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Thursday, 5 April 2012

Jesus’ resurrection – the evidence reviewed

'Christianity stands or falls on the claim that Jesus Christ rose from the dead': So claimed Ludwig Kennedy in a radio debate with Lord Rees-Mogg. He was right. The Apostle Paul put it even more bluntly: 'If Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith'. (1 Corinthians 15:14) The resurrection is of ‘first importance’ (1 Corinthians 15:3,4), and yet the difficulty of accepting it is a major barrier to faith for some people.

But although the resurrection appears incredible, we believe it happened on the basis of solid evidence.

First, no-one disputed the fact that Jesus died on the cross. He was seen to breathe his last by eye-witnesses, and was certified dead by Roman soldiers whose very business was killing. They decided not to break Jesus' legs (customary practice to hasten death in crucifixion), because they were convinced he was dead already; and this was confirmed by the observation of 'blood and water' (separated cells and serum) coming from his pierced side. This only occurs as a post-mortem event.

The so-called 'swoon' theory, that Jesus may have only fainted and revived in the cool of the tomb, does not hold water. It involves believing that a man beaten to within an inch of his life, impaled on a cross and then wrapped in 75 pounds of bandages and spices (rather like a plaster of Paris cast!) could somehow unwrap himself, push away a one ton boulder, single-handedly overcome an armed Roman guard; and then persuade over 500 others that he had conquered death. The foolishness of this position is evidenced by the fact that no-one dared suggest the possibility until centuries later. Would Christ, the model of integrity, really deceive his followers by claiming he had risen when he knew he hadn't? Apart from the testimony of eye-witnesses, no non-Christian historian at the time (see Josephus, Pliny, Tacitus and Lucian) doubted that Jesus died.

Second, the body was gone. If the Jews had removed it (Mary's immediate assumption) then they would simply have reproduced it at the first rumour of resurrection. If the disciples had removed it, they would not have subsequently been prepared to die for what they knew had not happened. In any case, the tomb was heavily guarded, and they had all run for their lives when Jesus was arrested. Pilgrims never flocked to Jesus' tomb. It was empty.

Third, the post-resurrection appearances were impressive. Despite Jesus' repeated predictions that he would rise from the dead, all his followers first thought of other explanations for the missing corpse. What convinced them? Mary, the twelve disciples, the followers on the Emmaus Road, Paul and 500 others (1 Cor 15:6) became convinced when they saw him. Some have suggested hallucinations as an alternative explanation; but hallucinations do not occur with varied groups, on multiple occasions, in different places, over a period of several weeks. They don't light beach fires or eat fish either!

Fourth, one has to account for the rapid spread of Christianity after Christ's death. Most of the twelve disciples later died for their belief that Jesus was God. Although dying for a belief does not make it true, the point is this: they came to believe in Christ's divinity after being convinced that he really had risen from the dead. It was this conviction that transformed them from fearful cowards into the bold apostles who literally turned the world upside down. The survival and growth of the early church resulted from the unshakeable belief that Jesus was alive.

Fifth is the personal experience of Christians, generations of people who have come to know Jesus as a person, with whom they enjoy a genuine friendship. Christianity is not just a creed to be followed nor an ideology to be embraced; it is a dynamic relationship with a real living God - through Jesus Christ.

People who are unconvinced by the above usually have philosophical objections to miracles per se. Here, no amount of sound historical evidence will convince them. In reality, the real miracle is the incarnation. Once we allow for the possibility that God exists and could become a man; then a resurrection presents no difficulty at all. It is then a case of reviewing the evidence.

Ultimately, the fundamental block to belief in the resurrection is often not intellectual, but moral. In Jesus' own words, 'If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets, they will not be convinced even if someone rises from the dead.' (Luke 16:31) For those who choose not to believe, no amount of evidence will suffice.

Adapted from my article in CMF’s Confident Christianity series.

9 comments:

  1. "First, no-one disputed the fact that Jesus died on the cross."

    Plenty of people do. Plenty of people dispute that Jesus existed. Just because someone wrote something down does not make it fact.

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  2. People may dispute it but no historian contemporary to the event - whether Jewish, Greek, Roman or Christian denied it. The first denial that Christ died was in the Qur'an written over 600 years after the event.

    The death and resurrection of Jesus Christ are the best attested events in antiquity.

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  3. If Jesus of Nazereth existed what is the earliest, dated, found text that mentions him? Are there any dated around 32CE by one of the deciples? The contents of the bible did they not get hand picked by a collection of people and some passages changed during several translations?

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  4. If you want real detail on this then the best site for contemporary scholarship is http://evangelicaltextualcriticism.blogspot.co.uk/

    But the short answer is that the oldest papyrus fragments of the gospels date from the early second century. The John Ryland fragment in Manchester (c 125 AD) covers part of the trial scene from John and is one of the earliest. The Greek New Testament can be very reliably reconstructed from over 5,000 manuscripts.

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  5. "Although dying for a belief does not make it true, the point is this: they came to believe in Christ's divinity after being convinced that he really had risen from the dead."

    Although dying for a belief does not make it true, the point is this: dying for a belief does not make it true.

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    Replies
    1. The disciples came to believe after seeing the empty tomb and meeting the risen Christ. Before that they did not believe.

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  6. "Christ's Resurrection is the strength, the secret of Christianity.
    It is not a question of mythology or of mere symbolism, but of a concrete event. It is confirmed by sure and convincing proofs.
    The acceptance of this truth, although the fruit of the Holy Spirit's grace, rests at the same time on a solid historical base."...
    On this day heaven and earth sing out the ineffable and sublime "name" of the Crucified One who has risen.
    Everything appears as before, but in fact nothing is the same as before.
    He, the Life that does not die, has redeemed every human life and reopened it to hope:
    "The old has passed away, behold, the new has come" (cf. 2 Cor 5:17)."

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  7. You're mixing science and faith. You say the "swoon" theory is foolish by putting it through proper skeptical analysis, and you are right. But if we do the same to the resurrection theory, we see that it is even more foolish. If we're accepting that Jesus is God incarnate, he can do literally anything so no theory is foolish.

    There is no rational reason to believe in this occurance, we know well that there are many myths from ancient times, many from much more recently than this story. It is only our arrogance in treating our prevalent religions as more logical that we take this seriously and dismiss Thor and Zeus.

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  8. The difficulty here is that the accounts of Jesus aren't exactly analogous to the Thor/Zeus myths. It is placed in a real, historical setting; and although it isn't completely accurate, there does appear to have been at least some attempt to get historical facts straight. Furthermore, there are plenty of accounts of miracles in Josephus' works, but no one doubts that he was attempting to write "history", not "myth" or other fiction.

    On the other hand, the Christian must at least acknowledge that when one sees accounts of heavenly hosts, miracles, etc. that this IS generally an indicator for myths/legends, even if they are worked into an otherwise historical account. Thus, there needs to be an accounting of why some miracles would be believed based on writings from 2000 years ago, but not others.

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