Redefining Resurrection, Part 1
I’ve made the argument before, many
times, that Christianity was a highly offensive faith in the context of first
century society, one that required an event like the Resurrection in order to
be believed. Recently I was informed (and confirmed) that the lunatic
anti-scholar Robert Price misrepresented my view in his interview with Bart
Ehrman, describing my views as being that Christianity could only have
succeeded if the “Holy Spirit” had been convincing people of its truth back
then. I have never made any such argument anywhere, and in fact wholly disagree
with any view that turns the Holy Spirit into a wholesale persuasion-dispensing
gumball machine. What this demonstrates well is that critics like Price can
only achieve victory in debates with Christians by ascribing to them views they
do not hold. (Next up Price will say that I thought Christianity was spread by
way of the apostles wearing “Make Israel Great Again” t-shirts and ballcaps.)
By way of further example, one such
point of offense was Christianity’s claim that the process of resurrection was
one reserved for the end of time, and for all men, all at once. The
resurrection of Jesus would have been a non-starter in Jewish contexts based on
this alone. (Gentile contexts are a different matter.) If the disciples were mere inventors, and if
they followed the lead of their social world, it would have been enough to say that
Jesus' body had been taken up to heaven. This would have made Christianity a
much easier "sell" to the Jews (and the pagans). The Jews had within
their traditions stories of righteous men whose bodies had been taken up to
heaven: Elijah in the Old Testament, and the body of Moses in the apocryphal
literature.
Though
less educated minds may cite more recent sources as though this were a recent innovation
by apologists, it is far from that. In 1973, Gerald O’Collins, (The Resurrection of Jesus Christ, 31) was
already saying this:
Within
the context of late Jewish apocalyptic thought, to claim the resurrection of a
single individual before the end of the world was to introduce quite a new
element….Neither the disciples nor anyone else expected the resurrection of one
person alone. Without a new, compelling reason they would not have asserted the
individual resurrection of Jesus.
After I popularized this idea a bit
as part of my “impossible faith” thesis, a few members of the atheist camp have
come up with their own silly ideas in an attempt to dull the point, the end
result mostly being to show that they are far more wedded to
fundamentalist-atheist sloganeering than to serious scholarship. One such
response is to say that, “People do not always believe what they expect to
believe. They also believe in unexpected things." Of course they do, but they
also have reasons for doing so. And the need for reasons to do so has a direct
corollary to how many barriers there are to believe in it. Atheists who think
this is some kind of all-purpose refutation are merely sloganeering to their
own crowd, which is already convinced of their own intellectual superiority by
the mere fact that they do not believe in superstitious nonsense. They may as
well create ballcaps and t-shirts with the slogan, “Make Atheism Great Again”
and otherwise keep their mouths shut.
In this case, one must deal with the
hard fact – not disputed by anyone using available evidence and interpreting it correctly – that resurrection
was associated among Jews with eschatological judgment. You may as well have
tried to say that the end of the world was coming today, but just a little bit.
Just belching out fundamentalist atheist slogans like “people believe weird
things all the time for all kinds of reasons” isn’t an argument; it’s a deft avoidance
of argument and an appeal to base pride of being intellectually elevated above
those stupid Christians. Further attempts to insult the intelligence of others
by pointing out that first century Jews also believed in silly things like
Messiahs and magical resurrections is just more of the same bigoted
sloganeering.
Another foolish argument in this regard
is that accounts in the New Testament never show this problem being brought up
by opponents of Christianity, so it must not have been a real problem. Yes, I
don’t imagine it would be brought up. For one thing, the opponents of
Christianity were generally people in power who didn’t have any need to bring
up such objections; their response was always the point of a sword. The sort of
person who would bring up this sort of objection (or think of it) would be the average
Jewish artisan, merchant or peasant to whom Christians would be preaching on
the street. These same persons would also generally not have any means to write
down their objections (having this slight problem, rather widespread in the
day, called “illiteracy”) and would also be unlikely to get to this objection
anyway: The far more impressive and immediate objection would be that Jesus was
shamed and crucified like a common criminal, and so could not be divine. It is absurd to suppose that just because no one registers this objection (to Jesus’
unique resurrection) in recorded New Testament discourse, this must mean it
would not have been a problem. It is even more foolish to think it would be
found in the New Testament in the first place, because the New Testament texts
are not missionary documents that targeted non-believers. The most convincing
proofs would be used in and reserved for oral preaching, where likewise
objections of any sort would also be addressed. The atheist who makes this
argument is falling for the usual snare in which it is assumed that first
century Christians, like Christians of today, evangelized with a Bible in one
hand and a Chick tract in the other.
Appeal has also been made in the
past to the confused meanderings of New Testament scholar David Bryan, who is
2005 wrote an article on the subject. As I pointed out in Defending the
Resurrection:
Bryan
first points out that there were certainly Jews who believed that God made
exceptions of some special people from the normal course of events. In terms of
death, he notes, some special people could be transformed or exalted to heaven
instead of dying. But is it not true that none of this involves resurrection?
Yes, Bryan agrees, but to make this point is “specious” because: “The language
was not used because, in the minds of the authors and their communities, they
had not died.”
But
this is arguing in a circle. Essentially Bryan is arguing that the language of
resurrection was not used because they were not even in a condition where they
would be subject to resurrection. In addition, Bryan’s point only magnifies our
own: Yes, this could happen to “special people.” And thus, our very point: The
Christian missionaries would need to prove that Jesus was special in order for
people to believe in his Resurrection.
I don’t hold to all the arguments
Bryan critiques by any means. That said, the prime argument of his that relates
to my arguments is a demonstrable failure.
Beyond this, we see that many critics commit the classic error of base
fundamentalist atheists like C. Dennis McKinsey, who designated anything and everything
as a “resurrection” by redefining the term to include men like Noah or Moses who
were given angelic bodies. As I noted, though, even if we accept these as “resurrections”
they just prove the point. Early Christians would be saying that Jesus was on a
par with Noah and Moses. It is playing the fool to redefine “resurrection” to include such events. (If those are “resurrections,”
then Popeye was “resurrected” after he ate spinach.) Transformations like those
of Moses and Noah were ways to get around the exact problem posed by the resurrection
of Jesus. Moses and Noah could NOT have been resurrected, because that was a
process specifically reserved for end-time judgment.
In my next entry, I’ll discuss some
more attempts to get around this problem the way McKinsey or Acharya S did: By
redefining “resurrection” Humpty Dumpty style to mean whatever the critic wants
it to mean.
Comments
What was the Pharisaic thinking on this? As far as I know, the NT and Josephus are by far the best sources on the Pharisees, and neither give much insight at all about the specifics of the resurrection. You seem very sure the resurrection of Jesus would have been a "non-starter", and I am just wondering what your evidence for that might be?
Edershuime.He was an expert om Talmud which was the servile of pharisee beyond the destruction of the temple.
Basically, there's no exceptions to this idea at all in the Jewish literature. Daniel describes a universal judgment; there are no exceptions. So do Jesus and Paul. So does intertestamental lit. It requires imagination to find any hint of a belief that there was any variation on the critical points in question for the argument I am presenting.
I know of no Pharasaic literature that has survived, though Joe is right to appeal to the Talmud, which is the heir apparent to the Pharasaic literature that would have existed.
Josephus was writing for his Roman patrons, so I wouldn't expect him to write much about such theological arcana (from the Roman point of view).