I spent an entire semester deep in intensive study of the historical basis for religion, the Bible, etc. Including all of the apocrypha, gnostic gospels, and literatures of early Christian societies. My senior thesis was an effort to prove (in sorts) a direct congruency between religious folkloric myth and scientific-based fact.
In studying all this I, personally, found there to be an overwhelming amount of evidence to support the idea of Biblical story as a solid fact. However, the main thing in understanding this is to realize that to read a verse and take from it a literal translation would be profoundly inaccurate. Notwithstanding the chasm in centuries of translation discrepancies, the influence from political ideologies passed down through generations, and all that we in modern-day take for 'granted' about what we know... take yourself out of what you think you understand about these stories, and approach them as if you'd never seen them before. Then understand that the manner in which the Gospels themselves were written (first as oral tradition, and with oral tradition you must understand the subtlties of metaphoric and allegorical understanding that would've been assumed in those times, but are now lost upon the general non-scholastic population).
With as thin of a background in theosophical archaeology as I have, I can say there is an honest link between everything. Including other anthropological factors such as the validity of the location of Christ's tomb and how he even ended up with a tomb. Do you think there was a tomb for everyone? He was not of high social status, nor was he rich by any means, yet he had a tomb. Given to him by one of the 'socialites' of Jerusalem. As a next step in obvious reasoning, we must ask then why did this rich man give away his tomb (which was highly taboo, and by Judaic law made him unclean)?
I could go on for days about this citing examples. But I recommend for any of you that have the time and hunger, learn Koine Greek (as I did) and read the Gospels in their original language. And dig a little. You'll be surprised what you learn.
In the end, and not to state the obvious, it all comes down to faith and willingness to be open minded.
And regardless of what you believe personally, the greatest thing anyone can do is educate themselves. Knowledge is your best bet. And for the believers, what better way to grow in that belief than to learn all you can about it. All sides of the story, every aspect and facet you can find. Then formulate a conclusion for yourself.
*Lecture over.*
