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Originally Posted by Fishteacher73
Quite simply it seems that it was not much more than a parlor trick. It seems more plausable that one of his followers removed his body to propogate his mythology.
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Thanks for offering this. It is a good place to start building the argument for the empty tomb.
There are three commonly offered justifications for the finding that Jesus' tomb was empty:
A) Someone stole the body (either Jesus' followers or the authorities)
B) Jesus "swooned" and regained consciousness (the "swoon" theory)
C) The followers went to the wrong tomb
There are several arguments that are interrelated for the defense of the notion that the real tomb was empty, and that there was something
very special about the curcumstances. It is true that the majority of these arguments rely on Biblical texts and closely related documents. Some (notably Freethinker and lindagarette, I believe, on this site) contend that all of these text are frauds. That is not a commonly held view
I have included a couple of trailing links (that are egregiously detailed) both in support and in refutation of the notion that the tomb was empty. You will note that even the detractors of the empty tomb position do not assume that all documents are fraudulent, but they will question specific passages for validity. The trailing links do not summarize the core arguments, so I did this briefly here:
1) The Jews understood something of what Jesus meant when he predicted his own resurrection, and hence requested that Pilate post a Roman guard.
The Jewish leadership (e.g., the Pharisees and some others) apparently had a little better understanding of Jesus' intent than the disciples did. This is not surprising, since they were far more educated in Jewish history and tradition than the disciples. They went to Pilate and asked him to post a guard at the tomb, explicitly because they assumed His followers would try to retrieve the body to claim He was resurrected.
2) The Roman guard contingent (Centurions) was assigned to guard the tomb
The quantity of guards assigned is unknown, but the number was plural. Centurions, by tradition were quite disciplined. They were under threat of death for a number of discipline violations, reportedly including drinking on duty, falling asleep on duty or losing a prisoner.
3) The tomb had a Roman seal on it.
The tomb was sealed by the Romans. Breaking the Roman seal was probably punishable by death if the perpetrator was a local peasant. If it were a Roman citizen, it probably would have precipitated a trial.
4) The stone at the opening of the tomb was probably over one half ton
By tradition, the stones used to seal a tomb were large (1000-2000 pounds) to avoid incursions by predator animals. They were usually rolled in place with levers, and required more than a single man to move.
5) The guards were surprised when they found the tomb open and empty.
Given that they were under threat of death, it is not surprising that the Biblical record states there was "no small disturbance" among the Centurions when they found Jesus missing. It is not clear if any of these Centurions were actually executed. The Biblical record states that the guards were bribed to say that Jesus' followers stole the body. Since admission of that fact would have resulted in the Centurion's premature demise, one might assume that their military careers were somewhat shortened, but I know of no confirmation of the execution of the actual guards.
6) The disciples were apparently quite fearful, and hiding out from the authorities.
The notion that the disciples were engineering a body theft appears implausible. They were hiding out in an "upper room" when Jesus found them. Further, Peter had famously denied any knowedge of Jesus during the mob events around His crucifixion to avoid injury at the hands of the mob. The disciples were not yeat acting like confrontational defenders of truth. Something happened to make them act that way.
7) The discovery of the empty tomb by women is at odds with what one might expect for a story written by first century Jewish males.
It is unlikey that a first century Jewish male would assign discovery of the empty tomb to a woman, much less Mary Magdalene. She was a woman of ill repute, and would not be the ideal standard bearer for the message.
8) Those who saw Jesus had a really difficult time believing it was Him, and some mistook Him for someone else.
Mary Magdalene saw Jesus and thought he was the gardener. She asked Him were He had taken the body. The exchange is bizarre enough that it is hard to imagine a reason for someone to make it up.
9) The ensuing Jewish polemic against Christians assumed the tomb was empty and the body was missing.
All subsequent text references presume that the tomb was empty. It was commonly asserted that the body was stolen. If the tomb was not empty, the authorities could have produced the body to refute the claims of the resurrection. They didn't.
Hence the problems with the three theories above:
A) Someone stole the body (either Jesus' followers or the authorities)- We would need to explain who had the nerve to try it, and how they got the body past the Centurions.
B) Jesus "swooned" and regained consciousness (the "swoon" thwory)-We would need to explain how He moved the stone at the cave entrance in His debilitated condition and then made the multi-mile walk to town
C) The followers went to the wrong tomb- This would also mean that the Centurians were at the wrong tomb, guarding an empty one, or the authorities would have produced the body to refute the resurrection.
References:
This is a long treatise covering many of the textual supports for the empty tomb:
Dr William Lane Craig, a Th.D. at Talbot
http://www.leaderu.com/offices/billc...mb2.html#text2
This is a detailed critique of the argument above by Peter Kirby. You might note at the end that he contends the are "grounds for debate" on the issues.
http://www.infidels.org/library/mode...rebuttal2.html
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