Can the Resurrection of Jesus be Defended

Argue for and against Christianity

Moderator: Moderators

Post Reply
User avatar
Tired of the Nonsense
Site Supporter
Posts: 5680
Joined: Fri Oct 30, 2009 6:01 pm
Location: USA
Been thanked: 1 time

Can the Resurrection of Jesus be Defended

Post #1

Post by Tired of the Nonsense »

Tired of the Nonsense wrote: There are no (Christians present) in actual point of fact. None that will support the story of the death and resurrection of Jesus as a point of "logic, reason and critical thinking." Unless there happens to be a Christian newbe present that I am unaware of who wishes to tackle the job. None of the Christian regulars here will defend the story of the resurrection beyond a "The Bible says it, I believe it, that settles it," defense.
SelectThis! wrote:
Not so. None is all. I would defend it gladly. Logic and reason reveals what is most evident and what the Bible reveals is absolutely most evident. Start the thread up if you dare. Bring your best arguments.

User avatar
Mithrae
Prodigy
Posts: 4326
Joined: Mon Apr 05, 2010 7:33 am
Location: Australia
Has thanked: 112 times
Been thanked: 195 times

Post #31

Post by Mithrae »

Tired of the Nonsense wrote:I fully agree. It's all right there. Matt. 27:62-66 is one of the most important passages in the NT. I actually know it by heart. The "fragment" I quoted was chosen to make a specific point about the disciples and their intention to promote a hoax by taking the body of Jesus. But let's address the entire four verses.
Howdy Tired. You offer a compelling analysis of the passage but (as I believe I've pointed out previously) based on flawed premises. [Edit: I notice you yourself made these points in post 29 while I was posting, so I'll leave them up as a seconding of your views.]

Contrary to fundamentalist assertions, it isn't reasonable to consider every part of the NT equally valid for providing historical information - and if it were reasonable, then we'd have to consider Matthew's earthquakes and sightings of Jesus and other risen saints as valid (at least in Matthew's belief, if not in fact) as his story of the guards.

It's generally acknowledged that the earliest gospel written was Mark, and that the gospel of 'Matthew' was not written by the apostle but by some other, unknown Jewish Christian (in the very early 70s CE by my guess) who made obvious changes to Mark's story to suit his agenda: For example note the changes made between Mark 9:1 and Matthew 16:28 (and the brand new comment invented for Matthew 10:23); or note the parallels, perhaps not even intended to be taken as literal truth, which 'Matthew' makes between Jesus and Moses in his early chapters.

In that context, which is more likely: That the chief priests personally went to Pilate on the Sabbath to request some guards at the tomb of a crucified man? Or that Jews in Matthew's day were speculating that the disciples had stolen the body and perpetrated a hoax, so he invented the guard story to contradict that idea?

The likelihood that there were no guards at the tomb just further weakens apologists' arguments, of course.

----
Tired of the Nonsense wrote:
aglassdarkly wrote:We can even stipulate that the story was really clever and they paid a bunch of "witnesses" to give false testimony and somehow a bunch of people were gullible enough to believe the story. But why would the 11 apostles give up their lives for a lie, get tortured for a lie... without ever admitting that they made it up?
Acts 12:2 details the death of James the brother of John at the hands of Herod Agrippa. I will concede this entire point to you if you can provide an example anywhere else in scripture concerning the death and martyrdom of any of the remaining 10 apostles for refusing to give up their claims.
John 21:18-19 refers in hindsight to "by what death [Peter] would glorify God."

Edit: And while he wasn't one of the 12, and while it's not from the bible, I've already posted Josephus' passing reference to the execution of Jesus' brother James and some others by the Sanhedrin.
Last edited by Mithrae on Thu Mar 28, 2013 10:21 pm, edited 2 times in total.

User avatar
SelectThis!
Apprentice
Posts: 106
Joined: Sun Mar 24, 2013 8:55 pm
Location: Southwest Missouri

Re: Can the Resurrection of Jesus be Defended

Post #32

Post by SelectThis! »

[Replying to post 28 by TheTruth101]

Nice to see a friend on this board. I have much more to this story that I have not mentioned yet. The onion has layers until you reach the core and I plan on going the whole way in. The fella that started this thread wanted logic and reason. I'll provide it by probability and evidence from our own day and age. The power is in the words.

View my first thread here to see more of my view:

http://debatingchristianity.com/forum/v ... hp?t=22688

User avatar
JoeyKnothead
Banned
Banned
Posts: 20879
Joined: Fri Jun 06, 2008 10:59 am
Location: Here
Has thanked: 4093 times
Been thanked: 2576 times

Post #33

Post by JoeyKnothead »

From Post 32:
SelectThis! wrote: Nice to see a friend on this board. I have much more to this story that I have not mentioned yet.
I dare say if all that much more to the story had it some pertinence, ya'da gone on and done it.
SelectThis! wrote: The onion has layers until you reach the core and I plan on going the whole way in.
Little Debbie's got some Swiss Rolls just layered up as all heck, are we to set off praying to Miss Debbie?
SelectThis! wrote: The fella that started this thread wanted logic and reason. I'll provide it by probability and evidence from our own day and age. The power is in the words.
Or, "the words" are only as powerful as one thinks they are.
SelectThis! wrote: View my first thread here to see more of my view:

http://debatingchristianity.com/forum/v ... hp?t=22688
There ya go, point to Random Ramblings, like that's the be all and end all of all logical inquiry.
I might be Teddy Roosevelt, but I ain't.
-Punkinhead Martin

User avatar
Tired of the Nonsense
Site Supporter
Posts: 5680
Joined: Fri Oct 30, 2009 6:01 pm
Location: USA
Been thanked: 1 time

Post #34

Post by Tired of the Nonsense »

aglassdarkly wrote: There's not even an implication that they suspected the tomb might be empty. The passage certainly doesn't tell us SPECIFICALLY of any uncertainty when the tomb was sealed. In fact, how do you know that part of securing the tomb didn't include checking it first?
If the priests knew for a certainty that the body was inside the tomb, then no seal would have been necessary. Trained guards with swords are a much more effective deterrent then some few cords held with embossed clay, any day. The seals were no real deterrent to anyone intent on defying them. All the seals really did was insure that the guards could not be held responsible if the tomb proved to be empty later. Which it did. If the priests knew for a certainty that the body was inside, why bother with the seals? No body in the tomb when the priests returned to check? Then the guards were clearly culpable, seal or not. Would the priests have opened the tomb to check for the body?

(Nazir 7.1) "The Nazarite and the Kohen Gadol may not defile themselves through contact with corpses even in the case of the death of a near relative; discussion of the question whether the Nazarite or the high priest defiles himself if both together find a corpse which must be buried and no one else is there to do it ( 1); things which defile the Nazarite, and other regulations regarding the uncleanness of a person entering the Temple." ( 2-3).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazir_%28Talmud%29

Being in the open presence of a corpse would have rendered the chief priests of the nation ritually unfit to enter into the temple on a high holy day. And the purification ritual required to regain a state of ritual cleanliness from such an unclean state took days to perform.
aglassdarkly wrote: It's like locking the front door and setting the alarm. You do it to make doubly sure that no one will get inside. If they suspected that the body was gone already, there'd be no need for guards or a seal.
If they were certain the body was already gone they would not have bothered to make the appeal to Pilate in the first place. Uncertainty is the key here. The priests followed the most logical course of action open to them to deal with an uncertain situation.
aglassdarkly wrote: And how did they discover that? Did the priests and guards break the seal and open the tomb to discover... SHOOT! THEY NEVER PUT THE BODY IN THERE!... ???
Exactly right. The body was originally and very publically taken to Joseph's new tomb of course. And in fact the corpse was never publically seen again after that point. The priests were unable to investigate the tomb on the high holy day, but they WERE free to do so Sunday morning. The seals and guards were never intended to be left there indefinitely.
aglassdarkly wrote: Really? You can't think of any other purposes for the herbs and ointments?

None?

Really?
A HUNDRED POUNDS of sweet smelling herbs and ointments has only one obvious purpose in this situation, to disguise the odor of decay for an extended period. Such a treatment would not have preserved the body from decay, and the Jews never practiced preservation of their dead anyway. In an era without refrigeration and modern preservation techniques however, it was the most obvious solution to the problem available to them.
aglassdarkly wrote: ... and no one noticed?

-I'll be gone for a couple days?
-Where will you be, sweety?
-None yo bizzness woman!

-Where are you taking all those expensive smelly things, hun?
-Wherever I want, k?
The city was filled with tens of thousands of pilgrims for the holy day ceremonies remember. Who is to notice one more animal drawn cart moving through the city containing a heavily wrapped corpse covered in blankets and traveling accessories? It's roughly 90 miles from Jerusalem to Galilee, a week long journey transporting a corpse through a warm arid clime. When would you have chosen to start it? The answer I submit, is ASAP!
aglassdarkly wrote: You're assuming. (That the tomb proved to be empty on Sunday morning.)
Empty, as in devoid of the body of Jesus. Actually I am drawing on Gospels Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John to provide me with this particular "assumption."
aglassdarkly wrote: So you think the apostles pretended to put Jesus' body in the tomb, but they secretly covered it in ointments and spent a week taking the body to Galilee... and while they were gone Jesus appeared to the women and the other disciples in Jerusalem and to the apostles in Galilee? Like a very convincing puppet show (in Galilee) and a hallucination (in Jerusalem)? Or they all decided to lie about it?
Mark 16
[1] And when the sabbath was past, Mary Magdalene, and Mary the mother of James, and Salome, had bought sweet spices, that they might come and anoint him.
[2] And very early in the morning the first day of the week, they came unto the sepulchre at the rising of the sun.
[3] And they said among themselves, Who shall roll us away the stone from the door of the sepulchre?
[4] And when they looked, they saw that the stone was rolled away: for it was very great.
In fact this account virtually SCREAMS conspiracy. According to the account in Mark, these women, entirely alone, set off to the tomb at first light to anoint a body already pretty well slathered in 100 pounds of ointments with yet even more ointments despite the fact that they knew perfectly well that access to the body was blocked by a large boulder which they had no possible hope of moving on their own. And they did this based on the vain hope that perhaps there would be some nice men who just happened to be hanging around a graveyard at night who would kindly agree to move the heavy boulder for them. Or perhaps they thought that the nice armed guards who had been placed at the tomb for the precise purpose of keeping everyone out would be nice enough to disobey their orders, break the seals, and allow them in. No woman in her right mind would have attempted such a pointless and potentially dangerous endeavor. Would YOU have gone out there under such conditions? Of course not! Because it makes NO SENSE. Unless of course the women already knew perfectly well that the tomb was open and the body was gone, in which case it was clearly their role to draw as much attention as possible to that fact. And the women were the perfect choice for achieving this. Certainly no one would accuse a mere group of women of moving the boulder and "stealing" the body.
aglassdarkly wrote: The obvious conclusion isn't always right. And before we even consider what's obvious, we need to take into account the whole picture, not this one issue.
That wasn't the question however, was it? The question was which conclusion is the more obvious. By failing to answer the question honestly, you failed the honesty test. Which is to say, you were unable to bring yourself to being honest.
aglassdarkly wrote: What's obvious to me is that Matthew 27:64 does not verify, as you claimed, that the disciples stole the body or that they spread a "rumor" that Jesus rose from the dead. Like hERICtic said, it wouldn't make sense for the biblical authors to explain how they fooled everyone... if they were still trying to fool people. It would be like a magician revealing his trick mid-illusion. What makes more sense, using your reason and logic: your interpretation stretches the truth into conspiracy-theory-land OR no one associated with the story believed it to be anything other than the truth?
I replied to hERICtic on this question.
aglassdarkly wrote: Additionally, if you're right about the priests suspecting that Jesus' body wasn't in the tomb, why did the priests bribe the guards (who reported that an angel appeared and opened the tomb on the third day) to keep their mouths shut? Why didn't the priests say "SHOOT! THE TOMB WAS EMPTY THE WHOLE TIME!" ??? Your theory doesn't match the account.
This IS Matthew's version of events and ONLY Matthew's version of events remember. None of it can be reconciled with the other Gospels.

The whole point of this exercise has been to establish that the obvious answer to the question of the story of the resurrection of Jesus from the dead is that it was all based on an agenda established by and followed through with by some of his disciples. Which would mean that Christianity is derived entirely from the actions, motives and passions of humans and has no connection to supernatural events. Just like all other human based endeavors. Just like all other religious beliefs in fact. As long as the obvious solution to the origin of the story of the resurrected Jesus is that his disciples were responsible for the whole story, the common Christian claim that the story of the reanimated corpse which ultimately flies away is the only reasonable conclusion to be made, has NO MERIT at all. Which honestly should have been obvious to everyone from the start.

I am leaving early Friday morning and will be away all Easter weekend. I will respond when I return on Monday.

User avatar
Tired of the Nonsense
Site Supporter
Posts: 5680
Joined: Fri Oct 30, 2009 6:01 pm
Location: USA
Been thanked: 1 time

Post #35

Post by Tired of the Nonsense »

[Replying to post 31 by Mithrae]

I agree with everything you said completely.

User avatar
Tired of the Nonsense
Site Supporter
Posts: 5680
Joined: Fri Oct 30, 2009 6:01 pm
Location: USA
Been thanked: 1 time

Re: Can the Resurrection of Jesus be Defended

Post #36

Post by Tired of the Nonsense »

[Replying to post 21 by SelectThis!]

[Replying to post 24 by SelectThis!]

Now that you have lain, rather extensively I might add, the ground rules, along with a long and splendid example of preaching, do you have a defense for my original argument, which was that the story of the flying reanimated corpse of Jesus cannot be defended by any resort to reason, logic, fact, or critical thinking?

I am leaving early Friday morning and will be away all Easter weekend. I will respond when I return on Monday.

User avatar
Tired of the Nonsense
Site Supporter
Posts: 5680
Joined: Fri Oct 30, 2009 6:01 pm
Location: USA
Been thanked: 1 time

Post #37

Post by Tired of the Nonsense »

Deleted by Tired of the Nonsense, 3/28/13
Last edited by Tired of the Nonsense on Fri Mar 29, 2013 12:39 am, edited 1 time in total.

User avatar
Tired of the Nonsense
Site Supporter
Posts: 5680
Joined: Fri Oct 30, 2009 6:01 pm
Location: USA
Been thanked: 1 time

Post #38

Post by Tired of the Nonsense »

Tired of the Nonsense wrote:
Joseph's personal tomb was never intended to be the final resting place of Jesus.
aglassdarkly wrote:
Support that claim, please.


I notice that I accidentally failed to respond to this point. That will never do.
Matthew
27:60 And laid it in his own new tomb, which he had hewn out in the rock: and he rolled a great stone to the door of the sepulchre, and departed.

John
19:41 "Now in the place where he was crucified there was a garden; and in the garden a new sepulchre, wherein was never man yet laid.
42 There laid they Jesus therefore because of the Jews' preparation day; for the sepulchre was nigh at hand."
Joseph's expensive new rock hewn tomb was used because it was "nigh at hand" to the place where Jesus was crucified. It was Joseph's personal crypt, and happened to be conveniently close. It was late in the day and a private place was needed to prepare the body. You probably should have a more clear understanding of what these sorts of tombs were like, and what they were for. It was common in that the era for rich families to have spaces large enough for their purposes chiseled into the living rock. Inside would be a flat slab for laying out the corpse. Ledges or niches would be cut into the walls. The corpse of the deceased would be lain out on the slab and, generally, left alone for several months to allow the natural decaying process to be fully developed. Then the bones would be collected and placed into a stone ossuary, usually with the name of the deceased person chiseled into the stone, and the ossuary would be placed onto a ledge or niche. Heavily wrapping and covering the corpse with ointments might well have succeeded in keeping the insects away from the corpse and slowed, but not arrested, the natural decomposition process. But this would generally have been counter productive to the intended process of the final interment of the bones. Also, these were family CRYPTS, not tombs for individuals, and multiple generations of family members would be kept together in them. The body of Jesus was never intended to be interred permanently in Joseph's clean brand new never before used family crypt. It was simply used as a place to prep Jesus' corpse because it was conveniently close to the site of the crucifixion. The great stone used to close off the entrance to the tomb would have been placed there for that exact purpose, and would probably have been smoothed and shaped to some degree in order for it to fit neatly into the opening. The heavy stone was placed there precisely for the purpose of keeping people out, and Joseph certainly would not have wanted strangers using his clean new tomb for "other purposes." So naturally the tomb would have been kept closed even when empty.

TheTruth101
Banned
Banned
Posts: 2761
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 6:51 pm
Location: CA

Re: Can the Resurrection of Jesus be Defended

Post #39

Post by TheTruth101 »

Tired of the Nonsense wrote: [Replying to post 21 by SelectThis!]

[Replying to post 24 by SelectThis!]

Now that you have lain, rather extensively I might add, the ground rules, along with a long and splendid example of preaching, do you have a defense for my original argument, which was that the story of the flying reanimated corpse of Jesus cannot be defended by any resort to reason, logic, fact, or critical thinking?

I am leaving early Friday morning and will be away all Easter weekend. I will respond when I return on Monday.

What's so hard to believe? I told you this before I think.
A person flatlining and pronounced dead comes back to life all the time even now. Through electric shocks.

I have shown videos of the shaman levitating.
Add two and two, and you have Jesus flying coming back from the dead.
He did say he comes as lightning. (Electric shocks compare to now medically)

Ever hear of Lazarous syndrome? Wiki it, you might learn a few regarding ressurection. (30 patients coming back to life after being pronounced dead days and weeks.)

Thus, it is concluded through this post ressurection CAN and have been defended.
Last edited by TheTruth101 on Fri Mar 29, 2013 1:00 am, edited 2 times in total.

TheTruth101
Banned
Banned
Posts: 2761
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 6:51 pm
Location: CA

Re: Can the Resurrection of Jesus be Defended

Post #40

Post by TheTruth101 »

TheTruth101 wrote:
Tired of the Nonsense wrote: [Replying to post 21 by SelectThis!]

[Replying to post 24 by SelectThis!]

Now that you have lain, rather extensively I might add, the ground rules, along with a long and splendid example of preaching, do you have a defense for my original argument, which was that the story of the flying reanimated corpse of Jesus cannot be defended by any resort to reason, logic, fact, or critical thinking?

I am leaving early Friday morning and will be away all Easter weekend. I will respond when I return on Monday.

What's so hard to believe? I told you this before I think.

A person flatlining and pronounced dead comes back to life all the time even now. Through electric shocks.

I have shown videos of the shaman levitating.

Add two and two, and you have Jesus flying coming back from the dead.

He did say he comes as lightning. (Electric shocks compare to now medically)

Edit.

Post Reply