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Old 05-18-2010, 06:14 PM   #11
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Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic View Post
Message to aa5874: I already know what many skeptics' positions are. For purposes of this thread, I would like some explanations from Christians about the opening post, or from skeptics who have some idea about how Christians might reply to the opening post.

The title of this thread is "If Jesus made personal appearances, how could the empty tomb have been an issue?" That assumes for the sake of argument that Jesus made personal appearances. I know that you do not like to do that, and it is fine for you to argue against the historical Jesus, but if all that skeptics ever did was claim that Jesus did not exist, and/or that no God exists, it would be very difficult to have discussions with Christians about many issues. There are lots of other threads for you to argue against the historical Jesus. My intention in this thread is to assume for the sake of argument that Jesus made personal appearances.

I think that you have made a lot of good arguments about various issues in some other threads, but the historical Jesus is not an issue in this thread.
I'm not sure what you want in the way of comment or argument from a Christian, but I'll give it a shot.

There was already an empty tomb, as reported in the gospels, in the time of Jesus: Lazarus', who walked out at Jesus' command after Lazarus was 4 days dead (and stinking by then).

Before Jesus' own tomb was found empty "on the third day", there were many empty tombs immediately after his crucifixtion because 'saints' had been raised from the dead and walked the streets of Jerusalem. Formerly dead folks were walking around town!

I have issues with the entire 'Jesus raised from the dead' concept because of the earlier 'raised from the dead' occurences. What was different? why were the apostles/disciples surprised or amazed that Jesus was raised from the dead? afterall, he'd told them what was going to happen before he died, AND they had witnessed other people raised from the dead before Jesus reportedly left an empty tomb behind and then appeared to them.

Another issue I have is that of Jesus' appearance after his resurrection. None of the other resurrections from the dead prior to or even after Jesus' resulted in the newly-alive not being recognized by those who knew them. Only Jesus wasn't recognized immediately by his followers and those closest to him when he appeared alive after death.

Only Jesus was dressed in supernatural clothing on a supernatural body that could appear, disappear, and walk through walls. What's up with those clothes as well as that body?
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Old 05-18-2010, 08:09 PM   #12
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Consider the following:

http://www.leaderu.com/offices/billc...ocs/guard.html

Quote:
Originally Posted by William Lane Craig
Of the canonical gospels, only Matthew relates the intriguing story of the setting of a guard at the tomb of Jesus (Mt. 27. 62-66; 28. 4, 11-1 5). The story serves an apologetic purpose: the refutation of the allegation that the disciples had themselves stolen Jesus' body and thus faked his resurrection. Behind the story as Matthew tells it seems to lie a tradition history of Jewish and Christian polemic, a developing pattern of assertion and counter-assertion:

Christian: 'The Lord is risen!'
Jew: 'No, his disciples stole away his body.'
Christian: 'The guard at the tomb would have prevented any such theft.'
Jew: 'No, his disciples stole away his body while the guard slept.'
Christian: 'The chief priests bribed the guard to say this.'

Though Matthew alone of the four evangelists mentions the guard at the tomb,.......the gospel of Peter also relates the story of the guard at the tomb, and its account may well be independent of Matthew, since the verbal similarities are practically nil.
How can Craig use the Gospel of Peter as a source? It was rejected for the New Testament Canon. Many Bible scholars date its composition in the middle of the second century. Even many conservative Christians criticize it.

Consider the following:

http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/proj...eraccount.html

Quote:
Originally Posted by law.umkc.edu

Gospel of Peter

8 But the scribes and Pharisees and elders being gathered together one with another, when they heard that all the people murmured and beat their breasts saying, If by his death these most mighty signs have come to pass, see how righteous he is,--the eiders were afraid and came to Pilate, beseeching him and saying, Give us soldiers, that we may guard his sepulchre for three days, lest his disciples come and steal him away, and the people suppose that he is risen from the dead and do us evil. And Pilate gave them Petronius the centurion with soldiers to guard the tomb. And with them came elders and scribes to the sepulchre, and having rolled a great stone together with the centurion and the soldiers, they all together who were there set it at the door of the sepulchre; and they affixed seven seals, and they pitched a tent there and guarded it. And early in the morning as the sabbath. was drawing on, there came a multitude from Jerusalem and the region round about, that they might see the sepulchre that was sealed.
http://www.4truth.net/site/c.hiKXLbP...l_of_Peter.htm

Quote:
Originally Posted by Charles L. Quarles

(William Peterson Carver, Jr., Research Professor of New Testament and Greek, Louisiana College)

An impressive number of clues suggest that [the Gospel of Peter] postdates even the latest New Testament book and belongs to the mid-second century. First, a close analysis of verbal parallels shared by the Gospel of Peter and the Gospel of Matthew suggests that the Gospel of Peter postdates Matthew and utilized that Gospel as a source. An example of these parallels is the account of the guard assigned to Jesus’ tomb. Of the four canonical Gospels, only Matthew shares with the Gospel of Peter an account of this event. Both the account in Matthew and the Gospel of Peter refer to the Pharisees gathering before Pilate to express concern about a staged resurrection on the third day. Both accounts refer to the guarding and sealing of the tomb. Both describe the Jews as “the people.” One sustained verbal parallel clearly indicates a definite literary dependence of one document on the other. Both Matthew 27:64 and Gospel of Peter 8:30 contain the precise words “lest his disciple come and steal him.” Crossan argued that the parallel demonstrated Matthew’s dependence on an early form of the Gospel of Peter (the Cross Gospel). However, an examination of the vocabulary, grammar, and style of the two documents strongly favors the dependence of the Gospel of Peter on Matthew. Robert Gundry, one of the most respected experts on issues related to Matthew’s style, called the phrase a “series of Mattheanisms” (Gundry, Matthew [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1994], 584). Similarly, John Meier noted “when it comes to who is dependent on whom, all the signs point to Matthews priority.......The clause is a tissue of Matthean vocabulary and style, a vocabulary and style almost totally absent from the rest of the Gospel of Peter” (Meier, Marginal Jews, 1:117). This is consistent with a number of other Matthean features appear in the Gospel of Peter that all point to the dependence of the Gospel of Peter on Matthew.

Second, other features of the Gospel of Peter suggest that the gospel not only postdates Matthew, but even postdates the latest book of the NT canon, the Book of Revelation. For example, although Matthew indicates that the Roman guard sealed the tomb of Jesus, Gospel of Peter 8:33 adds that it was sealed with seven seals. The reference to the seven seals conflicts with the immediate context. Gospel of Peter 8:32-33 states that all the witnesses present sealed the tomb. However, a minimum of nine witnesses were present leading readers to expect at least nine seals. The best explanation for the awkward reference to the seven seals is that the detail was drawn from Revelation 5:1. This allusion to Revelation fits well with the Gospel of Peter 9:35 and 12:50 reference to the day of Jesus’ resurrection as the “Lord’s Day” since this terminology only appears in Revelation in the NT and first in Revelation out of all ancient Christian literature. The reference to the “Lord’s Day” in the Gospel of Peter is a shortened form that appears to be a later development from the original form appearing in Revelation.

Still other features of the Gospel of Peter fit best with the historical data if the Gospel of Peter was produced in the mid-second century. The Gospel of Peter assumes the doctrine of Jesus’ descent into Hades to preach to the dead. However, this doctrine first appears in the words of Justin Martyr around AD 150. The talking cross is a feature of other second-century literature. The Epistula Apostolorum 16 states that during the second coming Jesus will be carried on the wings of the clouds with his cross going on before him. Similarly, the Ethiopic Apocalypse of Peter 1 describes the returning Christ as coming in a glory seven times as bright as the sun and with his cross going before his face. In a similar fashion, beginning in the late first century, Christian texts describe Christ as possessing gigantic stature. In an allegorical depiction of Jesus’ supremacy and authority over the church, Shepherd of Hermas 83:1 described Christ as of such lofty stature that he stood taller than a tower. 4 Ezra 2:43, a portion of 4 Ezra dating to the middle or late third century, referred to the unusual height of the Son of God. These shared compositional strategies and features make the most sense if these documents and the Gospel of Peter were composed in the same milieu.

This evidence confirms the traditional Christian claim that the four NT Gospels are the most reliable accounts of Jesus’ trial, death, burial, and resurrection. The accounts of crucifixion and resurrection in the four Gospels were based on eyewitness testimony rather than naïve dependence on an unreliable source like the alleged "Cross Gospel." The Gospel of Peter (and the so-called Cross Gospel) is clearly later than the NT Gospels and is sprinkled throughout with imaginative elements and traces of legend. Although the gospel is helpful for understanding the thought of some sectors of the church in the mid-second century, it is of little value for understanding the details of Jesus’ final days on earth. [For a more detailed discussion, see Quarles, "The Gospel of Peter: Does It Contain a Pre-canonical Resurrection Narrative?" in The Resurrection of Jesus: John Dominic Crossan and N. T. Wright in Dialogue (ed. Robert Stewart; Minneapolis: Fortress, 2005), 106-120].
Please note "a close analysis of verbal parallels shared by the Gospel of Peter and the Gospel of Matthew suggests that the Gospel of Peter postdates Matthew and utilized that Gospel as a source. An example of these parallels is the account of the guard assigned to Jesus’ tomb."

In addition, please note "both Matthew 27:64 and Gospel of Peter 8:30 contain the precise words "lest his disciple come and steal him." Crossan argued that the parallel demonstrated Matthew’s dependence on an early form of the Gospel of Peter (the Cross Gospel). However, an examination of the vocabulary, grammar, and style of the two documents strongly favors the dependence of the Gospel of Peter on Matthew. Robert Gundry, one of the most respected experts on issues related to Matthew’s style, called the phrase a "series of Mattheanisms" (Gundry, Matthew [Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1994], 584)."

So much for Craig's claim that "the gospel of Peter also relates the story of the guard at the tomb, and its account may well be independent of Matthew, since the verbal similarities are practically nil." In addition, "may well be independent of Matthew" in not good enough to be called an independent attestation, especially a testimony that was written over 100 years after the supposed facts. The person who wrote the Gospel of Peter was not even born when Jesus died.
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Old 05-18-2010, 08:26 PM   #13
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Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic View Post
Consider the following from another thread:

Quote:
Originally Posted by andrewcriddle
I think most Christians would agree that the empty tomb in isolation, i.e., without the appearances of the risen Christ to his followers, is not a sufficient basis for an argument for the resurrection.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic
Even with appearances of the risen Jesus, if his identity could not have been reasonably proven without an empty tomb, how could his identity have been reasonably proven with an empty tomb?

Even with appearances of the risen Jesus, how could his followers have reasonably proven where he had been buried, and that the body had not been moved?
Comments please.
Why do you say that that Jesus’ identity could not have been reasonably proven without an empty tomb? Neither the Gospels nor Christian doctrine suggest that this is true.

Jesus resurrection would have been disproven if his body was still in the tomb (so the disciples went to check), but I know of no reason to think that his identity could not have been proven without an empty tomb.
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Old 05-18-2010, 08:42 PM   #14
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Consider the following:

http://www.leaderu.com/offices/billc...ocs/guard.html

Quote:
Originally Posted by William Lane Craig

But perhaps the strongest consideration in favor of the historicity of the guard is the history of polemic presupposed in this story. The Jewish slander that the disciples stole the body was probably the reaction to the Christian proclamation that Jesus was risen.
That will not do. The Jewish slander, assuming that there was any, was post-Resurrection. If guards were posted, that would have been pre-Resurrection. Jesus' followers were a very small, uninfluential group. In his article "The Impossible Faith," Christian apologist James Holding quotes well-known Christian Bible scholar N.T. Wright as saying "This subversive belief in Jesus' Lordship, over against that of Caesar, was held in the teeth of the fact that Caesar had demonstrated his superior power in the obvious way, by having Jesus crucified. But the truly extraordinary thing is that this belief was held by a tiny group who, for the first two or three generations at least, could hardly have mounted a riot in a village, let alone a revolution in an empire."

Since Jesus' followers did not believe that he would rise from the dead, they would not have gone around boasting that he would rise from the dead. Virtually no one else would have paid any attention to a tiny, uninfluential group of religious fanatics even if they had been aware of them. Thus, it is very improbable that guards would have been posted at the tomb. If Jesus rose from the dead, only then would critics have tried to explain the empty tomb. If Jesus rose from the dead, his supporters would have had a difficult time reasonably proving where his body was buried, and that it had not been moved or stolen.

http://www.infidels.org/library/mode...rection/3.html

Quote:
Originally Posted by Richard Carrier

Lest one think stealing a body is odd, any Egyptologist can tell you that dozens of mummies are missing from tombs looted thousands of years ago. Corpses (actually, certain parts of them, like the skull) were used by sorcerers, and these body parts were likely to be a hot item on the black market--and the skull of a sorcerer or holy man would be even more valuable still.
Since Joseph of Arimathea loved Jesus, and did not believe that Jesus would rise from the dead, he might have moved the body in order to prevent Jesus from being discredited.

Jesus could easily have appeared to thousands of people all over the Middle East, including in Syria, where he had travelled extensively, and to the Roman government in Palestine, but he strangely chose to limit his appearances, thereby needlessly causing a lot of confusion today.
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Old 05-18-2010, 09:26 PM   #15
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... My intention in this thread is to assume for the sake of argument that Jesus made personal appearances.
Well once you assume Jesus made personal appearances after he was buried then it must be assumed the tomb was empty WHILE he made those appearances at other places outside the tomb.

It must be obvious that Jesus could not be in the tomb and make appearances outside the tomb at the same time.
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Old 05-18-2010, 09:27 PM   #16
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Originally Posted by andrewcriddle
I think most Christians would agree that the empty tomb in isolation, i.e., without the appearances of the risen Christ to his followers, is not a sufficient basis for an argument for the resurrection.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic
Even with appearances of the risen Jesus, if his identity could not have been reasonably proven without an empty tomb, how could his identity have been reasonably proven with an empty tomb?

Even with appearances of the risen Jesus, how could his followers have reasonably proven where he had been buried, and that the body had not been moved?
Quote:
Originally Posted by brianscott1977
Why do you say that that Jesus’ identity could not have been reasonably proven without an empty tomb? Neither the Gospels nor Christian doctrine suggest that this is true.
I do not care what Christian doctrine says. There was not a global flood. There were no Ten Plagues in Egypt. God did not give Egypt to Nebuchadnezzar as a compenastion for his failure to defeat Tyre. Jesus did not perform many miracles in Jerusalem, and throughout all of Galilee, and throughout all of Syria, and many more miracles that were not recorded. If Jesus performed miracles, his exploits would have been unprecendented in human history, and he would have become the biggest celebrity in the entire Middle East. First century, non-Christian history does not confirm that Jesus performed miracles.

I did not say that Jesus’ identity could not have been reasonably proven without an empty tomb. I have argued in another thread at this forum, or in another thread at the Abrahamic Religions forum, that if Jesus rose from the dead, an empty tomb would not have been needed as evidence. It is many Christians who make a big deal out of the empty tomb, not me. The empty tomb is a useless argument for Christians to use. When Matthew wrote the story of the guards at the tomb, he needlessly caused a lot of debates in the future. The Crucifixion and Jesus' post-Resurrection appearances, if true, are all that is needed to reasonably prove that Jesus from from the dead. The story of the guards weakens the case for the Resurrection since it is so improbable. Even if the story of the guards is true, Matthew should not have written about them. Since Jesus' followers did not believe that he would rise from the dead, they would not have gone around boasting that he would rise from the dead. Virtually no one else would have paid any attention to a tiny, uninfluential group of religious fanatics even if they had been aware of them. Thus, it is very improbable that guards would have been posted at the tomb. If Jesus rose from the dead, only then would critics have tried to explain the empty tomb. If Jesus rose from the dead, his supporters would have had a difficult time reasonably proving where his body was buried, and that it had not been moved or stolen.

I said:

Quote:
Originally Posted by Johnny Skeptic
Even with appearances of the risen Jesus, if his identity could not have been reasonably proven without an empty tomb, how could his identity have been reasonably proven with an empty tomb?
I said "'IF' his identity could not have been reasonably proven without an empty tomb.......," not "'THAT' his identity could not have been reasonably proven without an empty tomb. I did not intend to imply that if Jesus rose from the dead, an empty tomb would have still been needed as evidence that he had risen from the dead. I said that in order to address claims that some Christians make that the empty tomb adds credibility to the claim that Jesus rose from the dead. For example, some Christians claim that if a person thought that they might have had a hallucination, they could have checked the empty tomb. That is not a good argument.

Quote:
Originally Posted by brianscott1977
Jesus resurrection would have been disproven if his body was still in the tomb (so the disciples went to check), but I know of no reason to think that his identity could not have been proven without an empty tomb.
As I said, "some Christians claim that if a person thought that they might have had a hallucination, they could have checked the empty tomb. That is not a good argument."

Regarding "Jesus resurrection would have been disproven if his body was still in the tomb," that is not a good argument. First of all, there is not any credible evidence that Jesus was buried in Joseph of Arimathea's tomb. Second of all, even if the body was buried in Joseph's tomb, it might have been stolen or moved.

The title of this thread is "If Jesus made personal appearances, how could the empty tomb have been an issue?" That assumes for the sake of argument that Jesus made personal appearances. My intention in starting this thread was not to question the Resurrection, but to show that the empty tomb argument is useless for Christians to use.
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Old 05-18-2010, 09:32 PM   #17
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Originally Posted by aa5874
Well once you assume Jesus made personal appearances after he was buried then it must be assumed the tomb was empty WHILE he made those appearances at other places outside the tomb.

It must be obvious that Jesus could not be in the tomb and make appearances outside the tomb at the same time.
Of course, but if Christians could reasonably prove that Jesus was buried in Joseph of Arimathea's tomb, and that the body was not stolen or moved, and that guards were posted at the tomb, they would have a much better case that Jesus rose from the dead than they do now. However, as you know, Christians cannot provide that evidence.
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Old 05-18-2010, 09:56 PM   #18
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874
Well once you assume Jesus made personal appearances after he was buried then it must be assumed the tomb was empty WHILE he made those appearances at other places outside the tomb.

It must be obvious that Jesus could not be in the tomb and make appearances outside the tomb at the same time.
Of course, but if Christians could reasonably prove that Jesus was buried in Joseph of Arimathea's tomb, and that the body was not stolen or moved, and that guards were posted at the tomb, they would have a much better case that Jesus rose from the dead than they do now. However, as you know, Christians cannot provide that evidence.
I think there is a problem for you once you assume Jesus made appearances.

Once Jesus was buried and was seen alive at some other location then the empty tomb BECOMES evidence of his resurrection.

Imagine for a moment that you left your car in the garage and some-one told you that your car was seen at some other location then the empty garage BECOMES evidence that your car may have seen somewhere else.

My position is that the post-resurrection appearance is the least likely event that can be assumed to have occurred and based on the story Jesus could not have resurrected for the stolen body story to make any logical sense.

Imagine that the soldiers were before the Sanhedrin fabricating the stolen body story while, unknown to them, Jesus was appearing to Pilate at that very time.

It is most obvious that the author of the stolen body story already knew that HIS JESUS did not resurrect.
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Old 05-18-2010, 10:17 PM   #19
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I think there is a problem for you once you assume Jesus made appearances.

Once Jesus was buried and was seen alive at some other location then the empty tomb BECOMES evidence of his resurrection.
In my post #16, I said "the title of this thread is 'If Jesus made personal appearances, how could the empty tomb have been an issue?' That assumes for the sake of argument that Jesus made personal appearances. My intention in starting this thread was not to question the Resurrection, but to show that the empty tomb argument is useless for Christians to use."

If Jesus made appearances, that would imply that somewhere, some burial place was empty, but not a particular burial place. If Jesus made appearances, a specific burial place is not an issue since Christians have not provided reasonable proof that Jesus was buried in Joseph of Arimathea's tomb, that the body was not stolen or moved, and that guards were posted at the tomb.

There are lots of other threads for arguing against the Resurrection. I started this thread in order to try to discredit the empty tomb argument.

William Lane Craig knows how important the story of the guards is. As I showed previously in this thread, his explanations about that issue are not valid.
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Old 05-18-2010, 11:09 PM   #20
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Quote:
Originally Posted by aa5874

I think there is a problem for you once you assume Jesus made appearances.

Once Jesus was buried and was seen alive at some other location then the empty tomb BECOMES evidence of his resurrection.
In my post #16, I said "the title of this thread is 'If Jesus made personal appearances, how could the empty tomb have been an issue?' That assumes for the sake of argument that Jesus made personal appearances. My intention in starting this thread was not to question the Resurrection, but to show that the empty tomb argument is useless for Christians to use."
But, you seem not to understand that I am saying that the empty tomb is an issue once you assume Jesus made post-resurrection appearances.

Jesus could NOT be in the tomb at the same time he was making appearances.

Or if the body of Jesus WAS still in the tomb then it was not Jesus who was making post-resurrection appearances.

The empty tomb must be an issue.
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