by jimwalton » Mon Jun 12, 2017 10:39 pm
You didn't really have to quote from the Encyclopedia Britannica to support that the NT books are not in chronological order. That's pretty much a no-brainer.
> According to Richard Carrier, Paul's letters indicate that both Cephas (Peter) and Paul only knew Jesus from VISIONS/DREAMS, based on the Old Testament scriptures. Not what we would consider real life.
Carrier is wrong about this, as he is about many biblical things. You quoted 1 Corinthians 15. We'll start there, since you brought it up. You'll notice that Paul distinctly does NOT say that the appearances were "according to the Scriptures," but that his death and resurrection were according to the Scriptures. That's the first point.
Secondly, since Paul mentions the crucifixion and burial of Jesus, those automatically qualify as Paul placing Jesus on the earth. Jesus' crucifixion is also mentioned by Tacitus, Josephus, Ignatius, Lucian, and possibly Thallus and Mara bar Sarapion. John Crossan, a skeptic who denies the authenticity of just about everything in the Gospels, says, "That he was crucified is as sure as anything historical can ever be, since both Josephus and Tacitus...agree with the Christian accounts on at least that basic fact." So Paul places Jesus on the earth by mentioning the historicity of his crucifixion and burial.
Third, you bolded "that he appeared to Cephas." Some closer analysis is helpful. The verb used here is ὤφθη (ophthe), and it is an elastic term. It can be translated as "seen by" or "appeared to." All by itself it doesn't specify anything about the character of what is seen (whether the resurrection appearances were bodily or visionary). That has to be judged on wider criteria. Since ὤφθη stipulates that Christ was seen, and the previous two lines clearly affirm that the same "he"—namely, his physical body—was crucified, buried, and emerge from the grave, the context naturally indicates that the physical, bodily Jesus is what was "seen" by the witnesses listed in vv. 5-6a, 7. We have extremely good grounds for concluding that the earliest disciples both regarded the physical resurrection of Jesus as historical, and attested that they themselves—Peter included—had seen the physically risen Jesus after his death.
In addition, the verb is passive, so its normal meaning would be "was seen by." The list of witnesses is a clear indication that Paul doesn't suppose Jesus' resurrection to be a metaphor of some visionary experience. The great variety of times and places mentioned makes it difficult to interpret as legendary or visionary.
Fourth, since Paul is citing an early Palestinian creed that has been told to him, he must mean a literal appearance, based on the literalness of the death and burial.
The "appearing" to the 12, James, and to the 500 uses the same term. As N.T. Wright says, "Paul refers to the resurrection of Jesus as an event for which there were witnesses—a large, though finite number. This reference to seeing the risen Jesus cannot therefore, in Paul's mind at least, have anything to do with regular and normal, or even extraordinary, 'Christian experience,' with ongoing visions and revelations or a 'spiritual' sense of the presence of Jesus. As is clear from 1 Cor. 9.1, this 'seeing' was something that constituted people as 'apostles,' the one-off- witnesses to a one-off event. The Corinthians had every kind of spiritual experience imaginable, as the previous chapters have made clear, but they had not seen the risen Jesus, nor did either they or Paul expect that they would do so."
Paul uses the same term when he speaks of himself in v. 8, but remember that the context has to guide our interpretation, and Paul qualifies his use of the term with respect to himself by adding, "as to one abnormally born." Paul is claiming that his experience was qualitatively distinct from that of the disciples. Of the disciples he uses a three-fold sequence of *hoti ophthe…epeita ophthe…epeita ohthe*, but then he intentionally breaks that pattern by adding "as to one abnormally born he was also seen by me." He was separating the kind of experience he had—it was of a different kind—from that of the previous disciples listed.
Now, it is probably very true that Paul also saw Christ in a physical form, but not the way the disciples saw it. (1) 1 Corinthians 9.1 speaks of a normal human seeing. It was not simply a private experience; (2) "Last of all" makes it clear that his "seeing" of the risen Jesus was the last of a sequence that came to an end. It was not part of a chain of an ongoing set of spiritual experiences or visionary appearances that he or anyone else might have. It was different; (3) 1 Cor. 15.1-11 clear speaks of public events for which there were evidences if nothing else in the form of witnesses who saw something and can be interrogated; (4) the rest of chapter 15 doesn't speak of non-bodily resurrection.
In other words, Richard Carrier is all wet.
> Zechariah 3 & 6
That's not good exegesis. Of course "Joshua" is the Hebrew form of "Jesus." That doesn't prove your point in the least. Not sure what point you're making here, so you have to be more specific.
> Daniel 9, Isaiah 52-53, Psalm 22-24
Not sure what your point is. The resurrection is spoken of and hinted at in hundreds of places in the OT.
> Gerd Lüdemann
Paul briefly references a teaching of Jesus in 1 Cor. 7.10.
> or to [any] Christians as disciples
Not sure what your point is. The book of Acts, starting at chapter 9 where we first see the story of Paul, has 23 references to the term "disciple" in connection with Paul.
> there is no hint that a narration of Jesus’ earthly life or a report of his earthly teachings was an essential part of it
This is correct. Paul's point was Jesus crucified and risen again. It's virtually all he talked about because it was his point for writing.
> In the letter to the Romans, which cannot presuppose the apostle’s missionary preaching and in which he attempts to summarize its main points, we find not a single direct citation of Jesus’ teaching.
That's right. Even if Jesus never spoke a single word, his death and resurrection would have the same meaning. Jesus is important not for what he said, but for who he was and what he did (died and rose again).
> Furthermore, Richard Carrier points out Paul viewed the death of Jesus (who had a human body manufactured by God) as occurring in outer space.
Yeah, I listened to this talk by Carrier and I could hardly stop laughing. I'm not trying to be disrespectful, but it was hilarious. I guess the adage is true, "Anybody can make up anything they want." It's amazing how far he is willing to reach to try to discredit the NT, but what amazes me is that you seem to give his teaching more credit than the work of thousands of biblical scholars through the ages, and the careful scholarly work of current-day biblical scholars.