by jimwalton » Wed Feb 21, 2018 4:18 pm
I love having conversations like this. Thank you for bringing it up. Mary Magdalene's first thought when seeing the empty tomb is that the body was stolen, so it's clear that people's mind would go there. Resurrection wasn't part of their theology or culture. But I think the evidence leads us in a different direction.
The guards at the tomb. You quickly try to brush this off as a later invention, but not so fast.
1\. We know there was a reasonably-sized Roman military presence in Jerusalem. Guards were commonplace.
2\. The Roman military was there mostly as a peace-keeping presence and to do the bidding of the Roman government. Interaction between them and the Jewish population was on a need-to-engage basis, which ended up being routinely. But when there was threat of sedition or uprising, the Roman military and crucifixion machine cranked into gear to suppress it. So there was plenty of involvement, but it was tempered. It's at least possible, if not plausible, that Pilate could have assigned a guard to the tomb to avert more trouble from an already tense weekend.
There's nothing in the story that smacks of invention (fantasy, fiction, mythology, metaphor, or symbolism). While it could be made up, there's no particular reason to think so. The fact that it isn't in the other Gospels is an argument of no consequence.
Your quick disposition of this plausibility is unjustified. Matthew has already mentioned Roman soldiers in 27.36 & 54. There is no particularly "good reason" to think this was a later invention. Some think so, but the case is far from convincing.
Next, you postulate a possible motive because Jesus predicted it, and they want to fulfill this prediction. But in the Gospels, Jesus always only spoke privately of his resurrection to the 12, and none of them understood or accepted what he was saying. So how did this other bunch come upon the information, and then act with such resolve to bring it about?
Next, no one wanted to stick it to the Jewish authorities except Jesus. Everyone else respected them. They were the community leaders—the "pastors," so to speak. In contrast to our era where pastors are sometimes ridiculed, in those days the religious leaders were greatly respected.
You haven't accounted for the grave clothes being left behind. No robber would take the time to neatly fold a head cloth and leave it in a decorative position.
And if other unknown followers had stolen the body, they probably would have taken the precious, blood-stained wrappings with them.
To justify a theft, we have to justify the motive, the means, and the opportunity. As far as motive, the Bible says many of his followers turned against him and his closest followers ran away in fear. The power of Rome was lethal, and the drive of the Jewish leaders was oppressively intimidating. In addition, the disciples were not expecting Jesus to rise from the dead, and were filled with terrifying grief at his execution. There is nothing in the biblical account that tells us they had any motivation to fabricate a resurrection by stealing the body.
What did they hope to gain? To become religious leaders themselves? Not likely. To overthrown Rome? Jesus time and against refused to rise up against Rome. To become important and respected community leaders? At the time the disciples knew nothing about the new community that would be formed, the Church, as an assembly of like-minded believers who would be a brotherhood of encouragement and support. The respect they would know from believers was unknown at the time and unknowable, so this could not have been a possible motive for them.
Wealth? No. That didn't happen for hundreds of years, until great apostasy. Respect? none attained a position of governmental power. They were publicly ridiculed, arrested, imprisoned, and killed. Even today, atheists and skeptics regard the disciples as liars, deluded, subject to hallucinations, and deceivers. What did they have to gain from stealing the body and perpetrating a lie? Aside from some respect from believers that they had no way to foresee was coming, they had no motive to steal the body and nothing to gain from wild and fabricated tales of resurrection. They would have had to sow those tales themselves, even though they had no understanding that was what should and did happen. It doesn’t make sense. I think the motive you attribute to them is to weak to carry the case.
Did they have the means? Only if there was no guard. If a guard was there, there was no means.
Did they have the opportunity? Even if a guard was there, there was a small window of opportunity between burial and the guard being posted. But remember, they would have had to have devised a plan and executed it flawlessly. No one knew Jesus was to be killed so quickly after his arrest. (Well, they didn't know he would be killed at all.) They would have had to have been highly motivated and organized, devised a lie to which they would all hold until death, and somehow also to stage other convincing appearances of Jesus, including miracles. While it is questionably possible, it is not the most logical conclusion, nor is it a reasonable one.