There are some who look
at what Christians do at Easter and think we are mad or weird. We carry a cross
down a street on Good Friday and get excited about the person who was executed
on it. If you think we are stupid (because you may be atheist or agnostic, or
maybe you can’t be bothered) here’s the reversal of your world: you are
fighting a battle against history!
Jewish historians alone logged as a fact
both the existence of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, as well as his death. He lived,
he existed, he died. Historical facts. It’s also true to say that he said he
was God. When asked during his trial, he stated clearly that he was, and it was
on this basis of blasphemy (and that alone) that the Jews claimed he had to
die. And then executed him.
If you thought Jesus
never existed, then – no offence, but you are fighting a daft battle that is
akin to arguing that the world is flat. At best that’s a hilarious position and
historically silly, at worst we’d have to question a lot of the other things
you say too. No, that’s not where real question is.
The real question is
whether Jesus rose from the dead.
Okay, let’s take a look at that. The first
thing that people say about the resurrection is that Jesus didn’t actually die.
Yes, he was nailed to the cross, but he didn’t die. Would you mind if we pull
that one to shreds for a second?
Jesus was beaten to bloody shreds by
the whip used by the Roman guards. Jesus was so weak after His torture that He
couldn’t carry the patibulum of His cross to the crucifixion site. Jesus had
spikes driven through His wrists and feet and hung bleeding for six hours. The
Romans thrust a spear deep into Jesus’ side, confirming beyond doubt that
Jesus was dead. Jesus was prepared for burial according to exacting Jewish
custom. His body was encased in wrapped linen and spices. Jesus was then
entombed, and a massive, heavy rock was rolled across the tomb entrance. A
unit of highly trained Roman guards vigilantly guarded the entrance—knowing
they would be punished if Jesus’ body went AWOL.
In his
article, A Lawyer Examines The Swoon Theory, Texas attorney
Joseph “Rick” Reinckens satirically unpacks this theory. I will just
share a snippet of this must-read:
“Even in His
weakened condition, in a quiet private cemetery, Jesus manages to push back the
stone door without any of the guards noticing! Why go half-way? Jesus has been
whipped, beaten and stabbed, is hemorrhaging, and hasn’t had any food or drink
for at least three days. Does He just push the stone open enough to squeeze
through? No, He pushes the stone door COMPLETELY out of the way!!!”
“If Christ had only
swooned, He still would have still been half dead. A great deal of time would
have been needed for recuperation. In His weakened condition He could not have
walked the seven miles on the Emmaus road. It would have been impossible for
someone who had only resuscitated from the agonies the Lord endured with the
beatings and crucifixion to so quickly give the impression that He was the
Conqueror of death and the grave, the Prince of Life.”
Could the Roman
soldiers have been asleep? Is that how Jesus supposedly made His sneaky
escape?
Peter Kreeft, a popular writer
of Christian philosophy, theology and apologetics, says no way:
“The story the
Jewish authorities spread, that the guards fell asleep and the disciples stole
the body is unbelievable. Roman guards would not fall asleep on a job like
that; if they did, they would lose their lives. And even if they did fall
asleep, the crowd and the effort and the noise it would have taken to move an
enormous boulder would have wakened them.”
So that argument is
way off and just doesn’t stand a chance of being correct. The next thing people
say is that those who saw all this happen (and there were loads) were
hallucinating. It’s
important to note that hallucinations come from within a person,
not outside a person. Meaning hallucinations are entirely
subjective. Science tells us that, generally, only particular kinds of
people have hallucinations: persons who are paranoid or schizophrenic, or people
under the influence of drugs.
The New Testament
tells us, however, that all kinds of people saw Jesus after His resurrection.
Different ages, different occupations, different backgrounds, different
viewpoints.
Dr. Gary Habermas
observes:
“That these different
individuals in each of these circumstances would all be candidates for
hallucinations really stretches the limits of credibility.”
Says Peter Kreeft:
“Hallucinations
usually happen only once, except to the insane. This one returned many times,
to ordinary people. Five hundred separate Elvis sightings may be dismissed, but
if five hundred simple fishermen in Maine saw, touched and talked with him at
once, in the same town, that would be a different matter.”
Adds Dr. Michael
Licona, a professor of theology:
“Hallucinations are
like dreams. They are private occurrences … You could not share an
hallucination you were having with someone any more than you could wake up your
spouse in the middle of the night and ask him or her to join you in a dream you
were having.”
Hallucinations do
not cause people to change or create new beliefs. The fact that many people
chose to believe in Jesus, after talking with Him and touching His wounds,
also helps to refute this theory. Hallucinations are an individual event. If
500 people have the same hallucination, that’s a bigger miracle than the
resurrection.
The next and only
option (apart from the actual truth that he did rise again from the dead) is
that this was a conspiracy. The conspiracy theory goes like this: Christ’s disciples simply stole
His body and fabricated the resurrection story.
The great historian
Eusebius (A.D. 314-318) was the first to argue that it is inconceivable
that such a well-planned and thought-out conspiracy could succeed. Eusebius
satirically imagined how the disciples might have motivated each other to take
this route:
Let us band
together to invent all the miracles and resurrection appearances which we never
saw and let us carry the sham even to death! Why not die for nothing? Why
dislike torture and whipping inflicted for no good reason? Let us go out to all
the nations and overthrow their institutions and denounce their gods! And even
if we don’t convince anybody, at least we’ll have the satisfaction of drawing
down on ourselves the punishment for our own deceit.
Chuck Colson,
special counsel to President Nixon during the Watergate scandal in the 1960s,
knows full well how difficult it is to keep a conspiracy together. Says Colson:
“I know how
impossible it is for a group of people, even some of the most powerful in the
world, to maintain a lie. The Watergate cover-up lasted only a few weeks before
the first conspirator broke and turned state’s evidence.”
“Men will die for
what they believe to be true, though it may actually be false. They do not,
however, die for what they know is a lie.”
So the only possible option left is that Jesus did
actually rise again from the dead. Now who’s daft? Perhaps it’s time you
considered the facts before deciding that you don’t believe all this (as you might call it) "twaddle".
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