Eastertide: Day 9 Yesterday's blog entry was a simple visual of Easter flowers with the words "Christ is Risen!" written across it. But are there ways that we can actually PROVE that Jesus rose from the dead? According to Fr. Robert Spitzer, there are at least 5 historical ways Jesus' resurrection can be verified. So, for today's continuing celebration of Easter, I'm reposting a blog entry for scientifically minded folk. This article comes from the Magis Center for Reason and Faith. ( https://blog.magiscenter.com/blog ). The Magis Center is a new venture, founded by Fr. Robert Spitzer, S.J., who is a well-known Catholic author and leader. He is especially known for works like 5 Pillars of the Spiritual Life, on my Bookshelf page, Healing the Culture, and the 3 volume series The Light Shines On In the Darkness, The Soul's Upward Yearning and God So Loved the World. He has recently published a new trilogy, Called Out of Darkness. His special focus is on the intersection of faith and reason, and he frequently explains how science is not at war with faith. "The doctrine of the resurrection is central to Christianity—so much so that St. Paul states: "If there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised. And if Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith." —1 Cor 15:13-15 But are there any ways of verifying the claims made by the Christian church about Jesus’ resurrection in glory? As a matter of fact, there are. Through the use of historical criteria, exegetes such as N.T. Wright and Gary Habermas have found five historical ways of verifying the claims made by the Christian church about Jesus’ resurrection:
1. Commonalities in Gospel Accounts of Jesus’ Risen Appearances The Gospel accounts show substantial agreement about Jesus’ transformed embodiment in his risen appearances. Though described in different ways, several characteristics of these accounts are quite similar. For instance, Matthew, Luke, and John all indicate that in his risen appearances, Jesus was divinely and spiritually transformed. Furthermore, this transformation outshone his former corporeality—so much so that the apostles at first had doubts about whether Jesus was in this divine-spiritual appearance. Jesus overcame these doubts by revealing his identity (and continuity with his former embodiment) through the marks of his crucifixion (Luke and John 20) and through his communication with and missioning of them (Matthew and John 21). Hence, there are common elements in the three different resurrection narratives that help us verify the claim that Jesus really did resurrect after his death. Matthew, Luke, and John all affirm that, after his crucifixion and death, Jesus appears in a divine-like glory, power, and spirit in which he showed continuity with his former embodiment. 2. Paul’s Testimony to the Resurrection of Jesus St. Paul’s testimony about the resurrection (1 Corinthians 15) gives scholars of all subsequent generations the opportunity to test the historicity of his and the other witnesses’ claims. Paul seems to be acquainted with many of the witnesses he lists, and he is aware that these witnesses are still alive. While writing within living memory of the resurrection, St. Paul challenges his Corinthian audience to “check out the facts” and investigate Paul’s claim through the testimonies of the living witnesses. We can also verify the claims made about Jesus’ resurrection through St. Paul’s witness dilemma (1Cor 15:14-32), which goes as follows: First side of the dilemma: “...if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain. We are also found to be false witnesses of God because we witnessed before God that He raised Christ…” The other side of the dilemma: “If for this life only we have hoped in Christ, we are of all men most to be pitied. ...Why am I in peril every hour? ...I die every day! What do I gain if, humanly speaking, I fought with beasts at Ephesus? If the dead are not raised, ‘Let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we die.’” Paul uses this dilemma to show (in a legal fashion) that he and the other witnesses have everything to lose and nothing to gain by bearing false witness to the resurrection of Christ. If the witnesses lacked authentic motives for preaching the resurrection, they would have had self-interested ones. However, as Paul shows, they could not have had self-interested motives, because false preaching of the resurrection would have led either to risking their salvation for undermining God’s will (if they believed in God), or to persecution for nothing (if they did not believe in God and a resurrection). 3. N.T. Wright’s Argument Based on the Remarkable Rise of Christian Messianism We can verify the claims made about Jesus’ resurrection through two important arguments made by N.T. Wright. The first is the growth of the Christian messianic movement after the public persecution of its messiah (as discussed in Wright’s volume, Jesus and the Victory of God), After the public humiliation, persecution, and execution of their messiah, the disciples maintained their identity and did not replace Jesus as the true leader of their community. Wright points out that no other messianic movement displayed this behavior: "...In not one case do we hear of any group, after the death of its leader, claiming that he was in any sense alive again, and that therefore Israel’s expectation had in some strange way actually come true." —N.T. Wright We are now led to N.T. Wright’s probative questions. Why didn’t the Church follow the patterns of other groups whose leaders had been persecuted? Why did it (uniquely) consider Jesus as its continued leader? Why did it consider Jesus (after the crucifixion) to be the fulfillment of Israel’s destiny? Furthermore, why did it organize itself so uniquely? Why did it worship Jesus as the Lord and endure persecution for that worship? How, with a publicly humiliated and executed “Messiah” as its sole leader, did it become one of the most inspired and dynamically expansive missionary organizations in the history of religions? The powerful cause of this unique phenomena would seem to be the post-resurrection appearances of Jesus in combination with Jesus’ gift of the Holy Spirit which enabled the apostles’ (along with other missionaries) to perform miracles in the name of Jesus. 4. N.T. Wright’s Argument Based on the Christian Mutation of Second Temple Judaism Wright’s second and more extensive argument for the historicity of the resurrection appearances stems from several Christian mutations of the Jewish doctrine of resurrection prevalent at the time of Jesus (Second-Temple Judaism). In his book, The Resurrection of the Son of God, Wright shows through a study of the New Testament that Christianity changed the dominant Jewish view of "resurrection" in five major ways:
The obvious explanation would be that many witnesses saw the risen Jesus in a transformed embodied state (manifesting at once a spiritual transformation which had the appearance of divine glory and power, and some form of embodiment which was continuous with Jesus’ embodiment in his ministry). 5. The Empty Tomb The empty tomb does not give as much direct evidence of Jesus’ resurrection and spiritual transformation as his risen appearances do; however, it gives indirect corroboration of his resurrection and an indication of his continuity with his former embodiment. We have reason to believe Jesus’ body was originally in the tomb based on the accusation made by the Jewish authorities. The accusation claims that Jesus’ disciples had stolen his body, indicating the existence of a real missing body. We are now in a position to reconstruct the events surrounding the Jewish authorities’ accusation of the apostles’ theft of Jesus’ body. The moment the apostles started preaching that Jesus had appeared to them (and began making converts on the basis of that preaching), their adversaries would have likely made every attempt to produce a body that would disprove (or undermine) the apostolic claim. Apparently, they could not do this. We might infer from this that the authorities made every attempt to find out where the body was laid, located the site of the grave/tomb, and found the body gone. If the body had not been put into an identifiable place (e.g., a tomb), the charge of theft would not have been necessary. Now, if the authorities could have identified where the body was, we must suppose that his followers could do the same. Given this, it is likely that the women and other apostles witnessed the empty tomb, and shortly thereafter, Jesus appeared to them—spiritually transformed. Conclusion Through these historical studies mentioned above, Christians can verify the extremely important claim that Christ really did rise from the dead. The Resurrection of Jesus signals God’s Divine authority and power. Furthermore, the Resurrection proclaims that Christ did not leave us at death but, on the contrary, came back to life to be with us always. " Note: this article is a summary of Father Spitzer’s, “Historical Evidence of Jesus’ Resurrection—N.T. Wright and more” which can be found here.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
The BlogDisclaimer:
The images on this website are either my own or are used under the Creative Commons license. No images have been edited, shared, or adapted. A link to each work that I do not own is provided at the bottom of the page. CC License: Archives
March 2024
Categories
All
|