That being said... I'll bite anyway.
How do you account for the odds (1 in 10 to the 157th power) that even just 48 (of 300) Old Testament prophecies were fulfilled in Jesus Christ?
Which crevice did you pull that figure from?
Don't answer that, it was probably this crevice: http://www.emjc3.com/proof/ChristianityIsAFactYouCanProveIt.pdf
I'd reccomend everyone to open that up and do a search for the phrase: "How these figures were arrived at."
Read that section and you'll quickly realise the standard of evidence Perry is using here.
For me to consider a prophecy fullfilled. It has to meet 3 important criteria. And it has to meet all 3, you can't just meet 2 of the criteria and consider it a 'partial win'. NOPE all three or the prophecy falls flat by my standards.
1: The prediction has to be made BEFORE the described events. - and you have to be able to prove the prediction was written earlier than the event. I won't be impressed if you present a hd video recorded on a blue-ray disc 'predicting' World War 2.
2: It has to be a specific prediction with a timeframe or plenty of details. - Saying: "You will experience a devestating fall" is lame, even if I fall off a ladder the following day, or my stocks plummet, I'm not gonna be the slightest bit impressed with your prophecy. On the other hand if you predict: "This Saturday an albino crow is gonna fly through your window and poke your left eye out and then fly out the door you accidentally left open." and it actaully happens, I'll be VERY impressed.
3: The predicted event has to actually occur. And you have to have good evidence it occured. - This is where the vast majority of Jesus prophecies fall flat.
Predicting Jesus would be betrayed for 30 peices of silver? What evidence do you have that he even fulfilled it? If the answer is just: "The anonymous writer of the book of Matthew says it happened." then what the heck are we even wasting our time talking about this for?
Edit: Fingers. COLD, can't type. . .