Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Jesus or the Rebbe: Whose the Messiah?


Awesome video. I found this on http://apologeticsuk.blogspot.com/

Michael Brown (a Messianic Jew) talks about how many Jews accept the possibility of a Rabbi who died in 1994 as being the Messiah (and think he might raise from the dead or already has raised), but don't realize that Jesus meets the specifications better than the rabbi does.

Really interesting. Dr. Brown is gracious in his presentation and has interesting conversations with Jews in New York.

Thursday, June 21, 2012

Plenty of Double Standards

As I showed in the last post, one way to show the resurrection happened is to eliminate all other possibilities. These can be categorized into two distinct subgroups. We can say the ancient sources reporting the resurrection are either 1) misinformed, 2) lying, or 3) telling the truth. All theories fall under those three umbrellas.

However, most alternative theories to the resurrection involve an evidential double standard. Here's how:

1) Theory: Disciples hallucinated resurrected Jesus

Double Standard: In every other situation in life, 11 people is enough to ascertain the bodily presence of some individual!

Example: Hallucination theory allows me to be skeptical of the presence of my own girlfriend, even when more than one person sees her.

2) Theory: Jesus had an evil twin who stole the body and pretended to be the resurrected Jesus

Double Standard: In every other situation in life where the outcome is unexpected, we do not propose ad hoc, unethical stunt doubles for everyone!

Example: Everyone who commits a crime can offer the "twin defense" and get away with it.

3) Theory: Disciples preaching of resurrection was metaphor

Double Standard: In every other situation, we take things at face value unless the person tells us something is a metaphor.

Example: Perhaps the person shouting "The building is on fire! Get out!" is speaking metaphorically?

4) Theory: Jesus faked his own death and survived, and pretended to be resurrected. 

Double standard: In every other situation, when a historical figure is brutally executed and buried, we take it for granted that they didn't survive.

Example: Perhaps Saddam Hussein is still alive, and merely survived his hanging and his burial.

5) Theory: Jesus didn't exist and wasn't crucified.


Double standard: In every other situation, when multiple ancient sources report something within less than 70 years of the event (or even as little as 5 years!), we take it for granted.

Example: Perhaps Caesar was not assassinated by the senators at all!!

6) The disciples lied about the resurrection

Double standard: In every other situation, when multiple people suffer for their beliefs, they are considered sincere. However, liars are by definition insincere.

Example: Perhaps Martin Luther never really believed in justification by faith at all, despite the repeated risks of persecution he faced because of the Protestant Reformation!?!?

7) There is not enough information to decide if Jesus rose or not.

Double standard: In every other situation, when multiple people offer honest testimony to the death of some person or their bodily presence, we take it for granted that we have enough evidence of their death and/or presence in a room.

Example: Perhaps I should be agnostic about whether or not anyone actually saw Ronald Reagan during his life? Perhaps there is not enough evidence?

Two Choices: Have Double Standards or Accept Too Many Concessions

I can go on and on. The important thing to note is that most alternative theories involve suggestions that would not be considered realistic or even remotely acceptable explanations in other situations.

This places skeptics in one of two camps (or a little of both). One can accept the implausible alternative theories and risk losing debates. Or, one can concede the point that apologists are trying to make. (Aka concede that the disciples were sincere, or that the appearances were intended as bodily).

But this leads them to concede so much that their position looks unreasonable. In fact, it ends up leading them to concede so much that more evidence would be, in practice, unhelpful in causing them to change their mind (at least in some cases). This is the inspiration for the title of this blog "Death by a Thousand Concessions." The opponents of Christianity end up conceding so much of the data that their own position becomes highly untenable to the point that more evidence for our position would be unhelpful in practice.

But!!! But!!! But!!!!! Wait a Second!!!


Isn't the resurrection just as crazy??

Unfortunately, saying the resurrection is highly improbable has a very big assumption behind it. It also misconstrues the situation (perhaps accidentally on the skeptics part).

Not by Natural Causes...

If we were to say that the resurrection happened naturally, all on its own, then this argument would have a lot of merit. Of course the resurrection is less likely than an evil twin.....if we say the resurrection happened by purely natural causes.

But that's not what any Christian is saying....

William Lane Craig points out that the contention is not that Jesus just randomly rose from the dead, as some kind of unexplained natural mystery or freak of nature. The contention is that God raised Jesus from the dead.

...but by a Personal Cause

Michael Licona points out that probabilities of this nature immediately break down when personal, free agents are purported to be involved. For example, we know that books don't pick themselves up off the floor and set on the table all by themselves. If someone where to say that, we would justifiably reject their theory. However, if someone said that a person freely picked up a book and put it onto a table, then the probability that the book wouldn't pick itself up on its own no longer has any bearing on the situation anymore.

And it doesn't even matter if we know that the personal cause exists or not. This is not how we handle things of this nature in our lives. If someone named "Alvin Plantinga" emails me, I don't have to go independently assess whether or not a person named "Alvin Plantinga" exists. The email itself acts as evidence for his existence. (For the record, Alvin Plantinga has never emailed me.) If I am skeptical of the existence of mechanics, a repaired car acts as evidence for his existence. I don't have to prove the existence of mechanics before believing that a car has been repaired!

We seem to have exhausted all the available alternative possibilities. After all, skeptics have had 2000 years to come up with them.

The Only Game in Town

So unless we want to believe that God supernaturally caused a tomb robbery and supernaturally caused the disciples to hallucinate a bodily Jesus, the resurrection is the only game in town.


Resurrection of Jesus and Process of Elimination

One way to argue for the resurrection is to argue against alternative theories. Being polemical in and of itself doesn't make one right, but it is a very necessary part of the defense of a certain idea.

Polemic in certain situations can eliminate all other options, so that only one is left standing. For example, take the evaluation of some testimony you receive. Say for example that my friend Tom tells me that he heard that my other friend (call him Frank), has committed a misdemeanor theft. There are only a few options available for how to interpret his testimony:

1) He is culpably deceiving me
2) He himself is somehow misinformed
3) He is telling the truth

Frank the Thief

We can unpack these into different subcategories of the 3 above.

  1. He is deceiving me
    1. He is lying to me
    2. He is using a metaphor that he knows I will misinterpret
  2. He himself is somehow misinformed
    1. He is having some kind of incorrect subjective experience which caused him to think he was an eyewitness of Frank's theft
    2. Frank pretended to steal and get convicted, when he really didn't 
    3. The Frank theft story is a rumor (legend)
  3. He is telling the truth. 
    1. I understood him. 
    2. I misunderstood him. 
Alternatives to the Resurrection Categorized

These have obvious analogy with the resurrection as well. We have a variety of ancient sources that say some things about the crucifixion, about the disciples, what they said they saw, and the whole nine yards. If we want to disbelieve them, we have to impugn the testimony of the source in some way. (This is the way it works with any testimony of any kind, whether day to day, or historical.)
  1. The authors of the ancient sources are lying. 
    1. The ancient source is intending to deceive me about the whole story.
    2. The ancient source is using a metaphor it knows everyone will misinterpret. 
  2. The authors of the ancient sources are misinformed. 
    1. The ancient source received legends or rumors. 
    2. The ancient source is reporting a subjective event that caused the disciples to think they were eyewitnesses when they were not. 
    3. The ancient source is misinformed about the resurrection because Jesus faked his resurrection after surviving the crucifixion. 
    4. Someone lied to the ancient source. 
  3. The ancient source is both deceptive and misinformed. 
  4. The authors of the ancient sources are telling the truth. 
    1. We understand what they are telling us. 
    2. We are misinterpreting what they are telling us. 
Obviously we can break these down even further into more subcategories. 


Process of Elimination 
  1. The authors of the ancient sources are lying. 
    1. The ancient source is intending to deceive me about the whole story.
      1. Refutation
        1. motivation for deception absent
        2. higher numbers of witnesses make deception less likely
    2. The ancient source is using a metaphor it knows everyone will misinterpret. 
      1. Refutation
        1. see above
  2. The authors of the ancient sources are misinformed. 
    1. The ancient source received legends or rumors. 
      1. Refutation:
        1. Many of the ancient sources are closer to the events than other sources reporting in ancient history. Disbelieving these would cause us to disbelieve other sources that report things we all believe in. 
        2. Eyewitnesses still alive when source was writing. 
    2. The ancient source is reporting information based on someone who was misinformed (aka disciples had hallucinations, then told source). 
      1. Refutation 
        1. Any psychological explanations hold less and less probability the more people are involved
    3. The ancient source is misinformed about the resurrection because Jesus faked his resurrection after surviving the crucifixion. 
      1. Refutation
        1. No one can survive execution and burial. 
        2. Nor does anyone have motivation to fake a resurrection after such a fate. 
    4. Someone lied to the ancient source. 
      1. Refutation:
        1. Source relatively close in time to the events 
        2. Little motivation to lie in persecutory situation the church was in
  3. The ancient source is both deceptive and misinformed. 
    1. (see above)
  4. The authors of the ancient sources are telling the truth. 
    1. We understand what they are telling us. 
      1. Resurrection is true. 
    2. We are misinterpreting what they are telling us. 
      1. "Resurrection" in that time period means what we take it to mean today.

Sounds complicated, but it's actually very simple:

But I digress! I overcomplicate matters once again....

Every alternative theory is suggesting that the ancient sources used to prove the resurrection are either lies or themselves misinformed. By normal criteria of evidence we can rule out both of these. So process of elimination leaves the "ancient sources are telling the truth" option. 



Sunday, June 17, 2012

Jesus Dies for Our Sins: Compared to Our Legal System

Within the "new atheist" subculture, a renewed interest has been made in making fun of certain aspects of Christianity, which is to be expected. From time to time, the atonement of Jesus has been a target of these insults.

I would like to be frank without being too blunt, but I would like to point out that those who publicly make fun of the atonement generally have no idea what they are talking about at all. The atonement is such a theologically rich concept which I know less about than most other central Christian beliefs. But the taunts of the New Atheists usually show a remarkably poor understanding of what the atonement even is in the first place, let alone a good reason for disagreeing with it. It's as if they tried to make fun of something before they even knew what it was, in my honest opinion.



Glory to Jesus Forever

What is the Atonement?

But people do have questions about the nature of the atonement, which is fair enough. The doctrine of atonement, as generally understood by American Christians, is of penal substitutionary atonement. This means that humans are so guilty of sin that they are worthy of physical and spiritual death. However, instead of punishing us, God punished Jesus, who was the voluntary recipient of the punishment we deserved. Atonement is much, much more than this as well, but this is sort of the rough and ready definition of it which is commonly adhered to. I commit a crime, have to pay a fine, BUT, Jesus pays my fine instead.

Some people raise interesting questions about the atonement. For example:

  1. How can one person pay for the sins of everyone in history?
  2. Why did Jesus just have to die, instead of go to hell for us?
  3. Why do only the believers have the benefits of this applied to them, as opposed to everyone else?
  4. How is a human sacrifice ethical? 
  5. Is there any analogy to this in our legal system?
A lot of these will be answered by discussing the analogy in our legal system. 




Vicarious Liability
My uncle, Kurt Anderson, is an insurance attorney (and a smart and well-read Christian), so I asked him about how the atonement would work in our legal system. 

He told me that the best analogy is that of "vicarious liability." This seemed interesting because the word "vicarious" often precedes the word "atonement" in theological discussion. In law, there is a provision where a person in a "senior" type relationship is held liable for the actions of the "junior" in the relationship. For example, employers are sometimes held responsible for accidents or damages caused by employees. Furthermore, there are situations where parents are legally responsible for the behaviors of their children. 

The analogy would be as if Jesus voluntarily entered into a relationship like this with every human, making himself liable for all of our misdeeds and sins. As a result, Jesus was punished instead of us, because he voluntarily made himself liable for all of our sins. (3)

Obviously, this isn't a perfect analogy. But the comparison would be that what we do on a small scale in American law, God did on a very big scale in his divine court system, so to speak. For example, vicarious usually doesn't apply when jail sentences are involved (according to the supremely reliable source: Wikipedia). But perhaps God allows vicarious liability to work in every situation in his own court system.

Other analogies would include things such as paying for someone else's punitive damages in a court case, at great personal cost to themselves. As my uncle said, you can't insure yourself ahead of time from punitive damages. However, there is nothing stopping someone like Bill Gates from giving you a really big Christmas present, by which you can pay those punitive damages. ("Punitive" here is in contrast with compensatory damages.)




Christ the Representative

All of this may clear things up a bit more, but doesn't cover every aspect of the atonement. Christ's actions were also representative in nature. For example, the President acts as a representative for the people in negotiations with other countries. Congressmen act as representatives for certain states or areas of states. According to Christians (and this is very clear in Paul's writings), Adam acted as representative for the human race when he sinned, so all of humanity fell. Likewise, Christ, in his sacrifice, acted as our representative. 

I have barely scratched the surface on the meaning of the atonement. Of all the topics I feel somewhat qualified to at least blog about, the theological nature of the atonement is where I'm at my weakest, to be completely honest. 

The Atonement: Does It Make Sense?

As for the questions people raise, here are some brief replies:

1) How can one person pay for the sins of everyone in history? 

There are three responses. One, Christ acted as their representative. Two, Christ took on vicarious liability for the groups actions. Three, Christ, as the Son of God, is infinite in value. So his death is sufficient to cover every human being worthy of death. 

2) Why did Jesus only die for us, instead of going to hell for us forever?

This is a really good question. My answer is that no one actually goes to hell for any specific sin or sum of sins they commit in this life. Hell is reserved for a very permanent sin of rejecting God forever, and the consequences that result from being separated from him. So, it is my contention that Christ's suffering did not have to be "infinite" for it to be a full covering of sin. Christ took on the totality of God's wrath for specific sins we have committed in our lives.

3) Why do the benefits of the atonement only apply to believers?

God only wants to restore his relationship with people who actually...well...want that relationship restored in the first place. Faith is the terms by which God has chosen to save human beings. So in that sense, God gets to set the terms by which he forgives people. (4) If someone says they will pay my fine in court only if I "like" a certain charity on Facebook, or anything else, its only fair that you have to follow through on their terms.

Someone may respond and say that God would be more loving if he just forgave everyone. The issue is much more complex than that, because God is making every possible effort to bring people to faith in the first place. (2 Peter 3:9) Second, heaven wouldn't be heaven without a restored relationship to God. If someone doesn't want a relationship with God, he has no obligation to save them. 

4) How is human sacrifice ethical?

The reason human sacrifice is unethical is largely because its coerced. Apostate Israelites who sacrificed their children to Molech certainly did not have consenting children! Nevertheless, Christ voluntarily gave up his life so we could be saved. 

William Lane Craig's question of the week actually provided the inspiration for talking to my uncle, an insurance attorney, about some of the legal analogies to the atonement. That original post can be found here:





In another post, I will talk more about the atonement and why the earliest Christians believed in it. Again, the atonement is where I am at my weakest as far as theological understanding, but this post should quickly show critics that the concept is much more rational than they make it out to be.



Photo Credits

1) https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjkMpz4liWBeVcysyUuImk7zNg8Q3TwMqIZ5bRQY2Evz7R84_nH1ActoC-pEdNVcQ4I7OgoPOQTWyOaq4twIjTPUJoIQwSbbbFEcETnGLxcz_-ef9fc98CXrmZUnKlrEsXPqjPoqCHdjA/s1600/JesusOnCross.jpg
2) http://www.repotimes.com/main/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/Judge-using-Gavel.jpg
3) William Lane Craig comes to a very similar, though not identical conclusion in his question of the week on the atonement. He was the inspiration for my discussion with my uncle.

4) http://www.reasonablefaith.org/molinism-and-divine-election





Friday, June 15, 2012

A Sick Experiment: The Resurrection Challenge

So I was thinking......

A lot of people apparently think that its no supernatural feat that 12 men could be convinced their friend had resurrected AND that they had seen him...all within less than 3 days after his death.

But I started to push this idea to its logical conclusion. There are some Christian groups that like to offer a monetary reward to people who can, for example, fulfill 8 Messianic prophecies.

But what if they did it with the resurrection? Obviously it would be an unethical sort of thing to do, so its going to be a thought experiment in this case, and not a real bet.

But what if???


The Big Bad Bet

What if we put out a $5,000 reward to any person or organization who could do the following:

The Goal*:

  1. Convince 12 Christians that a recently dead friend had been "resurrected." 
  2. Convince those 12 Christians (through drugs or delusions or whatever) that this resurrected friend wasn't just resurrected, but had personally appeared to each of the 12 Christians.
  3. The hoax has to be pulled off in less than 3 days........
Rules:
  1. No holograms or modern technology allowed
  2. The Christians get to know the burial location of their friend
  3. Drugs ARE allowed, hallucinogenic or otherwise
CGI of Deceased "Tupac" Performing in Concert

Think about it.

Keep in mind you don't just convince the 12 Christians that their friend has resurrected. You have to convince each of those 12 Christians, through inducing false memory syndrome or hallucinations, that the 12 Christians themselves have seen their dead friend after his death. Convincing them that you are an eyewitness is not allowed. You have to convince THEM that they are eyewitnesses. 

(By the way, the appearances to the disciples and the belief that he had been "resurrected" are accepted among over 99% of scholars who are published on the historical Jesus. So my challenge is historically authentic.) (1)

Easier To Hoax Than Jesus' Resurrection

I am even making it easier to hoax than the resurrection of Jesus:

1) Christians are more open to the idea of a unique individual resurrection before the general resurrection at the end of time. Heck, they believe in one. So convincing this group that their dead friend was raised and appeared to them should be easier to convince than Jews. So any non-Christian group accepting the resurrection challenge is already at an advantage over Jesus' resurrection.

2) All things being equal, it is easier for something to happen if someone tries to make it happen, rather than it happen by accident. It is much more likely that two women will wear the same dress to an event if they try to wear the same dress, than if it happens by coincidence. Therefore, if we let a non-Christian team or organization accept this challenge, they will have yet another advantage over the circumstances surrounding Jesus' resurrection, since they get to try to hoax it.

3) Furthermore, whether it was 36 hours or 72 hours, the disciples were saying "three days later" or "on the third day." The traditional Christian belief is that it was 36 hours. But I am allowing 3 full days. Again, its a lot easier to convince people their friend has been raised when given 3 days instead of a day and a half, like it actually was. 

4) Whoever the "victim" is, its highly impractical that they be the victim of a public execution! The organization accepting the challenge would have to prey on some Christians who had a recently deceased friend who died by natural causes. But of course, doing away with the body is a lot easier when they haven't been publicly executed!


Hold Up....

Someone may not concede my challenge. Perhaps they disagree with the historical facts I am using. 

Perhaps they say that they think the disciples actually lied. OK, I can work with that. In that case, the "resurrection challenge" would be to convince the Christians themselves to hoax the resurrection of their friend....and face criminal charges as well. This may be harder than my challenge, because the idea that any friendly or semi-ethical person would try to hoax the resurrection of their recently deceased friend is just disturbingly immoral. 

What if they say that by "resurrected," the 12 Christians don't have to mean bodily raised from the dead? Fine. But there's the rub. "Resurrection" is not a metaphoric word in Christian subculture. So even if they mean it metaphorically, you have to get them to use the term "resurrected" or "raised from the dead" and fail to explain that it is a metaphor... This is exactly the situation the disciples were in, because for that time period, "resurrection" was not a metaphoric word. (2) If it was going to be used in this way, it was up to them to clarify as such. Which they didn't.....

So I've Been Thinking

So I have been trying to think of what I would do if I had to accept my own challenge. This seems like an extremely difficult task....perhaps impossible. I honestly doubt that I could pull it off, especially if I wasn't allowed to use any kind of modern technology. 

Seriously. Hoaxing a resurrection in three days is hard enough. But trying to convince the people that you are hoaxing that THEY are eyewitnesses......all in just 3 days.....well that's just absurd. 

....But if this is impossible when someone tries to hoax it, how much more impossible is it to happen by sheer accident?

Something to think about. 







*P.S. This isn't a real bet. I can't think of any ethical way to do this challenge without spending a lot of money on the hoax. 

3) Tupac Photo
4) Image for electric chair



59 Areas of Agreement between Paul and Jesus....in the book of Matthew Alone



As I said in a recent post, I showed how there is a remarkable and numerous similarities between what Jesus said about the second coming, and what Paul said about it. I leave that part out, since I have another post on Matthew 24-25 and agreement with Paul.

I am very lazy and did not put citations by this. But what I did was go through the teachings found only in Matthew and wrote where Paul agreed. Most of these are teachings in undisputed Pauline letters:
  1. aversion to testing God/Christ 
  2. Rejoicing in persecution for Christ
  3. The sad will be comforted
  4. Against antinomianism 
  5. Christ is the goal of the Law
  6. A high priority to get rid of anger between brothers
  7. Negative view of lust
  8. Eternal implications for living a lifestyle of anger or lust
  9. "Yes, yes" and "no, no"
  10. Same teachings of view 
  11. Rather to let the person with the lawsuit win than to sue back
  12. Not retaliating
  13. Greed is idolatry 
  14. Those who judge others are hypocritical 
  15. do not worry/ pray with requests/ God will supply the needs of those who serve him
  16. Asks for good gifts (Paul interprets this as spiritual gifts)
  17. The saved are apparently a minority 
  18. Bearing "fruit" to good deeds or to bad deeds
  19. Those who don't bear fruit are "destroyed" or "destruction"
  20. "Kingdom of God" an eschatological reality, entrance of which contingent upon performing God's will
  21. Building a good house on a good foundation 
  22. People from the whole word will come to God's kingdom, while many of those originally in the kingdom would be rejected 
  23. Jesus is in relative poverty 
  24. Christ comes to call and save sinners
  25. Christ is the groom
  26. Gaining new converts is called getting a "harvest"
  27. God's servants are worthy to be paid
  28. Paul a witness to Gentile politicians
  29. Confessing Jesus needed for salvation
  30. God conceals truth from the wise, and reveals it to people of humble knowledge 
  31. People of Christ are "brothers"
  32. "sowing"/"reaping" and as a result "reaping" a "harvest"
  33. Both quote Isaiah about callous heart and not hearing and understanding
  34. Money causes people to fall away from Jesus (Timothy)
  35. Foods do not defile a person
  36. Jews demand miracles 
  37. Jesus is the Messiah
  38. Jesus comes with the Father and angels 
  39. God repays according to deeds
  40. Everything is given up for sake of Christ
  41. "Take up their cross and follow me" and Paul's being "crucified with Christ"
  42. Having a faith that moves mountains 
  43. Christ is above human rulers but still pay taxes nonetheless
  44. keeping someone from "stumbling" into sin
  45. Jesus doesn't want anyone (little ones?) to perish
  46. Do not associate with brothers who persist in sin
  47. Forgive as God forgave you
  48. Idea of no divorce, but singleness to serve the kingdom of God a higher path for those who can bear it
  49. Christ's humility and love an example to serve one another
  50. Jesus is the cornerstone and stumbling block
  51. Pay taxes
  52. Resurrection of the dead at end of time
  53. Messiah is the Son of David 
  54. Messiah is the Lord
  55. "Gospel" will be preached throughout the world
  56. References to the "Father" the "Son" and the "Holy Spirit"
  57. Jesus was crucified 
  58. Jesus was betrayed 
  59. Jesus rose from the dead and appeared to followers


Again I am very lazy so I have not cited this. But if anyone reads this and wants citations I will provide them the moment they are requested......

But again the issue is raised. It's relatively easy to show that the direction of the "borrowing" of the ideas would be Paul borrowing from actual teachings of Jesus, not people inventing parables that cherry pick and stylistically change Paul. After all, you can't say Paul misrepresents Jesus and at the same time say that those who wrote the Gospels borrowed from Paul. (However, I have no idea of anyone who claims this to begin with.)

So if Paul is making allusions to Jesus teachings in the 50's and 60's A.D., then that means that material in the gospels is much earlier, and likely from eyewitnesses, whom Paul knew. (see my argument for this here).


Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Demons and Aliens: Is There a Major Difference?

Atheists and naturalists are critical of Christians for their beliefs. Belief in gods and demons is, for them, and indication of being influenced by mythology and not paying attention to new evidence from science.

Such a disposition against belief in gods or demons is found in the title of Carl Sagan's book "The Demon Haunted World."

But are we really that foolish for believing in demons? Some atheists are at least open to aliens or life on other planets. Let's compare traditional beliefs about aliens (in culture) with traditional beliefs about demons.



Traditional Characteristics of Aliens and Demons

Both demons and aliens are:

1) non-human persons
2) Capable of inter-dimensional travel
3) Are hostile to humans
4) Can change form
5) Can read minds
6) Have religious practices surrounding them (UFO cults, witchcraft)
7) Appear humanoid and frightening

Evidence for Aliens vs. Demons

I actually have more evidence for demons than for aliens of this type. The principle evidence of aliens surrounds 1) UFO sightings and 2) alien abduction reports. UFO sightings aren't really evidence of aliens in the traditional sense, because no is actually seeing "little green men" who are performing the characteristics listed above. However, alien abduction reports would work as evidence.

However, I don't know anyone who has been abducted by aliens. I know at least 2 people who have seen a demon in unexpected circumstances, and became extremely distraught by it. (Where talking like physically seeing it or it talking to them). I am not even sure if one of them is a religious person. I also have read a book where the author mentioned seeing a very frightening face of a demon while laying in his bed (the book wasn't about demons, but about something related to Christian life or something).



Aliens and Demons: Is There a Major Difference?

This is not to say that all or even any of these reports should be believed (about aliens or demons). But it shows that a belief in demons is more rational than belief in aliens if we base the evidence solely on observation. I have more independent testimony of the observation of demons than of aliens. But this is only if we can actually differentiate between the two based on appearance.

Someone may retort that the universe is so big that life had to evolve elsewhere. But this says nothing about the qualities of this life. If I was to meet an alien that met the traditional criteria I list above, I would have no reason to assign the title "alien" or "demon" to it. In fact, I would not know of any actual difference between the two. If I met some creatures of this nature, it may as well be a demon.

Someone may reply and say well demons used to be in the presence of God, but rebelled, whereas aliens didn't. But how would I know if the "aliens" were unaware of God? If the aliens are hostile to humans, for all I know, they know about God and hate him too. Someone may say that demons are "non-physical" whereas aliens are "physical." But there is no basis in the Bible for such a distinction. There is a basis for saying that angels/demons can do violent and physical things and change form- just like an "alien."

Someone may reply and say that on this standard, how do I know that the demon appearances are actually demons and not "aliens" instead? I don't. If I saw something that looked like an "alien," I could just as easily say the demon is changing its form to deceive us of its origin.

There is simply precious little practical difference between "aliens" and "demons" as traditionally understood.

On another note, this is why its unreasonable to have your faith affected by the discovery of "extraterrestrial life".

What Difference Does It Make?


None of this is at all intended to provide evidence for aliens or demons. But if you are open to aliens, but closed to demons, you may have to rethink how consistent you are being.


Jewish Pharisees vs. Richard Dawkins



Jews See Miracle of Jesus, Blame it On Demons

Many skeptical scholars are willing to admit that Jesus performed deeds which his contemporaries viewed as  miracles. However, many of these skeptical historians are willing to grant that Jesus performed deeds which his enemies viewed as real miracles. (1) Here are some of the skeptical historians who think along these lines:

Bart D. Ehrman
Gerd Ludemann
John Dominic Crossan
Marcus Borg
Geza Vermez
James Tabor 
Paula Fredriksen 
E.P Sanders 

The Jewish leaders of Jesus day were fiercely opposed to Jesus for many reasons. He harshly criticized them and seemingly tried to undermine their social status among the people. This is what caused them to constantly try and trip Jesus up with difficult theological questions and ultimately seek his death. And of course, they vehemently disagreed with the idea that Jesus was the Messiah. 

Miraculous signs were especially important to Jews in establishing a message. Paul writes "Jews demand signs and Greeks look for wisdom..." (1 Cor. 1:22) Every Gospel reports the Jews demanding a miracle from Jesus as proof of his teachings. After all, these were the same people that believed that God established the Jewish law and nation through a miracle...the parting of the Red Sea. 

Which makes it particularly unusual that these people would concede that Jesus could do miracles. The Gospels usually report increased aggravation on the part of the Jewish leaders when Jesus did a miracle. If you trust the Gospel of John, they even tried to kill a man whom Jesus raised from the dead, because it was so frustrating to them and harmful to their cause. (John 11)

But one thing they love to do when Jesus does a miracle is to blame it on demons. They liked to say Jesus was in cahoots with Satan in order to get the power for his miracles. Obviously, Jesus harshly criticized this alternative theory. 

......but wait a second...............

Richard Dawkins Sees a Miracle, Blames it On Space Aliens

Imagine if Jesus did miracles today, and performed one for passionate skeptics such as Richard Dawkins, Sam Harris, Daniel Dennett or Richard Carrier. Imagine if they didn't challenge the miracle, but said that Jesus was able to do that because he is controlled by very powerful evil space aliens, who intended to deceive the whole world into becoming Christians. If this were to happen, it would be forceful evidence that A) it really happened B) whatever it was that happened is so incredible that they have to resort to blaming it on aliens. (cf. 2)




Someone may respond by saying that this comparison doesn't work, because Richard Dawkins doesn't believe in anything supernatural at all, whereas the Jewish leaders (Pharisees) did. But that is precisely why he has to blame it on aliens in the first place. Aliens are a purely naturalistic explanation. Dawkins would have no need to depart from rigorous naturalism to explain the miracle in such an ad hoc way. And the Jewish leaders didn't have to depart from their belief system either when coming up with an extremely ad hoc solution.

Dawkins and the Jewish leaders are both in similar situations in that miracles constitute an extremely high evidence for something...if proven to have happened. One real miracle would falsify naturalism almost immediately. And as we saw before, miracles carry a very strong weight in 1st Century Judaism. So their desire to disprove that a miracle occurred at all in the first place, is very strong. 

But once again, the Pharisees surpass Dawkins as far as passionate skepticism is concerned. Dawkins is not actively seeking the death of any Christian, nor would he try to execute Jesus if he were on earth today. The Pharisees did. The Pharisees have a greater hate for the message of Jesus than Richard Dawkins does. But again, even they are forced to concede the miracles. 

If I had to pick between seeing a miracle myself and Dawkins seeing one, I'd pick someone like Dawkins every day of the week!

Would you believe a miracle if Richard Dawkins told you he saw one himself? 

Then you should believe Jesus did miracles......


(2)  http://www.amazon.com/Resurrection-Christian-Origins-Question-Vol/dp/080062679


(3) http://discovermagazine.com/2007/jan/20-things-aliens/alien198.jpg


alien image


(4)http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a0/Richard_Dawkins_Cooper_Union_Shankbone.jpg/250px-Richard_Dawkins_Cooper_Union_Shankbone.jpg

Dawkins image

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

What's a "Messiah" Anyway?

Since this is a blog about defending Christianity, it would only make sense to describe what I am defending in the first place.

As Alistar McGrath says, "the best defense of Christianity is its explanation. In other words, if you want to defend or commend Christianity, it is best to begin by telling people what it is really all about."

"Christ"-ians believe that Jesus is the "Christ" or Messiah. Christ is the English version of the Greek "Chrestus," which means Anointed One. "Messiah" is the English version of the Hebrew "Mashiach," which also means Anointed One. Christians, and the apostles, had been calling Jesus the Messiah since within 5 years of the birth of Christianity. (1 Cor. 15:3) (2)

What Does It Mean to Be "Messiah"?

The belief that Jesus is the Messiah, when properly understood, is probably the most central belief that Christians have. So what does it mean?

In Old Testament Jewish prophetic literature, the Messiah is the generic name for a recurring figure who performs many related functions. The following is a pretty uncontroversial list of what the Messiah will do.

1) A king of both Israel and the entire world (Isaiah 11; Zechariah 14?)

2) Would bring safety and peace to the entire world (Isaiah 11)

3) Would militarily defeat Israel's enemies and "the wicked" in general (Isaiah 11; Zechariah 12-14)

4) Would be a righteous judge (Isaiah 11)

5) Would spread knowledge of the Lord throughout the world (Isaiah 11)

6) Physical descendant of David (Isaiah 9:6)

Early Christians (and Christians today) believe these prophecies apply to the Second Coming of Christ.

But that's definitely not the whole story......


There are also passages that imply that the Messiah would die. For example, Isaiah 53 describes a figure who suffers for the sins of many people. He then dies, but is vindicated and given a "portion among the great" and will "divide the spoils with the strong" (which imply he is alive again).

This isn't just a Christian idea. In fact, there was a recent discovery in the Qumran caves of a tablet that speaks of a dying and resurrecting Messiah. It has been dated in the first century B.C. So Christians are certainly not alone in thinking that Messiah would die and rise again. In fact, they were not even the first to think so. (4)

Together, the victorious Messiah prophecies and the suffering prophecies are colloquially termed "conquering king" and "suffering servant" prophecies, respectively.

Why Do Christians Believe Jesus Is The Messiah??

Good question. With many different answers.

1) Jesus: Messiah and Miracle Worker

A) All four gospels report Jesus as claiming to be the Messiah or straightforwardly acknowledging someone's affirmation of that. Even atheist historian Gerd Ludemann thinks Jesus' own disciples called him the Messiah. (3)

B) Furthermore, even skeptical historians think that Jesus' Jewish enemies believed he could do miracles. Miraculous signs are especially important in Jewish thought as far as evidence is concerned. (1 Cor. 1:22;  Matt. 16:1; Mark 8:11; Luke 11:16) So his claim to be Messiah combined with the miracles makes a powerful case for him being the Messiah.

C) Almost all scholars think that Jesus was inaugurating the "kingdom of God." A "kingdom of God" has got to have a king, and what better candidate than Jesus, especially since he takes a leadership role in many of his parables about the kingdom of God.

2) Jesus and General Jewish Prophetic Expectation

A very early tradition (50's A.D.) reports that Jesus broke bread on the night he was betrayed, saying that it was his body and to do this in remembrance of him. Furthermore, the cup was "the new covenant in my blood." (1 Cor. 11) This strongly shows that Jesus believed his death was for the forgiveness of sins, ushering a renewal of the covenant. Isaiah promised a new covenant that God would institute for Israel. Isaiah says that God would one day bring a permanent forgiveness of sins to his people, make an everlasting covenant, and redeem his people Israel. This shows that by his death, Jesus believed that he was ushering in a new covenant and forgiving the sins of Israel. (1) This is an extremely Messianic thing to do. His resurrection vindicates that his atonement death was a successful event. (And, obviously, a dead person can't be king of the whole world. So a resurrection is necessary.)

Early Christians also thought very significant Isaiah 53 suffering servant prophecies, as well as passages in Psalms where it says "you will not let your holy one see decay." (see Psalm 16:8-11) So when Jesus rose from the dead, these passages immediately came to mind to the early Christians.

3) Jesus: Prophet of End Times......about Himself

Jesus predicted his own glorious second coming on the clouds of heaven, and even talked about coming as a King to judge people's eternal destiny. (Matthew 24-25) There is good evidence this is authentic material, because Paul makes over 20 conceptual references to it in two short letters as early as 50 A.D. (1 & 2 Thessalonians). See post here on why this is the case.

These passages portray Jesus as the "Son of Man" who "comes on the clouds of heaven." These are direct allusions to Daniel 7:13-14, where one like a son of man comes on the clouds of heaven, and obtains eternal glory, power and dominion over the whole world- clearly a Messianic vocation. Furthermore, Matthew talks about when the son of man sits on his glorious throne and judges people's eternal destiny.

Summary 


The early Christians thought Jesus was at least 4 things:

1) Miracle worker claiming to be Messiah
2) The "kingdom of God" needs a King.
2) Jesus takes it upon himself to enact the forgiveness of Israel's sins
3) Jesus makes prophecies about himself returning as a Judge and King in glory

But but but!!!!

....Only God can be king of the kingdom of God, can't he? And Isaiah says that God himself will bring in an everlasting covenant and forgiveness of sins, not some random dude. Isaiah says that God is "Israel's King" and that God is Israel's only Savior. ...and that God returns from heaven with his angels to get vengeance on his enemies.....

Next post about what Christianity is will talk about why the early Christians believed Jesus was Messiah and the Lord, even God himself.









*Important note: my uncontroversial list of the Messiah's qualities are uncontroversial for those who actually believe in a literal Messiah, such as Orthodox Jews and others.

1) http://www.ntwrightpage.com/Wright_Early_Traditions.htm

(Last paragraph)

2) Ludemann believes that the creed in 1 Cor. 15 originated within 15 years of the resurrection. Gary Habermas notes this in his book "The Case for the Resurrection of Jesus'

3) http://www.amazon.com/Jesus-After-2000-Years-Really/dp/1573928909/ref=sr_1_15?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1339532723&sr=1-15

4) http://benwitherington.blogspot.com/2008/07/death-and-resurrection-of-messiah.html


Are Manuscript Variances in the Bible a Serious Threat to Christianity? Not Even Bart Ehrman Thinks So.



Here is a very interesting and friendly discussion/debate on a radio program between Bart Ehrman and Peter Williams.

In his book "Misquoting Jesus," Bart Ehrman emphasizes the time distance between the oldest existing manuscripts and the original copies. Furthermore, Ehrman emphasizes the great number of manuscript variations between all the copies that we have. He sees this as evidence against Biblical inerrancy, at the very least.

Agreement on Key Points

However, Peter Williams and Bart Ehrman agreed on several points:

1) Most of the textual variations are spelling errors and can be easily ironed out with comparison to other manuscripts

2) Sometimes, the meaning of a passage leans heavily on a word that is ambiguous. Some manuscripts say one word, while another says another word.

But most importantly.....

3) No major Christian belief is challenged by these variances and they do not pose a major threat to central tenets of the Christian religion.


Williams' disagreement with Ehrman

1) Ehrman rhetorically dramatizes and overemphasizes the importance of the manuscript variations and additions.

2) Ehrman holds that many of the changes were made intentionally, whereas Williams contends that most of them were accidental (though some were intentional).

3) The meaning of an entire passage sometimes hinges on a single word. Though they agreed that it was theologically very important to discover which word was the actual word, they seemed to differ in how important the word ambiguity actually was for theological purposes.

Doesn't Disprove Central Tenets of Christianity


As I was listening to this program, they got into specific debates about the appropriate translation of a single word in certain passages. I quickly realized (as I suspected), that the details they were fussing over had very little significance with respect to actually disproving central tenets of Christianity. Ehrman himself admitted this and even said that was not the claim of the book. I found that if I had agreed with Ehrman on every single point it really wouldn't affect my faith that much.

An interesting listen. Always like to hear debate-discussion in a friendly context.





Brand New Proof the Gospels Could Not Have Been Made Up: Either on Purpose or By Accident....




Great stuff by Dr. Peter Williams on the quality of the Gospels as eyewitness materials.

Williams follows three main arguments.

1) Percentage of People with Certain Names in 1st Century Palestine

The percentage of people with certain names is nearly exactly right in all of the gospels, whereas they are very off in books that are forgeries (such as Gnostic gospels). Since all scholars (skeptical and Christian) agree that the gospels were penned in locations other than Palestine, they must have known eyewitnesses who remembered very specific details. Williams notes that it is easy to remember stories, but not so easy to remember names. This is evident in our own lives, where we often forget the name of main characters in movies we watch.

2) Specific and Accurate Geographical Knowledge

The gospels show very specific knowledge of insignificant and small villages in Palestine, whereas the forgery gospels do not.

3) Botany and Climate Details

The gospel writers show knowledge of climate and botany of the area. Luke reports that Zachaeus climbed a Sycamore tree. Sycamore trees only existed in Palestine, upper Egypt, and lower Syria, and nowhere else in the Roman empire. Furthermore, one gospel writer reports that the grass was green at the feeding of the 5000. Research shows that this event took place right after 3 months of the rainiest time of year.

Only Three Options: But Two of Them Don't Work....

Williams says there are only 3 options. 1) They passed on legendary material 2) they purposely lied about Jesus or 3) ordinary people relating eyewitness accounts. Due to the new name frequency research since 2003 (and info about geography, botany, climate, etc.) it is very unlikely that the Gospel writers would be clever enough to purposely misrepresent the details of the Gospels if they have such accuracy with name frequency. Furthermore, people passing on oral traditions or loosely remembered legends would not get such accuracy either.

Have fun he's a funny guy and quite the beast at this sort of stuff........





Monday, June 11, 2012

Paul Makes Literary Allusions to Books that Don't Exist Yet??

Many critics of Christianity say that Paul founded Christianity, and knew very little about the life and teachings of Jesus.

This is evidently false.

Paul Makes Literary Allusions to Jesus Teachings

According to critics, here are the dates of writing of New Testament books:

1 & 2 Thessalonians - 50-54 A.D.

Mark - 70 A.D.

Matthew - 85 A.D.

John - 95 A.D.

Paul shows a remarkable solidarity with Jesus on the subject of the end times and Second Coming. In fact, there are about 20 areas of conceptual agreement, on just the Second Coming alone. 1 & 2 Thessalonians contain four and a half chapters that have a very striking conceptual agreement to Matthew 24 and 25 on issues of end times.
  1. Gathering of believers together in the sky at second coming
  2. trumpet call at second coming 
  3. reference to angels at second coming
  4. Jesus comes from heaven at second coming
  5. coming of end time events compared to a woman in labor
  6. sudden, unexpected doom for happy and carefree people at the second coming 
  7. both passages very specifically say that the time of the second coming is unknown, and compare it to a burglar who comes at night
  8. both passages discourage "sleep" but instead encourage alertness
  9. both passages make passing reference to drunkenness as a bad behavior in light of the second coming
  10. those who care for other believers will be granted entry into the kingdom of God 
  11. those who persecute or fail to take care of Christ's people will be punished by God
  12. Jesus comes with angels at his judgment
  13. Condemnation constitutes an eternal punishment of a destructive nature
  14. Those who are condemned are excluded from Christ's presence
  15. Passage in Paul and with Jesus have a general motif of avoiding deception
  16. Christ and Paul agree that a falling away from faith precedes an act of idolatry in the temple as the order of end time events
  17. "Abomination of desolation" is a Jewish term historically associated with an act of idolatry in the temple. Jesus uses the masculine pronoun (in Mark 13) to refer to this. Paul shows striking agreement with Jesus by saying that it is a "he", not necessarily an "it", that is idolized in the temple.
  18. Christ and Paul both insinuate that "lawlessness" will be increased
  19. there will be false miracles and signs to deceive people in the end times
  20. Both Christ and Paul have a strong motif of avoiding laziness in context of the second coming
If anyone wants specific verse references I am happy to provide.

However, that's not all. 

Paul Alludes to Teachings Largely Found in The Gospel of John

1 & 2 Thessalonians show awareness of concepts which liberal New Testament scholarship claims are unique to John's gospel. 1 & 2 Thessalonians doesn't just show awareness of them, but actively weaves them in with the teachings from Matthew 24 & 25. 
  1. Jesus is Yahweh. John portrays Jesus making claims to divinity. Paul says Jesus is "the Lord" who descends from heaven. "The Lord" in Greek is the exact same phrase for "Yahweh" in the Greek Old Testament of Paul's day. (1 Thess. 5) 
  2. Jesus himself raises the dead at the end times (1 Thess. 5) 
  3. Believers, not necessarily workers, are vindicated at the Second Coming (2 Thess. 1) The idea of people being saved because they believe is hardly prominent at all in Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
  4. Those who do not believe do so because they love evil more than the truth. (John 3; 2 Thess. 2) 
This is especially significant because critics generally hold the gospel of John to be very unreliable because it was written so late (95 A.D.)

Throwing Out Bad Alternatives

This only leaves us 6 options:
  1. Jesus told Paul in a vision what he said while on earth. 
  2. The writers of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John plagiarized ideas from 1 & 2 Thessalonians. 
  3. Paul made up all those Second Coming ideas all by himself.
  4. Paul read Matthew and plagiarized it directly.
  5. Paul got those Second Coming ideas from some random Christian he met who was passing on word of mouth traditions about Jesus.
  6. Paul knew people who heard what Jesus really said. 
#1 is out from the critics perspective. It concedes that Christianity is true, so critics will quickly reject it. 

#2 is certainly not on the table, because the only way people can accuse Paul of changing Christianity is by reading Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John! If Paul is supposedly inventing a new Christianity, the only way that scholars have any basis at all for this claim is by comparing what he says to Matthew, Mark, Luke and John.

#3 is certainly not on the table either because its impossible to make 20 literary and thematic allusions to books that don't exist yet. 

#4 Most Christians and all non-Christians reject this one because 1 & 2 Thessalonians were written way too early ( early 50's) for Matthew to have been written yet. 

#5 is more plausible than others, but not likely given Paul's behavior with this sort of thing. Paul checked 2-3 times with Peter, James the brother of Jesus, and John to insure that his gospel message was correct and that he was not running "in vain." He even made a special trip to Jerusalem each time he did this. (Galatians 1-2) If he obviously knows eyewitnesses and is obsessed with getting his message correct, it would not make sense that Paul would rely on hearsay for teachings of Jesus on the Second Coming, especially when he knows eyewitnesses. Furthermore, even if it was hearsay, it would prove that the material from Matthew originated before 50's A.D. and not in the mid 80's like some critics suggest.

#6 This is the best explanation for many reasons. (See #5) First, Paul knows eyewitnesses to Jesus life. Second, Paul is very concerned with checking the accuracy of his teachings on the gospel with the other apostles. It only makes sense he do this with other major teachings.

This would make perfect sense, considering in 1 Thessalonians, he mentions that a certain teaching is "according to the Lord's word." 

Paul Knows the Teachings of Jesus

If Paul got his info from people who really knew the words of Jesus, then that means that those parts of the Gospels must have been what Jesus really said. 

If those parts are really what Jesus said, then the gospels are massively more reliable (at least for the words of Jesus) than critics make them out to be. That would mean that both Matthew 24 and 25 are accurate representations of Jesus teaching, as well as portions of John-like material originating very early as well.

Appendix:

Some may say that liberal scholars dispute that 2 Thessalonians was actually a letter of Paul. This is true, but does not matter. If it wasn't Paul, all it means is those teachings are even earlier, because Jesus teachings on Second Coming must have been widely circulated enough by then for a forger to use them and attribute them to Paul. This means that the material is ESPECIALLY early, and thus even more reliable than Paul on the subject of Jesus. 







Thursday, June 7, 2012

Apostle Paul vs. Atheist Richard Dawkins

Paul Sees Jesus: Scholarly Consensus

Over 95% of scholars accept that Saul of Tarsus, who previously persecuted Christians, had a sudden and dramatic conversion to Christianity. (1) He went on to become the world's most influential missionary and suffered repeated persecutions as a result, ultimately ending with his execution in Rome.

However, scholars don't think that he just converted. They think that he converted because he believed that he saw a glorious Jesus after his death.



Richard Dawkins Sees Jesus

Paul's conversion does not warrant belief in the miraculous. It is his explanation for his conversion which does. An example will illustrate this point. If leading atheist Richard Dawkins converted to Christianity tomorrow, we would be surprised. However, we would not consider it to be miraculous. However, imagine if he said he converted because he saw a glorious appearing of Jesus which knocked him off his feet on the way to work, and caused blindness? Suppose he became the world's most influential missionary as a result, and ultimately got executed for his religion? 

In that situation, we would not be able to doubt the sincerity of Dawkin's experience, because he would have proved it by his life and his suffering for the new religion. So lying would be out of the question. Furthermore, religious people sometimes claim to have visions of angels or Jesus. However, Richard Dawkins is neither prone to these nor open to having such an experience. So a "sane" religious vision is not going to work as an explanation. 

Furthermore, psychological problems would also fail to account for his experience. First, we have already seen that he would not have any proneness to a hallucination of Jesus. In addition, even if he did hallucinate Jesus, it would have to be such a powerful experience that it actually caused him to convert, instead of causing him to seek psychiatric help because of hallucinating Jesus! Other naturalistic explanations, such as sun stroke or epileptic seizures, would not convince Dawkins that he saw Jesus. After all, I'm sure there are plenty of atheists who have had sun stroke or epileptic seizures and do not think they have seen Jesus as a result! 

In addition, Richard Dawkins is more skeptical than all of us. He is even much more skeptical than the average atheist. So whatever proof we think we need of Jesus, Richard probably wants a lot more. 

In the case of Dawkins, all alternate explanations fail. He would not have any motive to lie. He is not in the right frame of mind to have a religious epiphany of that nature. In addition, psychological causes either would not happen (because he is not in the right mindset), or they would not be intense enough to convince him it was actually Jesus as opposed to a pyschiatric problem.

So if that happened, we would be forced to say that Richard Dawkins really saw Jesus. Not as a hallucination. But for real.



Paul vs. Richard Dawkins

This is the situation we have with the apostle Paul. He actively tried to get Christians in legal trouble and gave approval to the death of at least one leading Christian. The evidence we have shows he was on his way to throw Christians in jail. So Paul is more hostile to Christianity than Richard Dawkins. So he is even less prone to a sane religious experience than Paul is. Furthermore, he is also less prone to a hallucination, let alone being convinced by one. He is also not in the mindset to have a warm religious experience of Jesus and convert as a result. 

He has no motive to lie. He worked for his own financial support as a missionary. (1 Thessalonians) He had no female interests. (1 Cor. 7) The only power he had was in the new group of Christians, and even that was challenged at times. (2 Corinthians) He would have faced excommunication from his own people for his beliefs. He was regularly beat and attempts made on his life. (2 Cor./Acts)

Some alternative theories that have been proposed, such as sun stroke or epileptic seizure, would not be enough to convince Paul, since many atheists suffer from these maladies as well. (2) (Notice, these explanations implicitly concede the physical effects of his experience.)

Furthermore, some of the sources say that he was blinded by the experience, and his traveling companions were aware of it as well. The problem is that visions don't blind people, since they are basically religious dreams in a waking state. Only very bright objects cause blindness. (The risen Jesus, according to traditional Christian theology, obtained an incredibly glorious and bright appearance upon arrival to heaven). So the physical effects and the presence of others rule out subjective explanations. 

So it seems that if we reject Paul's experience, then we would be forced to reject Dawkins as well. Dawkins  doesn't try to get Christians in jail, whereas Paul did. Dawkins has more prestige and money to gain by converting to Christianity than Paul did, since Christianity has an established base now. 

Joseph Smith and Mohammed

Some may protest and bring up Joseph Smith and Mohammed as examples of people who changed religion due to a vision of some sort. Both of them claimed to have seen a message from the angel Gabriel and started a religion because of it.

However, there are many very crucial differences. First, we have already seen that Paul's testimony is even stronger than that of Richard Dawkins if he were to see Jesus. Richard Dawkins is definitely a stronger witness than Joseph Smith and Mohammed (since he is skeptical). So, if Paul is a stronger witness than Dawkins, a fortori Paul is a stronger witness than Joseph Smith and Mohammed.

But it doesn't stop there. Both Mohammed and Joseph Smith were disillusioned with their own religious beliefs or the religious beliefs in their region. (3 &4) Mohammed regularly meditated. (3) So their openness to an alternate religious vision is vastly stronger than Paul's. Furthermore, we cannot even be certain that they didn't lie. Mohammed got power through conquering the world for Islam. (3) Smith may have had female motivations and incited Mormon groups to military conflicts with non-Mormons. (4) It's not even clear that Smith died for Mormonism. (4) Finally, they lack physical evidence of the experience (such as blindness like Paul had).

On the contrary, Paul worked for his own monetary support as a missionary. He was celibate, so he had no female motivations. Paul faced the rejection of his own people. Paul traveled far and wide as a missionary, was beaten multiple times, faced trials, and was ultimately executed for his religion. Paul previously hated Christianity and persecuted it's followers. Paul was not at all open to religious experiences of a new religion, as Paul would have been. Furthermore, Paul experienced physical effects as the result of the appearance of Jesus and claimed it was a resurrected man he saw in heaven, making it a very objective experience. Whereas for Mohammed and Smith, there is no evidence it was anything more than subjective. Finally, Paul definitely suffered for Christianity, since the resurrection is mentioned in every speech in Acts that gained converts, in every "Gospel" it is the main focus (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John), and in every location Paul defines the gospel. 

Paul's experience, all by itself, is more evidence for Christianity than any other religion has to offer. (Not to mention the eyewitness testimony of the other disciples.)


Seeing Jesus for Yourself Is Less Evidence than Paul Seeing Jesus

But that's not the most radical conclusion. If we reject Paul's experience, we would be forced to reject our own experience if we saw Jesus. Paul is much more skeptical of Christianity than any of us would be.

Many skeptics find it unfair that Jesus doesn't appear to them personally. I don't think its unfair. If the average atheist got to see Jesus this would still be less evidence than what we already have with Paul's experience. 

If we don't trust Paul when he says he saw Jesus, why would we ever trust ourselves if we saw Jesus?


2) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conversion_of_Paul_the_Apostle Mentions sun stroke and epileptic seizures.

Photo 2 = http://www.urantiansojourn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Paul-on-the-Road-to-Damascus1.jpg

Saturday, June 2, 2012

An Early Date for the Book of Acts and It's Significance

An Early Date for the Book of Acts: Great Post by Matt Slick of Christian Apologetics Research Ministry:


In determining the date of the book of Acts, what the author leaves out is very significant. In his brief history of the early church, he fails to mention Nero's persecution, the destruction of the temple in Jerusalem, and the final result of Paul's trials and the appeal's process. 

This issue becomes even more striking since about a third of the book records events in Jerusalem, as well (relatively) minor persecutions. Furthermore, the end of Acts walks you through Paul's trials and all the places he goes in the appeals process. The author builds the story up to his final trial....but suddenly the story just stops and it has a kind of boring and awkward ending to be honest. 

Useful Analogies

If you were writing a history of Christianity in China from 1940-1970, would you forget to mention how terrifying Mao's persecution was? Probably not. 

Imagine someone documenting a major court case, with its appeals process, and even specific words made by the defense.......but not mentioning the supreme court decision on the matter. 

Skeptics say that these are arguments from silence. They say that its fallacious to say that Luke's exclusion of these events entails that they didn't happen.  

If the doctor knew you had a serious life-threatening illness but didn't tell you that you had it, would that be an argument from silence?
Yes and no.

The real argument is that any historian of Christianity is not going to leave out certain things since they are so important, especially if they record insignificant things by comparison. If it was minor events in the plot line of Acts, it would make sense to leave them out. However, the events Luke leaves out are sometimes more significant than the details he records. For example, he mentions a persecution in Jerusalem causing the scatter of Christians to Judea and Samaria, but makes no mention of Nero's persecution. Furthermore, he records certain of Paul's trials when they are less significant than his trial before Caesar....which he fails to mention. 

Significance of an Early Date for Acts

If Acts was written before 64 A.D. (the Neronian Persecution), then that means Luke had to have been written before, since Acts is Part II of "Luke-Acts." This means Luke is written before Acts. But Mark has always been considered the earliest. The current theory with most acceptance among scholars is that Matthew and Luke depended on Mark for information. So this would mean Mark would be even earlier, possibly in the mid 50's.

This is problematic for non-Christian scholars for several reasons. First, it means that the likelihood that Luke actually knew eyewitnesses is much higher, because of the earlier date. Same applies to Mark. Furthermore, its much more difficult to claim legendary development with earlier sources like this, especially in ancient historical study. On top of all this, the probability of the traditional authorships of the Gospels becomes immensely more likely because of the earlier dates. Furthermore, with sources as early as this, its much more difficult to say that the disciples were claiming a non-bodily resurrection or vision as the basis for the resurrection appearances. 


Friday, June 1, 2012

Did John write John??

Excellent post by Dr. Timothy McGrew on the authorship of John's gospel:

http://www.whatswrongwiththeworld.net/2012/05/on_the_authorship_of_the_fourt.html

The implication of John actually writing the fourth gospel is huge. If John actually wrote John, it nullifies hallucinations, the metaphor hypothesis, and the non-bodily resurrection theory because of the contents of the book itself. It would be impossible for him to hallucinate every resurrection appearance and every miracle he reported. The metaphor theory doesn't work because specific numbers of items and specific feast days mentioned, and specific conversations are elucidated on those days. Furthermore, non-bodily resurrection is refuted because of the empty tomb and the appearances.

The scholars concede that the disciples didn't lie about the resurrection.  In this post right here, I show at length that it is extremely unlikely that the disciples lied about the resurrection. John, being an inner circle disciple, is also unlikely to lie for the same reasons. So the implication of John writing the fourth gospel is that Jesus performed real miracles and rose from the dead.

Furthermore, John's gospel portrays a Jesus who claims equality with God and seems to threaten condemnation to those who refuse to believe. He also promises eternal life to everyone who believes. This leaves no room for a Jesus who is a non-threatening and a merely human prophet. John's gospel forces a person to make a very decisive and emotionally deep decision about who Jesus is.

All of this very easily explains at least one reason why almost all non-Christian scholars want to reject traditional authorship of the fourth gospel...........

Conceding the authorship of John comes rather close to conceding the Christian religion itself......

What did the disciples (and Paul) mean by "resurrection?"

(This last post turned out to be quite enormous. For those who want to know what I am trying to do here, all I am trying to show is that the disciples of Jesus (and Paul) believed that Jesus resurrection was a bodily event, and not just some kind of ghostly or metaphorical event. If you already don't think they could have meant that, then you might want to save yourself the time and read the "summary" at the end. If you dispute a point in the summary, move to the corresponding number-bullet in this blog post.)

Summary of What We Have Seen So Far

In the first post, we showed why over 95% of scholars publishing on the historical Jesus admit that he was crucified, buried and died. In that section I demonstrated the evidences that compel scholars to accept this and good evidence for the fact that he died. In the second post, I showed why 99% of historians accept that the disciples sincerely believed they had experiences which they believed to be appearances of the risen Lord after his death. In the third post, I showed why the vast majority of scholars reject the idea that the disciples lied about the resurrection. In the fourth post, I showed why the most popular theory to account for the appearances, namely the visions/hallucinations theory, fails based on what we know of psychology and the Jewish culture at the time.

Denial of Bodily Resurrection

So if historians agree that Jesus died and his disciples believed they had seen him alive again after the fact, and the most popular alternative theory fails on psychological grounds, that leaves us with few options other than accepting the resurrection itself. However, there is another option that some non-Christian scholars take. Some, like John Dominic Crossan and Marcus Borg of the Jesus Seminar, believe that the proclamation that Jesus was raised from the dead was primarily metaphorical (even though the "appearances" could have been visions). (5) (10)  Others, like atheist historian Richard Carrier, interpret Paul's discussions of "resurrection" to mean something entirely different than we understand it today. (6) Still others (about 30% of scholars), deny the reality of the empty tomb. (7) (13) Finally, others affirm a "spiritual resurrection" where Jesus was only "spiritually" resurrected. (Wright mentions these people in (2))

These four stances may sound vastly different from each other, but they all have something in common, namely that the proclamation of Jesus resurrection was not intended as a bodily event. In the current usage of the word "resurrection," if it's not a bodily resurrection, its no resurrection at all. Indeed, saying that someone was raised bodily from the dead is like saying "I walked down the street on my feet" as NT Wright puts it. (2)

I will put forward multiple arguments for why it was originally understood by the disciples (and Paul) as a distinctly physical and bodily event. Each of these arguments (generally) work pretty well on their own, so every one of them has to be a bad argument for the bodily resurrection to be denied.

But first, a lot of this will make more sense if I outline what traditional Christian theologians (Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant) believe about the resurrection today. This way, my argument will make more sense when I contrast the Christian view (which I believe is most evidenced) with alternative theories.

What Christians Theologians Believe About the Resurrection Body of Jesus

Christians believe that Jesus was crucified, died and stayed dead for at least 36 hours. After this, Jesus became alive again on Sunday morning. He then departed from his place of burial, leaving an empty tomb behind him. However, Jesus' resurrection was not like the resurrection of Lazarus, where Lazarus simply came back to life to a mortal existence, where he would die again. On the contrary, Jesus' resurrection was so significant to Jewish theology because he experienced a resurrection to eternal life, never to die again. (14) Apostle Paul uses many words to describe a resurrection body which help us understand what happened to Jesus. He came back to life in the same body, but one that has been "transformed." Furthermore, the resurrection body is also described as "imperishable" and one that has "immortality." (1 Cor. 15) This physical but transformed body is further supported by the book of Luke, where Jesus is able to eat food and says "Look at my hands and my feet. It is I myself! Touch me and see; a ghost does not have flesh and bones, as you see I have.” (Luke 24:39)  However, in those very same passages, where he does physical things, he is described as being able to move through locked doors. (2) NT Wright uses a new word to describe the nature of his body, calling it "transphysical." (2) It is physical (able to do things such as eat), but also has additional capabilities that mortal bodies don't have (such as the ability to move through locked doors).  (2)


After Jesus appeared to his disciples, he ascended (literally moved in an upward direction), and passed into the realm Christians call "heaven." Jesus didn't just resurrect to eternal life, he also experienced something called "glorification" upon his arrival to heaven. Due to Christ's achievement on the cross, he didn't just resurrect to eternal life, but obtained a glorious appearance as well. The book of Revelation, though highly symbolic, portray Jesus as wearing a robe with a golden sash, a face like the shining sun, his eyes like fire, and his hair white like snow, and his legs burning like bronze in a furnace. (Revelation 1) This very physical (non-ghostlike) picture of Jesus is also portrayed as especially radiant and powerful. 


Though it may not be clear yet in this blog post, this description of traditional Christian beliefs about Jesus' body after the resurrection will become important as I survey the arguments for alternative theories. 


There are many good arguments for why the disciples (and Paul) intended the traditional picture of Jesus' resurrection:

1) The Empty Tomb

The empty tomb works two ways. If the disciples meant a traditional bodily resurrection by saying "raised from the dead," then by definition they also believed in the empty tomb. If they believed in the empty tomb, then it really was empty, because the disciples would have known if the tomb was empty or not. If however, we find that the tomb was really empty, then it necessarily means the disciples believed in a bodily resurrection, because only bodily resurrection leaves behind an empty tomb. To put it simply, if the disciples mean bodily resurrection = historical empty tomb. And, if there is a historical empty tomb = disciples mean bodily resurrection.

There are 7 good arguments for the empty tomb, provided by Dr. Gary Habermas (1):

A - Jerusalem Preaching. The disciples preached Jesus as raised from the dead in the same city Jesus was crucified and buried. However, to refute the resurrection, all the Romans or Jewish leaders had to do was take a short walk to Jesus' tomb. If any remains at all were in there, then that would refute the resurrection. The fact that the disciples were able to preach the resurrection in the same city Jesus was buried, and the religion still be successful, shows that it was indeed empty.

B - Multiple Independent Sources. There are lots of theories about the relationship between Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. These theories vary as to which of these sources depended on each other for its material, and in what parts. However, no matter what major theory you take with respect to this, the empty tomb story has more than one independent source. This is very valuable in ancient historical study and perhaps the most powerful argument for the empty tomb.

C - Female Witnesses. Unfortunately, women were not acceptable witnesses in a court of law in 1st Century Palestine. So it would be a terrible apologetic strategy to say that they were the first ones to discover the empty tomb, and sometimes the first to see Jesus! However, this is indeed what all of the gospels have to say. Even in the resurrection creed found in 1 Corinthians 15, no women witnesses are listed, even though it is the largest list of appearances in the New Testament. Even atheist historians agree that the creed in 1 Corinthians 15 was created within 5 years of the death of Jesus. This shows that the material in the gospels that describe the discovery of the empty tomb is even earlier. Furthermore, it shows that the accounts are true, because no one would lie and say that women were the first witnesses to the empty tomb!

D - 1 Corinthians 15:3-8 Creed


Although the creed in 1 Corinthians 15 does not specifically mention the empty tomb, the most natural reading of it implies that the body which was crucified and buried came back up again in resurrection to appear to many disciples. ".......that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised again on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Peter, and then to the twelve........." The multiple "and that" or "kai hoti" clauses indicate that what happened to Jesus in his death happened to him in his life.

E - Acts 13 Tradition. The book of Acts describes early church history. Much of this involves the disciples (and Paul) traveling around the Roman Empire and giving speeches about how Jesus has been raised from the dead. Acts records many summaries of these speeches. Whether or not one accepts the book as generally historical or not, it is evident that the author is getting these speech summaries from an earlier source other than the book of Acts itself. So it is likely that he is getting them from earlier traditions about the preaching of the apostles during their missionary activities. One of these speeches (by Paul) specifically states that Jesus was laid in a tomb. Furthermore, it goes on to say that God raised Jesus from the dead and didn't let him decay. Paul compares Jesus to king David, who was buried and decayed, with Jesus who did not decay but was raised from the dead. This strongly suggests both an empty tomb and a bodily resurrection.

F - Stolen Body Rebuttal. Starting in the book of Matthew, all the way through the first 200 years of debate with Christians, the Jews consistently argued that the disciples had stolen the body out of the tomb. However, if the Jews are right, then the tomb was empty, because a stolen body would mean that the tomb was empty.

G - NT Wright's Thesis

According to Habermas, NT Wright demonstrated that all writings on resurrection up until 2nd century A.D. (whether they be Jewish, pagan, or Christian) consistently referred to a bodily event. Furthermore, Habermas notes that Wright found almost no exceptions to this view. However, if the disciples proclaimed a bodily resurrection, that would mean that they also believed the tomb was empty, since bodily resurrection necessarily means the tomb is empty.

The above was basically a modified and explained version of this article:

http://www.4truth.net/fourtruthpbjesus.aspx?pageid=8589952861

2) The Meaning of "Raised" and "Resurrection" in New Testament Greek

The New Testament uses two words to describe the concept of coming to life again.

"Resurrection" = "anastasis"
"Raised from the dead" = "Eregoi ek nekron."

"Anastasis" derives its root from "anistemi," which means to stand up or to arise. See the link below:

Anastasis - http://concordances.org/strongs/greek/386.htm
Anistemi - http://concordances.org/strongs/greek/450.htm

"Eregoi" means to arise, stand up, or wake up. Below you can see all of the uses of this word in the New Testament, and take note of its usage when not discussing resurrection issues:

http://concordances.org/greek/strongs_1453.htm

This is the same word that is used to say that someone woke up from sleeping, or that they stood up from their seat, or that they arose to the occasion. Given this, when Paul says "Jesus died and rose again" he means that Jesus died and woke up/ stood up again. Likewise when Paul says "that he was raised on the third day" he means that he was woken or stood up on the third day.

This shows that the traditional concept of Christ's resurrection is built right into the word itself. If Jesus died and stood up/woke up again, it is very consistent with the view that Jesus died and rose in a way that caused him to stand up again or "wake up," leave the tomb, and leave an empty grave behind.

3) The Old Testament Usage of The Resurrection Concept

The disciples made frequent use of Scriptural allusions to prove their point that Jesus was the Messiah. Indeed, the New Testament as a whole makes partial and whole Old Testament allusions over 1,000 times! (3) Furthermore, Jesus was "raised again on the third day according to the Scriptures." It seems that what the Old Testament said was of central importance to the first Christians. Here are some passages that indicate the Old Testament view of resurrection:

But your dead will live, Lord;
    their bodies will rise—
let those who dwell in the dust 
    wake up and shout for joy—
your dew is like the dew of the morning;
    the earth will give birth to her dead. (Isaiah 26:19) 



Multitudes who sleep in the dust of the earth will awake: some to everlasting life, others to shame and everlasting contempt. (Daniel 12:2) 

Since the disciples of Jesus were so keen on using the Old Testament to support their views of Jesus, it only makes sense that they referred to Jesus as being raised in the same way the Old Testament portrays resurrection.


4) The 1st Century Jewish Concept of Resurrection


There were many theological subgroups in Second Temple Judaism, some of which included Pharisees, Sadducees, and Essenes. (2) The two groups that Jesus interacted with most were the Pharisees and Sadducees. It is widely accepted that the Pharisees believed in a literal bodily resurrection of the dead of the righteous at the end of time, and believed in Old Testament prophets and the Torah. (4) (Acts 23) However, the Sadducees only believed in the Torah (the first five books of OT), and vehemently denied the resurrection of the dead. They also didn't believe in demons or angels.

This was no metaphorical dispute. It was quite heated. Indeed, there is an example in Acts where Paul is on trial for proclaiming the resurrection. The Pharisees and Sadducees are there, and he purposely gets them arguing about the issue in order to distract them from convicting him...and it succeeds! It would be like getting off the hook in court by bringing up a controversial topic such as abortion, and everyone getting so wrapped up in the argument that they forget to convict you!

"Then Paul, knowing that some of them were Sadducees and the others Pharisees, called out in the Sanhedrin, “My brothers, I am a Pharisee, descended from Pharisees. I stand on trial because of the hope of the resurrection of the dead.” When he said this, a dispute broke out between the Pharisees and the Sadducees, and the assembly was divided. (The Sadducees say that there is no resurrection, and that there are neither angels nor spirits, but the Pharisees believe all these things.)" Acts 23:6-8

We also see vigorous debate on this subject in the gospels as well. In Luke, the Sadducees try to stump Jesus with a riddle meant to be a reductio ad absurdum to the resurrection of the dead. They tell Jesus that there was a woman who married a man, but her husband died and she remarried. However, every time she remarried, her new husband died, so that she ended up re-marrying seven times. They pose the question: In the end of time, when the dead are raised, who is this woman's real husband? Jesus responds by chiding them for not knowing the power of God. He also chides them for not knowing that no one gets married at the resurrection. (Mark 12:18-27)

This entire riddle is absolutely meaningless unless the Pharisees believed in a very tangible bodily resurrection at the end of time. If the concept of resurrection simply meant some kind of immaterial heavenly existence or a metaphor of some kind for the community of faith, then this riddle is completely useless. This proves that the Pharisees believed in a re-embodied existence at the end of time, as historians seem to agree. 


5) Greco-Roman Revulsion at Resurrection

This belief wasn't only controversial among different sects of Jews. Indeed, when Paul speaks to philosophers in Athens in Acts 17, he begins his speech by elaborating on a Creator god who commands that they do not worship idols anymore. However, the moment he mentions Jesus as raised from the dead, the Stoic and Epicurean philosophers interrupt him and "sneered." Indeed, the wholesale rejection of any kind of resurrection of the dead his supported by a wide variety of Greco-Roman literature, as NT Wright notes. (2) These philosophers whom Paul is disagreeing have read their Plato, and know that any post death existence is certainly not to be construed as a literal resurrection of a dead person. Indeed, much of Greek literature repeatedly denies the possibility of actually reversing death. Wright notes that supposed pagan parallels of dying and rising gods are very much unlike what Christians believe about resurrection. (2) He further affirms that, as far as an actual resurrection of a real human is concerned, the Greeks generally believed it was an absurd notion. (2) 

So when the disciples or Paul say they believe Jesus has been "raised from the dead" it meant something very specific and very controversial in their time period--and something extremely tangible. It's like walking into a classroom discussion, and very confidently saying phrases like "abortion is evil" or "I am pro-life." There is no ambiguity at all behind these terms, especially since its such a controversial subject. Same with Paul and the disciples. To proclaim Jesus as "raised from the dead" meant something very specific, very controversial, and emotionally charged in that time period. Indeed, this is especially the case since Paul calls himself a Pharisee on multiple occasions in Acts and in his letters. 


6) The Shouting "Fire" Argument


Given that Paul says he is a Pharisee on two different occasions, and given that the disciples grew up in an environment where Pharisees and Sadducees were constantly debating. Furthermore, given his education, Paul would know what the Old Testament said about resurrection, and had some idea what the Greeks and Romans thought of it. Given this knowledge, they would have certainly known how the audience would understand "raised from the dead" and "resurrection" if they were to go from town to town proclaiming that it happened to Jesus.

This is somewhat analogous to me yelling "Fire!" in a movie theater, or me yelling "Abortion is evil!" at a Planned Parenthood rally. If I don't want the audience to react in a certain way, I won't use those words. It is of no help to me if I actually intend "fire" to be a metaphor for how the movie causes my heart to burn with emotion, or to say that "abortion" is a metaphor for the bullying of small children. That is not how the group is going to take it. And I know this. The same applies to the disciples. They know how controversial it is to say that the resurrection can happen, and that it happened to Jesus before anybody else! If they didn't want people to take it at face value, then they wouldn't have said it that way. Especially if they don't want the negative reaction that goes with it!

If they wanted to use it a metaphor, they certainly did a crappy job at conveying that message. Furthermore, if they meant something else by it entirely (as Richard Carrier suggests), they did a complete horrible job conveying it. All the words attributed to the disciples and Paul in Acts would very strongly give the idea of a traditional Christian resurrection of Jesus. The earliest Creed on Jesus' resurrection, 1 Corinthians 15:3-8, would strongly give that impression as well if no clarification was provided. Furthermore, most of Paul's letters strongly give this impression as well. Furthermore, all 4 gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) and Acts enunciate this quite clearly, as we will see below. So if the disciples meant something else by saying Jesus was raised from the dead, they did a quite horrible job of conveying it, so badly that no one after them believed it.

7) Resurrection in the New Testament (Besides Paul)

Mark - (late date 70 A.D.)

Although Mark doesn't have resurrection appearances, it clearly describes the empty tomb, and the angel clearly says that they can go to Galilee to see Jesus. Whether or not we believe the angel's account, we can know that the author of Mark believed in a bodily resurrection of Jesus in the traditional Christian sense.

Matthew (Ehrman's date 85 A.D.)

This book has both resurrection appearances and the empty tomb. It even has the disciples clasping Jesus feet and worshiping him, showing that a physical body is very much what is intended. In addition, Matthew reports the creation of the rumor by the Jews that the disciples stole the body, further reinforcing the empty tomb.

Luke (Ehrman's date 85 A.D.)

Luke also reinforces a bodily resurrection, by also reporting the empty tomb and the fact that the grave clothes were left behind as well. Furthermore, Luke portrays Jesus as eating broiled fish and moving through locked doors. He also specifically invites them to touch him, declaring that he is not a ghost, and that he has "flesh and bones." This one also reports an extended conversation with Jesus, although they didn't initially recognize him.

Many critics point out that the women and the disciples didn't initially recognize Jesus during their conversation. It must be noted that this fact doesn't work against the idea of bodily resurrection, since they are having an extended conversation with a person. Furthermore, the case for the resurrection by no means depends on the Road to Emmaus appearance, since there are so many other appearances! Finally, I myself have been in situations like this. I specifically had known someone, but saw them in a highly unexpected context. This caused me to not initially realize who it was.

John (late date 90-95 A.D.)

This book also reports the empty tomb, Mary Magdalene clasping Jesus' feet, Jesus sharing breakfast with the disciples on the shore, and having lengthy conversations with the disciples. The author of John clearly believed in a bodily resurrection of Jesus.

Acts (doesn't seem to be a consensus late date for this - agnostic Bart Ehrman probably dates it in 85 A.D.?) (9)

The author of the book of Acts very clearly believes in bodily resurrection. He states that Jesus gave his disciples "many convincing proofs that he was alive." Here, the phrase "alive" is used instead of raised or resurrection, making the meaning especially clear. Furthermore, it also mentions that Jesus was eating with the disciples, further enhancing that the author of Acts believes in a bodily and physical resurrection.

The author also clearly believes that the first disciples also believed in a bodily resurrection of Jesus. The author of Acts makes reference to Peter's speech, which very clearly enunciates a bodily resurrection. Peter is quoted as saying that Jesus' body did not see decay after his burial, but that Jesus was instead "raised to life." He also seems to contrast Jesus with King David. Peter is quoted as saying that King David has died and was buried, and his tomb remained until the time of Peter's life. However, Jesus was raised to life and did not see decay. In another chapter, the author of Acts quotes Peter as saying that Jesus rose from the dead and that he and other witnesses "ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead." This clearly portrays a bodily resurrection. (Acts 10)

Of great significance is Luke's quoting Paul as believing in the bodily resurrection of Jesus. In Pisidian Antioch, Paul gives a speech to a synagogue, where he says that Jesus was crucified, laid in a tomb, and raised from the dead. This is significant because this is the only specific mention of the tomb by Paul in antiquity (in another place he simply refers to Jesus' burial). Furthermore, he very directly contrasts King David with Jesus. He says that David died, was buried and decayed. However, since Jesus was raised from the dead, he did not see decay. This strongly shows that Paul believed in both the empty tomb and bodily resurrection of Jesus. (acts 13) Such a comparison between Jesus and David would make no sense if the resurrection was intended as a metaphor.

Possible Rebuttal: Paul's Conversion in Acts

Some say that Paul's Damascus Road experience in Acts seems more "visionary" than physical. This is problematic for several reasons:

1) The author of Acts also quotes Paul as believing Jesus was entombed and raised from the dead. He further quotes Paul as contrasting King David and Jesus, where David decayed in his grave, whereas Jesus did not. So if we are to accept the accounts in Acts for Paul's conversion, we ought to believe the authors quotation of Paul believing in bodily resurrection as well. After all, it is the same source. (2)

2) There is nothing to suggest that Paul's "seeing" of Jesus at the Damascus Road led him to believe that Jesus had no physical body. Indeed, the author of Acts says Paul was blinded by the light. Visionary experiences typically don't blind a person. Furthermore, the Damascus Road event often has an effect on the surrounding people with Paul, either causing them to hear or to see the light. Since visions are private and subjective, this shows the Damascus Road event was not visionary in the normal sense we use the term "visionary." (2)

3) It makes perfect sense that Paul would see Jesus in heaven surrounded by light. Remember, Christians believe that Jesus wasn't just resurrected, he ascended and was glorified as well. So Paul's experience of the post-glorified risen Lord makes perfect sense on Christian theology and causes no inconsistency. Indeed, it is almost exactly what we would expect for a post-glorified appearance of Jesus.


8) Resurrection in Paul (besides 1 & 2 Corinthians)


Christian apologists often concede late dating for the texts in question, since the resurrection can still be rationally demonstrated with either early or late dates. This is not to say that the late dates are the best dates (indeed good arguments can be made for dating the book of Acts in the 60's). However, the current trend in apologetics is to concede the late dating for the writings in question.

That being said, liberal scholars consider Paul's writings to have the earliest dates over all other New Testament writings. The argument is that Paul is the earliest source regarding what the disciples believed about resurrection, since he had contact with the disciples. Furthermore, Paul regularly states that all believers will experience a resurrection at the end of the age. He repeatedly states that our body will be like Jesus' body was in the resurrection. So, whatever Paul thinks about the future resurrection body of believers, he believes about Jesus' body.

Despite what some critics have to say, Paul agrees with other New Testament writings on the subject of resurrection. There are 7 letters of Paul that scholars are unanimous in agreeing that Paul actually wrote them. These are of principal interest in determining Paul's views on the nature of the resurrection body.

Romans - 60's A.D.

"And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies because of his Spirit who lives in you."


Here Paul states that the Holy Spirit who resurrected Jesus will "give life to your mortal bodies." This works against Richard Carrier's two body hypothesis, and John Dominic Crossan's metaphor hypothesis. The passage implies that the body that is raised is the same that dies. This works against Richard Carriers hypothesis that Paul believed in a replacement resurrection body that is different than the one that died. Furthermore, it is difficult to understand the metaphorical meaning behind "your mortal bodies." 


Philippians - 60's A.D.

10 I want to know Christ—yes, to know the power of his resurrection and participation in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, 11 and so, somehow, attaining to the resurrection from the dead.


Here Paul talks of the "resurrection from the dead." Gary Habermas notes that this phrase implies a resurrection out from among dead ones, which very keenly consistent with traditional Christian theology and its belief about resurrection. (8)

 But our citizenship is in heaven. And we eagerly await a Savior from there, the Lord Jesus Christ, 21 who, by the power that enables him to bring everything under his control, will transform our lowly bodies so that they will be like his glorious body.

This passage most strongly implies a future transformation of our current bodies into a glorious one. Notice that glorious does not at all mean non-physical in Christian theology. This works against the metaphor hypothesis, because the resurrection of all believers is a future event. If, as Crossan and others maintain, the resurrection of Christ is symbolized by his continued presence in the church through the Holy Spirit in the body of Christ, it makes passages that discuss the resurrection of believers at the Second Coming rather meaningless. Furthermore, "transform" strongly states that the body we have now will be transformed, not replaced as Richard Carrier states Paul believed.

1 Thessalonians - 50 A.D.

13 Brothers and sisters, we do not want you to be uninformed about those who sleep in death, so that you do not grieve like the rest of mankind, who have no hope. 14 For we believe that Jesus died and rose again, and so we believe that God will bring with Jesus those who have fallen asleep in him. 15 According to the Lord’s word, we tell you that we who are still alive, who are left until the coming of the Lord, will certainly not precede those who have fallen asleep. 16 For the Lord himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first. 17 After that, we who are still alive and are left will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air. And so we will be with the Lord forever. 18 Therefore encourage one another with these words.

Here Paul very clearly falls in line with traditional Christian belief about resurrection. He tells the Thessalonians that the rest of mankind "have no hope." Since he is talking to a Greek audience at Thessalonica, the locals undoubtedly believed in a ghostly existence in Hades after death. (2) (cf. Plato) Apparently, Paul lumps this in with having "no hope." For Paul, eternal life is not a reality without the bodily resurrection from the dead. Apparently for Paul, a ghostly existence in Hades is no hope at all, and certainly not a resurrection.

Furthermore, he uses the common euphemism of the time, referring to dead people those who "sleep in death" and "fallen asleep." However, it is interesting that he says that "Jesus died and rose again." The word here for "rose" is eregoi, which is the same word that means to arise from a seat or to wake up, or to "arise" to the occasion. Combined with the sleep euphemism, it is very clear that Paul believes that the dead will literally wake up, or stand up again just like Jesus did. This works against Richard Carrier's replacement body hypothesis, because it shows a strong continuity between the body that dies and the body that is raised. Furthermore, it works against Crossan's metaphor hypothesis because it speaks of a future event that happens where dead believers will rise, and not just the presence of Christ in the church. Furthermore, in the phrase "Jesus died and rose again," purporting that the "rose again" part is a metaphor would necessarily mean that the "Jesus died" part is a metaphor too. And Crossan thinks its historically certain that Jesus really literally died. So there is no reason to jump from literal to metaphorical interpretation without reason for doing so.

Galatians & Philemon

Both of these books have very little to say about the nature of resurrection body.

9) Resurrection in Paul (1 & 2 Corinthians)


Paul's longest explanation of the concept of resurrection is in 1 Corinthians 15. He also explains some of it in 2 Corinthians 5 as well. These passages are either long, complex or controversial. That is why I group them separately from the others. So far, what we have learned about Paul's view of resurrection is very consistent with the traditional Christian view of resurrection. Since Paul is associated with the Pharisees, and seems to be confirming traditional Christian views of resurrection, we should assume that is what he is doing unless we have some strong evidence to the contrary in another one of his letters.

2 Corinthians 5


For we know that if the earthly tent we live in is destroyed, we have a building from God, an eternal house in heaven, not built by human hands. Meanwhile we groan, longing to be clothed instead with our heavenly dwelling, because when we are clothed, we will not be found naked. For while we are in this tent, we groan and are burdened, because we do not wish to be unclothed but to be clothed instead with our heavenly dwelling, so that what is mortal may be swallowed up by life. Now the one who has fashioned us for this very purpose is God, who has given us the Spirit as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come.

Therefore we are always confident and know that as long as we are at home in the body we are away from the Lord. For we live by faith, not by sight. We are confident, I say, and would prefer to be away from the body and at home with the Lord. So we make it our goal to please him, whether we are at home in the body or away from it. 10 For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, so that each of us may receive what is due us for the things done while in the body, whether good or bad.

Crossan Metaphor: 

The metaphorical meaning of this passage would be remarkably difficult to decipher if it has no concrete basis. In fact, one wonders if this passage would mean anything at all within a purely metaphorical context. Paul speaks of clothing our presently weak and mortal existence with a heavenly one. If our presently weak and mortal existence is not metaphorical, then neither is the heavenly body we will receive. Furthermore, the reference to "earthly tent" and "building from God" are clearly metaphors with concrete referents. If the whole passage is a metaphor, then we have an situation where we have metaphors nested within metaphors, which is a very awkward explanation for the passage and is an unnecessarily complex theory. 

Non-physical "Spiritual" Resurrection: 

A non-physical spiritual resurrection would not make sense here, because in the first paragraph, the body is very specifically not abandoned, but is "clothed" with the heavenly dwelling. It also says that what is "mortal" is not abandoned but is "swallowed up by life." He specifically says that "we do not wish to be unclothed but to be clothed instead with our heavenly dwelling." It seems to abandon the body would be to be "unclothed" in this context, which is not what Paul has in mind since he says we are going to be "clothed" with our heavenly dwelling. 

Carrier Replacement Body:

It is hard to use this passage to make a case for the abandoning of this present body for the replacement of another. This is the case for several reasons. First, Paul wants us to be "clothed" with our heavenly dwelling and for what is "mortal to be swallowed up by life." He speaks of the new heavenly dwelling clothing and swallowing up the mortal body, but certainly does not speak of abandoning the mortal body. In the second paragraph, Paul speaks of being "away from the body and at home with the Lord." However, this is evidently a temporary state, because he already said in the previous paragraph that "we do not wish to be unclothed, but clothed by our heavenly dwelling." 



Traditional Resurrection: 

Mike Licona in a debate with Richard Carrier mentions that this is one of the most controversial passages with respect to what Paul actually meant. (15) Indeed, it has at least a small amount of awkwardness for every theory. So we ought not use Paul's ambiguous passages to explain his very clear ones, but vice versa. This passage works reasonably well with bodily resurrection if one views each paragraph as speaking of a different topic. The first paragraph speaks of a body that clothes the present mortal and weak "earthly tent" to a more permanent existence. This is perfectly in line with other Pauline passages on resurrection. Furthermore, the second paragraph speaks not of resurrection at all, but of abandonment of the body to the intermediate state while waiting for the Second Coming of Christ. We have already seen why Paul does not view abandonment of the body as the ideal or final state.

Finally, the fact that the body is "in heaven" is merely awkward but poses no inconsistency with traditional resurrection, or what Paul seemed to mean in his other letters. It does make sense on traditional resurrection, because if we are to clothe/transform our mortal bodies with something that isn't earthly or corruptible, it only makes sense that this body or the material for this new transformed body would originate from heaven, since it obviously can't come from earth. Furthermore, as NT Wright notes with respect to the body in heaven: "If I assure my guests that there is champagne for them in the fridge I am not suggesting that we all need to get into the fridge if we are to have the party." (2) The body comes from heaven, but doesn't stay there, in NT Wright's analysis. (2)

So 2 Corinthians 5 gives us every reason to reject alternatives to physical resurrection. It also works (more or less) smoothly with traditional Christian view of resurrection. Since this is what Paul seems to affirm in his other unambiguous writings, we have no reason to reject this view in the case of 2 Corinthians 5.

1 Corinthians 15

42 So will it be with the resurrection of the dead. The body that is sown is perishable, it is raised imperishable; 43 it is sown in dishonor, it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power; 44 it is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body.

If there is a natural body, there is also a spiritual body. 45 So it is written: “The first man Adam became a living being”; the last Adam, a life-giving spirit. 46 The spiritual did not come first, but the natural, and after that the spiritual. 47 The first man was of the dust of the earth; the second man is of heaven. 48 As was the earthly man, so are those who are of the earth; and as is the heavenly man, so also are those who are of heaven. 49 And just as we have borne the image of the earthly man, so shall we bear the image of the heavenly man.

50 I declare to you, brothers and sisters, that flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable. 51 Listen, I tell you a mystery: We will not all sleep, but we will all be changed  52 in a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be changed. 53 For the perishable must clothe itself with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality. 54 When the perishable has been clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality, then the saying that is written will come true: “Death has been swallowed up in victory.”


Crossan Metaphor

The metaphor hypothesis has a lot of trouble with 1 Corinthians 15, but mainly with passages I left out. Before this part of the chapter Paul again reaffirms that our faith is worthless without a future resurrection of the dead.

For if the dead are not raised, then Christ has not been raised either. 17 And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins. 18 Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ are lost. 19 If only for this life we have hope in Christ, we are of all people most to be pitied.


Here he poignantly reaffirms that if Jesus is dead, then so are we---permanently. He says that "If only for this life we have hope in Christ" everyone should feel sorry for us. He clearly thinks that there is a future life of resurrection which makes this present life worth living. This idea makes little sense on Crossan's metaphor hypothesis, where Jesus' resurrection is merely Christ's working through the body of Christ, which is the church. This has little to say  when explaining Paul's belief in a future resurrection life, without which our present faith is worthless.

Non-Physical "Spiritual" Resurrection:

An (often accidental) anachronistic reading of this passage could lead us to belief that Paul speaks of some kind of ghostly or non-physical spiritual resurrection, because of a couple verses. However, the whole passage works against a non-bodily resurrection in a very strong way, especially once we understand the meaning of the terms Paul uses.

There are three verses which might imply to a 21st Century reader a non-physical resurrection.

1) "It is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body."

A) Paul uses the words "natural" and "spiritual" in this same letter to refer to "natural" and "spiritual" Christians. Surely he does not think some Corinthians are physical, and some non-physical! His usage of "spiritual" is similar to the way we use it when we say that the Bible is a "spiritual" book. (11)

B) Mike Licona did a word study and studied the usage of "natural" (psychikon) and "spiritual" (pneumatikon). He found that in over 800 instances in Greek literature, the word "natural" (psychikon) NEVER means physical. He found that the word "spiritual" (pneumatikon) can sometimes mean non-physical or physical. However, since "psychikos" never means physical, it is almost positively certain that Paul did not intend to contrast a physical with a non-physical body in this passage. (11)

C) If Paul wanted to say that the resurrection was purely a non-physical event, he could have easily said that it is raised a "spirit" (pneuma), not "spiritual body" (soma pneumatikon). The use of the word "body" (soma) is where we get our word "somatic" and has a physical connotation. (11)

D) Paul's actual meaning in this passage makes more sense when we look at his other letters. Paul's letters repeatedly emphasize that some people give in to fleshly impulses and follow the sin nature, while others are led by the Spirit to do good. When Paul speaks of a "spiritual body," he likely speaks of a body devoid of sinful impulses and oriented towards what God wants. This interpretation is especially fitting given his contrasting "natural" Christians with "spiritual" Christians earlier in the same letter. (11?)

2) "'The first man Adam became a living being,' the last Adam a life giving spirit."

Here the words used for living being (lit: "living soul") and ("life-giving spirit") are the roots of the words "natural" and "spiritual" above. We have already seen that "natural" never means physical. Since the roots are used here, this comparison also cannot be a contrast between "physical" and "non-physical."  So whatever Paul means here by this contrast between "living soul" and "life-giving spirit," it does not mean that it is a contrast between a physical body and a non-physical one. (11)

3) "Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God"

Some scholars try to contrast "flesh and blood" with Luke's gospel, where the risen Jesus claims to have "flesh and bones." This they say, is proof that Luke is later and the result of legendary embellishments, whereas Paul actually did not believe in physical resurrection. (11)

The majority of scholars view this to be a figure of speech for "mortal," because of its usage in the Old and New Testament, and the rest of antiquity. So here, the actual words are more analogous to saying that a person is a "cold-blooded murderer" or a "red-blooded" male. The expression "cold blooded murderer" could not be used as evidence that the murderer had cold blood. So the phrase, "flesh and blood" merely means that "mortality" cannot inherit the kingdom of God. (11)

Context bears this out as well. It says that "flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God, nor does the perishable inherit the imperishable." Context shows that Paul simply means that perishable and mortal bodies don't inherit the kingdom of God. Furthermore, "the perishable must clothe itself with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality." This further demonstrates that Paul means that mortal existence can't inherit the kingdom of God.

Carrier Replacement Body:

The material in this passage works strongly against a replacement view of resurrection. Paul says that "we will not all sleep, but will all be changed - in a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet." The primary meaning of the word "change" is to transform. It can mean exchange, but its primary meaning is to transform. Furthermore:

For the perishable must clothe itself with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality. 54 When the perishable has been clothed with the imperishable, and the mortal with immortality, then the saying that is written will come true: “Death has been swallowed up in victory.

Here he repeatedly speaks not of an exchange, but the clothing of the present mortal body with an immortal and imperishable body. This works strongly against the view that Paul thought that our present bodies would remain in the grave, while we get  new bodies in heaven. Clearly Paul believed that the present body would be transformed and "clothed" with immortality.

This view is also born out in this paragraph:


42 So will it be with the resurrection of the dead. The body that is sown is perishable, it is raised imperishable; 43 it is sown in dishonor, it is raised in glory; it is sown in weakness, it is raised in power; 44 it is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body.


In the preceding, Paul compares the dying mortal body with a seed that dies and comes to life again in a plant. He continues the use of that metaphor when saying "it is sown,...It is raised..." The "it" implies a continuity between that which dies and that which is raised to life, albeit it is a transformed existence.

Traditional Resurrection:

1 Corinthians 15 strongly bears out the traditional view of resurrection. We have seen no reason that Paul was referring to a "non-physical" resurrection, because only an anachronistic reading of the text would yield that interpretation. Furthermore, Crossan's metaphor hypothesis is unsuccessful here, because Paul emphatically believes in a future life beyond this current life, without which his current faith is useless. Furthermore, Carrier's replacement body hypothesis works against the text, because the text refers to the mortal being "clothed" with immortality, not replaced.

The traditional Christian view of resurrection is strongly elucidated in 1 Corinthians 15. It speaks of the transformation of the perishable and mortal body into an imperishable and immortal body. It also says that the mortal body dies in weakness, but is raised in power. The first body dies in dishonor, but is raised in glory. Once we realize the Jewish meaning of resurrection, and the anachronistic reading of "spiritual body," 1 Corinthians 15 very strongly bears out the idea that the resurrection involves the emptying of a tomb, the transformation of a mortal corpse into an immortal existence.

Paul Overall


Since Paul is supposedly the earliest source, we cannot find any reason he believed in a different kind of resurrection body for Jesus than what the Gospels present. The "transformed corpse" view is found explicitly in 1 Thessalonians, Romans, and Philippians, and also in 1& 2 Corinthians, despite what critics have to say. So here, Paul is in full agreement with Christian tradition regarding the nature of the resurrection body (and the nature of Jesus' body specifically as being a physical, tomb-emptying event.)

10) Resurrection in Apostolic Fathers


Apostolic Fathers are Christian writers in the 1st and 2nd Century that are the earliest writings we have other than the apostles themselves. Furthermore, some other Church fathers, such as Irenaeus, specifically say that some of these men knew certain apostles. It is believed that some of these men listened to the apostles preaching. So what they think of resurrection is also important. (2)

Polycarp (2)

Polycarp seems to believe in an intermediate state between death and the resurrection of the dead at the end of the age. If resurrection was merely a disembodied afterlife, Polycarp would not need or want to speak of both a disembodied intermediate state and a resurrection at the Second Coming.

Ignatius (2)

Ignatius may very well have known the apostle John. He very much goes out of his way to affirm what Luke says about the resurrection body of Jesus. He very much affirms it to be a physical body that could eat food. He insists that Jesus body was composed of "flesh."

Clement of Rome (2)

Clement specifically compares the resurrection to the rising of the phoenix from the ashes. The bird dies and rejuvenates every 500 years. With using such an obscure parallel in Greco-Roman literature, he is clearly looking for some precedent to affirm a physical resurrection, because affirming a disembodied existence in the afterlife would have been an easy task for him.

Traditional Theologians

For those who say that my reading of physical resurrection is entirely "modern" all one has to do is look at some famous theologians in the past to see that they share my view as well:

Augustine (14)

But, as far as the substance of the resurrection body is concerned, it will even then still be “flesh.” This is why the body of Christ is called “flesh” even after the resurrection.

Thomas Aquinas on 1 Corinthians 15:50 (12)

What we must not think, as some heretics say, is that flesh and blood will not rise according to substance, but rather that the whole body will be changed into spirit or into air. This is heretical and false. For the Apostle says that our body will be conformed to his body of radiance. Therefore, since Christ after his resurrection, has body and blood, as it says in Luke (24:39): “See my hands and my feet, that it is I myself; handle me, and see; for a spirit has not flesh and bones as you see that I have,” it is certain that we too will have flesh and blood in the resurrection.



11) "At Least One" Authorship Argument

But of course, all of these arguments assume a "minimal facts" approach. This means I am trying to concede to liberal scholarship as much as possible, especially in the areas of dating and authorship.

However, this does not mean that I actually agree with the dating and authorship assessments of these liberal scholars! Very powerful arguments can be made for early dating of some of the gospels and Acts. Good arguments can be given that Matthew, Mark, Luke and John really wrote Matthew, Mark, Luke and John. But all of that aside. If I can prove just ONE conservative authorship of any of the gospels (or Acts), that pretty much sinks the idea that Paul or any of the disciples believed in a non-traditional resurrection. If any of the gospels was written by an eyewitness, then that destroys the theory that the apostles believed in a non-traditional resurrection.

Furthermore, if the early date of Acts is true, then trying to prove that Luke didn't write it, or that Paul didn't believe in bodily resurrection, becomes a useless endeavor. Believing in the non-bodily interpretation means that the authorship of EVERY SINGLE ONE of the gospels (and Acts) was not written by an eyewitness or someone who spoke to eyewitnesses. The early church was unanimous as to who wrote these books. This is often how authorship is determined with ancient writings. If they are right about any of them, then the non-bodily resurrection hypothesis falls apart. Notice a trend here. The skeptical case for non-bodily resurrection depends entirely on the idea that none of the traditional authorships are true.

Summary 

The apostles believed in bodily resurrection of Jesus for several reasons:

1) The empty tomb - if the scholarly majority (70%) is right about the empty tomb, then the disciples would have necessarily believed in bodily resurrection.

2) The meaning of "raised" in Greek is often the same word for to "stand up" or to "wake up" or to "arise" to a certain occasion. Greek for "resurrection" also has the root for "to stand up." The word itself corresponds with the traditional view of resurrection.

3) The Old Testament portrays resurrection as dead people waking up from the dust of the earth. Since the disciples frequently cite the Old Testament as such a high authority, one would think they would share the Old Testament view of resurrection.

4) Second Temple Jews had many sub-groups including Pharisees, Sadduccees, and Essenes. However, it was known that the Pharisees disagreed with the Sadducees, not on the nature of the resurrection, but on whether or not it actually happened. So Jews in 1st Century Palestine who affirmed resurrection were affirming a bodily notion. We shouldn't expect any different from a Pharisee like Paul or Jews like the disciples.

5) Greco-Roman revulsion at resurrection. Many pagan beliefs actually repeatedly repudiate the notion that a dead person can return to life. This is often due to their Platonic view of afterlife. So resurrection is a bodily notion for the Greeks as well. The only difference is that they disagree with it.

6) Proclaiming Jesus as raised from the dead is like shouting "fire" in a movie theater. The disciples would know how people would interpret the phrase "raised from the dead," but chose to use that phrase anyway, despite the negative (and positive) reactions.

7) "Resurrection" in New Testament writings other than Paul clearly affirm a bodily notion, especially because the Gospels report an empty tomb and Acts strongly implies one.

8) Resurrection and "raised from the dead" in Paul (outside Corinthians) very clearly enunciate the traditional Christian belief of bodily resurrection.

9) Resurrection and "raised from the dead" concepts in Paul (in 1 & 2 Corinthians) work strongly against alternate interpretations but work best with the traditional resurrection. Furthermore, only an anachronistic reading of these passages would lead us to believe in a non-bodily resurrection.

10) Resurrection belief in apostolic fathers is very consistent with the traditional Christian view of bodily resurrection. This is significant because many of these people are purported to have spoken with or learned under the apostles.

11) Most arguments against a non-bodily resurrection depend on the idea that every single one of the traditional authorships for the Gospels is false. However, in many cases good arguments can be made for traditional authorship. Furthermore, arguments against Paul believing in a non-bodily resurrection collapse with an early dating of Acts, which is very likely.


Conclusion to Resurrection Series

This concludes the series on resurrection. We have seen that:

1) Jesus was crucified, buried and died.
2) Jesus disciples claimed Jesus was raised from the dead and appeared to them
3) The disciples did not lie about the resurrection.
4) The disciples could not have possibly hallucinated the resurrection.
5) The disciples affirmed a bodily resurrection of Jesus.

I got carried away and got very detailed on the posts on resurrection, since the entire Christian religion depends on the truth of it.

However, He is risen indeed!

I will now return to more regular posting with shorter, less confusing, posts.


1) Gary Habermas and the Empty Tomb
http://www.4truth.net/fourtruthpbjesus.aspx?pageid=8589952861



2) "The Resurrection of the Son of God" NT Wright
http://www.amazon.com/Resurrection-Christian-Origins-Question-Vol/dp/0800626796

3) Number of OT allusions in NT
http://studylight.org/dic/hbd/view.cgi?number=T4699

4) Jewish Beliefs on Resurrection in the 1st Century
http://jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/12697-resurrection


5) Mike Licona and the Metaphor Hypothesis
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u0ZNaPKypGo

6) Richard Carrier's View
http://richardcarrier.info/SpiritualFAQ.html


7) Habermas on Percent of Scholars Who accept empty tomb
http://www.garyhabermas.com/articles/J_Study_Historical_Jesus_3-2_2005/J_Study_Historical_Jesus_3-2_2005.htm




8) Gary Habermas (Physical or Spiritual) Resurrection
http://www.google.com/url?sa=t&rct=j&q=&esrc=s&source=web&cd=5&ved=0CGIQFjAE&url=http%3A%2F%2Fbiblocality.com%2Fforums%2Fattachment.php%3Fattachmentid%3D163%26d%3D1291863445&ei=f3rET-aXLsqt0AGWnMmaCg&usg=AFQjCNE0HVf50LLpvTXHdyyRWdDoUvI5ww&sig2=fG8qFEUovU4yTBC6p43lEw

9) Licona vs. Ehrman
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyHA3K_6H0g

10) Marcus Borg's Metaphor Hypothesis
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tVAa-_YNCz8&feature=relmfu

11) Mike Licona on Bodily Resurrection
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrhTXLizuWk

12) Thomas Aquinas on Resurrection
http://josephkenny.joyeurs.com/CDtexts/SS1Cor.htm

13) Habermas on Percent of Scholars Who accept empty tomb
http://www.garyhabermas.com/articles/J_Study_Historical_Jesus_3-2_2005/J_Study_Historical_Jesus_3-2_2005.htm

14) Augustine on Resurrection
http://www.ccel.org/ccel/augustine/enchiridion.chapter23.html

15) Licona vs. Carrier
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-EGrzxkozVU