Easter week is here and Christians
are getting ready to mark the rising of Jesus from the grave. The Resurrection
is the foundational event of Christianity and it drastically changed human
history. But skeptics don't believe the accounts of the resurrection as the
Gospels and Paul present them. They doubt the historicity of the resurrection,
and think the Gospel writers either intentionally fabricated the tale or
recorded legends that grew into the familiar story we know. However, both
theories have significant problems associated with them.
Problems with Charging the Resurrection as Fraud
Some charge the Gospel writers with fraud, inventing the resurrection
accounts as part of a purposeful plan to "sell" Christianity to the masses or to
gain power. This charge goes all the way back to the Jewish Sanhedrin
themselves, who claimed the disciples stole the body in order to claim Jesus had
been raised from the dead (Matt 28:13).
First, it is very unclear how
concocting a story of a crucified leader who rises physically would be more
appealing to a first century Jew than perhaps a spiritual or ephemeral
resurrection. I noted yesterday how the idea of a resurrection here and now
created a paradigm shift from traditional Jewish thought. Further, Romans
initially reacted to the story with persecution and death. Tacitus even reports
that after the first couple of decades for the resurrection, Christians were
"hated for their abominations" so much Nero thought they would be the perfect
fall guys to blame the burning of Rome on.
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Moreover,
the change in the disciples themselves and their unflinching belief in seeing
the resurrected Jesus become more implausible if these early followers really
knew the whole thing was a conspiracy. Not one disciple ever recanted seeing the
risen Christ, even upon pain of torture or death. In fact, their behavior
changed drastically. They became bold proclaimers of the risen Lord, even
directly defying the very Sanhedrin from whom they ran and hid when Jesus was
arrested (Acts 4:18, Mark 14:27).
What About Those Who Held Christianity in Contempt?
Also, the false resurrection theory cannot account for the conversion of
those who were antagonistic to Jesus and his message. Throughout Jesus's
ministry, his brothers were outsiders, not believing him to be the Messiah (ref.
Mark3:21, 6:3-4). However Jesus appeared to James after his resurrection which
changed him so much he became the leader of the Christian church in Jerusalem
(Acts 15:12-21). What would cause James to change his beliefs? If he didn't
believe the miracles of Jesus before his crucifixion, why would he believe Jesus
rose unless he actually saw him as 1 Corinthians 15:7 states?
Even more
amazing than James is the conversion of the Apostle Paul. Paul was trained in
the ways of the Pharisees (Phil. 3:5), a highly observant and passionate
follower of the Jewish faith who found the claims of Jesus and the Christians so
offensive, he petitioned the Sanhedrin to capture or kill any Christians he
could find (Acts 9:1). Without Jesus appearing to Paul, why would Paul abandon
such deeply held and what he would only consider as righteous beliefs? As I
explain here, it's like a high ranking ISIS commander, one who ordered the
beheadings of Christians in Syria all at once renouncing not only ISIS but Islam
and converting to Christianity and holding Billy-Graham style crusades around
the world. Again, it wasn't an empty tomb that Paul offered as the reason for
his conversion. It was the fact that Paul saw the risen Jesus himself (1 Cor.
15:8-9).
If the resurrection account is a lie, then Paul's conversion screams
for an explanation. Paul believed it was a lie. He believed it was more than a
lie, but also an affront to God himself. So, what made Paul do a 180 degree
change in his beliefs and his attitude?
Where's the Alternative?
To claim the resurrection is a fraud, the skeptic is denying the testimony of
Paul and the Gospel writers themselves. Therefore, the skeptic must offer some
plausible explanation for the facts we do know: that Jesus died by Roman
crucifixion, that the disciples so deeply believed they had experienced the
risen Jesus it transformed them and they held their belief even unto death, that
Jesus's skeptical brother James became a leader in the Christian church and
that one of the deadliest enemies of Christianity reversed himself in the blink
of an eye and became its biggest advocate.
How does the skeptic account for
these things and is their account more plausible than the resurrection itself? I
don't think any alternative theory has measured up to the challenge.
References