Response to “Top 10 Myths About Jesus’ Resurrection” (3 of 5)

Let’s continue with part 3 of our critique of Mike Licona’s “Top 10 Myths About Jesus’ Resurrection” (part 1 of the critique here).

(Blue text is the myth, green is Licona’s rejection of the myth, and black is my response to Licona.)

Myth 5: It’s a Matter of Faith.

You can’t prove the resurrection because it’s a matter of faith.

Imagine this conversation between an atheist and a believer.

Atheist: I don’t believe in God but instead think that we’re all here because of blind naturalistic forces.

Christian: Can you prove that? Perhaps there’s no point in even trying because that’s just a statement of faith.

Response: We have scientific evidence!

Christian: And we have historical evidence for the resurrection.

Historians have already evaluated your evidence and rejected it. The resurrection is a religious belief, not a historical one. The historical consensus rejects the supernatural.

And science never proves anything. It’s always provisional. Acceptance of science as a reliable (though imperfect) source of information isn’t a matter of faith. We trust in science because it has earned that trust—contrast that with religion.

Licona: “When you subject that historical evidence to strictly controlled historical methods, the resurrection of Jesus is not only the best explanation, it is by far the best historical explanation for the known historical data.”

Now that’s a faith statement! You’ve already tried and failed to convince historians. You’ve not even convinced Muslims of the resurrection, and they’re fellow believers in the supernatural and Jesus. Why should I accept your version of the crucifixion story over the Muslims’ version?

You’ll likely say that Muslims are biased by their beliefs to not follow the evidence, but first show me that this criticism doesn’t apply to you as well.

Myth 6: Apparent Death Theory.

Jesus really didn’t die; he just seemed to die, and then he revived in the tomb. This is also known as the swoon theory.

The chance of surviving a crucifixion is very small. Even if taken down from the cross alive (Josephus gives examples of this), the trauma would probably be too much to survive.

Uh, okay. For your next trick, I suggest you analyze the likelihood of the Wicked Witch of the East surviving the fall of Dorothy’s house.

Labeling part of the gospel narrative as history and then demanding that the skeptic give a naturalistic explanation for what comes next is a waste of time. The resurrection is an accretion of legend and history and we’re not sure which is which, but the supernatural explanation isn’t necessary. The God hypothesis adds nothing.

“The problem with the apparent death theory is: there’s not a shred of evidence for it.”

And the problem with the claim that George Washington didn’t fly around with a jet pack is that there’s not a shred of evidence for it, either. There are no testimonies from friends who say he didn’t, and there is no comprehensive inventory of his possessions that convinces us that a jet pack couldn’t have been hidden somewhere or given to a friend when he died.

So must we be agnostic on the jet pack question? Of course not. Common sense is a reliable tool, and we can reject the claim. Similarly, the resurrection would be an incredible, unprecedented event, and all evidence is against it.

Licona apparently wants contemporary evidence to overturn a claim from history. I wonder then what he makes of the claim of the “Eight Witnesses,” eight men who publicly stated that in 1829 they saw and handled the golden plates from which Joseph Smith translated the Book of Mormon. Even after some of them fell out with Joseph Smith and were excommunicated, there is little evidence that they retracted their position. This statement is in every copy of the Book of Mormon.

The statement of the Eight Witnesses does nothing to increase my belief in the reliability of Joseph Smith’s story, and I don’t need to see any contemporary evidence to undercut it. Is it any different for Licona? If he sees things the same way, what does that say about his demand for evidence supporting the swoon theory? In fact, only his Christian bias prevents him from seeing pretty much any natural alternative as more plausible than a divine resurrection.

“These reasons and some others are why no widely respected scholar in the world today holds or posits that Jesus survived his crucifixion.”

Every Muslim scholar thinks that he wasn’t crucified at all. This suggests that to Licona, “scholar” just means “Christian scholar.” Muslims and atheists need not apply. His brand of scholarship requires an echo chamber with only supportive voices.

Why bother with the apparent death theory? Licona wants to focus here rather than respond to the best challenges to the resurrection, that it’s a combination of myth and legend. It’s easier to wrestle with a strawman than with a real argument.

To be continued.

Poetry, mythology, and religion represent the world
as man would like to have it,
while science represents the world
as he gradually comes to discover it.
— Joseph Wood Krutch

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(This is an update of a post that originally appeared 3/25/16.)

Image from Wikimedia, public domain

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Response to “Top 10 Myths About Jesus’ Resurrection” (2 of 5)

Let’s continue with our critique of Mike Licona’s “Top 10 Myths About Jesus’ Resurrection” (part 1 here).

Licona’s view is that the gospel story is literally true and Jesus really did die and rise again. The “myths” analyzed in this post series are explanations that Licona rejects. Let’s critique.

(Blue text is the myth, green is Licona’s rejection of the myth, and black is my response to Licona.)

Myth 3: The Fraud Theory

The disciples stole the body and lied about the later appearances of Jesus.

Licona says that no credible scholar holds this view.

I’ll grant that the body-snatchers hypothesis isn’t popular, but that’s only because skeptical scholars find another natural explanation far more likely: that the resurrection developed over time as a legend. Nevertheless, the disciples stealing the body is far more likely than a god creating the universe and everything in it and then 13.7 billion years later going to one galaxy out of billions to find one planet out of billions to visit one tribe for which this whole mess was created.

Christian apologists seem to imagine that they can drop the skeptic into the gospel story at any point and demand a satisfactory alternative ending. Until proven otherwise, none of the gospel is history, and none must be explained by a skeptic. Any part of the gospel story could be legend; in fact, it could all be legend.

For example, we could stay within the story and give “the disciples stole the body” as an alternative to the resurrection. However, with no interest or need to stay within the story, the skeptic can say that the resurrection is likely just a legendary addition.

And let’s pause and consider the credibility of the Christian scholars that Licona relies on. How many hold a job that requires a faith statement? Apologists who point to Christian “scholars” probably don’t give it a second thought, but this is actually fundamental to the credibility of many of these authorities. Licona is himself such an authority. He is an associate professor at Houston Baptist University. As such, he is bound by their faith statement. Licona has already lost jobs when he strayed from the obligation of a faith statement. Since he’s been punished for straying before, why should I believe that he’s following the facts now since this obligation means that he’s prohibited from following the facts objectively? To take just one claim from his faith statement as an example, he is committed to “man was directly created by God.” If he were to declare that humans didn’t evolve from lower animals, that could just be his faith statement talking. How could I believe that was his honest conclusion after following the facts when he knows that he loses his job if he says otherwise?

Licona says, “For the most part, scholars today acknowledge that Jesus’ disciples had experiences that convinced them that Jesus had been raised from the dead and had appeared personally to them.”

Oh? What about Muslim scholars? They have no problem with the supernatural, and they’re happy to accept Jesus as much more than an ordinary man. And yet I’m sure that these scholars universally reject the idea that Jesus resurrected from the dead, regardless of what his disciples might have said or not.

What about historians? There are plenty of stories of supernatural stories from history—Caesar Augustus being divinely conceived or Merlin the magician able to shapeshift—but these are never categorized as history. In other words, these stories exist, but they’re not true.

Licona seems left only with scholars who are Christians. That non-Christian historians disagree makes this a partisan issue, not the consensus view of historians.

Licona: The disciples were willing to die for this, which shows that they didn’t just report it; they believed it. Even if one nut would die for a lie, can you imagine them all doing so?

He undercuts his point by inferring that they all died as martyrs. The idea that all of the Twelve (except Judas and John) died as martyrs comes from Foxe’s Book of Martyrs, first published in 1563. In fact, our best evidence is from Hippolytus of Rome, and he has only seven on his list of disciple martyrs. But even this was written 150 years after the events it claims to document and is therefore next to useless.

The “Who would die for a lie?” argument is popular, mostly because it rhymes, but it crumbles under investigation.

“The disciples were dying for what they knew was true or false. And liars make poor martyrs. So we can know that the disciples actually believed that Jesus had been raised from the dead and had appeared to them.”

“Liars make poor martyrs”? No one (except for apologists like Licona) are saying that anyone deliberately lied. It was a legend. It grew with time by happenstance. There was no individual pulling the levers to control the development of the gospel story. He just assumes the disciples were martyrs even though the evidence for any of them being so is scanty.

The characters in the gospel story are marionettes who do whatever the author makes them do. The burden of proof to show that this is history is on the Christian, and this burden hasn’t been met.

Finally, Licona marvels that Paul converted to Christianity. “Since [Paul] had been persecuting Christians and consenting to their execution, it’s inexplicable why he would convert to Christianity and lie about the appearances.”

What’s surprising about someone switching religions? And if there were a lie in Paul’s story, it could easily be about his being a persecutor. Perhaps even in the first century Christians liked to marvel at how sinful they had been in their pre-Christian lives. Paul would be motivated to show how far he’d come and could conceivably have enhanced the evil back story recorded in Acts 9.

Myth 4: Hallucinations

The disciples were grief stricken, so maybe they saw hallucinations about Jesus. Or maybe they turned to drink or drugs for solace and this distorted their perception.

Licona: While imagining a lost loved one does happen, only seven percent of grieving seniors experience visual hallucinations.

Sure, maybe the hallucination hypothesis is farfetched. But which would be likelier—that hallucinations of a risen teacher morphed over time into the gospel story? Or that some god created the universe and desperately wants a relationship with us but just can’t find the time to connect with us personally? Now, that would be hard to believe.

But it turns out that hallucinations are quite common. Scientific American reported on a study that found that eighty percent of elderly people experienced hallucinations of a dead partner. Bart Ehrman noted that another common hallucination is that of a revered religious figure. Did dead Jesus “appear” to several grieving disciples, and then this story evolved into Jesus physically appearing to many more? Paul admits that his own experience was just of a vision of Jesus, not a bodily appearance. The hallucination hypothesis isn’t so crazy, and it’s far more likely than the supernatural alternative.

Licona doesn’t even acknowledge the problem of fallible memories, which he imagines conveying the story accurately through the forty-plus years of oral history. There’s an enormous difference between a vivid memory and an accurate one. (I explore fallible memory here and here.)

Continue with part 3.

What’s the difference between a religion and a myth?
A myth is a religion that no one believes in anymore.
— James Kern Feibleman, paraphrased

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(This is an update of a post that originally appeared 3/23/16.)

Image from Steve Maw, CC license

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BSR 17: There Are No Objective Moral Truths

Summary of reply: Rejecting a claim on a flimsy technicality is cowardly, claims of objective morality fail, and adding “for fun” doesn’t help.

(These Bite-Size Replies are responses to “Quick Shots,” brief Christian responses to atheist challenges. The introduction to this series is here.)

Challenge to the Christian: There are no objective moral truths.

Christian response #1: “This kind of claim is clearly self-refuting. The challenge isn’t whether objective, moral truths exist, the challenge is simply identifying them and explaining where they come from.”

BSR: They’re trying to get a lot of mileage out of this tired and (in my opinion) cowardly charge that arguments are self-defeating. Specifically, the attack here is that “There are no objective moral truths” is itself an objective truth claim, which means that the statement defeats itself. But this charge fails.

What would work is dropping the “moral” part. Now, “There are no objective truths” is an objective truth claim and technically defeats itself. But let’s go back to the original challenge. “There are no objective moral truths” does not claim to be an objective moral truth, so the self-defeating charge fails.

My own position would be something like “I see no evidence for objective moral truths; if you have some, provide it.” Phrase it this way and, yet again, the self-defeating claim dissolves away.

And let’s highlight the second sentence in the response. It basically says, let’s not worry about whether objective moral truths exist; let’s assume they do and find out where they come from.

Uh, no, let’s not assume that. That objective moral truths exist is a bold claim that must be defended.

“That argument is invalid on a technicality, and I won’t respond” is a popular but cowardly retreat by which Christian apologists try to avoid difficult arguments. [Click to tweet]

Christian response #2: Here’s an objective moral truth: “It’s always wrong to torture babies for fun.” You would fight anyone who didn’t see this truth limiting their behavior.

BSR: Yes, I would reject the claim that it’s okay to hurt someone for no good reason, but who says that’s objective morality? That moral claim about torture is both strongly felt and universally agreed to, but that doesn’t make it objectively true (that is, grounded outside humanity and true whether there are humans to appreciate its truth or not).

Notice the appeal to emotion. Here’s something that we all feel strongly about, and the argument wants to cheat by avoiding the difficult intellectual argument and claim success based on emotion. But it doesn’t work that way. Look up “morality” in the dictionary, and you’ll find no mention of objectivity.

Objective morality is unchanging morality. If slavery and genocide are wrong today, they should have always been wrong, but the Bible shows God supporting slavery and demanding genocide. If “slavery is morally wrong” is objectively true, then God was objectively wrong.

Or consider moral dilemmas today that divide society like same-sex marriage, abortion, euthanasia, contraception, sex education, or capital punishment. Are there objectively correct moral stands for each of them? And are these objective moral truths reliably accessible by ordinary humans? If so, then why don’t we agree?

Consider society’s current moral dilemmas: SSM, abortion, capital punishment. Are there objectively correct moral stands on each? Are these objective moral truths reliably accessible by ordinary humans? If so, why isn’t it obvious? [Click to tweet]

Christian response #3: How do you find objective moral truths? Lying is bad, for example, but what if you’re protecting someone’s feelings? Solution: add “for fun” to the end of the moral statement.

BSR: Here’s the idea: take a moral statement like “Don’t steal” for which there seem to be exceptions. For example, what if you’re stealing because your family is starving? What if you’re stealing from a thief? The solution is to add “for fun” on the end. Now we have “Don’t steal for fun,” which shrinks the scope of the rule so that it is universally true.

But how does this help? Okay, I shouldn’t steal for fun. That seems to admit no exceptions, but I already knew that. And the moral questions remain: what if my family is hungry—is stealing okay then? Or take a persistent moral issue within society like abortion. I’ll agree with “Don’t have an abortion for fun,” but again, where is the new insight?

Sure, we can add “for fun” to any moral statement (“Don’t steal FOR FUN”), but how does this help? This teaches us nothing new, and it does nothing to resolve moral issues like abortion or same-sex marriage. [Click to tweet]

(The Quick Shot I’m replying to is here.)

Continue with BSR 18: Being a Good Person Is All that Really Matters

For further reading:

How can [God] be a source for any sort of morality
if [he’s] not held morally responsible?
— commenter Susan

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Image from Alice Alinari, CC license
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Response to “Top 10 Myths About Jesus’ Resurrection”

Easter has recently come and gone, so it’s opportune to critique “Top 10 Myths About Jesus’ Resurrection,” ten brief videos by Dr. Mike Licona covering what he claims are false beliefs about the Resurrection. Let’s take a look and see where the facts point us. (I’ve written about Licona before, and I analyze where he got on the wrong side of fundamentalist scholars here.)

Myth 1: Contradictions in the Gospels

“The gospels contradict themselves and so therefore we can’t believe them on the Resurrection of Jesus.”

Licona rejects this: “No credible historian believes that contradictions within an account discredit the account itself.” (I’ll use blue for the myth, green for Licona’s rejection of the myth, and black for my response to Licona.)

Contradictions don’t discredit a historical account? Surely you admit that contradictions within a source must discredit it somewhat and that a contradiction-free account is more credible than the equivalent story full of contradictions. (I have a long list of Bible contradictions beginning here.)

Licona gives the sinking of the Titanic as an example. Some witnesses say that the ship broke in two before sinking (which is correct) while others say that it sank intact, but historians didn’t conclude from this contradiction that the Titanic didn’t sink.

Since the witnesses were unanimous that it did sink, that a sinking ship is a well-understood event, and that the event is well documented, “the Titanic sank” sounds like a reasonable conclusion for historians. Disagreements over details didn’t change the fact that the genre of the Titanic account is history, but disagreements between the gospels make one wonder if historical or journalistic accuracy was even the goal.

While a ship sinking isn’t especially incredible, the story of a man rising from the dead must default to the “mythology” or “legend” categories. We’ll move it to the history category only after being convinced by very good evidence. The 100% natural Titanic story is a poor analogy to a supernatural tale.

Licona says that he won’t admit to any contradictions in the Bible and that any there could be explained away.

Harmonizing the facts to support something you know for certain happened is fine, but first you must show that it happened. Licona has it backwards—he wants to assume the accuracy of the Bible first and then select the facts of the world to support that presumption.

And, of course, if there are contradictions in an account, you must first ask yourself if that account is so unreliable that it should be discarded. Richard Carrier addresses this with his summary of Stephen Law’s Argument from Contamination:

Law’s argument is that in documents with a disturbingly high quantity of unbelievable claims, we have no reason to trust the mundane claims in those documents either, without some reliable external corroboration (the bogus material thus “contaminates” the rest with heightened suspicion). . . .

Law is not saying any history or biography that blends legendary with mundane claims warrants skepticism. He is saying any history or biography that is loaded with legendary claims, as in has an unusual amount of them central to the story, warrants sweeping skepticism. . . .

Law’s actual principle is obviously correct and obviously one real historians routinely employ.

I can accept that a single contradiction can’t justify the dismissal of a source, but contradictions must affect the reliably to some extent. Stephen Law’s Argument from Contamination is a nice encapsulation of how unbelievable claims, like the supernatural, must color our view of the remainder.

Licona argues that any contradictions are in peripheral details. The gospels agree on the important claims: that Jesus died, was buried by Joseph of Arimathea, was raised on the third day, and appeared to others.

We have several copies of the Gilgamesh epic, which must also disagree on some details. Are we entitled to consider as history the supernatural claims agreed to in all copies as Licona does for the claims common among the gospels?

Or suppose that a future historian is trying to make sense of our contradictory stories about Superman from radio shows, TV, movies, and other media. Suppose he selects just the common features—Superman came as a baby in a rocket from Krypton, he grew up in Smallville, he could lift cars, he disguised himself as Clark Kent, and so on. Must that amalgam be historical?

Licona gives no rule that allows him to capture Christianity but reject Gilgamesh, Superman, and other fanciful tales.

Myth 2: Pagan Parallels in Mystery Religions

“How can it be that you have so many accounts of dying and rising gods and heroes within pagan accounts—isn’t Christianity just another example of this?”

Licona says that there is almost unanimous consensus by scholars that virtually all of these accounts postdate the gospels. That means that it’s the pagans who are copying the Christians!

This is a red herring. If there are accounts that postdate the gospels, we should obviously discard them. But that leaves us with plenty of precedents for the Jesus resurrection: Tammuz, Osiris, Adonis, Attis, and Baal. My favorite is Dionysus, the love child of one of Zeus’s many affairs. His jealous wife Hera had the infant Dionysus eaten by Titans, but Zeus brought him back to life through the mortal woman Semele.

Dead, and then born by a mortal. Brought back to life by the ruler of the gods. Sounds like there’s overlap with the gospel story.

Unlike Licona, second-century Christian Justin Martyr was happy to acknowledge commonalities between Jesus and Greek gods such as a virgin birth and resurrecting from the dead. He simply says that Satan placed the precedent back in time to trick us.

The Jesus story arose in a culture suffused with the idea of dying and rising gods, and Resurrection envy nicely explains the Resurrection.

Licona warns us that many popular internet examples are nonsense, such as the claim that Krishna was crucified and rose from the dead. “There are no accounts period of Krishna being crucified or rising from the dead three days later.”

I suppose he’s thinking of sources like The World’s Sixteen Crucified Saviors by Kersey Graves (1875) or Zeitgeist: the Movie (2007), which have been attacked for poor scholarship. But, like his complaints about the existence of dying-and-rising gods that postdated the gospels, historical examples that don’t fit can simply be ignored. His warning us away from examples that aren’t relevant doesn’t dismiss the ones that are.

As for Krishna, it’s true that there is no crucifixion or three-day delay, but those are insignificant details. What’s common is the important thing: that, like Jesus, Krishna arose from the dead and returned to his place in heaven!

Continue with part 2.

Forget Jesus—stars died so you could be here today.
Lawrence Krauss

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(This is an update of a post that originally appeared 3/21/16.)

Image from Camilo Rueda López, CC license
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What Would it Look Like If Faith Healers Really Healed?

Isn’t it weird that faith healers aren’t curing COVID-19? Isn’t it weirder that their flock isn’t calling them on it?

From Oral Roberts’ sweaty tent revivals in the 1950s to Benny Hinn’s slick five-hour productions today, faith healers have been busy. Kenneth Copeland, Pat Robertson, Peter Popoff, and other big names are faith healers or started that way. A healing revival has lots of practiced emotional manipulation, but there is clear biblical support for healings of this sort. Jesus did public healings, and we see a first-century promise to the sick in James 5:14–16:

Is anyone among you sick? Let them call the elders of the church to pray over them and anoint them with oil in the name of the Lord. And the prayer offered in faith will make the sick person well; the Lord will raise them up. If they have sinned, they will be forgiven. Therefore confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The prayer of a righteous person is powerful and effective.

If faith healing worked, and healing revivals were the place to see them, what would that look like? How could we tell that it was for real? Here’s a list of some of the things we should expect to see (contrasted with what we actually see).

Use of money

Donations given by sick people to the ministry that provided real faith healing would either be refused or used for conventional good works (food, clothes, and housing for the needy, for example). Instead, God would provide money, equipment, or whatever was necessary to run the ministry. After all, God “will repay each person according to what they have done” (Romans 2:6), and Jesus said, “Give, and it will be given to you” (Luke 6:38).

What we see instead: the big faith-healing ministries take in roughly $100 million per year, and sick people in the audience, who probably have better things like medical expenses to spend their money on, are encouraged to give money repeatedly. Desperate people giving money they shouldn’t part with to rich people who make big claims with paltry evidence? Though it may be done for the best of reasons, that certainly looks from the outside like a scam, a modern-day version of the patent medicine salesman.

Relationship to evidence

If faith healing worked, the focus would be on evidence and science. Scientists and doctors would be given easy access to evidence supporting claims of miraculous healings and would be encouraged to evaluate the claims and publish the results. They’d be encouraged to examine people before and after healings by prayer.

You would see statistics showing the efficacy of faith healing, just like with a conventional medical treatment. The ministry would show that it could reliably access the supernatural by winning a public, transparent test like the James Randi Education Foundation’s Million Dollar Paranormal Challenge. (The JREF Challenge retired in 2015 after fifty years with no winners.) If faith healing worked, you’d see people going there first instead of conventional medicine.

What we see instead: instead of evidence and science, we see anecdotes, emotion, and faith. The focus is on quantity rather than quality, and if you debunk the claims of one anecdote, they point you to others. No one won the JREF million-dollar prize, and no big-name psychic or faith healer ever tried. The 2006 STEP experiment, often known as the Templeton Study because of the foundation that funded it, showed no value in third-party healing prayer.

Relationship to faith

It may be faith healing, but it’s claimed to actually work. Faith may be the key to unlock the miracle, but the results should be testable. It should work as reliably as a car or light switch works—otherwise, “faith healing works” is a meaningless claim. If a sick person stays sick despite treatment, the medicine (the faith healing procedure) would be faulty.

What we see instead: We see sick people who don’t recover blamed for their lack of faith, adding guilt to their burden and making faith healing unfalsifiable. We see sick people told that using conventional medicine admits a lack of faith. We see people pushed because of the limitations of conventional medicine to a desperate, “Well, I can’t take it with me” attitude toward their life savings, preyed upon by faith healers eager to provide snake oil in return for all they can take.

I remember one televangelist who used the line, “The bigger the need, the bigger the seed”—that is, the bigger your problem (and a life-threatening disease is a pretty big problem), the more money you must send to God to the televangelist. It’s hard to imagine more reprehensible advice to give to a vulnerable person.

Lourdes, France became a destination for the sick shortly after a claimed visitation by Mary in 1858. Today it receives six million visitors per year, though the Catholic Church recognizes a total of just 67 miraculous cures. How many more people are killed or injured just traveling to Lourdes than are imagined to be healed?

Kinds of cures

A real faith healer would be able to cure anything, including healings that anyone could see, such as limbs restored, burns healed, and chromosomal diseases like Huntington’s or Down syndrome cured.

What we see instead: we see only claims for invisible “cures” like cancer or some other internal illness that we can’t check on the spot. We must take the results on faith.

Military uses

The battlefield would be the perfect place for faith healing. Imagine a wizard who could conjure injured soldiers back to health or even raise them from the dead. Such a military would be invincible.

What we see instead: chaplains in the military can be helpful with matters of conscience (“Is it wrong to kill people?”) or as a therapist in an extremely stressful environment. But they have no medical mojo to offer medics and doctors.

Public healings

Real faith healings wouldn’t need to be elaborate public events. Real faith healers would take their show on the road. They wouldn’t be in churches but rather in hospitals or on street corners. The goal wouldn’t be showmanship but simply healing people. There would be no interest in a big audience, and a private hospital room would be as good a venue as a stadium.

What we see instead: we see a performance. We see emotional manipulation. We see tricks like those performed by a stage magician—think of Peter Popoff’s use of wireless messages to magically “know” someone’s name or ailment. We see frauds like putting someone who normally needs only a cane into a wheelchair. The patient is then wheeled onstage so the faith healer can do his thing and then marvel when the patient gets up and walks.

With the public spectacle, we have the solitary person put on the spot and all the emotional issues that brings: the placebo effect that can simulate a cure, adrenaline that masks pain, peer pressure to encourage you to play the role you’re expected to play, and so on.

Negative results? Just blame them on demons.

Intermediaries

Faith healing wouldn’t need a special personality or great training. There would be no need for intermediaries like Benny Hinn. Jesus himself makes clear that it’s as simple as, “Ask and you will receive” (John 16:24).

What we see instead: faith healers are apparently anointed by God. They may or may not have great learning, but they have the gift. Communicating with God is so tenuous that only a very few can do it. Nevertheless, even their performance isn’t very reliable, so don’t expect a guarantee.

Here again, the presence of an intermediary with his hand out makes faith healing look like just another scam.

Conclusion

Televangelists always conclude their infomercials with two requests: to pray for them and to send lots of money. But why ask for money? If prayer works and God responds to it, then the prayer is far more potent than my twenty dollars. Televangelists asking for money means that they know what I know: that money has value but prayer is just a placebo. Prayer does nothing whether I’m at home praying for their ministry or they’re on television praying for my health.

Am I too hard on faith healing? Televangelists handwave about the comfort provided by a god that’s not there or a heaven that doesn’t exist, but this may provide hope for the hopeless.

I’m in no position to criticize what someone in a tough position must do to get through life, but we’re not talking about a sugar pill. We’re talking about taking poor people’s money in return for witchcraft or encouraging them to shun conventional medicine. In the West in the twenty-first century, when we know something about disease, neither is acceptable.

The miraculous healings recorded
[at both pagan and Christian shrines]
were remarkably the same.
There are, for example, many crutches hanging
in the grotto of Lourdes,

mute witness to those who arrived lame and left whole.
There are, however, no prosthetic limbs among them,
no witnesses to paraplegics whose lost limbs were restored.
— John Dominic Crossan

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(This is an update of a post that originally appeared 2/22/16.)

Image credit: Jay Trinidad

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Christians Reveal! How to Defeat Christianity (2 of 2)

This is the conclusion of a response to the intriguingly titled article from Christian apologist Greg Koukl, “This One Thing Could Destroy Christianity Completely….” Part 1 of my critique is here.

The argument comes from a verse in 1 Corinthians, which bases the entirety of the Christian message on the historical truth of the Resurrection. No Resurrection means no saving message of Jesus.

Koukl helpfully lays out Christianity’s vulnerability with three facts. He says that they’re strong enough to support the hard-to-believe claim of Resurrection. I say that each one is unreliable and so are not actually facts. In addition, no set of natural claims can support a supernatural conclusion.

“Fact” 1 was that Jesus was dead and buried. (Yes, he was, but only in the story.) Let’s wrap up with the remaining two.

2. The tomb was empty on Sunday morning

Here’s Koukl’s summary.

Nearly three-quarters of all scholars agree here, since the empty tomb was never disputed by anyone at the time, even the Jews and Romans. Why was Jesus’ body never produced to quell the rumor of resurrection? Present the corpse, end the controversy. Pretty simple.

Wow—so few words with so much wrong.

The “three-quarters of all scholars” (I think he meant New Testament scholars) comes from Gary Habermas. It’s a statistic from his personal database of articles, which he hasn’t made it public, so we’re stuck taking his word for it. And who’s in the database—historians? Christian professors? Pastors and street preachers? I’d find historians whose expertise was in non-religious areas of history to be far less biased than New Testament scholars, for example.

My guess is that those motivated to write articles about the empty tomb are Christians, and almost all historians of pre-Columbian America, medieval France, or any other non-New Testament area couldn’t be bothered. (More on this statistic here and here.)

How do we know whether the empty tomb was disputed by anyone at the time? We have poor records of anything from 2000 years ago. Who would’ve gone to the expense of denying an odd claim in writing if it didn’t affect them or challenge anything dear to them? Even more so, who would bother copying that rebuttal through the generations to preserve it for us to read today?

More important, there was no “anyone at the time” to dispute the story! When Jesus was supposed to have died, the empty tomb was in a book that wouldn’t be written for decades. Seeing it from the other end of the timeline, in the 70s or 80s when the gospels were written, those authors weren’t constrained by history. They could write whatever they wanted to.

Said another way, the empty tomb didn’t exist until the author of Mark wrote “He is not here; see the place where they laid him” roughly forty years after Jesus supposedly died. Was Mark documenting history? That must be demonstrated. Until then, it’s just a story.

Koukl’s “Present the corpse, end the controversy” isn’t realistic. Who’d be motivated to head off any rumor that Jesus was risen? Even if Christians caused trouble in later decades or centuries, in the two or three days after the crucifixion, any Jewish or Roman authority would assume that this fringe Jewish sect was finished. Its troublesome leader was now dead; problem solved. As for the worry about the rumor of resurrection, that, too, was in a gospel that wouldn’t exist for decades.

Skeptics give a dozen reasons why Christianity’s claims are nonsense, and that doesn’t destroy Christianity today. Why imagine it any different 2000 years ago? Even if you imagine naysayers poised to contradict the gospels (and why would you?), contrary facts have little impact on a religion.

3. The disciples were transformed

Koukl now argues that the disciples took the difficult route, proving the depth of their motivation.

Even the most critical scholars acknowledge that the disciples proclaimed the resurrection at their peril because they thought they’d encountered the risen Christ. Many paid the ultimate price—including the skeptic James and the former executioner of Christians, Paul—choosing death rather than retraction.

Let me make a quick aside about Christian scholarship. Many Christian professors must sign a doctrinal statement (statement of faith) before they can work at a Christian college. Their job then depends on their abiding by each point in the doctrinal statement. If the statement says that Jesus’s disciples chose death over denying the divinity of Jesus (say), what does it mean when they write a paper or give a lecture with that conclusion? They were obliged to reach that conclusion, so their objectivity is suspect.

A doctrinal statement is a commitment to a conclusion before any research is done, and researchers can’t honestly follow the facts when some conclusions are off limits. In other fields, practitioners recuse themselves when they can’t be objective, and Christian scholars should do the same. I talk about the problem in depth here and here.

Let’s move on to “paying the ultimate price” as a martyr. This is the “Who would die for a lie?” argument, which asks why a disciple would go to his death knowing that Jesus didn’t resurrect as the story says.

Our first question: why do we think any disciples died as martyrs? Only the martyrdom of James the son of Zebedee is given in the Bible. The oldest source with claims about all twelve disciples, “On the Twelve Apostles,” was written roughly 150 years after the last supposed martyrdom. This is too old to be reliable, but the story gets muddier still when you toss in contradicting accounts written even later. These give us tradition, not history.

Second, on what charges were these disciples convicted? To support the argument, the crime must merit a death penalty (something like treason or sedition) and be such that denying Jesus’s resurrection would get you released. “On the Twelve Apostles” doesn’t tell us what any disciple was charged with, if anything. It only claims to document how they died. That means we have no evidence, not even poor evidence, that they would’ve been released by saying the magic words, “Okay, I’ll admit it—Jesus didn’t rise from the dead!”

And with that, the “Who would die for a lie?” argument fails. (More here.)

Punch line

Every fact is false and even the grounds for his argument are gone, but Koukl still springs his nonexistent trap.

Which brings us to our final, most important question: What single explanation makes sense of all of the historical details that virtually every academic in the field agrees on—the death of Jesus, the empty tomb, and the transformation of the disciples and the skeptics? What single interpretation accounts for all the facts?

That it’s a story.

Jesus was buried in the story. The tomb was empty in the story. The disciples became bold proclaimers of the divinity of Jesus in the story. Don’t take us to a certain point in the story and then demand to know, given the constraints of the story to that point, what alternative we could have to a supernatural explanation.

This is Robert M. Price’s yellow brick road problem: “Of course there’s an Emerald City. Where else would the yellow brick road go to?” Or, in this case, “Of course Jesus rose from the dead. What else explains the empty tomb?” Step outside of it and see the story, and you’ll discover that nothing about it constrains you to accept a supernatural conclusion.

In the beginning of part 1, I pointed to C.S. Lewis’s “Liar, Lunatic, or Lord” argument and noted that a fourth possibility, Legend, was the obvious explanation. How could Lewis or any apologist today make the argument without that omission being apparent? And with Koukl’s “The one thing that could destroy Christianity” argument, we have a similar mystery. How can anyone make this argument without “It’s just a story!” springing to mind?

Koukl wraps up:

Here it is, the answer Peter gives—the only answer that fits all the evidence: “This Jesus God raised up again, to which we are all witnesses” (Acts 2:32). Those who disagree must solve this problem: “What is a better explanation of the facts?”

 That it’s a story.

[Want to share the summary below? Click to tweet.]

Show the Resurrection false to defeat Christianity 1. Natural claims won’t support a supernatural conclusion. 2. The gospels say Jesus resurrected (but then “Goldilocks” says she ran from 3 bears). 3. Regular historians expunge the supernatural. 4. When Jesus died, “the empty tomb” was in a book that wouldn’t be written for decades. 5. Mandatory faith statements shackle Christians’ scholarship. 6. We don’t know that the disciples died as martyrs. 7. The best explanation of the gospels’ resurrection story: it’s a story!

For further reading: 8 Lessons Learned from the Minimal Facts Argument

They say [swearing’s] not necessary,
as if that should stop one from doing it.
It’s not necessary to have colored socks! . . .
Things not being necessary are what makes life interesting.
— Stephen Fry (Joys of Swearing video @1:50)

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Image from Tom Edgington, CC license
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