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So, was Jesus Resurrected?

Because none of the authors was an eyewitness of the events?


Except Paul. Paul was an eyewitness to Paul's stuff, including a purported resurrection appearance. I Actually think the NT narratives conatin some historical truth. Her eis my explanation why, from a recent blog post. It's incredibly simplified but it gives the jist --

One of my friends over on my ghost forum wrote:

Much of the discussion I have had… is regarding the bible. I asked the question – “How do you know the bible is a true record of what happened in Jesus’ life? That the disciples (or whoever else wrote it) didn’t elaborate on the stories in order to promote the religion that would have been seen as a ‘breath of fresh air’ at the time of Christ – hope when all else was gone.”

I thought this was interesting, so I hammered out a very quick reply, which I thought I would share…

To answer this properly would require a huge amount of time, so briefly – we don’t know the authors of most of the New Testament (henceforth NT) books. If Jesus dies in 1933, the Gospel accounts we have today were written between 1965 and about now – 2009 (just subtract 1900 to get the real dates). So the question is can we be certain about accounts written a long while after the events?

Well the first thing many people do not realize is that in the NT as well as the four gospels of Matthew Mark Luke and John we have the Epistles, which are divided in to two groups – the Pauline Epistles, and the Pastorals. The Pauline Epistles are all accredited to Paul of Tarsus, a persecutor of the early Church who converted – a bit like if James Randi became a medium and a major figure in Spiritualism over night. Paul also crops up a lot in one other books, Acts of the Apostles (also in the NT) which tells the story of the early Church after Jesus died. It’s a really fun story – you can find it here -http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts;&version=31;9; It was probably written by the same person who wrote Luke, so we call the author Luke.

Now of the Pauline Epistles Biblical Scholars (who are called Biblical Critics) believe seven were actually written by Paul. He was writing using my timeline example in the 1950’s, and died about (19)64 or (19)65, probably killed in Rome by the Romans. So his works date back to within 20 years of the crucifixion – more importantly if Jesus was crucified in (19)33, then he converted and began his ministry in (19)35 or 19(36), and knew a lot of people who were eyewitnesses, including Jesus’ brother James. So we have pretty direct testimony. (The other epistles were mainly probably written circa 1980 to 2010). All these dates are subject to debate, but these are mainstream scholarly figures.

So why believe the gospels contain truth about Jesus? Would we believe a ghost testimony from 1933? Was Borley Rectory really haunted? IT depends on the quality of the evidence. We all know stories can grow in the telling (though evidence suggests much in the paranormal/miraculous may be rationalized and forgotten) but one thing is pretty certain – there was a historical teacher called Jesus, who lived, died on a cross executed by the romans and inspired the movement today known as Christianity. Various kooks have tried to argue that he never existed, or that he was a version of a pagan deity, and older story given new life – but these claims are while popular (and they even got repeated by Stephen Fry on QI, who gave the Mithras December 25th rubbish) absolute nonsense. I have as it happens written a chapter of a book recently on them, and i can promise you it’s bilge. I might well post some extracts later. All mainstream historians agree there was a historical Jesus who was crucified. (A good mainstream study of what is called “the historical Jesus” is EP Sanders book, but the Jewish scholar Geza Vermes has written some excellent stuff too from an explicitly non-Christian perspective. There are also some good atheist books on the historical Jesus as well.)

Anyway, what we now have to establish is the order the books were written. With the Epistles, I have already mentioned the most likely dates. The Gospels are more complicated – almost all scholars agree Mark cam first, and was available to and used by Matthew and Luke (traditional names for the authors) when they wrote their books. However Matthew and Luke also seem to be aware of each other – but who wrote first? This question of which order these thee gospels were compiled is called the Synoptic Question, from the Greek term for similar or same – because they all tell much the same story. (the end of Mark is missing, and a bit tacked on to complete it – more on that another time.)

The remaining gospel, John is totally different – Jesus in it goes off on long speeches which are not like the ones in the other gospels, and it is more “theological” – less of a history, more of what Jesus meant. Most scholars date John last, but it may well contain elements, particular the Passion narrative – the bit about the crucifixion – which are older than the rest, indeed possibly the oldest of all our sources!

It is interesting that they disagree on which day Jesus was crucified – the Synoptics say the Passover, John the Eve of the Passover. Nonetheless, despite details varying in all the gospels, the general story is the same. We find the same traditions, littles stories called pericope, from the Greek word for beads, which were preserved and handed down by the earliest Christians, and the authors each told the story according to how they saw it , arranging the pericope in a string to make the story as they told it. You see how that works? Now if the Church had actually invented the whole thing, then we would actually expect the stories to agree far more. But they don’t. Look at the Resurrection accounts. Original Mark if it ever had one is missing – Paul certainly knew about it, and yet the other Gospels all tell different accounts of who went to the tomb first, and exactly what happened that day. This is what one would expect of a real event, muddled by years and retelling. If they invented the story, well they’d have got the story straight.

Secondly there is a key thing called the criterion of embarrassment. The heroes of the story, the Apostles, often look like real dumb asses. Peter, arguably the most important disciple, denies even knowing Jesus three times. They squabble over who gets to be head honcho in heaven., They repeatedly fail to understand him. And even Jesus says things that were awkward for the early Church – it strongly seems that he expected the world to end at any time, and God to end history before the disciples were all dead. Yet they died, and the world goies on. (this is actually not as fatal as it sounds, but it is a very important issue – the end of the world is something we call the Eschaton, the study of it Eschatology.) Then Jesus says his mission is to the Jews, not the Gentiles who he likens to dogs. This was really quite a problem for the church which was rejected largely by the Jews but flourished among Gentiles. I could go on, but you get the idea. So yes, the accounts are real enough – otherwise none of this “embarrassing” stuff would be in there!

OK, so why trust them? Very early on people start making up all kinds of claims about Jesus, so there has to be some measure of what is a real account, and what is rubbish. Generally the books believed to be real became part of the Bible – this is called the canon, the development of which books constitute our modern New Testament. For a book to be in the canon, it had ot be credited to an eyewitness, and apostle, pretty much. Because from the beginning that was how it worked – those who were with Jesus in his life, and saw what actually happened were given the leadership – they were the Apostles, and authority was investyed in them. When they died off the Gospels were posibly written to preserve their beliefs.
There were other books – mainly much later, but some early, which were rejected by the Church, as not fitting what the eyewitnesses taught. Many of these are known as gnostic gospels, and i’ll talk about them another time, but they won’t (with one possible exception) get you any closer to the historical Jesus. And now I really, really must go to bed.

Anyway hope of some interest to someone – it really is written for people with absolutely no idea about these things, and yes I know one could easily dispute bits.
icon_smile.gif



cj x
 
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...snip...

The real question I have to ask though: why do you asume the narratives in the bible are fiction? On what grounds do you make this value judgement? Once I understand that I think we can maybe make some headway...

cj x

I'm actually not making that assumption (but I will in a moment!) I am simply saying that we can account for the narrative of the resurrection by a known mechanism. i.e. people make stuff up. You've pointed out how we can look at other historical sources, but these then run up against the next point I made: which is that some people will (and can do this quite sincerely) mistake fictions for truths and at this end of 2000 years it will be near enough impossible to extract the fiction from the truth, even if there was an original kernel of truth. And which then follows on to my ETA point, which is that any points of "verisimilitude" we do find (with other contemporary historical documentation and archaeology) can also be explained by a known mechanism, i.e. cults deliberately camouflaging their fictions with dabs of the truth.

Then you can throw in my original point, which is that (from my understanding of the very early church), Paul was apparently fighting other "apostles" and early leaders to establish his view of what Christianity should be and the resurrection was a way for him to gain authority within terms of that early church.

And now to my assumption of the resurrection being "fictional" - whilst I agree the above is in fact a "just so story" it does fit the evidence we have both historically and how we (so far) think the world works, it fits into what we know about human behaviour and how cults can and do develop and what their leaders are capable of. Given all that I have no evidence nor reason to consider the resurrection as anything other than a fiction.

Can I state that with 100% certainty - of course not but then I can't state anything with 100% certainty - well apart from that statement of course.... :)
 
I thought we were discussing the resurrection, which he was a witness to???

cj x

No he wasn't - he says he witnessed the resurrected Christ - it's a bit vague isn't it whether anyone saw the resurrection itself? (And by vague I mean confused - what with those two bloody angels getting thrown in somewhere and Jesus apparently doing a bit of gardening on the side....)
 
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Not really scant - embarrassingly rich in comparison to other comparable 1st century Judean figures. This tells us that he very quickly became the centre of a major cult, and was therefore deemed of interest
Nope. You're jumping to a conclusion

Although it tells us that a cult started, it does NOT tell us that he was "deemed of interest"
 
If we're going to accept the possibility of miracles, then there are an infinite number of possibilites. A poster named TEP over at RichardDawkins.net put forth these possibilites in a similar thread:

TEP said:
The Jewish authorities were pretty ticked off by Christ's message, as they believed it was blasphemous. Well, what if it actually was? Let's suppose that Yahweh's old rival, Baal Hadad, wanted to get back at Yahweh. So, this crazy preacher comes along, talking all sorts of blasphemy with the potential to sway people from worshipping Yahweh in the proper way, but this is quickly nipped in the bud when he is crucified. Baal Hadad comes along, and thinks it would be really amusing to raise this preacher from the dead, because this would give everyone the impression that Yahweh approves of what the preacher is saying. So, Jesus rises from the dead, and his followers take it as vindication of his teachings, and as his message spreads more and more people begin to worship Yahweh in an incorrect fashion, just as Baal Hadad intended.

Or, here's another possibility. One of the witnesses present at the crucifixion was a vampire (obviously wearing a cloak to protect against the sunlight), and bit Jesus while he was on the cross. Jesus is put in a tomb, and rises as a vampire. He then attempts to make his followers immortal by getting them to drink his blood. So, the question is, which is more plausible? That vampires exist, or that there's an all-powerful, all knowing god who cursed humanity for eating an apple, flooded the world, parted seas, firebombed cities, and sent his son in human form to die so he could convince himself to forgive humanity for the apple incident?
 
I thought we were discussing the resurrection, which he was a witness to???

cj x


No, he was not a witness to the resurrection. He claimed to be a witness to a different appearance of Jesus some years after the crucifixion.

Not till long after Christianisation though - unless you know a source i don't?

What do you mean by Christinization? The story of Odin's death and resurrection predates the Christianization of northern Europe by several centuries. There's no evidence it predates Christianity itself - it's hard to tell how old the story is because it comes from an oral tradition. My point was just that dying and resurrected gods are not unique to Christianity, and the concept seems to have arisen independently at least once.
 
The inconsistencies among the gospel accounts undermines their authority regarding the events of Jesus' life. They can't all be right, but they can all be wrong.

We can even see the same sort of myth making and embellishment with Paul himself. The Book of Acts contradicts Paul's own narrative in a number of places. And the pseudoepigraphic works attributed to Paul by later writers also contradict Paul in many ways.
 
Nope. You're jumping to a conclusion

Although it tells us that a cult started, it does NOT tell us that he was "deemed of interest"


You don't think Paul the ultimate fan boy deemed him of importance? I'd say thsi Jesus bloke was pretty much central to the cult??? Hence the fact manuscripts and references survive - there were alot of them, and his enthusiastic followers maintained the libraries and educational suystem in Europe for a millennium and a half.

cj x
 
The inconsistencies among the gospel accounts undermines their authority regarding the events of Jesus' life. They can't all be right, but they can all be wrong.

We can even see the same sort of myth making and embellishment with Paul himself. The Book of Acts contradicts Paul's own narrative in a number of places. And the pseudoepigraphic works attributed to Paul by later writers also contradict Paul in many ways.

Yes. You miss out one option though. Some may be right, and some may be wrong. I started with Paul because he was the earliest surviving source - and in fact the bit i cited may be part of an even earlier "Creed" according to many Biblical Critics

cj x
 
No he wasn't - he says he witnessed the resurrected Christ - it's a bit vague isn't it whether anyone saw the resurrection itself? (And by vague I mean confused - what with those two bloody angels getting thrown in somewhere and Jesus apparently doing a bit of gardening on the side....)


Good point "read witness to end result of purported resurrection". :) And yes, someone want to post say John's resurrection account, as many have suggested it may be the earliest (not as a gospel, but as a narrative?) When I wake up I'll talk abit about Paul and his famous argument with Jerusalem, and why that tells us quite a bit about all this...

cj x
 
We know Doc's answer "Yes, because it is in the bible so it must be true."

You appear to be saying, "it is in the bible, that does not make it true but something must have happened. Let us see what could have happened"

Sounds like wishful speculation to me.
Thats exactly what I'm saying. Yes it is speculation, but clearly the narratives have a root in something, and it's informed speculation.
Informed? Really? Other than 'it's been quite popular for a while' what informs your speculation?
History.. Archeology, Sociology. Psychology, etc, etc?
So you count a few minor hits and overlook a shedload of major misses? Good luck with that
You completely misunderstand. I am not saying we should use the disciplines of medicine, history, archeology, law, and our understanding of the first century Roman, Hellenist and Judean words to somehow "prove the Bible".
HUH?

Yep... I do completely misunderstand...
 
Yes. You miss out one option though. Some may be right, and some may be wrong. I started with Paul because he was the earliest surviving source - and in fact the bit i cited may be part of an even earlier "Creed" according to many Biblical Critics

cj x

Some may be right in parts. Some of the words attributed to Jesus may have been his own words passed down through the oral tradition. But these words are consistent with an apocalyptic rabbi of the first century who adhered to a Jewish sect that bears virtually no resemblance to modern Christianity.
 
Some may be right in parts. Some of the words attributed to Jesus may have been his own words passed down through the oral tradition. But these words are consistent with an apocalyptic rabbi of the first century who adhered to a Jewish sect that bears virtually no resemblance to modern Christianity.


Or a non-apocalyptic sect - it's hard to tell if the apocalyptic material was the accretion, or the non-apocalyptic, given the theological concerns of everyone who wrote and the vast diversity of belief in Second Temple Judaism. But yeah, agreed.

cj x
 
Sorry if asking questions about the fundamental tenets of your beliefs is rude, but how else can they be examined if we can't question them?
It was tone, not the asking, that I got shirty about.
I still don't get it. I may be dense, but why should faith in god be dependent on Jesus rising from the dead? If he was a sacrifice to cleanse humanity of sin, shouldn't he stay dead?
That might work, specifically in terms of the Hebraic patterns up to that point, but it doesn't necessarily not work if the sacrifice demonstrates power over death (physical and spiritual) by resurrection. If you don't have the resurrection tied to the sacrifive, it doesn't differentiate much from general Hebrew practice up to that point. It's a non trivial split, or as the doctrine refers to it, a New Covenant, rather than the Old Covenant.
Is a sacrifice more effective if the lamb gets up and walks around afterwards?
It takes on a different form, certainly, as the end isn't the end anymore, but a rebirth. I am sorry to have forgotten the detail, but a commentary I read a while back pointed out the subtle difference between circular time frames versus linear time frames. This may be syncretistic, but the Christian patterns began to take on a circular character (see the models of liturgical year for example) which is different from the more linear Semitic/Hebraic model. Agggggggh, the details are lost to my memory. Sorry.
Are you saying that Paul couldn't sell his new religion to the Romans if it just involved some Jewish preacher telling people to be nice to each other, so he had to invent a magical story about miracles and the resurrection to attract converts?
No, the resurrection piece predated Paul. I think he recognized in that piece of the narrative of Jesus's ministry the critical difference that evemt made between a Christian (the New bit) and the Jew (the Old bit).
Sorry if this seems off topic, but I thought it was central to the whole question of why people believe in the resurrection.
I don't think it's off topic. cj opened with "was Jesus Resurrected" so I think we are on safe ground here.
Documentary filmmakers and the sellers of souvenirs?
As I read it, the cui bono list is a mixture of anyone who'd like to see the Christian faith crash and burn: Muslim? Hey, this restores Jesus to Prophet status, as they teach. Jew? Hey, the old covenant is all that there was, this New covenant bit was always rubbish. Atheist? He was just a guy, maybe a charismatic prophet, but mortal, not divine. Pagan? Likewise. Just another guy. Buddhist? I don't think they care either way, as it's the sound of one loaf drinking, or one drunk loafing. :D

DR
 
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Except Paul. Paul was an eyewitness to Paul's stuff, including a purported resurrection appearance. I Actually think the NT narratives conatin some historical truth. Her eis my explanation why, from a recent blog post. It's incredibly simplified but it gives the jist --

One of my friends over on my ghost forum wrote:

Much of the discussion I have had… is regarding the bible. I asked the question – “How do you know the bible is a true record of what happened in Jesus’ life? That the disciples (or whoever else wrote it) didn’t elaborate on the stories in order to promote the religion that would have been seen as a ‘breath of fresh air’ at the time of Christ – hope when all else was gone.”

I thought this was interesting, so I hammered out a very quick reply, which I thought I would share…

To answer this properly would require a huge amount of time, so briefly – we don’t know the authors of most of the New Testament (henceforth NT) books. If Jesus dies in 1933, the Gospel accounts we have today were written between 1965 and about now – 2009 (just subtract 1900 to get the real dates). So the question is can we be certain about accounts written a long while after the events?

Well the first thing many people do not realize is that in the NT as well as the four gospels of Matthew Mark Luke and John we have the Epistles, which are divided in to two groups – the Pauline Epistles, and the Pastorals. The Pauline Epistles are all accredited to Paul of Tarsus, a persecutor of the early Church who converted – a bit like if James Randi became a medium and a major figure in Spiritualism over night. Paul also crops up a lot in one other books, Acts of the Apostles (also in the NT) which tells the story of the early Church after Jesus died. It’s a really fun story – you can find it here -http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts;&version=31;9; It was probably written by the same person who wrote Luke, so we call the author Luke.

Now of the Pauline Epistles Biblical Scholars (who are called Biblical Critics) believe seven were actually written by Paul. He was writing using my timeline example in the 1950’s, and died about (19)64 or (19)65, probably killed in Rome by the Romans. So his works date back to within 20 years of the crucifixion – more importantly if Jesus was crucified in (19)33, then he converted and began his ministry in (19)35 or 19(36), and knew a lot of people who were eyewitnesses, including Jesus’ brother James. So we have pretty direct testimony. (The other epistles were mainly probably written circa 1980 to 2010). All these dates are subject to debate, but these are mainstream scholarly figures.

So why believe the gospels contain truth about Jesus? Would we believe a ghost testimony from 1933? Was Borley Rectory really haunted? IT depends on the quality of the evidence. We all know stories can grow in the telling (though evidence suggests much in the paranormal/miraculous may be rationalized and forgotten) but one thing is pretty certain – there was a historical teacher called Jesus, who lived, died on a cross executed by the romans and inspired the movement today known as Christianity. Various kooks have tried to argue that he never existed, or that he was a version of a pagan deity, and older story given new life – but these claims are while popular (and they even got repeated by Stephen Fry on QI, who gave the Mithras December 25th rubbish) absolute nonsense. I have as it happens written a chapter of a book recently on them, and i can promise you it’s bilge. I might well post some extracts later. All mainstream historians agree there was a historical Jesus who was crucified. (A good mainstream study of what is called “the historical Jesus” is EP Sanders book, but the Jewish scholar Geza Vermes has written some excellent stuff too from an explicitly non-Christian perspective. There are also some good atheist books on the historical Jesus as well.)

Anyway, what we now have to establish is the order the books were written. With the Epistles, I have already mentioned the most likely dates. The Gospels are more complicated – almost all scholars agree Mark cam first, and was available to and used by Matthew and Luke (traditional names for the authors) when they wrote their books. However Matthew and Luke also seem to be aware of each other – but who wrote first? This question of which order these thee gospels were compiled is called the Synoptic Question, from the Greek term for similar or same – because they all tell much the same story. (the end of Mark is missing, and a bit tacked on to complete it – more on that another time.)

The remaining gospel, John is totally different – Jesus in it goes off on long speeches which are not like the ones in the other gospels, and it is more “theological” – less of a history, more of what Jesus meant. Most scholars date John last, but it may well contain elements, particular the Passion narrative – the bit about the crucifixion – which are older than the rest, indeed possibly the oldest of all our sources!

It is interesting that they disagree on which day Jesus was crucified – the Synoptics say the Passover, John the Eve of the Passover. Nonetheless, despite details varying in all the gospels, the general story is the same. We find the same traditions, littles stories called pericope, from the Greek word for beads, which were preserved and handed down by the earliest Christians, and the authors each told the story according to how they saw it , arranging the pericope in a string to make the story as they told it. You see how that works? Now if the Church had actually invented the whole thing, then we would actually expect the stories to agree far more. But they don’t. Look at the Resurrection accounts. Original Mark if it ever had one is missing – Paul certainly knew about it, and yet the other Gospels all tell different accounts of who went to the tomb first, and exactly what happened that day. This is what one would expect of a real event, muddled by years and retelling. If they invented the story, well they’d have got the story straight.

Secondly there is a key thing called the criterion of embarrassment. The heroes of the story, the Apostles, often look like real dumb asses. Peter, arguably the most important disciple, denies even knowing Jesus three times. They squabble over who gets to be head honcho in heaven., They repeatedly fail to understand him. And even Jesus says things that were awkward for the early Church – it strongly seems that he expected the world to end at any time, and God to end history before the disciples were all dead. Yet they died, and the world goies on. (this is actually not as fatal as it sounds, but it is a very important issue – the end of the world is something we call the Eschaton, the study of it Eschatology.) Then Jesus says his mission is to the Jews, not the Gentiles who he likens to dogs. This was really quite a problem for the church which was rejected largely by the Jews but flourished among Gentiles. I could go on, but you get the idea. So yes, the accounts are real enough – otherwise none of this “embarrassing” stuff would be in there!

OK, so why trust them? Very early on people start making up all kinds of claims about Jesus, so there has to be some measure of what is a real account, and what is rubbish. Generally the books believed to be real became part of the Bible – this is called the canon, the development of which books constitute our modern New Testament. For a book to be in the canon, it had ot be credited to an eyewitness, and apostle, pretty much. Because from the beginning that was how it worked – those who were with Jesus in his life, and saw what actually happened were given the leadership – they were the Apostles, and authority was investyed in them. When they died off the Gospels were posibly written to preserve their beliefs.
There were other books – mainly much later, but some early, which were rejected by the Church, as not fitting what the eyewitnesses taught. Many of these are known as gnostic gospels, and i’ll talk about them another time, but they won’t (with one possible exception) get you any closer to the historical Jesus. And now I really, really must go to bed.

Anyway hope of some interest to someone – it really is written for people with absolutely no idea about these things, and yes I know one could easily dispute bits. [qimg]http://s.wordpress.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif[/qimg]


cj x

Wrong wrong, wrong. Paul was no such thing. Nowhere in his letters does he claim to have ever met a historical Jeebus.
 

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