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The resurrection of Christ is the fulcrum of everything we believe, and a turning point in history, no matter what you believe. If it's real, the implications are immense. If it didn't happen, the implications are immense. Let's talk.

Wouldn't Jesus have started to rot?

Postby Throw Away » Tue Nov 24, 2020 2:13 pm

If Jesus was revived wouldn't that mean he would've started to rot before there?
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Re: Wouldn't Jesus have started to rot?

Postby jimwalton » Sat Nov 19, 2022 12:48 am

Here is an excerpt from an article by Martin Pickup, addressing this very matter of the three days in the tomb.

"This is the only explicit time designation of the entire formula (1 Cor. 15.4), and the 4 affirmations of the formula appear to be structured around this temporal framework. The NT gospels give similar prominence to the 3rd day aspect of Jesus’s resurrection.[1] Each evangelist says that Jesus was crucified and buried on a Friday (“preparation day”) and that his tomb was found empty on the following Sunday (“the first day of the week”). Far from being a minor chronological detail that happened to get included in the proclamation, the 3-day time frame of Jesus’s death and resurrection was a key theme that was ensconced in the church’s earliest tradition.

"I believe the 3-day time frame is more directly related to the Jewish understanding that the decomposition of a corpse begins after the 3rd day of death.[2] The 3rd-day motif focused attention on the fact that the risen Christ did not undergo the decay that besets the bodies of deceased human beings, symbolizing their sinfulness (Mal. 2.3). By raising him from the dead before his body could begin to decompose, God demonstrated the personal righteousness of Christ and the fact that he died not for his own sins, but for the sins of others.

"In Jewish thought, death is a divine punishment for sin, and the decomposition of a human corpse highlights human sinfulness by destroying, in a most gruesome manner, the body of flesh that was used to commit sin (Ps. 49.7-9; Job. 21.19-26; 24.19-20). Jesus’s resurrection on the third day signified to Jewish minds that his body did not decay, and thus it implied his personal sinlessness. This not only vindicated Jesus, it supported the gospel claim that his death was an atonement for the sins of others.

"Though the Jewish minds would understand these implications of this as long as he rose sometime before the 4th day, the formula affirms and demands that he rose specifically on that day—explicable only if some event(s) occurred indicating that this was the actual day he arose. The significance would be that it was long enough to denounce accusations that he wasn’t truly dead, but short enough to denounce accusations (in the Jewish mind) that he was a sinner.

"It follows, then, that the 3rd day formula can refer to nothing other than a historical, physical, bodily resurrection of his corpse. Nor can the physical resurrection of Jesus have been a minor opinion held only by a segment of the church. On the contrary, it indicates it was always an emphatic part of the church’s message.

"It is also evident that the formula is implying that the burial place of Jesus was empty on the 3rd day, and that it was known to be empty. Mourners routinely visited tombs on the 3rd day (and never after that). The 3rd day motif affirms his burial, and since the 3rd day motif assigns his resurrection to the day when mourners would visit a deceased person’s tomb, this implies that the burial place was literal and spatial, and could be visited, and was visited, and the absence of his body observed."


[1] Mt. 12.39-40; 16.21; 17.23; 20.17-19; 26.61; 27.40, 63-64; Mk. 8.31; 9.30-31; 10.32-34; 14.58; 15.29; Lk. 9.21-22; 13.32; 18.31-33; 24.7, 21-23, 46; Acts 10.40-41; Jn. 2.19-21.

[2] The article by Pickup contains rabbinic statements about corpse decay, for reference


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