by jimwalton » Mon Feb 27, 2017 10:35 am
> The women
There was obviously a group of women there. None of the authors claims to be making an exhaustive list, though Luke gets the closest with "and other women." Each of the authors feels free to mention the ones in particular that pertain to their particular reason for telling the story. There's no contradiction here.
Suppose there was a party at my house. The next day a friend of mine asks me who was there. I mention James, Mary, and Peter, because I hung out with them the most. You were there also, but you mention Mary, John, and Rasputin. Have we contradicted each other? Of course not. There were many people there, and we each mentioned the ones that pertained to OUR story. No big deal.
> Harmonization
Jesus was crucified beside a road west of Jerusalem (Mk. 15.29). His trial had garnered some attention around town (Mk. 15.8-15), because he had entered the city a few days previous in the manner of a king (Mt. 21.1-11; Mk. 11.1-11; Lk. 19.28-44; Jn. 12.12-19). His arrest piqued the curiosity of some of the population of Jerusalem, and because the city was bulging with guests at Passover time, the streets were swollen as Jesus carried his cross to the Place of the Skull (Mt. 27.33; Mk. 15.22; Lk. 23.27; Jn. 19.17). Because Jesus was too weak to carry it the entire way, Simon of Cyrene was recruited to carry it the rest of the way for him (Mt. 27.32; Mk. 15.21; Lk. 23.26).
Very few actually followed the procession to the place of crucifixion just outside the city walls. Not only was crucifixion a gory and morbid affair, but most people were too busy with the Passover preparation to bother. There is no reason that we would expect a large crowd to gather for the crucifixion. Jesus, despite his fame in Galilee, was not as well known in Judea. At the execution site were the soldiers (Mt. 27.36; Lk. 23.36), some of the Jewish leaders (Mt. 27.41; Mk. 15.31; Lk. 23.35), a few of Jesus’ followers (mostly women, Mk. 15.40-41), and the passers-by (Mt. 27.39; Mk. 15.29).
Jesus was hung on the cross at 9 a.m. on Friday. Crucifixion was generally a long, drawn-out business, most often a process of days from onset to death. People didn’t exactly pack lunches and stay to watch. In the case of Jesus, since it was Passover weekend, it would likely be cut short and ended before sundown. Unlike the general population, the soldiers were bound to stay (Mt. 27.36) since the guaranteed death of the miscreants was their responsibility. The Jewish religious leaders may have come and gone, but some of the women who followed Jesus, along with Jesus’ mother Mary and John the Apostle, probably stayed through the whole ordeal (Mt. 27.55; Lk. 23.49; Jn. 19.25-27).
Jesus died at 3 p.m. (Mt. 27.46; Mk. 15.33-37; Lk. 23.44-46), and the attending soldiers were surprised by his quick demise (Mk. 15.44-45). They broke the legs of the other malefactors (Jn. 19.31-32), but were confident that Jesus was already dead (Jn. 19.33). Just to make certain, they plunged a spear in his side, up under his rib cage, into his chest cavity (Jn. 19.34). Now there was no doubt he was dead.
Meanwhile, Joseph of Arimathea, a member of the Sanhedrin, had requested of the authorities permission to take Jesus’ body upon death and bury it in his own family tomb, within sight of Golgotha (Mt. 27.57-58; Mk. 15.42-43; Lk. 23.50-54; Jn. 19.41). That permission is granted. Joseph and another member of the ruling council, Nicodemus, received the body of Jesus from the cross, and wrapped it as best they could in the time they had before sundown (Mt. 27.59; Mk. 15.46; Jn. 19.38-41), as some of the women watched (Mt. 27.61; Lk. 23.55). Those same women also observed that the body was not finished being wrapped and filled with spices, so they took note of where the grave was (Mk. 15.47; Lk. 23.55-56). A stone was rolled over the tomb entrance (Mt. 27.60; Mk. 15.46).
Some of the Jewish leaders were wary of the rumors that Jesus had predicted his own resurrection (especially in the Temple courts just a few days prior to his death, as well as at other times). They requested that the tomb be sealed to prevent tampering and a guard posted to dissuade any activity around the tomb, presumably so the body wouldn’t be stolen. Both of these activities—the sealing and posting the guard—happened sometime during the day Saturday (Mt. 27.62-66). The Sabbath passed otherwise uneventfully (Lk. 23.56).
Sometime just before dawn on Sunday morning, the earth shakes (Mt. 28.2) and Jesus rises from the dead. The stone is lifted right out of its track and removed from the entrance (Mt. 28.2). The soldiers all fall unconscious (Mt. 28.4). Jesus emerges from the tomb and walks away.
Now the guards come back to consciousness, see the stone rolled away, notice there is no body inside, and they run away in fear and report the empty tomb to their bosses (Mt. 28.11-15).
On Sunday morning at about the same time, just before the break of dawn, some women had woken early to walk to the tomb to finish dressing the body for its burial (Mk. 16.1; Jn. 20.1). It was important to them to reach the body before the fourth day, for Jewish tradition held that decomposition set in after three days. The sun rises while these three women are walking, and it has just creased the horizon as they arrive (Mt. 28.1; Mk. 16.2; Lk. 24.1). On the way they remember that there is a large stone over the entrance and ponder how they are going to gain entrance to the burial chamber to finish the work that had been begun late Friday afternoon (Mk. 16.2). (They are probably unaware of the sealing, or of the posted guard.)
Not only to their surprise, but also to their utter shock, they arrive at Joseph’s family tomb to find that the stone is no longer over the entrance, but displaced and to the side of the opening (Mk. 16.4; Lk. 24.2; Jn. 20.1). Mary Magdalene stops in her tracks, changes directions and runs to tell the disciples (Jn. 20.2), leaving the other women behind. This small group of women continues to the gravesite, and they see angels who declare to them that Jesus has risen from the dead (Mt. 28.2-6; MK. 16.5; Lk. 24.4-8). An angel instructs these women to go and tell the disciples to meet him in Galilee (Mt. 28.7; Mk. 16.6-7), but the women are scared (Mk. 16.5). They leave the scene (Mk. 16.8). On the way Jesus appears to them, and they worshipped him. He tells them to tell the others (Mt. 28.8-10; Mk. 16.8). Despite what they have seen and what Jesus has said, they don’t tell a soul (Mk. 16.8). They hardly know what to think of it all (Mk. 16.8).
Mary Magdalene, meanwhile, has found John and Peter, both of whom run to the tomb in fear, confusion, and surprise. John reaches the tomb first and glances in the tomb. Peter arrives shortly behind him, crashes past him and bursts into the burial chamber (Lk. 24.12; Jn. 20.33-5). John then follows him in, notices the position of the graveclothes and the head cloth (Jn. 20.6-7, and then both he and Peter leave the scene to head back to find the other disciples (Jn. 20.10).
Mary Magdalene, who has walked back to the site, now arrives (Jn. 20.11). She is the only one there now, and is still noticeably upset (Jn. 20.11). She thinks someone has stolen the body, and is beside herself with grief and confusion (Jn. 20.13). She looks in the tomb and sees two angels (Jn. 20.12), but, still confused, retires a short distance away, where Jesus himself appears to her (Jn. 20.14-17). At first she thinks he is a gardener, but Jesus reveals himself to her, and she worships him. She goes to tell the other disciples (Jn. 20.18).
In the middle of the day, Jesus walked the road to Emmaus with two of his disciples, and revealed himself to them (Lk. 24.13-35).
Later that same day, still Sunday, the day of resurrection, Jesus appears to Peter, and then to ten of the disciples (the other nine plus Peter, minus Thomas; Lk. 24.36ff.; Jn. 20.19ff.). The story continues from there.
> Alternative theories
1. They all went to the wrong tomb. This is easy to prove wrong. Take the idiots to the right tomb, still closed, sealed and guarded, and show them to corpse of Jesus. But that didn't happen. this theory is trite and without basis.
2. Someone stole the body. To claim that, we have to justify the motive, the means, and the opportunity. If we examine the potential perpetrators, we find that there is a substantial doubt beyond a reasonable doubt in all of the cases. Nothing about it really makes sense.
The disciples had no motive. They were in hiding for their lives. They weren't expecting a resurrection. The power of Rome was lethal and the Jewish leaders were not shy about killing, either. Nor did they have anything to gain from such a ridiculous story: there was no fame or money in it for them, as far as they could see. Only ridicule and persecution.
The women? Not likely. Neither the motive nor the means.
The Jews? Hardly. They had a dedicated reason to keep Jesus in the grave.
The Romans? Even less motive than the Jews, if that's even possible.
3. Jesus never really died, just swooned. Nothing about this makes sense if you think it through.
4. The disciples were lying. A successful conspiracy requires factors that weren't present: (a) a low number of conspirators. The lower the better. The more people involved, the greater the chance of failure. (b) The shortest amount of time to hold on to the lie. The longer the lie has to be maintained, the greater the chance someone will break. (c) excellent communication between conspirators. As the lie expands and gets elaborated on, all conspirators need to keep their stories in conformity with each other. (d) Family members. A conspiracy has greater chance of success with blood ties. The disciples were anything but. (5) Little or no pressure to confess. The greater the pressure, the more chance of break down.
Remember also that Palestine in the Greco-Roman era was an honor/shame culture. One would do anything possible to avoid shaming the family and community.
That they were liars and conspirators doesn't make a shred of sense.
5. All appearances of Jesus were hallucinations. This is impossible. There is no such thing as a group hallucination.
6. They were fooled by an imposter. No sense to this theory. That might work on a glance, but to pull off a convincing fraud you have to know more about the topic than the person you are trying to con. If someone were “playing” the person of Jesus risen from the dead, he would have to be able to fool the people who knew him best, including some doubtful disciples who didn’t want to be known as gullible halfwits.
7. One (or several) had hallucinations and tricked the others. Mary? No, she didn't have that much influence with the disciples. Peter? Others were with him when he saw Jesus, so that doesn't make sense. Paul? They didn't trust him when the story of the resurrection was being spread. He was an enemy. This alternative doesn't make sense.
8. It was all made up—a legend. It doesn't make sense, given what we know. If the story of resurrection were suddenly made up in Jerusalem, the city where he was killed, people wouldn’t fall for it. All people would have to do is produce the body and put an end to the lies. It also doesn't make sense given the chain of custody (the writings of Paul, the Gospels, and the Church fathers) about his bodily resurrection and appearances. This alternative doesn't make sense.
About all you have to go on is (1) Miracles aren't possible because (2) I have made the assumption that miracles aren't possible, and therefore (3) it didn't happen. But that doesn't make sense either, because you can't prove miracles aren't possible.
> The women
There was obviously a group of women there. None of the authors claims to be making an exhaustive list, though Luke gets the closest with "and other women." Each of the authors feels free to mention the ones in particular that pertain to their particular reason for telling the story. There's no contradiction here.
Suppose there was a party at my house. The next day a friend of mine asks me who was there. I mention James, Mary, and Peter, because I hung out with them the most. You were there also, but you mention Mary, John, and Rasputin. Have we contradicted each other? Of course not. There were many people there, and we each mentioned the ones that pertained to OUR story. No big deal.
> Harmonization
Jesus was crucified beside a road west of Jerusalem (Mk. 15.29). His trial had garnered some attention around town (Mk. 15.8-15), because he had entered the city a few days previous in the manner of a king (Mt. 21.1-11; Mk. 11.1-11; Lk. 19.28-44; Jn. 12.12-19). His arrest piqued the curiosity of some of the population of Jerusalem, and because the city was bulging with guests at Passover time, the streets were swollen as Jesus carried his cross to the Place of the Skull (Mt. 27.33; Mk. 15.22; Lk. 23.27; Jn. 19.17). Because Jesus was too weak to carry it the entire way, Simon of Cyrene was recruited to carry it the rest of the way for him (Mt. 27.32; Mk. 15.21; Lk. 23.26).
Very few actually followed the procession to the place of crucifixion just outside the city walls. Not only was crucifixion a gory and morbid affair, but most people were too busy with the Passover preparation to bother. There is no reason that we would expect a large crowd to gather for the crucifixion. Jesus, despite his fame in Galilee, was not as well known in Judea. At the execution site were the soldiers (Mt. 27.36; Lk. 23.36), some of the Jewish leaders (Mt. 27.41; Mk. 15.31; Lk. 23.35), a few of Jesus’ followers (mostly women, Mk. 15.40-41), and the passers-by (Mt. 27.39; Mk. 15.29).
Jesus was hung on the cross at 9 a.m. on Friday. Crucifixion was generally a long, drawn-out business, most often a process of days from onset to death. People didn’t exactly pack lunches and stay to watch. In the case of Jesus, since it was Passover weekend, it would likely be cut short and ended before sundown. Unlike the general population, the soldiers were bound to stay (Mt. 27.36) since the guaranteed death of the miscreants was their responsibility. The Jewish religious leaders may have come and gone, but some of the women who followed Jesus, along with Jesus’ mother Mary and John the Apostle, probably stayed through the whole ordeal (Mt. 27.55; Lk. 23.49; Jn. 19.25-27).
Jesus died at 3 p.m. (Mt. 27.46; Mk. 15.33-37; Lk. 23.44-46), and the attending soldiers were surprised by his quick demise (Mk. 15.44-45). They broke the legs of the other malefactors (Jn. 19.31-32), but were confident that Jesus was already dead (Jn. 19.33). Just to make certain, they plunged a spear in his side, up under his rib cage, into his chest cavity (Jn. 19.34). Now there was no doubt he was dead.
Meanwhile, Joseph of Arimathea, a member of the Sanhedrin, had requested of the authorities permission to take Jesus’ body upon death and bury it in his own family tomb, within sight of Golgotha (Mt. 27.57-58; Mk. 15.42-43; Lk. 23.50-54; Jn. 19.41). That permission is granted. Joseph and another member of the ruling council, Nicodemus, received the body of Jesus from the cross, and wrapped it as best they could in the time they had before sundown (Mt. 27.59; Mk. 15.46; Jn. 19.38-41), as some of the women watched (Mt. 27.61; Lk. 23.55). Those same women also observed that the body was not finished being wrapped and filled with spices, so they took note of where the grave was (Mk. 15.47; Lk. 23.55-56). A stone was rolled over the tomb entrance (Mt. 27.60; Mk. 15.46).
Some of the Jewish leaders were wary of the rumors that Jesus had predicted his own resurrection (especially in the Temple courts just a few days prior to his death, as well as at other times). They requested that the tomb be sealed to prevent tampering and a guard posted to dissuade any activity around the tomb, presumably so the body wouldn’t be stolen. Both of these activities—the sealing and posting the guard—happened sometime during the day Saturday (Mt. 27.62-66). The Sabbath passed otherwise uneventfully (Lk. 23.56).
Sometime just before dawn on Sunday morning, the earth shakes (Mt. 28.2) and Jesus rises from the dead. The stone is lifted right out of its track and removed from the entrance (Mt. 28.2). The soldiers all fall unconscious (Mt. 28.4). Jesus emerges from the tomb and walks away.
Now the guards come back to consciousness, see the stone rolled away, notice there is no body inside, and they run away in fear and report the empty tomb to their bosses (Mt. 28.11-15).
On Sunday morning at about the same time, just before the break of dawn, some women had woken early to walk to the tomb to finish dressing the body for its burial (Mk. 16.1; Jn. 20.1). It was important to them to reach the body before the fourth day, for Jewish tradition held that decomposition set in after three days. The sun rises while these three women are walking, and it has just creased the horizon as they arrive (Mt. 28.1; Mk. 16.2; Lk. 24.1). On the way they remember that there is a large stone over the entrance and ponder how they are going to gain entrance to the burial chamber to finish the work that had been begun late Friday afternoon (Mk. 16.2). (They are probably unaware of the sealing, or of the posted guard.)
Not only to their surprise, but also to their utter shock, they arrive at Joseph’s family tomb to find that the stone is no longer over the entrance, but displaced and to the side of the opening (Mk. 16.4; Lk. 24.2; Jn. 20.1). Mary Magdalene stops in her tracks, changes directions and runs to tell the disciples (Jn. 20.2), leaving the other women behind. This small group of women continues to the gravesite, and they see angels who declare to them that Jesus has risen from the dead (Mt. 28.2-6; MK. 16.5; Lk. 24.4-8). An angel instructs these women to go and tell the disciples to meet him in Galilee (Mt. 28.7; Mk. 16.6-7), but the women are scared (Mk. 16.5). They leave the scene (Mk. 16.8). On the way Jesus appears to them, and they worshipped him. He tells them to tell the others (Mt. 28.8-10; Mk. 16.8). Despite what they have seen and what Jesus has said, they don’t tell a soul (Mk. 16.8). They hardly know what to think of it all (Mk. 16.8).
Mary Magdalene, meanwhile, has found John and Peter, both of whom run to the tomb in fear, confusion, and surprise. John reaches the tomb first and glances in the tomb. Peter arrives shortly behind him, crashes past him and bursts into the burial chamber (Lk. 24.12; Jn. 20.33-5). John then follows him in, notices the position of the graveclothes and the head cloth (Jn. 20.6-7, and then both he and Peter leave the scene to head back to find the other disciples (Jn. 20.10).
Mary Magdalene, who has walked back to the site, now arrives (Jn. 20.11). She is the only one there now, and is still noticeably upset (Jn. 20.11). She thinks someone has stolen the body, and is beside herself with grief and confusion (Jn. 20.13). She looks in the tomb and sees two angels (Jn. 20.12), but, still confused, retires a short distance away, where Jesus himself appears to her (Jn. 20.14-17). At first she thinks he is a gardener, but Jesus reveals himself to her, and she worships him. She goes to tell the other disciples (Jn. 20.18).
In the middle of the day, Jesus walked the road to Emmaus with two of his disciples, and revealed himself to them (Lk. 24.13-35).
Later that same day, still Sunday, the day of resurrection, Jesus appears to Peter, and then to ten of the disciples (the other nine plus Peter, minus Thomas; Lk. 24.36ff.; Jn. 20.19ff.). The story continues from there.
> Alternative theories
1. They all went to the wrong tomb. This is easy to prove wrong. Take the idiots to the right tomb, still closed, sealed and guarded, and show them to corpse of Jesus. But that didn't happen. this theory is trite and without basis.
2. Someone stole the body. To claim that, we have to justify the motive, the means, and the opportunity. If we examine the potential perpetrators, we find that there is a substantial doubt beyond a reasonable doubt in all of the cases. Nothing about it really makes sense.
The disciples had no motive. They were in hiding for their lives. They weren't expecting a resurrection. The power of Rome was lethal and the Jewish leaders were not shy about killing, either. Nor did they have anything to gain from such a ridiculous story: there was no fame or money in it for them, as far as they could see. Only ridicule and persecution.
The women? Not likely. Neither the motive nor the means.
The Jews? Hardly. They had a dedicated reason to keep Jesus in the grave.
The Romans? Even less motive than the Jews, if that's even possible.
3. Jesus never really died, just swooned. Nothing about this makes sense if you think it through.
4. The disciples were lying. A successful conspiracy requires factors that weren't present: (a) a low number of conspirators. The lower the better. The more people involved, the greater the chance of failure. (b) The shortest amount of time to hold on to the lie. The longer the lie has to be maintained, the greater the chance someone will break. (c) excellent communication between conspirators. As the lie expands and gets elaborated on, all conspirators need to keep their stories in conformity with each other. (d) Family members. A conspiracy has greater chance of success with blood ties. The disciples were anything but. (5) Little or no pressure to confess. The greater the pressure, the more chance of break down.
Remember also that Palestine in the Greco-Roman era was an honor/shame culture. One would do anything possible to avoid shaming the family and community.
That they were liars and conspirators doesn't make a shred of sense.
5. All appearances of Jesus were hallucinations. This is impossible. There is no such thing as a group hallucination.
6. They were fooled by an imposter. No sense to this theory. That might work on a glance, but to pull off a convincing fraud you have to know more about the topic than the person you are trying to con. If someone were “playing” the person of Jesus risen from the dead, he would have to be able to fool the people who knew him best, including some doubtful disciples who didn’t want to be known as gullible halfwits.
7. One (or several) had hallucinations and tricked the others. Mary? No, she didn't have that much influence with the disciples. Peter? Others were with him when he saw Jesus, so that doesn't make sense. Paul? They didn't trust him when the story of the resurrection was being spread. He was an enemy. This alternative doesn't make sense.
8. It was all made up—a legend. It doesn't make sense, given what we know. If the story of resurrection were suddenly made up in Jerusalem, the city where he was killed, people wouldn’t fall for it. All people would have to do is produce the body and put an end to the lies. It also doesn't make sense given the chain of custody (the writings of Paul, the Gospels, and the Church fathers) about his bodily resurrection and appearances. This alternative doesn't make sense.
About all you have to go on is (1) Miracles aren't possible because (2) I have made the assumption that miracles aren't possible, and therefore (3) it didn't happen. But that doesn't make sense either, because you can't prove miracles aren't possible.