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If I Had Faked the Resurrection
Focus on the Family ^ | Wednesday, April 16, 2003 | Josh McDowell and Bob Hostetler

Posted on 04/16/2003 6:36:15 PM PDT by Remedy

I set out as a young man to debunk Christianity. I met a young Christian woman who challenged me to intellectually examine the evidence for Christianity, and I accepted her challenge. I aimed to show her-and everyone-that Christianity was nonsense. I thought it would be easy. I thought a careful investigation of the facts would expose Christianity as a lie and its followers as dupes.

But then a funny thing happened. As I began investigating the claims of Christianity, I kept running up against the evidence. Time after time, I was surprised to discover the factual basis for the seemingly outlandish things Christians believe. And one of the most convincing categories of evidence I confronted was this: The resurrection accounts found in the Gospels are not the stuff of fable, forgery or fabrication.

I had assumed that someone, or several someones, had invented the stories of Jesus Christ's resurrection from the dead. But as I examined those accounts, I had to face the fact that any sensible mythmaker would do things much differently from the way Matthew, Mark, Luke and John did in recording the news of the resurrection. As much as I hated to, I had to admit that if I had been some first-century propagandist trying to fake the resurrection of Jesus Christ, I would have done a number of things differently:

I would wait a prudent period after the events before "publishing" my account.

Few historians dispute the fact that the disciples of Jesus began preaching the news of His resurrection soon after the event itself; in fact, Peter's Pentecost sermon (Acts 2) occurred within 50 days of the Resurrection. And textual research indicates that the written accounts of the Resurrection, especially the creedal statement of 1 Corinthians 15:3-8, are astoundingly early in origin, possibly within two years of the event. Such early origins argue against any notion that the Resurrection accounts are legendary.

I would publish my account far from the venue where it supposedly happened.

Dr. William Lane Craig writes, "One of the most amazing facts about the early Christian belief in Jesus' resurrection was that it originated in the very city where Jesus was crucified. The Christian faith did not come to exist in some distant city, far from eyewitnesses who knew of Jesus' death and burial. No, it came into being in the very city where Jesus had been publicly crucified, under the very eyes of its enemies."

I would select my "witnesses" very carefully.

I would avoid, as much as possible, using any names at all in my account, and I would certainly avoid citing prominent personalities as witnesses. Yet at least 16 individuals are mentioned by name as witnesses in the various accounts, and the mention of Joseph of Arimathea as the man who buried Jesus would have been terribly dangerous if the gospel accounts had been faked or embellished. As a member of the Sanhedrin, a Jewish "Supreme Court," he would have been well-known. J. P. Moreland writes, "No one could have invented such a person who did not exist and say he was on the Sanhedrin if such were not the case."

His involvement in the burial of Jesus could have been easily confirmed or refuted. Perhaps most important, I would avoid citing disreputable witnesses, which makes significant the record of Jesus' first appearances-to women-since in that time and culture women were considered invalid witnesses in a court of law. If the accounts were fabrications, the women would never have been included in the story, at least not as first witnesses.

I would surround the event with impressive supernatural displays and omens.

As Jewish scholar Pinchas Lapide writes, "We do not read in the first testimonies [of the Resurrection] of an apocalyptic spectacle, exorbitant sensations, or of the transforming impact of a cosmic event. . . . According to all New Testament reports, no human eye saw the resurrection itself, no human being was present, and none of the disciples asserted to have apprehended, let alone understood, its manner and nature. How easy it would have been for them or their immediate successors to supplement this scandalous hole in the concatenation of events by fanciful embellishments! But precisely because none of the evangelists dared to 'improve upon' or embellish this unseen resurrection, the total picture of the gospels also gains in trustworthiness."

I would painstakingly correlate my account with others I knew, embellishing the legend only where I could be confident of not being contradicted.

Many critics have pointed out the befuddling differences and apparent contradictions in the Resurrection accounts. But these are actually convincing evidences of their authenticity; they display an ingenuous lack of collusion, agreeing and (apparently) diverging much as eyewitness accounts of any event do.

I would portray myself and any co-conspirators sympathetically, even heroically.

Yet the Gospel writers present strikingly unflattering portraits of Jesus' followers (such as Peter and Thomas) and their often skeptical reactions (Mark 16:11, 13; Luke 24:11, 37; John 20:19, 25, 21:4). Such portrayals are very unlike the popular myths and legends of that (or any) time.

I would disguise the location of the tomb or spectacularly destroy it in my account.

If I were creating a resurrection legend, I would keep the tomb's location a secret to prevent any chance that someone might discover Jesus' body, or I would record in my account that the angels sealed it or carried it off into heaven after the Resurrection. Or I might have taken the easiest course of all and simply made my fictional resurrection a "spiritual" one, which would have made it impossible to refute even if a body were eventually discovered. But, of course, the Gospel accounts describe the owner of the tomb (Joseph of Arimathea) and its location ("At the place where Jesus was crucified, there was a garden, and in the garden a new tomb," John 19:41), and identify Jesus' resurrection as a bodily one (John 20:27).

I would try to squelch inquiry or investigation.

I might pronounce a curse on anyone attempting to substantiate my claims, or attach a stigma to anyone so shallow as to require evidence. Yet note the frequent appeal of Jesus' disciples, to the easily confirmed-or discredited-nature of the evidence, as though inviting investigation (Acts 2:32, 3:15, 13:31; 1 Corinthians 15:3-6). This was done within a few years of the events themselves; if the tomb were not empty or the Resurrection appearances were fiction, the early Christians' opponents could have conclusively debunked the new religion.

As Dr. Edwin Yamauchi says of the citation of the resurrected Christ appearing to more than 500 people in 1 Corinthians 15, "What gives special authority to the list [of witnesses] as historical evidence is the reference to most of the five hundred brethren being still alive. St. Paul says in effect, 'If you do not believe me, you can ask them.' "

I would not preach a message of repentance in light of the Resurrection.

No one in his right mind would have chosen to create a fictional message that would invite opposition and persecution from both civil and religious authorities of those days. How much easier and wiser it would have been to preach a less controversial gospel- concentrating on Jesus' teachings about love, perhaps-thus saving myself and the adherents of my new religion a lot of trouble.

I would stop short of dying for my lie.

Lee Strobel has written, "People will die for their religious beliefs if they sincerely believe they're true, but people won't die for their religious beliefs if they know their beliefs are false.

"While most people can only have faith that their beliefs are true, the disciples were in a position to know without a doubt whether or not Jesus had risen from the dead. They claimed that they saw him, talked with him, and ate with him. If they weren't absolutely certain, they wouldn't have allowed themselves to be tortured to death for proclaiming that the resurrection had happened."

•••

These are not the only reasons I believe in the truth of the Bible and the reality of the Resurrection. But these were among the "many convincing proofs" (Acts 1:3) that I encountered in my attempts to prove Christianity wrong, which eventually led me to the conclusion that Jesus Christ was who He claimed to be and that He really did rise from the dead. It didn't happen immediately, but eventually I gave in to the truth, and on Dec. 19, 1959, the Risen Christ radically changed my life. I've seen Him do the same for countless others, and I pray, if you haven't done so already, you will let Him do the same for you.

Josh McDowell is a speaker, author, and traveling representative for Campus Crusade for Christ. His books include Evidence That Demands a Verdict, More Than a Carpenter, and The New Tolerance. He was assisted in writing this article by Bob Hostetler, an award-winning writer who lives in Hamilton, Ohio.
This article appeared in Focus on the Family magazine.
Copyright © 2000 Josh McDowell.
All rights reserved.


TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; Charismatic Christian; Current Events; Evangelical Christian; History; Mainline Protestant; Orthodox Christian; Other Christian; Theology
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To: PaganConservative
I apply the same standard of proof to ALL Messianic claims

And what is that standard?

Cordially,

21 posted on 04/17/2003 12:27:40 PM PDT by Diamond
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To: diode; LiteKeeper; HumanaeVitae
ping


22 posted on 04/17/2003 12:39:00 PM PDT by Dataman
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To: Dataman; Remedy
Thanks for the ping. I've read his books but it's always good to read a summary. Good post, Remedy.
23 posted on 04/17/2003 12:54:11 PM PDT by scripter
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To: PaganConservative
PaganConservative

Well, at least you've taken the main step. Conservatism assumes a pessimistic view of human nature. Paganism in all it's permutations--collectivism, libertarianism, rationalism, idealism, etc.--assumes the opposite.

Here's hoping you reconcile it the 'right way'.

24 posted on 04/17/2003 1:02:49 PM PDT by HumanaeVitae (Tolerance is a necessary evil.)
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Comment #25 Removed by Moderator

To: Remedy
He then proceeds to show why the theories of Crossan and Mack are almost certainly false.

Crossan explains the absence of a body post-cruxifiction by suggesting that Jesus' followers may have left his body unburied and exposed in the desert where his bones were then scattered by wild dogs. Those dogs weren't the only ones howling after Crossan's theory got around!

26 posted on 04/17/2003 1:08:40 PM PDT by beckett
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To: betty boop
Thank you so much for the excellent quotes and analysis! I agree:

Once upon a time, "liberalism" was preeminently about human liberty. But now, it has become a prescription for human greed, power-lust, rapine, and bondage....


28 posted on 04/17/2003 1:16:09 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: betty boop
Liberalism: "A God without wrath, led men without sin, into a kingdom without judgment, through the ministrations of, a Christ without a cross." H. Richard Neibuhr

Excellent, thanks for that quote.

30 posted on 04/17/2003 4:00:56 PM PDT by HumanaeVitae (Tolerance is a necessary evil.)
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To: PaganConservative; Remedy; betty boop
The standard of proof is my own; since I am responsible for my life and my spirit/soul, no one else's "authority" will do.

That Jesus rejected this, the basis for all pagan systems of ethics Deathics, should be proof enough of His Divinity.

31 posted on 04/17/2003 4:03:29 PM PDT by HumanaeVitae (Tolerance is a necessary evil.)
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To: PaganConservative
There is a fourth: That Yeshua ben Youssef believed the things he said, but was mistaken

As were the witnesses, many of whom were stoned (with rocks) for their belief in what they saw.

That words were put into his mouth by later writers (Saul of Tarsus and his followers.)

See original post: "People will die for their religious beliefs if they sincerely believe they're true, but people won't die for their religious beliefs if they know their beliefs are false."

32 posted on 04/17/2003 5:21:27 PM PDT by Gamecock (Remember; always plunder first, then burn!)
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To: PaganConservative
Poor phrasing aside, your point is only valid if you are talking about modern Western people. You are trying to apply modern psychological labels to people or mythological characters of another time and place.

2000 years ago, and before, it was common to believe that kings were divine, or that people could achieve divinity through great deeds or the favor of the gods. Mithras, Sol Invictus, Herakles, Gilgamesh, the Caesars, the Pharoahs, and the Dagda were all believed to be gods-that-walked-the-earth or men who who would become divine upon their death. Thus, it is entirely possible that Yeshua thought himself to be divine (or ascending to divinity after death) and was mistaken, but was not "insane".

I'm afraid that, rather than projecting your perspective back, you've projected it across. Most modern Western people are formed, to some degree or another, by the influence of Hebraic civilization. All the examples you cited are, like you, pagan. The division here is less about era than worldview.

There is also the matter of "absence of evidence is not evidence of absence." "There survives nothing" is definitely not synonymous with "there has never been anything written"; since you do not have access to all extant writings, your statement is unsupportable. If the Church destroyed all dissident writing, or buried it in the Vatican library, they (and you) can deny their very existence.

The Catholics have always kept records of the heresies rejected, especially at Councils. (And truths rejected, for that matter.) Even if only keeping their own side, that does survive to record the controversy. This one single issue would be unique if they destroyed or hid not only their oponents' writings, but their own. Yes, in the right circumstances, absence of evidence can be evidence of absence.

Even given the logical errors, you are also factually incorrect (i.e., no records of Christian sects who did not believe in the claims of divinity of Yeshua.) Read about the Ebionites, and get back to me.

I've got an even better one: the Arians, which I forgot completely because I was thinking of very early groups, like the Gnostics (who are condemned by doctrine, but not name, in the New Testament).

So I read about the Ebionites. They seem to have grown out the Judaizers, who I did mention and were very early, but the Ebionites proper, with their low Christology, didn't exist until the second century. They weren't contemporaries of the Apostles.

33 posted on 04/17/2003 6:29:19 PM PDT by A.J.Armitage (Christ died for the ungodly.)
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To: PaganConservative
Although you seem to have already made up your mind, how would you explain the prediction of a Messiah from the OT scriptures and the fulfillment of those predictions -- against all odds-- by Jesus Christ?
36 posted on 04/17/2003 10:19:49 PM PDT by Dataman
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To: PaganConservative
Particularly, can you describe the particular "predictions" you are referencing, and explain why "the fulfillment of those predictions" (by Yeshua) was "against all odds"?

There are over 300 prophecies that could be cited. Just a few should be enough.

Isaiah 40:3 The Messiah would be heralded by a messenger of the Lord who would be a voice of one calling "In the desert prepare the way for the Lord; make straight in the wildernedd a highway for our God." This was fulfilled by John the Baptist.

Is 53:2-12 give precise descriptions of Christ's sufferings and death:

His ancestry is significant.

Now the Jews kept very detailed records of ancestry and could have challenged his Messiahship on the basis of his ancestry. Instead, they called him the Son of David.

Daniel gave the very year that the messiah would die (Chapter 9).

Psalm 16 predicts his resurrection.

Psalm 110 predicts his ascension.

The probability that Jesus could have fulfilled just 16 of the messianic prophecies is 1 in 10,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000. The chance that he fulfilled 48 of them is 1 in 10157. Stoner's odds

Arcane writings can be interpreted in many ways, and later scripture can be written to appear to support the old prophecies.

What makes the arcane? A subjective personal fiat? If the scripture in question was understood by the Jews to be messianic before Christ was born, it is not arcane.

Yeshua may not have been born in Bethlehem (there is no Roman evidence of the "census" referenced in the infancy tale of Yeshua, which makes the actual location of his birth an open question)

There is no Roman evidence? How could one possibly know that? It wasn't that long ago that Pilate was said not to have existed because there was no Roman evidence. There is a biased and uninformed opinion about the reliability of the eyewitness accounts that assumes all biblical accounts in error unless they are corroborated by a secondary or less reliable source. Try applying that standard to say the theory of evolution or innocent-until-proven-guilty.

The fact of the matter is that if the Messiah was not born in Bethlehem then his contemporaries would have known.

and he may not have fled to Egypt as a newborn (no one but the gospel writer describes the 'slaughter of the innocents' under Herod Antipas).

Another "may have?" The slaughter occurred just before Herod died and was not contrary to his nature since he had done many such brutal things during his reign according to Josephus. Of course there is a problem for skeptics in the gospel account: There were people alive when the account was written who would know if it was a fabrication since they witnessed it. Yet there exists no claim to the contrary.

He may not have sat with the rebbis in the Temple as a boy. These things may be pious inventions, designed to give Yeshua legitimacy as a messiah

Yet another "may not have." If the stories are false, where are contemporary critics? Christianity had no political power before Constantine 300 years later and the critics were free to discredit Christ or the NT. The alleged fabrications would have been made while living witnesses to the contrary had the power to object. Yet none such objections exist. Rather than producing the body of Christ to disprove the resurrection, stories were circulated that his body was stolen. NOT likely for the following reasons:

You can believe what you like, Mr. Pagan, nobody will deny that. Simply reject Christ because you don't like him. Don't offer a bunch of might-not-haves as the reason for rejection. As the genius Blaise Pascal said, if you are wrong in the end you lose everything and gain nothing. If I am wrong, I lose nothing. There is a great deal of evidence in favor of the accuracy of the gospels. As your quote illustrated, the best evidence against them is a handful of what-ifs. What if the gospels are true?
38 posted on 04/18/2003 7:25:02 AM PDT by Dataman
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To: PaganConservative
No, what you apparently were saying is that you are the final authority on your own ethical conduct. You are not.
39 posted on 04/18/2003 7:29:50 AM PDT by HumanaeVitae (Tolerance is a necessary evil.)
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