I didn’t have anything in particular in mind. Virtually all of history requires us to believe in persons, places, things and events that we haven’t seen in-person, and can’t.
Very true. I certainly question many things about the history that the victor inevitably writes. It isn't only biblical accuracy and it's reliability as a source of history that I hold in contention.
If it were merely mythological, it could be easily dismissed as just that --- myth. The trouble that biblical literalist face, and what I face as well, is the supernatural elements of the text. You don't have to believe in the supernatural to believe in the moon landing, for example. But you do have to believe in the supernatural to believe in divine miracles.
The latter requires far more evidence because it
is outside of the norm. And i want to be clear: i don't believe in cherry picking. In other words, I don't think it is logical to say we believe in the story of Noah's Ark, but not the Resurrection.
Likewise, I think it applies to other religions as well. How do you believe in the Resurrection story, but not the story of Islamic prophet Muhammad, flying to heaven on a winged horse? Both of these are supernatural events with no evidence beyond hearsay and other third party accounts. Why choose one over the other, and how do you do that? How do you rationalize it? How do you justify it?