Re: jaguarbass' comment, actually Jesus' divinity is fully preserved in # 1, which perfectly suits the pedagogical and eclectic use of Redeemer myths in early Christian gnosticism; and one reason for the penultimate remark in my last post was precisely that, in depth (notwithstanding its "orthodox" label),Eastern Christianity (where the pre-Gnostic Johannine writings occupy a central place) has kept much more of a "Gnostic" wayof believing than its Western Latin counterpart, which was more subject to equate historicity and truth. Option # 2 doesn't make this kind of "faith" impossible but complicates it considerably imo.
DD: I do believe that this passage of 1 Corinthians (which XJW4EVR already referred to) is an early (and fairly exceptional, as far as Pauline literature is concerned) example of the shortsighted, suicidal, ab absurdo rhetorics which (unfortunately imo) became the dominant form in Western < Protestant < Evangelical apologetics: if it is not true as I understand it to be it is worthless. I would personally think that this either/or attitude is an important reason for the rise of anti-religious atheism in the West.