Apologetics 9 – The Resurrection of Jesus
18 April 2008 by Gil
The Christian faith is dependent on an historical event; it is dependent on the fact of the empty tomb. As Paul himself wrote, ‘If Christ has not been raised then your faith is futile’ (1 Cor 15:17). So there is very little doubt that, at least historically, Christians have been people who have staked their lives and their identities on a dead man being resurrected.
There has been a lot of effort made to ‘investigate’ the early Christian claims of the resurrection of Jesus, many of which focus on details surrounding the resurrection itself (the empty tomb, the post-mortem appearances of Jesus, the reliability of the reports of the first witnesses etc.). I do not intend to minimize the force of these arguments but I have found the origin of the Christian church itself to be one of the most persuasive arguments in favour of the resurrection.
While there is a wide spectrum of belief on the question of whether or not the resurrection really happened, there is no debate over the fact that the early Christians believed that Jesus had been raised from the dead and that this belief launched the Christian church. How do we explain this belief? In brief, either the early Christians told the truth about what they experienced or else they were mistaken.
If they were mistaken then are a few options for explaining how that came to be the case. They could have been lying, they could have been so traumatized by the loss of Jesus that they manufactured the idea that he had not really died, they could have experienced some kind of cognitive dissonance that led to their ‘projection’ of the idea that Jesus was alive again, they could have mistakenly believed he was dead when in reality he only fainted on the cross and was later revived in the tomb.
Or it’s possible that we have misunderstood the disciples all these years. Maybe they weren’t talking about an actual physical resurrection at all. Maybe they were referring to Jesus’ spiritual exaltation , his final vindication by God after the suffering and rejection he experienced at the cross. The theories that attempt to account for how people could have come to the conclusion that Jesus was alive again are numerous and well-publicized.
When you look at the actual history of the first century, however, it becomes fairly obvious that the word ‘resurrection’ has a fairly clear (and limited) semantic range. There is no equivalent belief in Greek philosophy, where the afterlife is thought to be a shadowy existence in Hades or a paradisaical state where the soul contemplates the perfection of the forms. In Second Temple Judaism, there was a growing belief in a future Resurrection where the nation of Israel would be restored and the righteous dead would rise but that was not a vision of life after death, it was a vision of the end of the age.
In the first century the word ‘resurrection’ means what it appears to mean – a dead person somehow being alive again. The fact that this was the word that Jesus’ disciples used to describe what happened after his death is a very unique historical fact that requires some kind of explanation.
There were a number of messianic movements in the years leading up to and following the life of Jesus. Judas Maccabeus (167-160 BC), Judas the Galilean (6 BC), Simon Bar Giora (AD 66-75) and Simeon Ben Kosiba (AD 132-135) were all seen, at least by some, as messianic figures. All of these men died at the hands of the pagans against whom they were revolting, and none of these men were proclaimed as ‘resurrected’ by any of their followers after their deaths. All of these movements died with their leaders which begs the important question of how Jesus continued to be proclaimed as the Messiah, even after his death.
There was a widespread belief that Jewish martyrs were exalted to the presence of God as they awaited the final Resurrection of the dead and this would have been the default assumption regarding what happened to Jesus after his death. What is critical to note is that the word ‘resurrection’ would not have been used to describe it.
So when it comes to explaining the historical fact of the disciple’s belief in Jesus’ resurrection, we can rule out any kind of a confusion between physical resurrection and spiritual exaltation. N.T. Wright puts it well:
“It is impossible to conceive what sort of religious or spiritual experience someone could have that would make them say that… a crucified leader was the Messiah when he obviously was not… However strong the disciples sense may have been that Jesus had been vindicated, that they had been forgiven, or whatever, they would still not have said he had been raised from the dead.”
While it will always be counter-intuitive to proclaim the resurrection of Christ, the historical fact of early Christian belief in the resurrection is undeniable and demands some kind of explanation. Obviously the explanation that seems best to me is that the tomb really was empty and Jesus was, in fact, risen.
Probably one of the most interesting part of Wright’s book (for me) was his demonstration of the specificity of resurrection language in the first century. As you say, they had plenty of words available to them if they wanted to talk about personal spiritual experiences, ghosts, seeing visions, etc. The fact that they used the word “resurrection” - and as a way of speaking about something that nobody was expecting at that time (one man rising within history as opposed to a general resurrection at the end of history) - is highly suggestive.
I can hear a Mormon reasoning along the same lines:
“While it will always be counter-intuitive to proclaim the reality of the golden plates, the historical fact of early Mormon belief in the golden plates is undeniable and demands some kind of explanation. Obviously the explanation that seems best to me is that the golden plates were indeed real and Joseph Smith was, in fact, a prophet.”
The fact that Mormonism got off the ground in the first place should clue us in to the nature of humanity and our innate desire to believe things we want to believe despite the mountains of evidence against it.
R.K.
I didn’t intend to put this forward as definitive proof of the truth of the resurrection, only to point toward one apologetic angle of this question that was somewhat new to me. So your reminder that this is by no means proof-positive of the resurrection is a good one.
Obviously this question could be asked of any religious movement and here I could only say that I believe that there are more likely stories than others. The origins of the Mormon church (as you seem to say) can be very plausibly explained in ways that do not involve Joseph Smith encountering the angel Moroni.
Having said that, I think the question of the how the Christian church began is a legitimate one. Something happened to launch the Christian movement; something happened to turn disillusioned, despairing disciples into people who were willing to die for a belief in the resurrection of Jesus.
If the resurrection is abandoned then there must be some other compelling explanation for this phenomenon.