@TonusOH
The
claim was that the event (Christ returning) had indeed occurred, but it had
happened so quietly that even those who expected it hadn't noticed.
It's
the sort of obvious nonsense that we normally see through, when the stakes
aren't as high as we believe them to be. If our hopes and dreams are dependent
on a prediction coming true, we are willing to extend our credulity
surprisingly far.
---
What you write is absolutely spot on! The claim of the invisible(!) arrival of a person cannot be "tested", or rather, it may work for a while, but after a while, it ceases to be interesting. Invisible arrival, then, equals: not here.
For the one who claims that Jesus came invisibly, this is convenient. His statement is somehow not contestable, especially when he hedges it with the "authority" that anyone who questions this statement is the son of the devil...