the other apostles. Nonetheless, mixing hallucinations and conversion disorder, Goulder thinks that Peter and Paul experienced what he calls “conversion visions,” hallucinations of various sorts that are produced during times of great stress, guilt, and self-doubt."
So, clearly, this is one of the common objections... Let's see how Dr. Habermas handles this...
"However, Rees does admit that bereavement experiences cannot account for the disciples’ simultaneous group encounters with the risen Jesus."
Interesting...
"John Dominic Crossan seems to have lined up in more than one place on these questions. In an earlier journal article, he states quite directly, “Resurrection is not post-mortem apparition.”29 Then in a later dialogue on the subject with N. T. Wright, Crossan either affirms this option or at least seems open to the idea."
IDK, seems like some cope to me... Let's look further...
"Other scholars mention grief visions or hallucinations without necessarily specifying whether or not they consider the possibility that they were actual occurrences."
That's you right there...
"One of the central issues in this entire discussion of Jesus’s resurrection appearances concerns whether a group of people can witness the same hallucination together."
"But favoring the possibility of collective hallucinations is highly problematic on any scenario and on several grounds. (1) To begin, the chief examples of “collective hallucinations” provided by Zusne and Jones (plus many critics) were group religious experiences such as Marian apparitions. However, since these occasions are purportedly theological, by their very nature they simply beg the question regarding whether such experiences could ever actually have occurred under natural conditions in the real world. If these events happened as described, and if they were even possibly miraculous in some sense, then almost assuredly they could not have been hallucinations as normally understood. In other words, what Zusne and Jones assume to be normal, naturalistic, subjective explanations in the first place could be miraculous!51 By so doing, they ruled out even the possibility of real religious occurrences in an a priori manner, before alternative possibilities were considered. Perhaps these events did occur naturalistically, but that does not follow without evidence. Assuming them to be natural occurrences as a starting point without showing that to be the case is unwarranted."
Sorry for the big chuck of text.
"As commented by Frank Larøi, the coauthor of one of the most highly accredited research volume on hallucinations, “in general, ‘true’ collective (mis)perceptions are more commonly illusions.” In this sense, these occasions could be collective without being hallucinations."
So... Maybe you are not actually talking about hallucinations, per se?
"The distinction is this: illusions are disproven by falsifying the reports. Thus, it is known that the sun is not spinning and dancing in the sky because both uninvolved people and telescopes prove this to be the case. Likewise, hunters know the grizzly bear is not Sasquatch as they get closer to it or examine the photographs."
"Further, claims regarding the collective hallucination thesis are somewhat or even largely unfalsifiable, at least in the specific sense of solving the overall issue, chiefly because even if the occasions turn out actually to be some other sort of illusory phenomena, hallucinations may still be maintained even after the criteria are properly identified, as with the telescope example above."
"On the other hand, purely natural group events also could simply be called group hallucinations too—like many persons reporting UFOs or other odd sightings. In both sets of circumstances, such identifications also could be very much mistaken. This sort of misapplication could potentially happen in both directions. Thus, either religious or secular sightings could be misidentified as group hallucinations, as Larøi mentions above, making this thesis quite haphazardly applied almost whenever and wherever. But crucial epistemic criteria seem to be missing in both."
"Even if it could be established that people in groups witnessed hallucinations, it is absolutely critical to note that it does not at all follow that these experiences were therefore collective, as in every person witnessing the exact same things. If, as most psychologists and psychiatrists assert, at least the vast majority of hallucinations are private, individual events, then how could groups share exactly the same subjective visual perception? Rather, it is much more likely that the phenomena in question are either illusions—perceptual misinterpretations of actual realities such as the spinning sun example above—or a collection of individual hallucinations. Many specialists have agreed on this as well."
"Moreover, perhaps the largest number of serious problems for utilizing the group hallucination explanation to account for Jesus’s group appearances results from comparing the requirements for these occurrences to the critically recognized portions of the New Testament accounts of Jesus’s postmortem sightings.61 It may be precisely at this interval that the explanatory power of this natural hypothesis is most severely challenged, since much of the accredited New Testament data not only differs from the psychological requirements but actually contradicts the necessary conditions for “collective hallucinations.” In other words, the necessary conditions are precisely what are not reported."
Hence, there is no evidence for them... Unless you have some other evidence to consider???
"To suppose that these believers would exhibit “expectation,” “emotional excitement,” “enthusiasm,” and’ “intoxication” is simply far over the top of a normal psychological response especially in the face of these stark circumstances beginning just a day or so later. This would require of them responses that would scarcely be exhibited even at a normal funeral, let alone a death of this magnitude! That Zusne and Jones postulate that expectation “plays the coordinating role” in all this is most likely the least applicable to Jesus’s disciples, in that it would need to be present in order to get the entire process moving. Yet it was the characteristic that was probably lacking most in them. All indications are that Jesus’s disciples exhibited the very opposite emotions from these that Zusne and Jones assert are the necessary prerequisites for their thesis (though they were not at all considering Jesus’s situation)."
"By comparison, the disciples’ experiences were totally unlike those in the Marian cases above where pilgrims frequently traveled long distances, hoping dearly and even expecting to witness wonderful events, gathering exuberantly with anticipation. These would seem to be very meager grounds of comparison with any of the emotions belonging to Jesus’s disciples after his death."
"Separate studies of both the relevant psychological and medical literature going back even decades have revealed no clear data indicating that group hallucinations have ever actually occurred or at least been observed. Individual hallucinations of course happen, as do illusions and delusions—the latter even in more than one person. But Aleman and Larøi note “the general supposition” made by a number of theorists that “hallucinations are private events.”66 Group hallucinations have not been observed or confirmed in the relevant literature. This by itself does not make them impossible events, but given the huge collections of relevant scientific literature in these areas, this is almost an overwhelming critique by itself."
"So here is the additional knockout criticism: Even if there had been some exceptionally rare realities like mass hallucinations in the world, several group events of that nature were proclaimed in the earliest and strongest Christian sources. Therefore, the chief issue
according to the data is that to deal a blow to these appearances, it would not be enough to mount arguments against a single group sighting of the risen Jesus. Even though group hallucinations have arguably never happened in the past, these group events reportedly reoccurred frequently after Jesus’s death."
But you might say, "But I never mentioned "GROUP HALLUCINATIONS!!"
Okay fair enough... Would you like to go over the data that we can be VERY confident that there WERE group appearances? I mean from a HISTORICAL and not religious PoV, of course...