Not everything Mark Shea writes about the faith is accurate or prudent, so I don't think he should receive a blanket endorsement, but I do have to give credit where credit is due. About 10 years ago he wrote one of the best apologetics defenses of the Resurrection I've every come across. Shea demolishes all skeptical and liberal arguments in true Catholic and Chestertonian fashion. It's truly a classic and must-read for Catholics that's captivating from start to finish.
If Christ Has Not Been Raised....
"Jesus came to give us moral guidance and, to prove he
meant business, he let himself be killed and seen after death, so we
would listen up and be good." Not being raised in any particular
religion myself, it wasn't until later that I discovered this view of
Jesus' death and Resurrection (which I heard from my grandmother) had
more in common with The Day the Earth Stood Still than it did
with the historic faith of Christianity. But this view of
Jesus-as-Klaatu, impressing the yokels with spiritualist stunts to wow
us into listening to his preachments, is but one of many "alternative"
views of the Resurrection of Christ. In this view, it isn't particularly
important whether Jesus was raised bodily, just so long as his disciples knew he was "really alive"--more likely as a particularly impressive ghost.
To others, it isn't important whether Jesus is alive even as a ghost
so long as he "lives in the hearts of his countrymen". This is more or
less the position of alleged "Christian theologians" like John Dominic
Crossan, who cheerfully relates this happy news in Jesus: A Revolutionary Biography:
This, in English, means Jesus' corpse was dog food long ago, but
since the idiot savant apostles were particularly adept at religious
psychosis and making lemonade out of lemons, then we can say the
Resurrection is full of "hope" in a sense intelligible only to Extremely
Advanced Theologians like Crossan.
Then again, there are others who solve the problem of the
Resurrection by not letting Jesus die. In this view, somebody else was
crucified on Good Friday (somebody who really deserved it, like Judas
Iscariot), while Jesus went off to a well-earned pension someplace else.
Depending on the legend or the Shocking Book (e.g. Holy Blood, Holy Grail
by Michael Baigent) you are reading, "someplace else" could be anywhere
from Japan to France. Frequently, "Jesus didn't die" scenarios go for
the hearts and flowers conclusion favored by Hollywood, in which the
retired Son of Man finally gets the girl like Clark Kent in Superman II
and no longer has to pursue his unrewarding task of Proclaiming
Platitudes. Typically, they pack him off to some vineyard with Mary
Magdalene, there to found a dynasty of Merovingians or something.
Sometimes, instead of escaping crucifixion entirely, some scenarios
grant that he was crucified, but swooned (possibly with the help of some
drugged wine) and regained consciousness later. But the central claim
of all such scenarios is that Jesus didn't really die on the Cross.
Still other theorists, often involved in the New Age Movement, solve
the problem by allowing him to be only a spirit (divine or angelic,
depending on the preference of the author) appearing as man, a
sort of Holy Vision. This solves the problem of his death by making it
an illusion: a tidy disposal of a messy crucifixion which preserves the
Happy Ending.
Meanwhile, others have much simpler and cruder explanations:
disciples stole the corpse, lied about it, and founded a cult for their
own selfish gain and power. Slightly kinder than this is the Hysterical
Hallucination theory which says the apostles meant well, but
hallucinated a Resurrection. Or, if not them, then later generations of
Christians got hold of the New Testament and added the Resurrection.
Originally, it was just a collection of apostolic memoirs about the Dead
Master and his witty sayings. Many think Paul is behind the whole thing
(see, for instance, The Mythmaker: Paul and the Invention of Christianity
by Hyam Maccoby as a sample of this sort of thinking). Paul allegedly
transformed this ordinary Jewish rabbi into a Cosmic Christ figure under
the influence of pagan myth. The original apostles, according to this
school, would be horrified at what Paul did to the teaching of the
gentle and witty Y'shua.
One of the obvious difficulties with all these theories is that they
don't fit together well. If later generations are to blame for importing
resurrection myths, then earlier ones aren't. If it's all Paul's fault
then it's not Peter's fault. If the Eleven are body snatchers, then
they're not well-meaning hallucinators, and vice versa. Such theories
demonstrate what C.S. Lewis once referred to as the "restless fertility
of bewilderment" so much in evidence when debunkers try to overturn the
mountain of solid evidence for the truth of the Christian claims. This
is unsurprising, since these "alternative explanations" are all much
harder to believe than the Christian explanation of the Resurrection,
which is nicely summarized by St. Paul as follows:
For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve. Then he appeared to more than five hundred brethren at one time, most of whom are still alive, though some have fallen asleep. Then he appeared to James, then to all the apostles. Last of all, as to one untimely born, he appeared also to me. For I am the least of the apostles, unfit to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God. But by the grace of God I am what I am, and his grace toward me was not in vain. On the contrary, I worked harder than any of them, though it was not I, but the grace of God which is with me. Whether then it was I or they, so we preach and so you believed.
Now if Christ is preached as raised from the dead, how can some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead? But if there is no resurrection of the dead, then Christ has not been raised; if Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain. (1 Corinthians 15:1-14)
This, the earliest creedal summary of the Faith, gives the lie to my
first (and still one of the most common) ignorant notions of the meaning
and nature of the Resurrection. For it shows clearly that the real
heart and soul of the New Testament teaching about Jesus is not that he
was primarily a preacher, wonder worker, reformer, sage or deliverer of
Profound Truths and Happy Thoughts, nor that the Resurrection was a
special effect performed to wow us into following good advice.
The first fact of the Christian gospel, according to the New
Testament, is the Passion and Resurrection of Christ. Without the
Resurrection, you don't have an "original" gospel of Witty Sayings, Wise
Saws and Modern Instances. You have no gospel whatsoever. This is why
one fourth of each of the gospels focuses on a 72 hour period in the
life of Jesus of Nazareth: his Passion and Resurrection. It is why the
rest of the New Testament is overwhelmingly focused on the meaning
of that death and Resurrection, and not on his signs or sayings (almost
none of which are preserved outside the gospels.) It is why virtually
nobody but the most ignorant TV host these days holds the once-popular
notion that the Resurrection was tacked on the New Testament by later
generations of Christians after the death of the apostles. The simple
fact is that trying to account for any of the New Testament without
placing the Resurrection at the absolute core of it is like saying that
the real truth of Abraham Lincoln consists of platitudes about peace and
justice and that the "Civil War" was just a myth concocted by later
hagiographers which forms no part of the original story. If the
"original gospel" was just a collection of tales about Jesus going
around saying "Niceness is nice" the question that arises is what,
exactly, was so interesting about him? The only answer is found in the
actual documents of the New Testament, which begin to be composed within
20 years of his death, which reflect a faith in the Resurrection which
is about 20 years old at that point, and which already contain things
like the creed above and the insistence that the gospel is about nothing
other than Jesus and the Resurrection (Acts 17:18).
Very well, we can't blame "later generations" for coming up with the
Resurrection story. So, say some, let's blame Paul. The problem with
this theory is that Paul himself (and witnesses who know Paul, such as
Luke, as well as witnesses who appear to be under very little influence
by Paul, such as Matthew and John) seem to be under the impression that
the basic core of the story Paul has to tell is not Paul's invention.
"I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received"
is rabbinic jargon which means "I'm handing on to you the Tradition I
was taught". Taught by whom? In Paul's case, taught by the apostles
(Galatians 1:18-21) and by the normal primitive catechesis given in
places like the Church at Antioch where Paul lived for many years before
he started any mission at all (Acts 13). Paul says this sort of thing
repeatedly and seems to take for granted, not only that what he has to
say about Jesus is common knowledge to all Christians (not just the ones
he's converted) but that none of the other apostles bopping around the
Mediterranean--and none of the Churches they founded--are going to have
any quarrel with him when he says that Christ is Risen. If Paul alone is
coming up with this unheard-of and cockamamie myth of the Risen Christ
while the rest of the apostles are just wandering hither and thither,
sharing Anecdotes about Their Friend the Martyred Nazarene, you kind of
think somebody would notice.
In short, if faith in the Resurrection is as old as Paul, it is as
old as the apostles themselves. He preaches it for the same reason they
do: he really believes he saw the Risen Christ, just as they say they
saw the Risen Christ.
Ah, yes. They say. But why should we believe them? What if the
Eleven were just body snatchers, stealing the corpse of Christ in order
to portray themselves as the Martyr's Best Buddies and found a cult
with Jesus as putative head but themselves as the adored Big Cheeses.
The difficulties with this are numerous. First of all, they don't act
like any cult leaders we know. The records they leave behind do not
show air-brushed photos of fearless, shiny, happy, faith-filled dynamos
of apostolic courage, theological acumen, and intellectual agility who
were Jesus' Trusty Right Hand Men. They show us a group of men whose
chagrined honesty compelled them to carefully incorporate into the
public record the fact that they were snobbish, spiteful, cowardly,
factional nitwits who were slow on the uptake, ambitious, blind, selfish
and, when the supreme test came, quite willing to bolt and run in the
hour of their Master's terrible trial. Compare this with the adoring
exhalations of the North Korean press on the Manifold Virtues of The
Fearless Leaders, or the flawless perfection of Stalin according to the
Stalinist press of the 30s, or the Nazi hagiography of Hitler. The
apostles make sure that their public preaching, and the public record,
includes a faithful recitation of their many, many sins. Moreover, they
continue to preach the Resurrection for decades, despite separation,
persecution, poverty, threats, torture, and martyrdom (except for John,
who had the pleasure of watching his brother James executed for his
testimony.) In short, they speak and act like honest men, not like men
out to make a buck or acquire power.
Indeed, so honest are they that they even make Jesus look
rather ungodlike at first blush. Jesus is recorded displaying weakness,
showing fear, confessing ignorance and asking questions. He is described
as unable to do certain things. He is recorded saying things that sound
dangerously like denials of deity, such as "Why do you call me good?
There is none good but God alone" (Mark 10:18) or "My God, my God, why
have you forsaken me?" (Matthew 27:46). Yet we are to believe that
cunning liars who carefully doctored history to make Jesus appear to be
the Risen Lord also managed to not notice that such details should be
the first to be eliminated from public preaching if you are air-brushing
the historical record?
No. What comes across with terrific force in the New Testament is a
testimony given by people who tell the truth, even about awkward facts
not instantly advantageous to their claims. They come across as people
who genuinely believe Christ Risen, not as people who lie about a body
they know perfectly well was stolen or eaten by dogs and then cunningly
doctor the record. The apostles behave their life long (right through
their tortured deaths) like men utterly convinced that they have met the
Risen Christ. Indeed, so convinced are they that they include numerous
details which, frankly, no liar would ever make up.
So, for instance, no first century Jewish liars would call as their
first witness Mary Magdalene. For the Magdalene was prima facie
incredible to a first century Jewish audience on two counts. First, she
was a woman. Second, she was a woman out of whom seven demons had been
driven--a rather shady psychological profile. (Mark 16:9). The gospels
read like accounts by honest people who are stuck with the
facts--including the fact that the first witness was this inconvenient
and awkward woman.
Some will, of course, retort that this proves too much, since indeed
we would not bother with the testimony of Ima Nutt, alleged alien
abductee, so why bother with Mary's?
Because Mary is the first, not the last, witness. The records point
to hundreds of witnesses--most still alive at the time 1 Corinthians was
written--and give an account of the Resurrection which is, in the main,
basically coherent. An appearance to the women, to the Twelve at
various times in and around Jerusalem, to various other individuals, to
others in Galilee, including a large gathering, and in various other
ways for 40 days, concluding at the Ascension, followed by an appearance
to Paul some years later (not counting various vision phenomena which
are of a different order). Nitpickers are fond of talking about the
discrepancies between the gospel accounts (books written decades apart
for different audiences and for differing theological purposes). But
what really stands out is how similar the tale is in all of them.
If the minor discrepancies that distinguish them really mean they are
false, then we must also conclude that JFK was never assassinated since
witnesses have as many discrepancies in their testimony.
Indeed, it's often the details that are so persuasive. Thus, another
fact nobody would ever make up is the burial place of Christ: the tomb
of Joseph of Arimathea, a member of the Sanhedrin. It's exactly the sort
of detail that gives the gospels the ring of truth. If you're making
the story up, you put the body in the tomb of some devoted disciple with
proper pomp and circumstance, not in the unlikely final resting place
of a member of the ruling body which (by the time the gospels were
composed) is the headquarters of the people most bitterly opposed to
your message.
The mention of the tomb leads some people to another favorite theory:
namely, that the disciples went to the wrong tomb and leapt to the
conclusion Christ was risen. One can only wonder what such theorists
think people are made of. It requires preternatural stupidity on the
part, not only of the disciples, but of the Jerusalem authorities to
suppose that such a blunder could lead to the universal conviction among
the apostles that Jesus was the Risen and Glorious Lord of all. Even if
all the early Church was too stupid to find its way back to the final
resting place of the Man who was the white hot focus of their devotion,
surely somebody in the Jerusalem elite who opposed the growing sect of
Nazarenes could have said, "Uh, guys? Here's the corpse. You were
looking in the wrong place. Next time ask for directions." Joseph of
Arimathea might have been of some help here. So might the women, who saw
where he was laid. And such a theory becomes doubly silly when the
early Church's fascination with relics and tombs is factored in. Early
liturgies tended to be held at gravesites, yet there is no cultus that
develops around the most important grave of all. Why, it's like the tomb
was empty or something.
Which takes us, in our taxonomy of Resurrection alternatives, to the
various Escape from Death/Swoon Theories, the notion that Jesus somehow
avoided death, either by skipping town and leaving a stooge to take the
fall for him or by enduring crucifixion and then escaping the tomb. It's
hard to choose which version of this theory is more preposterous. If
there's any fact of history that is not disputed, even by hard core
atheist historians, it is the fact of his death. If we know nothing else
about him, we know that he died by crucifixion outside the walls of
Jerusalem c. 30 AD.
And yet, as some would have it, he didn't. Like a sort of first
century Elvis, he went into sudden and mysterious retirement in sharp
contradiction to everything he had ever said or done and founded a
dynasty or studied philosophy or something in some far off land. The
evidence for this? Well, there is none really. Just hints, supposings,
surmises and what ifs. It's rather like the thinking behind Chariots of the Gods. There's a theory in search of evidence, not a dram of evidence giving rise to a theory. Meanwhile, the people who were there
give testimony, not that Jesus boarded a bus out of town right after
the Last Supper (a supper at which he specifically prophesied his
Passion with a creepy accuracy that would reduce Peter to tears when it
all happened), but that he went to betrayal, trial and crucifixion. (And
again, why would lying cult founders make up the story of that prophecy
and it's very embarrassing fulfillment?) Indeed, eyewitnesses like John
saw Jesus at both his trial and the crucifixion. So there's not a lot
of ways for Jesus to have gotten out of Dodge and left somebody else
holding the bag.
Ah! But John only thought he saw Jesus die. Really, the
Nazarene received a drugged wine, passed out, and awoke in a freezing
cold tomb on a chill morning in April. The perfect setting for a
dramatic recovery from scourging, crucifixion, massive blood loss,
shock, and a spear wound to the heart, as nine out of ten doctors agree.
He then stumbled out (after somehow freeing himself from the bandages
sealed to his torn flesh) and, shoving the zillion ton stone that sealed
the tomb out of the way, limped up to the disciples on his bloody feet,
showed them his hands (complete with permanently immovable thumbs due
to irreparable nerve damage), and gasped out a greeting between the
stabs of agonizing pain due to the spear wound. Most people, faced with
such a ghastly spectacle, would call 911. The disciples, naturally,
greeted him as the glorious Conqueror of Death and Lord of the Universe
and founded a religion instead. Happens all the time.
"Okay, fine," says the victim of Restless Fertility of Disbelief
Syndrome, "Jesus died. And the disciples didn't steal the body and lie
about it." They just hallucinated. Together. All 500 hundred of them.
For 40 days... No.... Really.
Well, prescinding from the fact that there's still that troublesome
empty tomb (with empty graveclothes in it) to deal with, there's also
the problem of the nature of hallucination. Mass hallucination is
extremely rare. So rare, in fact, that it's usually only invoked to
explain away things like, oh, the Resurrection. The rest of the time,
when 500 people say they saw somebody and spoke with him, we believe
them, particularly when they keep suffering martyrdom for saying it and
have nothing to gain by saying it. But in addition, we have other
problems to deal with when it comes to the Mass Hallucination Theory.
First and foremost is the curious fact that hallucinations like this are
supposed to be the fruition of intense wish-fulfillment fantasies. The
witnesses supposedly wanted Jesus to be alive so bad that they freaked
out and thought they saw him. However, on at least three occasions the
one they saw was not recognized. What sort of hallucination shows up in response to our deepest wish and then isn't recognized?
More to the point, what hallucination can be touched and eats fish?
Which leaves us pretty much with the Last Gasp "Jesus was a Divine
Illusion" school of gnostic or New Age thinking. For, if the Risen
Christ was "really" a purely spiritual illusion sent by the divine to
teach us Higher Truths about the unimportance of the body and the need
to transcend our humanity, then what could be more certain to obscure
this lesson than a body which can be touched, which eats fish and
breathes warm breath? The apostles, at any rate, don't seem to have
picked up on these Higher Truths at all. They teach instead that the
Risen Christ is raised bodily and is not only fully God but fully human,
albeit glorified.
Raised bodily. Glorified. Both fully God and fully Man. When the
alternatives have all spent themselves in fruitless clamor for our
attention, it's the old Christian story that still persuades because it
just happens to be the truth. It's the story of the Conqueror of death
who, as Man, has borne the sting of death and, as God, has raised our
dead human nature out of the grave so that we too may live in his
glorious life on the Last Day as he already lives it. You can read all
about it--without crackpot alternative explanations--in the New
Testament. A most convincing book, especially when so many skeptics
drive you to murmur "Almost thou persuadest me to be a Christian!"
The Resurrection is the factual cornerstone of Christian faith. Without it, you do not get a gospel purified of superstition. You get a litter of low-rent "real" conclusions of the story of Christ that are vastly harder to buy than the Christian explanation. At the end of the day, the fact remains that, "If Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain" and "we are of all men most to be pitied" (1 Corinthians 15:14; 19). But all that rides on the fantasy of "if". In reality, as Paul also clearly knew (for he had seen the Risen Christ and went to his grave in joyful confidence of this fact), things were far otherwise, thanks be to God. For "in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of those who have fallen asleep" (1 Corinthians 15:20).
2 comments:
I hope it is a typo that you refer to Mark Shea as "She"
You are correct that not everything Mark Shea has written is trash. When he sticks to stuff he actually knows something about, he's okay. However, in recent years, he has tried to be an expert on everything under the sun, and has made a total fool of himself many times. Also his foul temper (and mouth) has caused him to lash out at people who have disagreed with him or who are disagreeable to him. His strange obsession with Michael Voris is a good example of this habit. I hope he realizes someday before it's too late that he's only hurting himself be doing these things. .
Post a Comment