FM: ... "certainly he [Josephus] would have mentioned formerly dead people arising out of their graves and walking around a city, don't you think? That hardly falls under the "earthquake and meteorological phenomena" category."
In case I wasn't altogether clear, one of the points of my post was that the statement about the bodies of the Jerusalem saints being "raised" didn't necessarily mean that they were resurrected (contra the NIV's paraphrase, "raised to life" -- the words "to life" aren't in the Greek text); it is capable of meaning that the saints' bodies were exposed to view from observers on the surface. Another point was that the statement about the saints' entrance into the holy city and their appearance unto many doesn't necessarily describe bodily entrances into the earthly Jerusalem; it may be a reference to their transition from Sheol to Paradise -- and if "the holy city" *does* refer to the earthly city of Jerusalem, their "appearances" were not necessarily visible to everyone, but to people to whom they briefly visited by way of dreams and visions.
Taken this way, there's clearly no reason why Josephus would mention what he would understand to be the vivid dreams of people who had been living in Jerusalem in A.D. 30.
Yours in Christ,
Waterrock
