RWC,
You believe that differences among the various gospel accounts of the resurrection are unimportant, since the most important thing is that all gospel writers agree that Jesus was resurrected. However, that's really not true. The very first gospel writer, Mark, ends his gospel with the women finding the tomb empty and the women not telling anyone anything. Mark doesn't say anything about angels at the tomb telling Mary that Jesus had risen; he says nothing about Jesus meeeting with anyone. Only after a later scribe had fraudulently added verses 9-20 are the readers told about the resurrection.
Now, I know that you will not accept that these last verses are fake, so my remarks are really intended to enlighten those whose view of the Bible is less conservative than yours. You may wish to explain why the editors of the New International Version (NIV), the New American Standard Bible (NASB), and others, state that the most reliable, and the earliest, transcripts of Mark do NOT include verses 9-20. I'll let you check this yourself. Just go to Bible Gateway (linked on my website), where you'll find a dozen or so different Bible versions, and go to the footnotes at the end of Chapter 16.
If the original "Mark"--the very first gospel writer--didn't know about the angels speaking to Mary, and about Mary meeting Jesus, or about Jesus being resurrected, then why should we believe that any of these things happened?
Joseph F. Alward
"Skeptical Views of Christianity and the Bible"