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Old 07-05-2009, 08:09 PM   #21
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Originally Posted by Self-Mutation View Post
Evidence for this assertion?
1. It is an inherently unlikely disposition given Jesus' social status. The more likely fate was a common grave.

2. It is unlikely from the internal evidence of the absence of an empty tomb tradition in Paul.

3. That he obtained a tomb despite his social standing is unlikely because Joseph of A appears to be a fictional creation serving only to provide a tomb (ie deus ex machina).

A secret disciple who was also a wealthy member of the Sanhedrin but served no other purpose than to provide a tomb?

Please.

But don't let this tangent distract you from your failure to support the notion that there were guards at the tomb.
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Old 07-05-2009, 08:12 PM   #22
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renassault,

I agree with you that the Jewish leaders (scribes and Pharisees) would not have been impressed even if J had shown himself to them because they would have considered it to be magic or an evil miracle by a false prophet like Deut.13:2-6 describes.

The tomb events took place outside the city's walls on a holiday, so very few people would have seen what happened. That's why I think this story is an unfair proof. How would people then know who to believe (assuming the story actually existed right away.)

Kenneth Greifer
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Old 07-05-2009, 08:20 PM   #23
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One would wonder why the Sanhedrin which was so bent on disproving Jesus wouldn't guard the tomb to dispell such myths in case the body really was missing after three days.
When even the disciples didn't expect it, why should anyone?

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A single witness does not mean forgery.
Who said it did? Straw man.

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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
The other three authors betray no awareness of this aspect to the story and that, alone is sufficient to cause any rational individual to question its veracity.
When three of four authors appear to be ignorant of what should have been understood as a very important plot point, the rational response is to doubt the single claimant.
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Old 07-05-2009, 08:43 PM   #24
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Originally Posted by eenassault
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Originally Posted by Baalazel
Originally Posted by Baalazel
Where were the guards when the Magdalene arrived at the tomb on Sunday morning? If you place so much emphasis on there being guards at the tomb you must explain why they would be gone on the very morning Jesus was raised. Why were there no guards at the tomb on Sunday morning?
They had left seeing how the women found the stone rolled away.
So the Roman guards who stood watch under penalty of death just wandered away when a group of women showed up? Had they not noticed that the stone had been rolled away?

It really seems to me that this was just the time to have Roman guards standing watch under penalty of death actually standing watch.

But no, when one of the evidences of the resurrection becomes untenable let's just pretend something else happened even if that something else is even less tenable. When will you people put an end to this maddness?

Quote:
Originally Posted by renassault
Quote:
Originally Posted by Baalazel
IMO the problem with the resurrection has always been the lack of a
living body. Even now, two thousand years later the Christians can't come up with a living Jesus. The only conclusion must be that there is no living Jesus.
You must be insane.
Now there's convincing argument if I ever heard one. And to think I felt bad for all the times I was sure you were insane.

Nevertheless the fact remains that Christians can't offer a living Jesus as proof of his resurrection. The often claimed and long awaited Second Coming only reinforces the failure. The non-sense of the stories of the resurrection in the Gospels highlight the failure.

If Jesus is alive why is he not here, on Earth, where he could be doing some good? How long does it take to build condos for the faithful?

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Old 07-05-2009, 09:19 PM   #25
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I've never heard a single person seriously try to argue that the body was stolen. It's basically just an apologist strawman that it's a "common" objection. The question itse;f is alittle more than a ruse to get the opponent to accept that there was an empty tomb or missing body at all. First prove that Jesus' body went missing from a tomb, and then we'll talk about explanations.

You can't use Matthew to prove Matthew, by the way. That's just silly.
The emphasis the Gospel of Matthew puts on it, and not on the much more vigorous argument of Jesus' miracles simply being an invention by Christians points towards a date not long after 70, nor 60, when the memory would have still been fresh. From the way he says this, it may not be a pressing issue, but an answer the people have if the issue is raised at all. To be brought up as a strawman would be very odd, because what you yourself point out, would have been done by the Jews, and Matthew would have reflected this. Thus, he obviously reflected a real situation where there were such answers.


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Quote:
Originally Posted by renassault
It's not recorded that Jesus went to the chief priests and all of Jerusalem, but mainly to disciples (as Paul implies in 1 Corinthians 15). Seeing how the Scribes and Pharisees attributed Jesus' exorcisms to the devil, it would have made little difference if he had shown himself to them. Seeing how the priests preferred to have the soldiers say that the body was stolen than to report the truth, an appearance to them or all of Jerusalem apparently wouldn't have made a difference anyway, and why try to give further signs to a wicked generation that Christ knew would ultimately reject him anyway? He may of course have shown himself to them, but as shown above, it obviously wouldn't have/didn't made a difference.
You really have no idea what would have happened if a man that was believed to have been crucified, dead for three days , buried and under guard, showed up at Jerusalem in the presence of Pilate, Herod, the chief priest and thousands of Jews.
As is evidenced by the text, when the guards came and reported the angels opening the tomb to the priests, they bribed them and told them to lie. So apparently, not much would have happened except the usual shameful silence the Pharisees came to when Jesus answered one of their accusations through Scripture or logical disputation.

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Originally Posted by renassualt
The fact that this was being reported to that day means that Matthew was writing close to the time, within a few decades, certainly by 80 AD and afterwards, the alleged time of the composition of the Gospel, there would have been no such reports needed, but instead the general, "Christian superstition" would have been given (see Pliny and Tacitus, so clearly this was prior to 100 AD).
What happened close to the time gMatthew was written?

It cannot be shown, using credible external sources, that anything close to the Jesus stories actually happened as found in gMatthew during the time Pilate was governor of Judaea.
The empty tomb happened close to the time of Matthew being written. The above reasoning is what I'm using to show it. You don't always have external sources for everything.

Quote:
In addition, Pliny and Tacitus did not write about Jesus, and Tacitus and Suetonius wrote about people called Christians before any of the Jesus stories as found in the NT were written.
So? What were their interests in what they regarded, by both of their admissions, as superstitions?

Quote:
The Christians in Tacitus and Suetonius were during the time of Nero, perhaps around 66 CE, but the people who believed the Jesus stories are all after the Fall of the Jewish Temple, after 70 CE to coincide with the time of the writing of the Gospels.
How have you shown that the people who believed the stories about Christ lived after the Fall of the Temple. What about Paul's narrative in 1 Corinthians 10-11, which was written c.55, or 1 Corinthians 15.3ff. ?

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Originally Posted by Amaleq13
1. It is an inherently unlikely disposition given Jesus' social status. The more likely fate was a common grave.
It was Joseph of Arimathea's grave, and Joseph was apparently not poor.

Quote:
2. It is unlikely from the internal evidence of the absence of an empty tomb tradition in Paul.
Paul and the other Hellenistic-oriented letters are not especially concerned with episodes of the earthly life of Jesus. Of the epistles/letters, only Hebrews comes somewhat closer. For proof they didn't use the empty tomb, but the appearances to the Apostles and others (1 Cor.15.3ff.).

Quote:
3. That he obtained a tomb despite his social standing is unlikely because Joseph of A appears to be a fictional creation serving only to provide a tomb (ie deus ex machina).

A secret disciple who was also a wealthy member of the Sanhedrin but served no other purpose than to provide a tomb?

Please.
To name many people who don't really serve much in the narrative, amongst these are Jesus' mother. Does this mean he had no historical mother? The fact is, Jesus had hundreds of followers, and to name them all would be rather pointless, and Joseph of Arimathea is named for this because this makes him stand out, and nothing else did. Thus his only participation being to serve as the source of the tomb does not imply fiction. Think about it, hundreds of disciples who are not in any way very important to mention, until one of them is the source of Jesus' tomb; this would indeed be the only occasion to mention without making the story have a pointless naming of disciples who simply follow Jesus.

Quote:
Quote:
Originally Posted by renassault
One would wonder why the Sanhedrin which was so bent on disproving Jesus wouldn't guard the tomb to dispell such myths in case the body really was missing after three days.
When even the disciples didn't expect it, why should anyone?
The high priests were not in the minds of the disciples. For all their fears, the disciples would have been up to something deceptive.

Quote:
Quote:
A single witness does not mean forgery.
Who said it did? Straw man.
You implied it by saying that Matthew was the only source of the guards at the tomb as well as the dead saints rising after Christ's Resurrection.


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When three of four authors appear to be ignorant of what should have been understood as a very important plot point, the rational response is to doubt the single claimant.
But that doesn't necessitate it being untrue.

Quote:
Originally Posted by manwithdream
renassault,

I agree with you that the Jewish leaders (scribes and Pharisees) would not have been impressed even if J had shown himself to them because they would have considered it to be magic or an evil miracle by a false prophet like Deut.13:2-6 describes.

The tomb events took place outside the city's walls on a holiday, so very few people would have seen what happened. That's why I think this story is an unfair proof. How would people then know who to believe (assuming the story actually existed right away.)
Jesus did many miracles for the Pharisees and other unrepentant Jews in Israel. His rejection at Chorazin and Bethsaida, despite miracles there, is evidence enough that he would not have been accepted ultimately, maybe for a short time but not for the rest of their lives, even if he came back to the dead, as the parable of the rich man and Lazarus says, the rich man's brothers would not believe even if a dead man came back to life if they don't follow Moses' commandments. It is true that there would be no proof for the Christians if Jesus didn't show himself to any of them, but they had enough proof from his ministry.

They would have most likely claimed it was the same sorcery that the medium used to bring back the spirit of Samuel, which was indeed a sin, so that Saul would ask him if he would win in battle, but with a twist in this case, so in all likelihood, they would have resorted to the usual, it was through the Devil, defense. So what would Christ do? Walk away and feel like he shouldn't have come at all? Probably why he never would have showed himself to them.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Baalazel
So the Roman guards who stood watch under penalty of death just wandered away when a group of women showed up? Had they not noticed that the stone had been rolled away?
It probably wasn't Roman guards but Herodian soldiers/temple guards. I think Richard Carrier makes this point too. But what penalty of death threat would not be enough to make you run away from this? You would think you're receiving the death if you stay anyway and such a supernatural phenomena might be deemed as a much better excuse than staying and presumably dying. The guards apparently went and told the priests soon after this happened, and when the women arrived there at dawn the guards were there. The women did notice the stone was rolled away, they wondered who would roll it away before they noticed that as per the Gospels.

Quote:
It really seems to me that this was just the time to have Roman guards standing watch under penalty of death actually standing watch.

But no, when one of the evidences of the resurrection becomes untenable let's just pretend something else happened even if that something else is even less tenable. When will you people put an end to this maddness?
Which is scarier, a promise of impending death, or a death that you're about to receive? Certainly if they thought they were about to die by such an unprecedented event they would have ran away, and I don't even think we're dealing with Roman guards as Pilate had no interest in such things. In any case, one can only wonder how seriously this penalty of death was to be taken. In the Roman army, the severest punishment of disobeying an order was to select every 10th man out of a legion and have the previous 9 beat him to death. This was abolished in the army centuries before Christ, only brought back once during Spartacus' revolt by the general Crassus. So if such a severe punishment was abandoned, which evidently worked, it can only be wondered how its promise, which is unlikely to be executed so strictly as seeing the abolishment of such harsh measures hundreds of years before Christ, would be so effective.

Quote:
Now there's convincing argument if I ever heard one. And to think I felt bad for all the times I was sure you were insane.

Nevertheless the fact remains that Christians can't offer a living Jesus as proof of his resurrection. The often claimed and long awaited Second Coming only reinforces the failure. The non-sense of the stories of the resurrection in the Gospels highlight the failure.

If Jesus is alive why is he not here, on Earth, where he could be doing some good? How long does it take to build condos for the faithful?
Our failure to bring Jesus at will negates his existence? Well if that is an argument, then you sure have Christians beat. The nonsense of the Resurrection story has yet to be demonstrated. Whatever the purpose for not building condos for the faithful, as the priest that Lindbergh tried to teach flying said, God has the ability to do it, whether He will or won't no one can say, but He would know it. And the fact is, whatever the reason is, it's God's.
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Old 07-05-2009, 11:33 PM   #26
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One of the most common skeptics objections to the empty tomb of Jesus is that the disciples stole Jesus' body and moved it to fool people into thinking Jesus was resurrected.

There's a problem with this objection. For one, Matthew mentions that there were guards at the tomb. Pilate ordered these guards to go to the tomb to make sure the DISCIPLES DID NOT STEAL THE BODY. Since it was punishable BY DEATH for a Roman soldier to leave their post, the "disciples stole the body" theory flies right out the window.

Even if, for the sake of argument, the disciples were able to somehow distract the guards away from guarding the tomb, there is still the problem of the big stone placed in front of the entrance way.The stone weighed several tons and required many men to move it. How did the disciples have enough time to move the stone? Unless you argue the Roman guards were sleeping. But, if caught sleeping, this also could've meant death for the soldiers. When Pilate tells you to do something, you're damn well gonna do it.
I actually don't think that it is a common skeptic's objection. The mainline scholars seem to believe that the tomb story was an invention of gospel writers in order to fit the messianic prophecy, "he made his grave with the wicked and with the rich in his death," which would mean that Jesus was probably actually dumped into the fires of Gehennah and his ashes were left there, along with the other victims of crucifixion. That is the theory I accept. And the theory that is popular around here is that the whole narrative is myth, which means that neither Jesus nor his tomb ever existed. The point that Jesus' body couldn't have been stolen is exactly right, it is refuting a point made by hardly anyone, and the popular Christian apologists seem to spend a lot of time on it. But, yes, you are right, it is an absurd hypothesis.
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Old 07-06-2009, 06:53 AM   #27
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One of the most common skeptics objections to the empty tomb of Jesus is that the disciples stole Jesus' body and moved it to fool people into thinking Jesus was resurrected.
Oh, that's a common skeptical objection, is it?

Then how come I've never found, in 10 years of posting on skeptic forums, a skeptic who actually believes that the disciples stole the body?
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Old 07-06-2009, 07:54 AM   #28
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I've said it before and I'll say it again We need to first establish what tomb we are talking about. The Eastern Orthodox/RCC Holy Sepulchre or the Protestant Garden Tomb.

Later,
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Old 07-06-2009, 08:35 AM   #29
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I wonder why Jesus didn't appear to Pilate? That would seem like a reasonable resurrection appearance considering that Pilate "washed his hands" of Jesus' supposed murder at the hands of the Jews.
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Old 07-06-2009, 10:16 AM   #30
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The guards apparently went and told the priests soon after this happened...
why didn't the priests accuse the guards of stealing the body? why did they swallow the guards claims?
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