The various books of the New Testament were written decades after the death of Jesus, and significantly, after the Jews found another temporal Messiah, who organized them into a military force and threw the Romans the Hell outta Jerusalem.
The Romans, of course, would not and did not stand for this, and came back like gangbusters (or gangsters) and wiped out all jewish resistence, ending at Mossada, killed the men, raped the women and enslaved the children, burned Jerusalem to the ground and destroyed all of the Temple except for the famous Western Wall. It was probably at the time of the destruction of Jerusalem that the Ark of the Covenant disappeared, perhaps destroyed by the Romans, perhaps squirred away to be guarded for centuries by the secretive, illiterate and possibly deranged Ethiopian priests we have seen on a couple of PBS specials.
All this happened between the crucifixion of Jesus and the writing of the NT, but very curiously there is not a peep about these utterly monumental events in any part of the Bible.
Jesus' birth date is not mentioned in the Bible, either. But Mithra, a competing deity who was worshipped by many Roman soldiers, and was considered to be the Son of the Sun, also born of a virgin, was allegedly born on Dec. 25th.
I think that Mani, the leader of the Manichaeists, also was reported to have survived a crucifixion. Assuming that the story of Jesus in the NT is entirely accurate is like assuming that I could write an entirely accurate history of Pretty Boy Floyd.