by jimwalton » Sat May 07, 2022 12:25 pm
It's not plausible. If we are claiming that someone stole the body, we have to justify the motive, the means, and the opportunity to have done that. If we examine the potential perpetrators, we find that there is a substantial doubt beyond a reasonable doubt in all of the cases.
The disciples had no motive to steal the body. The Bible says they were filled with fear, ran away, and went into hiding. 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. But did they have anything to gain from doing such and then claiming he had risen? Fame could not have been their motive. 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.
Nor did any of them ever become wealthy because of his claim, and 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.
But even if we remotely grant they may have had motive, did they have the means? Since the gravesite was guarded by soldiers, they would have to have had enough people armed with enough weapons to overpower the guard and dispose of their bodies without getting caught. Such a plan would be a capital crime. They would have needed a strategy that history tells us must have worked flawlessly, since they were never arrested. Nor was there any record of any guards being killed, which would have raised suspicions against the disciples, one of whom was a Zealot. While there were enough of them to lift the stone out of its place, is it reasonable to think they pulled this off so spectacularly that they were never caught, never charged, never suspected, and then held their conspiracy together for the rest of their lives? Not likely.
Lastly, did they have opportunity? They had about 18 hours between the burial and when a guard was posted. Technically they had an opportunity in the middle of the night on Friday, but they would have had to have devised a plan quickly and executed it flawlessly. 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.
Could they have stolen the body between the brief segment of time when the earthquake came, when the guards "fell as dead men," and dawn? First of all, we would have to assume they had a motive to steal the body and claim a resurrection, which I have already shown is not likely. Then they would have had to have been already there at the site with plan and weapons in place when the earthquake happened, which also doesn't fit the profile of their mindset. Third, they would have had to take the time to position the grave clothes and head cloth in a decorative manner, all the while not knowing when the guards would come back to consciousness.
Did the women steal the body? This is not likely either. They had neither the motive nor the means.
Did the Jews steal the body? Not only did they have no motive for such a theft, but they had a dedicated reason to keep him in the grave to put a stop to all this messianic fervor—and to prove he was only a delusional and blasphemous human.
Did the Romans steal the body? They had even less motive than the Jews, if that’s even possible.
One additional possibility is to consider whether an individual or a small group of independent operatives stole the body. We would have to consider what their motive might be. Possibly they would be a group of detractors wanting to prove this pretender wasn’t God. Maybe they thought they could sell the precious body back to his foolish followers for ransom. Whatever their motive, before too long the corpse would have been produced for their sinister plot. But nothing of the sort ever happened. If it had been for gain, the body never showed up. If it had not been for gain, what would have been the point?
As it turns out, despite the slight possibility of limited means and opportunities on the part of various people to steal the body, the lack of motive was so powerful as to make the other factors moot. If we are looking for a reasonable conclusion, this isn’t it. It makes little sense that anyone stole the body of Jesus.