The
Evidence for Jesus
William Lane Craig
Five reasons are presented for thinking that
critics who accept the historical credibility of the gospel accounts of Jesus
do not bear a special burden of proof relative to more skeptical critics. Then
the historicity of a few specific aspects of Jesus' life are addressed,
including his radical self-concept as the divine Son of God, his role as a
miracle-worker, his trial and crucifixion, and his resurrection from the dead.
"Rediscovering the Historical Jesus: The
Evidence for Jesus." Faith and Mission 15 (1998): 16-26.
Last time we saw that the New Testament
documents are the most important historical sources for Jesus of Nazareth. The
so-called apocryphal gospels are forgeries which came much later and are for
the most part elaborations of the four New Testament gospels.
This doesn’t mean that there aren’t sources
outside the Bible which refer to Jesus. There are. He’s referred to in pagan,
Jewish, and Christian writings outside the New Testament. The Jewish historian
Josephus is especially interesting. In the pages of his works you can read
about New Testament people like the high priests Annas and Caiaphas, the Roman
governor Pontius Pilate, King Herod, John the Baptist, even Jesus himself and
his brother James. There have also been interesting archaeological discoveries
as well bearing on the gospels. For example, in 1961 the first archaeological
evidence concerning Pilate was unearthed in the town of Caesarea; it was an
inscription of a dedication bearing Pilate’s name and title. Even more
recently, in 1990 the actual tomb of Caiaphas, the high priest who presided
over Jesus’s trial, was discovered south of Jerusalem. Indeed, the tomb beneath
the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem is in all probability the tomb in
which Jesus himself was laid by Joseph of Arimathea following the crucifixion.
According to Luke Johnson, a New Testament scholar at Emory University,
Even the most critical historian can
confidently assert that a Jew named Jesus worked as a teacher and wonder-worker
in Palestine during the reign of Tiberius, was executed by crucifixion under
the prefect Pontius Pilate and continued to have followers after his death.1
Still, if we want any details about Jesus’s
life and teachings, we must turn to the New Testament. Extra-biblical sources confirm
what we read in the gospels, but they don’t really tell us anything new.
The question then must be: how historically reliable are the New Testament
documents?
Burden of Proof
Here we confront the very crucial question of
the burden of proof. Should we assume that the gospels are reliable unless they
are proven to be unreliable? Or should we assume the gospels are unreliable
unless they are proven to be reliable? Are they innocent until proven guilty or
guilty until proven innocent? Sceptical scholars almost always assume that the
gospels are guilty until proven innocent, that is, they assume that the gospels
are unreliable unless and until they are proven to be correct concerning some
particular fact. I’m not exaggerating here: this really is the procedure of
sceptical critics.
But I want to list five reasons why I think
we ought to assume that the gospels are reliable until proven wrong:
1. There was insufficient time for
legendary influences to expunge the historical facts. The interval of time
between the events themselves and recording of them in the gospels is too short
to have allowed the memory of what had or had not actually happened to be
erased.
2. The gospels are not analogous to folk
tales or contemporary "urban legends." Tales like those of Paul
Bunyan and Pecos Bill or contemporary urban legends like the "vanishing
hitchhiker" rarely concern actual historical individuals and are thus not
analogous to the gospel narratives.
3. The Jewish transmission of sacred
traditions was highly developed and reliable. In an oral culture like that
of first century Palestine the ability to memorize and retain large tracts of
oral tradition was a highly prized and highly developed skill. From the
earliest age children in the home, elementary school, and the synagogue were
taught to memorize faithfully sacred tradition. The disciples would have
exercised similar care with the teachings of Jesus.
4. There were significant restraints on
the embellishment of traditions about Jesus, such as the presence of
eyewitnesses and the apostles’ supervision. Since those who had seen and
heard Jesus continued to live and the tradition about Jesus remained under the
supervision of the apostles, these factors would act as a natural check on
tendencies to elaborate the facts in a direction contrary to that preserved by
those who had known Jesus.
5. The Gospel writers have a proven track
record of historical reliability.
I don’t have enough time to talk about all of
these. So let me say something about the first and the last points.
1. There was insufficient time for
legendary influences to expunge the historical facts. No modern scholar
thinks of the gospels as bald-faced lies, the result of a massive conspiracy.
The only place you find such conspiracy theories of history is in
sensationalist, popular literature or former propaganda from behind the Iron
Curtain. When you read the pages of the New Testament, there’s no doubt that
these people sincerely believed in the truth of what they proclaimed. Rather
ever since the time of D. F. Strauss, sceptical scholars have explained away
the gospels as legends. Like the child’s game of telephone, as the stories
about Jesus were passed on over the decades, they got muddled and exaggerated
and mythologized until the original facts were all but lost. The Jewish peasant
sage was transformed into the divine Son of God.
One of the major problems with the legend
hypothesis, however, which is almost never addressed by sceptical critics, is
that the time between Jesus’s death and the writing of the gospels is just too
short for this to happen. This point has been well-explained by A. N.
Sherwin-White in his book Roman Society and Roman Law in the New Testament.2 Professor Sherwin-White is not a theologian; he
is a professional historian of times prior to and contemporaneous with Jesus.
According to Sherwin-White, the sources for Roman and Greek history are usually
biased and removed one or two generations or even centuries from the events
they record. Yet, he says, historians reconstruct with confidence the course of
Roman and Greek history. For example, the two earliest biographies of Alexander
the Great were written by Arrian and Plutarch more than 400 years after
Alexander’s death, and yet classical historians still consider them to be
trustworthy. The fabulous legends about Alexander the Great did not develop
until during the centuries after these two writers. According to
Sherwin-White, the writings of Herodotus enable us to determine the rate at
which legend accumulates, and the tests show that even two generations is too
short a time span to allow legendary tendencies to wipe out the hard core of
historical facts. When Professor Sherwin-White turns to the gospels, he states
that for the gospels to be legends, the rate of legendary accumulation would
have to be "unbelievable." More generations would be needed.
In fact, adding a time gap of two generations
to Jesus’s death lands you in the second century, just when the apocryphal
gospels begin to appear. These do contain all sorts of fabulous stories about
Jesus, trying to fill in the years between his boyhood and his starting his
ministry, for example. These are the obvious legends sought by the critics, not
the biblical gospels.
This point becomes even more devastating for
skepticism when we recall that the gospels themselves use sources that go back
even closer to the events of Jesus’s life. For example, the story of Jesus’s
suffering and death, commonly called the Passion Story, was probably not
originally written by Mark. Rather Mark used a source for this narrative. Since
Mark is the earliest gospel, his source must be even earlier. In fact, Rudolf
Pesch, a German expert on Mark, says the Passion source must go back to at
least AD 37, just seven years after Jesus’s death.3
Or again, Paul in his letters hands on
information concerning Jesus about his teaching, his Last Supper, his betrayal,
crucifixion, burial, and resurrection appearances. Paul’s letters were written
even before the gospels, and some of his information, for example, what he
passes on in his first letter to the Corinthian church about the resurrection
appearances, has been dated to within five years after Jesus’s death. It just becomes
irresponsible to speak of legends in such cases.5. The Gospel writers have a proven track record of historical reliability. Again I only have time to look at one example: Luke. Luke was the author of a two-part work: the Gospel of Luke and the Acts of the Apostles. These are really one work and are separated in our Bibles only because the church grouped the gospels together in the New Testament. Luke is the gospel writer who writes most self-consciously as an historian. In the preface to this work he writes:
Inasmuch as many have undertaken to compile a narrative of the things which have been accomplished among us, just as they were delivered to us by those who from the beginning were eyewitnesses and ministers of the word, it seemed good to me also, having followed all things closely for some time past, to write an orderly account for you, most excellent Theophilus, that you may know the truth concerning the things of which you have been informed. (Lk. 1.1-4)
This preface is written in classical Greek terminology such as was used by Greek historians; after this Luke switches to a more common Greek. But he has put his reader on alert that he can write, should he wish to, like the learned historian. He speaks of his lengthy investigation of the story he’s about to tell and assures us that it is based on eyewitness information and is accordingly the truth.
Now who was this author we call Luke? He was
clearly not an eyewitness to Jesus’s life. But we discover an important fact
about him from the book of Acts. Beginning in the sixteenth chapter of Acts,
when Paul reaches Troas in modern-day Turkey, the author suddenly starts using
the first-person plural: "we set sail from Troas to Samothrace,"
"we remained in Philippi some days," "as we were going to the
place of prayer," etc. The most obvious explanation is that the
author had joined Paul on his evangelistic tour of the Mediterranean cities. In
chapter 21 he accompanies Paul back to Palestine and finally to Jerusalem. What
this means is that the author of Luke-Acts was in fact in first hand contact
with the eyewitnesses of Jesus’s life and ministry in Jerusalem. Sceptical
critics have done back-flips to try to avoid this conclusion. They say that the
use of the first-person plural in Acts should not be taken literally; it’s just
a literary device which is common in ancient sea voyage stories. Never mind
that many of the passages in Acts are not about Paul’s sea voyage, but take
place on land! The more important point is that this theory, when you check it
out, turns out to be sheer fantasy.4 There just was no literary device of sea
voyages in the first person plural—the whole thing has been shown to be a
scholarly fiction! There is no avoiding the conclusion that Luke-Acts was
written by a traveling companion of Paul who had the opportunity to interview
eyewitnesses to Jesus’s life while in Jerusalem. Who were some of these
eyewitnesses? Perhaps we can get some clue by subtracting from the Gospel of
Luke everything found in the other gospels and seeing what is peculiar to Luke.
What you discover is that many of Luke’s peculiar narratives are connected to
women who followed Jesus: people like Joanna and Susanna, and significantly,
Mary, Jesus’s mother.
Was the author reliable in getting the facts
straight? The book of Acts enables us to answer that question decisively. The
book of Acts overlaps significantly with secular history of the ancient world,
and the historical accuracy of Acts is indisputable. This has recently been
demonstrated anew by Colin Hemer, a classical scholar who turned to New
Testament studies, in his book The Book of Acts in the Setting of
Hellenistic History. 5Hemer goes through the book of Acts with a
fine-toothed comb, pulling out a wealth of historical knowledge, ranging from
what would have been common knowledge down to details which only a local person
would know. Again and again Luke’s accuracy is demonstrated: from the sailings
of the Alexandrian corn fleet to the coastal terrain of the Mediterranean
islands to the peculiar titles of local officials, Luke gets it right.
According to Professor Sherwin-White, "For Acts the confirmation of
historicity is overwhelming. Any attempt to reject its basic historicity even
in matters of detail must now appear absurd."6 The judgement of Sir William Ramsay, the
world-famous archaeologist, still stands: "Luke is a historian of the
first rank . . . . This author should be placed along with the very greatest of
historians."7 Given Luke’s care and demonstrated reliability
as well as his contact with eyewitnesses within the first generation after the
events, this author is trustworthy.On the basis of the five reasons I listed, we are justified in accepting the historical reliability of what the gospels say about Jesus unless they are proven to be wrong. At the very least, we cannot assume they are wrong until proven right. The person who denies the gospels’ reliability must bear the burden of proof.
Specific Aspects of Jesus’s Life
Now by the very nature of the case, it will
be impossible to say a whole lot more beyond this to prove that certain stories
in the gospels are historically true. How could you prove, for example, the story
of Jesus’s visiting Mary and Martha? You just have here a story told by a
reliable author in a position to know and no reason to doubt the historicity of
the story. There’s not much more to say.
Nevertheless, for many of the key events in
the gospels, a great deal more can be said. What I’d like to do now is take a
few of the important aspects of Jesus in the gospels and say a word about their
historical credibility.
1. Jesus’s Radical Self-Concept as the
Divine Son of God. Radical critics deny that the historical Jesus thought
of himself as the divine Son of God. They say that after Jesus’s death, the
early church claimed that he had said these things, even though he hadn’t.
The big problem with this hypothesis is that
it is inexplicable how monotheistic Jews could have attributed divinity to a
man they had known, if he never claimed any such things himself. Monotheism is
the heart of the Jewish religion, and it would have been blasphemous to say
that a human being was God. Yet this is precisely what the earliest Christians
did proclaim and believe about Jesus. Such a claim must have been rooted in
Jesus’s own teaching.And in fact, the majority of scholars do believe that among the historically authentic words of Jesus—these are the words in the gospels which the Jesus Seminar would print in red—among the historically authentic words of Jesus are claims that reveal his divine self-understanding. One could give a whole lecture on this point alone; but let me focus on Jesus’s self-concept of being the unique, divine Son of God.
Jesus’s radical self-understanding is revealed, for example, in his parable of the wicked tenants of the vineyard. Even sceptical scholars admit the authenticity of this parable, since it is also found in the Gospel of Thomas, one of their favorite sources. In this parable, the owner of the vineyard sent servants to the tenants of the vineyard to collect its fruit. The vineyard symbolizes Israel, the owner is God, the tenants are the Jewish religious leaders, and the servants are prophets send by God. The tenants beat and reject the owner’s servants. Finally, the owner says, "I will send my only, beloved son. They will listen to my son." But instead, the tenants kill the son because he is the heir to the vineyard. Now what does this parable tell us about Jesus’s self-understanding? He thought of himself as God’s special son, distinct from all the prophets, God’s final messenger, and even the heir to Israel. This is no mere Jewish peasant!
Jesus’s self-concept as God’s son comes to explicit expression in Matthew 11.27: "All things have been delivered to me by my Father; and no one knows the Son except the Father; and no one knows the Father except the Son and anyone to whom the Son chooses to reveal Him." Again there is good reason to regard this as an authentic saying of the historical Jesus. It is drawn from an old source which was shared by Matthew and Luke, which scholars call the Q document. Moreover, it is unlikely the Church invented this saying because it says that the Son is unknowable—"no one knows the Son except the Father"—, but for the post-Easter church we can know the Son. So this saying is not the product of later Church theology. What does this saying tell us about Jesus’s self-concept? He thought of himself as the exclusive and absolute Son of God and the only revelation of God to mankind! Make no mistake: if Jesus wasn’t who he said he was, he was crazier than David Koresh and Jim Jones put together!
Finally, I want to consider one more saying:
Jesus’s saying on the date of his second coming in Mark 13.32: "But of
that day or that hour no man knows, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son,
but only the Father." This is an authentic saying of the historical Jesus
because the later Church, which regarded Jesus as divine, would never have
invented a saying ascribing limited knowledge or ignorance to Jesus. But here
Jesus says he doesn’t know the time of his return. So what do we learn from
this saying? It not only reveals Jesus’s consciousness of being the one
Son of God, but it presents us with an ascending scale from men to the angels
to the Son to the Father, a scale on which Jesus transcends any human being or
angelic being. This is really incredible stuff! Yet it is what the historical
Jesus believed. And this is only one facet of Jesus’s self-understanding. C. S.
Lewis was right when he said,
A man who was merely a man and said the sort
of things Jesus said would not be a great moral teacher. He would either be a
lunatic—on the level with the man who says he is a poached egg—or else he would
be the Devil of Hell. You must make your choice. Either this man was and is the
Son of God: or else a madman or something worse. You can shut him up for a
fool, you can spit at him and kill him as a demon; or you can fall at his feet
and call him Lord and God. But let us not come with any patronizing nonsense
about his being a great human teacher. He has not left that open to us.82. Jesus’s Miracles.Even the most sceptical critics cannot deny that the historical Jesus carried out a ministry of miracle-working and exorcism. Rudolf Bultmann, one of the most sceptical scholars this century has seen, wrote back in 1926:
Most of the miracle stories contained in the
gospels are legendary or at least are dressed up with legends. But there can be
no doubt that Jesus did such deeds, which were, in his and his contemporaries’
understanding, miracles, that is, deeds that were the result of supernatural,
divine causality. Doubtless he healed the sick and cast out demons.9
Back in Bultmann’s day the miracle stories
were thought to be influenced by stories of mythological heroes and, hence, at
least in part legendary. But today it is recognized that the hypothesis of
mythological influence was historically incorrect. Craig Evans, a well-known
Jesus scholar, says that "the older notion" that the miracle stories
were the product of mythological divine man ideas "has been largely
abandoned."10 He says, "It is no longer seriously
contested" "that miracles played a role in Jesus’s ministry." The
only reason left for denying that Jesus performed literal miracles is the
presupposition of anti-supernaturalism, which is simply unjustified.
3. Jesus’s Trial and Crucifixion.
According to the gospels Jesus was condemned by the Jewish high court on the
charge of blasphemy and then delivered to the Romans for execution for the
treasonous act of setting himself up as King of the Jews. Not only are these
facts confirmed by independent biblical sources like Paul and the Acts of the
Apostles, but they are also confirmed by extra-biblical sources. From Josephus
and Tacitus, we learn that Jesus was crucified by Roman authority under the
sentence of Pontius Pilate. From Josephus and Mara bar Serapion we learn that
the Jewish leaders made a formal accusation against Jesus and participated in
events leading up to his crucifixion. And from the Babylonian Talmud, Sanhedrin
43a, we learn that Jewish involvement in the trial was explained as a proper
undertaking against a heretic. According to Johnson, "The support for the
mode of his death, its agents, and perhaps its coagents, is overwhelming: Jesus
faced a trial before his death, was condemned and executed by
crucifixion."11 The crucifixion of Jesus is recognized even by
the Jesus Seminar as "one indisputable fact." 12
But that raises the very puzzling question:
Why was Jesus crucified? As we have seen, the evidence indicates that his
crucifixion was instigated by his blasphemous claims, which to the Romans would
come across as treasonous. That’s why he was crucified, in the words of the
plaque that was nailed to the cross above his head, as "The King of the
Jews." But if Jesus was just a peasant, cynic philosopher, just a liberal
social gadfly, as the Jesus Seminar claims, then his crucifixion becomes
inexplicable. As Professor Leander Keck of Yale University has said, "The
idea that this Jewish cynic (and his dozen hippies) with his demeanor and
aphorisms was a serious threat to society sounds more like a conceit of
alienated academics than sound historical judgement."13 New Testament scholar John Meier is equally
direct. He says that a bland Jesus who just went about spinning out parables
and telling people to look at the lilies of the field-- "such a
Jesus," he says, "would threaten no one, just as the university
professors who create him threaten no one."14 The Jesus Seminar has created Jesus who is
incompatible with the one indisputable fact of his crucifixion.
4. The resurrection of Jesus. It seems
to me that there are four established facts which constitute inductive evidence
for the resurrection of Jesus:
Fact #1: After his crucifixion, Jesus was
buried by Joseph of Arimathea in the tomb. This fact is highly significant
because it means that the location of Jesus’s tomb was known to Jew and
Christian alike. In that case it becomes inexplicable how belief in his
resurrection could arise and flourish in the face of a tomb containing his
corpse. According to the late John A. T. Robinson of Cambridge University, the
honorable burial of Jesus is one of "the earliest and best-attested facts
about Jesus."15
Fact #2: On the Sunday morning following
the crucifixion, the tomb of Jesus was found empty by a group of his women
followers. According to Jakob Kremer, an Austrian specialist on the
resurrection, "By far most exegetes hold firmly to the reliability of the
biblical statements concerning the empty tomb."16 As D. H. van Daalen points out, "It is
extremely difficult to object to the empty tomb on historical grounds; those
who deny it do so on the basis of theological or philosophical assumptions."17
Fact #3: On multiple occasions and under
various circumstances, different individuals and groups of people experienced
appearances of Jesus alive from the dead. This is a fact that is almost
universally acknowledged among New Testament scholars today. Even Gert
Lüdemann, perhaps the most prominent current critic of the resurrection,
admits, "It may be taken as historically certain that Peter and the disciples
had experiences after Jesus’s death in which Jesus appeared to them as the
risen Christ."18
Finally, fact #4: The original disciples
believed that Jesus was risen from the dead despite their having every reason
not to. Despite having every predisposition to the contrary, it is an
undeniable fact of history that the original disciples believed in, proclaimed,
and were willing to go to their deaths for the fact of Jesus’s resurrection. C.
F. D. Moule of Cambridge University concludes that we have here a belief which
nothing in terms of prior historical influences can account for—apart from the
resurrection itself.19
Any responsible historian, then, who seeks to
give an account of the matter, must deal with these four independently
established facts: the honorable burial of Jesus, the discovery of his empty
tomb, his appearances alive after his death, and the very origin of the
disciples’ belief in his resurrection and, hence, of Christianity itself. I
want to emphasize that these four facts represent, not the conclusions of
conservative scholars, nor have I quoted conservative scholars, but represent rather
the majority view of New Testament scholarship today. The question is: how do
you best explain these facts?
Now this puts the sceptical critic in a
somewhat desperate situation. For example, some time ago I had a debate with a
professor at the University of California, Irvine, on the historicity of the
resurrection of Jesus. He had written his doctoral dissertation on the subject
and was thoroughly familiar with the evidence. He could not deny the facts of
Jesus’s honorable burial, his empty tomb, his post-mortem appearances, and the
origin of the disciples’ belief in his resurrection. Therefore, his only
recourse was to come up with some alternative explanation of these facts. And so
he argued that Jesus had an unknown identical twin brother who was
separated from him at birth, came back to Jerusalem just at the time of the
crucifixion, stole Jesus’s body out of the grave, and presented himself to the
disciples, who mistakenly inferred that Jesus was risen from the dead! Now I
won’t go into how I went about refuting his theory, but I think that this
theory is instructive because it shows to what desperate lengths skepticism
must go in order to deny the historicity of the resurrection of Jesus. In fact,
the evidence is so powerful that one of today’s leading Jewish
theologians Pinchas Lapide has declared himself convinced on the basis of the
evidence that the God of Israel raised Jesus from the dead!20
ConclusionIn summary, the gospels are not only trustworthy documents in general, but as we look at some of the most important aspects of Jesus in the gospels, like his radical personal claims, his miracles, his trial and crucifixion, and his resurrection, their historical veracity shines through. God has acted in history, and we can know it.
1 Luke Timothy Johnson, The Real Jesus
(San Francisco: Harper San Francisco, 1996), p. 123.
2 A. N. Sherwin-White, Roman Society and Roman
Law in the New Testament (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1963), pp. 188-91.
3 Rudolf Pesch, Das Markusevangelium, 2
vols., Herders Theologischer Kommentar zum Neuen Testament 2 (Freiburg: Herder,
1976-77), 2: 519-20.
4 See discussion in Colin J. Hemer, The Book of Acts in the Setting of Hellenistic History, ed. Conrad H. Gempf, Wissenschaftliche Untersuchungen zum Neuen Testament 49 (Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1989), chap. 8.
5 Ibid., chaps. 4-5.
6 Sherwin-White, Roman Society, p. 189.
7 William M. Ramsay, The Bearing of Recent
Discovery on the Trustworthiness of the New Testament (London: Hodder &
Stoughton, 1915), p. 222.
8 C. S. Lewis, Mere Christianity (New
York: Macmillan, 1952), p. 56.
9 Rudolf Bultmann, Jesus (Berlin: Deutsche
Bibliothek, 1926), p. 159.
10 Craig Evans, "Life-of-Jesus Research and
the Eclipse of Mythology," Theological Studies 54 (1993): 18, 34.
11 Johnson, Real Jesus, p. 125.
12 Robert Funk, Jesus Seminar videotape.
13 Leander Keck, "The Second Coming of the
Liberal Jesus?" Christian Century (August, 1994), p. 786.
14 John P. Meier, A Marginal Jew, vol. 1: The
Roots of the Problem and the Person, Anchor Bible Reference Library (New
York: Doubleday, 1991), p. 177.
15 John A. T. Robinson, The Human Face of God
(Philadelphia: Westminster, 1973), p. 131.
16 Jakob Kremer, Die
Osterevangelien--Geschichten um Geschichte (Stuttgart: Katholisches
Bibelwerk, 1977), pp. 49-50.
17 D. H. Van Daalen, The Real Resurrection
(London: Collins, 1972), p. 41.
18 Gerd Lüdemann, What Really Happened to
Jesus?, trans. John Bowden (Louisville, Kent.: Westminster John Knox Press,
1995), p. 80.19 C. F. D. Moule and Don Cupitt, "The Resurrection: a Disagreement," Theology 75 (1972): 507-19.
20 Pinchas Lapide, The Resurrection of Jesus, trans. Wilhelm C. Linss (London: SPCK, 1983).
Read more: http://www.reasonablefaith.org/the-evidence-for-jesus#ixzz1yyOzINbh
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