|
Why I Don't Buy the
Resurrection Story
Richard Carrier
What follows is a half-hour lecture I gave at Yale on 26 October
2000 at the request of the Yale College Humanists and
Secularists. It was followed by a Q & A session that actually
lasted nearly two hours. I have subsequently been asked to give
this lecture elsewhere on other occasions, so I am reproducing
it here, with footnotes in brackets giving more detail than I am
able to give in the lecture itself. Though it shares the same
title as the much-longer essay here, it is not the same paper,
but actually a synthesis of several papers I have published
here, and including entirely new arguments and information. It
is worth reading on its own, in addition to or even in lieu of
the much lengthier essay also called
Why I Don't Buy the
Resurrection Story.
Today I am going to tell you why
I don't buy the resurrection story. By that I mean the tales in
the Gospels, of Jesus physically rising again from the grave. As
a professional historian, I do not believe we have anywhere near
sufficient evidence or reason to believe this, and I've been
asked by the Yale College Humanists and Secularists to explain
why. If any of you want to know more about this than what few
points I can cover in thirty minutes, I have several writings on
this and other subjects. But here I will cover the most
important reasons why I don't buy the resurrection story.
It actually begins with a
different tale. In 520 CE an anonymous monk recorded the life of
Saint Genevieve, who had died only ten years before that. In his
account of her life, he describes how, when she ordered a cursed
tree cut down, monsters sprang from it and breathed a fatal
stench on many men for two hours; while she was sailing, eleven
ships capsized, but at her prayers they were righted again
spontaneously; she cast out demons, calmed storms, miraculously
created water and oil from nothing before astonished crowds,
healed the blind and lame, and several people who stole things
from her actually went blind instead. No one wrote anything to
contradict or challenge these claims, and they were written very
near the time the events supposedly happened -- by a religious man
whom we suppose regarded lying to be a sin. Yet do we believe
any of it? Not really. And we shouldn't.[1]
As David Hume once said, why do
such things not happen now?[2] Is it a coincidence that the very
time when these things no longer happen is the same time that we
have the means and methods to check them in the light of science
and careful investigation? I've never seen monsters spring from
a tree, and I don't know anyone who has, and there are no women
touring the country transmuting matter or levitating ships.
These events look like tall tales, sound like tall tales, and
smell like tall tales. Odds are, they're tall tales.
But we should try to be more
specific in our reasons, and not rely solely on common sense
impressions. And there are specific reasons to disbelieve the
story of Genevieve, and they are the same reasons we have to
doubt the Gospel accounts of the Resurrection of Jesus. For the
parallel is clear: the Gospels were written no sooner to the
death of their main character -- and more likely many decades
later -- than was the case for the account of Genevieve; and like
that account, the Gospels were also originally anonymous -- the
names now attached to them were added by speculation and oral
tradition half a century after they were actually written. Both
contain fabulous miracles supposedly witnessed by numerous
people. Both belong to the same genre of literature: what we
call a "hagiography," a sacred account of a holy person regarded
as representing a moral and divine ideal. Such a genre had as
its principal aim the glorification of the religion itself and
of the example set by the perfect holy person represented as its
central focus. Such literature was also a tool of propaganda,
used to promote certain moral or religious views, and to oppose
different points of view. The life of Genevieve, for example,
was written to combat Arianism. The canonical Gospels, on the
other hand, appear to combat various forms of Gnosticism. So
being skeptical of what they say is sensible from the start.[3]
It is certainly reasonable to
doubt the resurrection of Jesus in the flesh, an event placed
some time between 26 and 36 CE. For this we have only a few
written sources near the event, all of it sacred writing, and
entirely pro-Christian. Pliny the Younger was the first
non-Christian to even mention the religion, in 110 CE, but he
doesn't mention the resurrection. No non-Christian mentions the
resurrection until many decades later -- Lucian, a critic of
superstition, was the first, writing in the mid-2nd century, and
likely getting his information from Christian sources. So the
evidence is not what any historian would consider good.[4]
Nevertheless, Christian apologist
Douglas Geivett has declared that the evidence for the physical
resurrection of Jesus meets, and I quote, "the highest standards
of historical inquiry" and "if one takes the historian's own
criteria for assessing the historicity of ancient events, the
resurrection passes muster as a historically well-attested event
of the ancient world," as well-attested, he says, as Julius
Caesar's crossing of the Rubicon in 49 B.C.[5] Well, it is
common in Christian apologetics, throughout history, to make
absurdly exaggerated claims, and this is no exception. Let's
look at Caesar's crossing of the Rubicon for a minute:
First of all, we have Caesar's
own word on the subject. Indeed, The Civil War has been a Latin
classic for two thousand years, written by Caesar himself and by
one of his generals who was definitely an eye-witness and who
knew the man personally. In contrast, we do not have anything
written by Jesus, and we do not know for certain the name of any
author of any of the accounts of his physical resurrection.
Second, we have many of Caesar's
enemies, including Cicero, a contemporary of the event,
reporting the crossing of the Rubicon, whereas we have no
hostile or even neutral records of the resurrection until over a
hundred years after the event, and fifty years after the
Christians' own claims had been widely spread around.
Third, we have a number of
inscriptions and coins produced soon after the Republican Civil
War related to the Rubicon crossing, including mentions of
battles and conscriptions and judgments, which in fact form
almost a continuous chain of evidence for Caesar's entire march.
On the other hand, we have absolutely no physical evidence of
any kind in the case of the resurrection.
Fourth, we have the story of the
"Rubicon Crossing" in almost every historian of the period,
including the most prominent scholars of the age: Suetonius,
Appian, Cassius Dio, Plutarch. Moreover, these scholars have a
measure of proven reliability, since a great many of their
reports on other matters have been confirmed in material
evidence and in other sources. In addition, they all quote and
name many different sources, showing a wide reading of the
witnesses and documents, and they show a regular desire to
critically examine claims for which there is any dispute. If
that wasn't enough, all of them cite or quote sources which were
written by witnesses, hostile and friendly, of the Rubicon
crossing and its repercussions.
Compare this with the
resurrection: we have not even a single historian mentioning the
event until the 3rd and 4th centuries, and then only by
Christian historians.[6] And of those few people who do mention
it within a century of the event, none of them show any wide
reading, never cite any other sources, show no sign of a skilled
or critical examination of conflicting claims, have no other
literature or scholarship to their credit that we can test for
their skill and accuracy, are completely unknown, and have an
overtly declared bias towards persuasion and conversion.[7]
Fifth, the history of Rome could not have proceeded as it did
had Caesar not physically moved an army into Italy. Even if
Caesar could have somehow cultivated the mere belief that he had
done this, he could not have captured Rome or conscripted
Italian men against Pompey's forces in Greece. On the other
hand, all that is needed to explain the rise of Christianity is
a belief -- a belief that the resurrection happened. There is
nothing that an actual resurrection would have caused that could
not have been caused by a mere belief in that resurrection.
Thus, an actual resurrection is not necessary to explain all
subsequent history, unlike Caesar's crossing of the Rubicon.[8]
It should be clear that we have
many reasons to believe that Caesar crossed the Rubicon, all of
which are lacking in the case of the resurrection. In fact, when
we compare all five points, we see that in four of the five
proofs of an event's historicity, the resurrection has no
evidence at all, and in the one proof that it does have, it has
not the best, but the very worst kind of evidence -- a handful of
biased, uncritical, unscholarly, unknown, second-hand witnesses.
Indeed, you really have to look hard to find another event that
is in a worse condition than this as far as evidence goes. So Geivett is guilty of a rather extreme exaggeration. This is not
a historically well-attested event, and it does not meet the
highest standards of evidence.
But reasons to be skeptical do
not stop there. We must consider the setting -- the place and time
in which these stories spread. This was an age of fables and
wonder. Magic and miracles and ghosts were everywhere, and
almost never doubted. I'll give one example that illustrates
this: we have several accounts of what the common people thought
about lunar eclipses. They apparently had no doubt that this
horrible event was the result of monsters trying to devour the
moon, or witches calling the moon down with diabolical
spells -- sometimes both. So when an eclipse occurred, everyone
would frantically start banging pots and blowing brass horns
furiously, to scare away the monsters and confuse the witches'
spells. So tremendous was this din that many better-educated
authors complain of how the racket filled entire cities and countrysides. This was a superstitious people.[9]
Only a small class of elite
well-educated men adopted more skeptical points of view, and
because they belonged to the upper class, both them and their
arrogant skepticism were scorned by the common people, rather
than respected. Plutarch laments how doctors were willing to
attend to the sick among the poor for little or no fee, but they
were usually sent away, in preference for the local wizard.[10]
By modern standards, almost no one had any sort of education at
all, and there were no mass media disseminating scientific facts
in any form.
By the estimates of William
Harris, author of Ancient Literacy [1989], only 20% of the
population could read anything at all, fewer than 10% could read
well, and far fewer still had any access to books. He found that
in comparative terms, even a single page of blank papyrus cost
the equivalent of fifty dollars -- ink, and the labor to hand copy
every word, cost many times more. We find that books could run
to the tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars each.
Consequently, only the rich had books, and only elite scholars
had access to libraries, of which there were few.
The result was that the masses
had no understanding of science or critical thought. They were
neither equipped nor skilled, nor even interested, in
challenging an inspiring story, especially a story like that of
the Gospels: utopian, wonderful, critical of upper class
society -- even more a story that, if believed, secured eternal
life. Who wouldn't have bought a ticket to that lottery?
The differences between society
then and now cannot be stressed enough. There didn't exist such
things as coroners, reporters, cameras, newspapers, forensic
science, or even police investigators. All the technology, all
the people we have pursuing the truth of various claims now, did
not exist then. In those days, few would even be able to check
the details of a story if they wanted to -- and few wanted to.
Instead, people based their judgment on the display of sincerity
by the storyteller, by his ability to impress them with a show,
and by the potential rewards his story had to offer.[11] At the
same time, doubters didn't care to waste the time or money
debunking yet another crazy cult, of which there were hundreds
then.[12] And so it should not surprise us that we have no
writings by anyone hostile to Christianity until a century after
it began -- not even slanders or lies. Clearly, no doubter cared
to check or even challenge the story in print until it was too
late to investigate the facts.[13]
These are just some of the
reasons why we cannot trust extraordinary reports from that time
without excellent evidence, which we do not have in the case of
the physical resurrection of Jesus. For on the same quality of
evidence we have reports of talking dogs, flying wizards,
magical statues, and monsters springing from trees.[14] Can you
imagine a movement today claiming that a soldier in World War
Two rose physically from the dead, but when you asked for proof
all they offered you were a mere handful of anonymous religious
tracts written in the 1980's? Would it be even remotely
reasonable to believe such a thing on so feeble a proof?
Well -- no.[15] What about alien bodies recovered from a crashed
flying saucer in Roswell, New Mexico? Many people sincerely
believe that legend today, yet this is the modern age, with
ample evidence against it in print that is easily accessible to
anyone, and this legend began only thirty years after the
event.[16]
Even so, it is often said in
objection that we can trust the Gospels more than we normally
would because they were based on the reports of eye-witnesses of
the event who were willing to die for their belief in the
physical resurrection, for surely no one would die for a lie. To
quote a Christian website: "the first disciples were willing to
suffer and die for their faith... for their claims to have seen
Jesus... risen bodily from the dead." Of course, the Gospel of
Matthew 28:17 actually claims that some eye-witnesses did not
believe what they saw and did not become Christians, which
suggests the experience was not so convincing after all. But
there are two other key reasons why this argument sounds great
in sermons but doesn't hold water under rational scrutiny.
First, it is based on nothing in
the New Testament itself, or on any reliable evidence of any
kind. None of the Gospels or Epistles mention anyone dying for
their belief in the physical resurrection of Jesus. The only
martyrdoms recorded in the New Testament are, first, the stoning
of Stephen in the Book of Acts. But Stephen was not a witness.
He was a later convert. So if he died for anything, he died for
hearsay alone. But even in Acts the story has it that he was not
killed for what he believed, but for some trumped up false
charge, and by a mob, whom he could not have escaped even if he
had recanted. So his death does not prove anything in that
respect. Moreover, in his last breaths, we are told, he says
nothing about dying for any belief in the physical resurrection
of Jesus, but mentions only his belief that Jesus was the
messiah, and was at that moment in heaven.[17]
The second and only other
"martyr" recorded in Acts is the execution of the Apostle James,
but we are not told anything about why he was killed or whether
recanting would have saved him, or what he thought he died
for.[18] In fact, we have one independent account in the Jewish
history of Josephus, of the stoning of a certain "James the
brother of Jesus" in 62 A.D., possibly but not necessarily the
very same James, and in that account he is stoned for breaking
the Jewish law, which recanting would not escape, and in the
account of the late 2nd century Christian hagiographer
Hegesippus, as reported by Eusebius, he dies not for his belief
in a physical resurrection, but, just like Stephen, solely for
proclaiming Jesus the messiah, who was at that moment in
heaven.[19]
Yet that is the last record of
any martyrdom we have until the 2nd century. Then we start to
hear about some unnamed Christians burned for arson by Nero in
64 A.D.,[20] but we do not know if any eye-witnesses were
included in that group -- and even if we did it would not matter,
for they were killed on a false charge of arson, not for
refusing to deny belief in a physical resurrection. So even if
they had recanted, it would not have saved them, and therefore
their deaths also do not prove anything, especially since such
persecution was so rare and unpredictable in that century. We
also do not even know what it was they believed -- after all,
Stephen and James did not appear to regard the physical
resurrection as an essential component of their belief. It is
not what they died for.
As far as we can tell, no one
knew what the fate was of any of the original eye-witnesses.
People were even unclear about who the original eye-witnesses
were. There were a variety of legends circulating centuries
later about their travels and deaths, but it is clear from our
earliest sources that no one knew for certain.[21] There was
only one notable exception: the martyrdom of Peter. This we do
not hear about until two or three generations after the event,
and it is told in only one place: the Gnostic Gospel of Peter,
which was rejected as a false document by many Christians of the
day. But even if this account is true, it claims that Peter was
executed for political meddling and not for his beliefs. Even
more important, it states that Peter believed Jesus was
resurrected as a spirit, not in the flesh...[22]
Which brings us to the second
point: it seems distinctly possible, if not definite, that the
original Christians did not in fact believe in a physical
resurrection, but that Jesus was taken up to heaven, and then
"the risen Jesus" was seen in visions and dreams, just like the
vision Stephen has before he dies, and which Paul has on the
road to Damascus. Visions of gods were not at all unusual, a
cultural commonplace in those days, well documented by Robin
Lane Fox in his excellent book Pagans and Christians.[23] But
whatever their cause, if this is how Christianity actually
started, it means that the resurrection story told in the
Gospels, of a Jesus risen in the flesh, does not represent what
the original disciples believed, but was made up generations
later. So even if they did die for their beliefs, they did not
die for the belief that Jesus was physically resurrected from
the dead.
That the original Christians
believed in a spiritual resurrection is hinted at in many
strange features of the Gospel accounts of the appearances of
Jesus after death, which may be survivals of an original
mystical tradition later corrupted by the growing legend of a
bodily resurrection, such as a Jesus that they do not recognize,
or who vanishes into thin air.[24] But more importantly, it is
also suggested by the letters of Paul, our earliest source of
information on any of the details of the original Christian
beliefs. For Paul never mentions or quotes any of the Gospels,
so it seems clear that they were not written in his lifetime.
This is supported by internal evidence that suggests all the
Gospels were written around or after the destruction of
Jerusalem in 70 CE, well after Paul's last surviving letter,
which was written around the year 58 CE.[25]
Yet Paul never mentions Jesus
having been resurrected in the flesh. He never mentions empty
tombs, physical appearances, or the ascension of Jesus into
heaven afterward (i.e. when Paul mentions the ascension, he
never ties it to appearances in this way). In Galatians 1 he
tells us that he first met Jesus in a "revelation" on the road
to Damascus, not in the flesh, and the Book of Acts gives
several embellished accounts of this event that all clearly
reflect not any tradition of a physical encounter, but a
startling vision (a light and a voice, nothing more).[26] Then
in 1 Corinthians 15 Paul reports that all the original
eye-witnesses, Peter, James, the Twelve Disciples, and hundreds
of others, saw Jesus in essentially the same way Paul did -- the
only difference, he says, was that they saw it before him. He
then goes on to build an elaborate description of how the flesh
cannot inherit the kingdom of God, and how the resurrected body
is a spiritual body, and all this seems good evidence that Paul
did not believe in a physical resurrection of Jesus, but
something fundamentally different.[27]
Finally, when we examine the
Gospel record closely, it becomes apparent that the physical
nature of the resurrection was a growing legend, becoming more
and more fabulous over time, a good sign that it wasn't the
original story. Now, we don't actually know when any of the
Gospels were written, but we can infer their chronological
order. Luke and Matthew both copy whole phrases from Mark and
arrange them in an identical order as found in Mark, so it is
clear that Mark came first among those three. Scholars dispute
whether Luke preceded Matthew or the other way around, but it
seems to me that, since they show no apparent awareness of each
other, they were written around the same time, though scholars
generally hold that Luke perhaps wrote later than Matthew. John
presents the most theologically elaborate of the accounts,
suggesting a late development, and even earliest Christian
tradition held that this Gospel was the last to be written, and
scholars generally agree on this.
So we start with Mark. It is
little known among the laity, but in fact the ending of Mark,
everything after verse 16:8, does not actually exist in the
earliest versions of that Gospel that survive.[28] It was added
some time late in the 2nd century or even later. Before that, as
far as we can tell, Mark ended at verse 16:8. But that means his
Gospel ended only with an empty tomb, and a pronouncement by a
mysterious young man [29] that Jesus would be seen in
Galilee -- but nothing is said of how he would be seen. This was
clearly unsatisfactory for the growing powerful arm of the
Church a century later, which had staked its claim on a physical
resurrection, against competing segments of the Church usually
collectively referred to as the Gnostics, though not always
accurately. So an ending was added that quickly pinned some
physical appearances of Jesus onto the story, and for good
measure put in the mouth of Christ rabid condemnations of those
who didn't believe it.[30] But when we consider the original
story, it supports the notion that the original belief was of a
spiritual rather than a physical event. The empty tomb for Mark
was likely meant to be a symbol, not a historical reality, but
even if he was repeating what was told him as true, it was not
unusual in the ancient world for the bodies of heroes who became
gods to vanish from this world: being deified entailed being
taken up into heaven, as happened to men as diverse as Hercules
and Apollonius of Tyana, and Mark's story of an empty tomb would
simply represent that expectation.[31]
A decade or two passes, and then
Matthew appears. As this Gospel tells it, there was a vast
earthquake, and instead of a mere boy standing around beside an
already-opened tomb, an angel -- blazing like lightning -- descended
from the sky and paralyzed two guards that happened to be there,
rolled away the stone single handedly before several
witnesses -- and then announced that Jesus will appear in Galilee.
Obviously we are seeing a clear case of legendary embellishment
of the otherwise simple story in Mark. Then in Matthew a report
is given (similar to what was later added to Mark), where,
contrary to the angel's announcement, Jesus immediately meets
the women that attended to his grave and repeats what the angel
said. Matthew is careful to add a hint that this was a physical
Jesus, having the women grovel and grab his feet as he
speaks.[32]
Then, maybe a little later still,
Luke appears, and suddenly what was a vague and perhaps symbolic
allusion to an ascension in Mark has now become a bodily
appearance, complete with a dramatic reenactment of Peter
rushing to the tomb and seeing the empty death shroud for
himself.[32a] As happened in Matthew, other details have grown.
The one young man of Mark, which became a flying angel in
Matthew, in this account has suddenly become two men, this time
not merely in white, but in dazzling raiment. And to make the
new story even more suspicious as a doctrinal invention, Jesus
goes out of his way to say he is not a vision, and proves it by
asking the Disciples to touch him, and then by eating a fish.
And though both Mark and Matthew said the visions would happen
in Galilee, Luke changes the story, and places this particular
experience in the more populous and prestigious Jerusalem.[33]
Finally along comes John, perhaps
after another decade or more. Now the legend has grown full
flower, and instead of one boy, or two men, or one angel, now we
have two angels at the empty tomb. And outdoing Luke in style,
John has Jesus prove he is solid by showing his wounds, and
breathing on people, and even obliging the Doubting Thomas by
letting him put his fingers into the very wounds themselves. And
Jesus eats not only fish this time, but breaks bread as well.
Like Luke, the most grandiose appearances to the Disciples
happen in Jerusalem, not Galilee as Mark originally claimed. In
all, John devotes more space and detail than either Luke or
Matthew to demonstrations of the physicality of the
resurrection, details nowhere present or even implied in Mark.
It is obvious that John is trying very hard to create proof that
the resurrection was physical, and at the end of a steady growth
of fable, he takes license to make up a lot of details, far more
than any storyteller before him.[34]
We have no primary sources on
what was going on in the forty years of the Church between Paul
in the year 58 CE and Clement of Rome in the year 95 CE, and
Paul tells us almost nothing about what happened in the
beginning. We only conjecture that the Gospels were written
between Paul and Clement, though they may have been written even
ten or twenty years later still. But what I suspect happened is
something like this: Jesus died, was buried, and then in a
vision or dream appeared to one or more of his Disciples,
convincing them he had ascended to heaven, escaping death before
the End Times, and then what began in the simple story of Mark
as a symbolic allusion to an ascended Christ soon to reveal
himself in visions from heaven, in time led some Christians to
believe that the resurrection was physical, and they heard or
came up with increasingly elaborate stories proving themselves
right. Overzealous people often add details and color to a story
they've been told without even thinking about it, and as the
story passed from each to the next more detail and elaboration
was added, securing the notion of a physical resurrection in
popular imagination and belief.
It would have been a natural
mistake to make at the time, since gods were expected to be able
to raise people bodily from the dead, and physical resurrections
were actually in vogue in the very 1st century when Christianity
began. Consider the god Asclepius. Doctors associated themselves
with this god, and many legends were circulating of doctors
becoming famous by restoring the dead to life, as recounted by
Pliny the Elder, Apuleius and others.[35] Asclepius was also
called SWTAYR, "The Saviour," as many gods were in that day. He
was especially so-named for being able to cure the sick and
bring back the dead, and since "Jesus" (properly, Ioshua) means
"The Saviour" in Hebrew it may have been expected that his
resurrection would be physical in nature. After all, so was that
of Lazarus, or of the boy raised by Elijah in 1 Kings -- a prophet
with whom Jesus was often equated.[36] Jesus' association with
many healing miracles may also have implied a deliberate rivalry
with Asclepius, and indeed, Jesus was actually called SWTAYR,
and still is today: we see the Christian fishes on the backs of
cars now, containing the Greek word ICHTHUS, the last letter of
which stands for: SWTAYR. Not standing to be outdone by a pagan
god, Christians may have simply expected that their god could
raise himself physically from the dead.[37]
Then there is Herodotus, who was
always a popular author and had been for centuries. He told of a
Thracian religion that began with the physical resurrection of a
man called Zalmoxis, who then started a cult in which it was
taught that believers went to heaven when they died. We also
know that circulating in the Middle East were very ancient
legends regarding the resurrection of the goddess Inanna -- also
known as Ishtar -- who was crucified in the underworld, then
rescued and raised back to earth by her divine attendant, a tale
recounted in a four thousand year old clay tablet from Sumeria.[38]
Finally, Plutarch writes in the latter half of the 1st century
how "Romeo-and-Juliet-style" returns from the dead were a
popular theme in contemporary theatre, and we know from
surviving summaries and fragments that they were also a feature
in romance novels of that day. This trend is discussed at some
length in G. W. Bowersock's book Fiction as History.[39]
So the idea of "physical
resurrection" was popular, and circulating everywhere.
Associating Jesus with this trend would have been a very easy
mistake to make. Since religious trust was won in those days by
the charisma of speakers and the audience's subjective
estimation of their sincerity, it would not be long before a
charismatic man, who heard the embellished accounts, came into a
position of power, inspiring complete faith from his
congregation, who then sought to defend the story, and so began
the transformation of the Christian idea of the resurrection
from a spiritual concept to a physical one -- naturally, calling
themselves the "true church" and attacking all rivals, as has
sadly so often happened in history.
Lending plausibility to this
chain of events was the Jewish War between 66 and 70 CE [40],
which ended with the complete destruction of the original
Christian Church in Jerusalem, and much of the entire city,
after all Judaea itself was ravaged by war. It is likely that
many if not all of the original believers still living were
killed in this war, and with the loss of the central source of
Christian authority and tradition, legends were ripe for the
growing. This would explain why later Christians were so in the
dark about the history of their own Church between 58 and 95. It
was a kind of mini-dark age for them, a time of confusion and
uncertainty. But what exactly happened we may never know.
However it came to change, it seems more than likely that the
first Christians, among them Paul, believed in a spiritual
resurrection, and not the resurrection story told in the
Gospels.
So this is where we end up. We
have no trustworthy evidence of a physical resurrection, no
reliable witnesses. It is among the most poorly attested of
historical events. The earliest evidence, from the letters of
Paul, does not appear to be of a physical resurrection, but a
spiritual one. And we have at least one plausible reason
available to us as to why and how the legend grew into something
else. Finally, the original accounts of a physical resurrection
show obvious signs of legendary embellishment over time, and
were written in an age of little education and even less
science, a time overflowing with superstition and credulity.
And, ultimately, the Gospels match perfectly the same genre of
hagiography as that life of Genevieve with which I began. There
the legends quickly arose, undoubted and unchallenged, of
treeborn monsters and righted ships and blinded thieves. In the
Gospels, we get angels and earthquakes and a resurrection in the
flesh. So we have to admit that neither is any more believable
than the other.
It should not be lost on us that
Thomas was depicted as no less righteous for refusing to believe
so wild a claim without physical proof. We have as much right,
and ought to follow his example. He got to see and feel the
wounds before believing, and so should we. I haven't, so I can't
be expected to believe it.[41] And this leads me to one final
reason why I don't buy the resurrection story. No wise or
compassionate God would demand this from us. Such a god would
not leave us so poorly informed about something so
important.[42] If we have a message for someone that is urgently
vital for their survival, and we have any compassion, that
compassion will compel us to communicate that message clearly
and with every necessary proof -- not ambiguously, not through
unreliable mediaries presenting no real evidence. Conversely, if
we see something incredible, we do not attack or punish
audiences who don't believe us, we don't even expect them to
believe -- unless and until we can present decisive proof.
There is a heroic legend in the
technology community about the man who invented elevator safety
brakes. He claimed that any elevator fitted with his brakes,
even if all the cables broke, would be safely and swiftly
stopped by his new invention. No one trusted it. Did he get
angry or indignant? No. He simply put himself in an elevator,
ordered the cables cut, and proved to the world, by risking his
own life, that his brakes worked.[43] This is the very principle
that has delivered us from superstition to science. Any claim
can be made about a drug, but people are rightly wary of
swallowing anything that hasn't been thoroughly tested and
re-tested and tested again. Since I have no such proofs
regarding the resurrection story, I'm not going to swallow it,
and it would be cruel, even for a god, to expect otherwise of
me. So I can reason rightly that a god of all humankind would
not appear in one tiny backwater of the Earth, in a backward
time, revealing himself to a tiny unknown few, and then expect
the billions of the rest of us to take their word for it, and
not even their word, but the word of some unnamed person many
times removed.
Yet, if one returns to what was
probably Paul's conception of a Christ risen in the spirit, then
the resurrection becomes no longer a historical proof of the
truth of Christianity, but an article of faith, an affirmation
that is supposed to follow nothing other than a personal
revelation of Christ, not to be believed on hearsay, but
experienced for oneself. Though I do not believe this is a
reliable way to come to a true understanding of the world, as
internal experience only tells us about ourselves and not the
truth of the world outside of us,[44] I leave it to the
Christians here to consider a spiritual resurrection as a
different way to understand their faith. But I don't see any
reason to buy the resurrection story found in the Gospels.
[1] For the Vita Genofevae
see the translation of the earliest mss. ("Text A") in Sainted
Women of the Dark Ages by Jo Ann McNamara and John Halborg,
1992, pp. 17 ff. Their introduction gives background and further
sources. See also The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church,
3rd ed., s.v. "Geneviève" for more sources. I only mention a few
of the most incredible of her miracles -- by section number, cf.
monsters: 34; righted ships: 39; exorcisms: 44-47, etc.; calmed
storms: 50; oil: 51; water: 19; healings: 20, 32, 36, etc.;
blinded thieves: 23, 33, etc.
[2] Hume, An Enquiry
Concerning Human Understanding (1777), Chapter 10. See the
edition of this chapter and notes in In Defense of Miracles, as
well as Antony Flew's essay, ibid., "Neo-Humean Arguments About
the Miraculous," all with my Review of In Defense of Miracles.
[3] Besides my summary of
Metzger on The New Testament Canon, cf. R. Burridge, What are
the Gospels? A Comparison with Graeco-Roman Biography (1992); H.
Koester, Ancient Christian Gospels: Their History and
Development (1990); W. Lane's New London Commentary on the New
Testament (1974; and also Bart Ehrman's The Orthodox Corruption
of Scripture: The Effect of Early Christological Controversies
on the Text of the New Testament (1993).
[4] A good summary of
extra-biblical mentions of Jesus is Robert Van Voorst, Jesus
Outside the New Testament: an Introduction to the Ancient
Evidence (2000). However, compare my treatment of Thallus with
his. He outright omits mention of Phlegon, probably because we
have no reliable quotations.
[5] Douglas Geivett, "The
Evidential Value of Miracles," In Defense of Miracles (1997),
pp. 186, 185, etc. He is not alone: hundreds like him have made
similar claims, cf. Josh McDowell's The New Evidence That
Demands a Verdict (1999), esp. § 9.5A & 9.8A for some examples.
I refute Geivett at length in my Review of In Defense of
Miracles.
[6] The first Christians to show
a desire to employ the methods of critical scholarship in
working out historical facts are Clement of Alexandria, Origen,
and Sextus Julius Africanus, all working in the early 3rd
century. Africanus is the first known Christian chronologer, but
not quite a historian in the proper sense of someone who tried
to develop a critical analysis of what happened with an interest
in the relevant causal connections, and very little of his work
survives. In the proper sense, the first Christian historian was
Eusebius, yet he is notoriously unreliable. In fact, no
trustworthy Christian historian would appear until the early
modern period. On Eusebius in particular, cf. D.S. Hadrill,
Eusebius of Caesarea (1960); R.M. Grant, Eusebius as Church
Historian (1980). On the others, see entries in the The Oxford
Dictionary of the Christian Church, 3rd ed.
[7] Two points need
clarification. First, "bias" in and of itself is never a
sufficient reason to dismiss any account. Rather, bias can only
act as a supporting reason to doubt when we already have other
reasons to be skeptical, since bias, if demonstrable, is a ready
explanation for why an author would have consciously or
unconsciously created, or uncritically transmitted, an account
or detail that was untrue. But though bias explains this ,
making other skeptical grounds stronger, it does not entail it.
Indeed, bias can in fact be used to help prove an account true,
e.g. if an author is biased against some account of things but
reports it anyway. However, I do not merely charge the Gospels
with their obvious bias, but in some cases with an overtly
stated propagandist mission, which is something much more
damning than mere bias: some of the sources specifically state
that their versions of events were written to convert people.
That alone raises them to a whole new level of suspicion. Cf.
e.g. John 20:31; Mark 16:16; 1 Corinthians 15:1-2; Galatians
1:1-9.
Also suspicious are repeated
assertions of honesty, without explaining why the account is to
be given credit. This is the sort of thing liars are more likely
to do than honest people. When an author honestly wishes to
insist an account is true, he will usually add reasons why such
an insistence is appropriate ("I know this is true because I saw
it myself" is the simplest example). But when the insistence
stands by itself ("That's what happened! Honest") we are right
to be cautious in trusting what the author says. Cf. e.g. John
21:24; Galatians 1:20, etc. But even this is not sufficient to
dismiss an account: additional supporting reasons are necessary.
However, sufficient doubt can be raised when obvious bias is
combined with a complete lack of any critical analysis or source
research. The Evangelists simply tell stories, and never show
any interest in admitting the existence of alternative versions
of any events, or admitting any doubt or uncertainty about any
details, or identifying or discussing the merits of any of their
sources, or making any attempt to justify their accounts with
critical or scholarly analysis. Contrast this with, for example,
chapter 8 of Suetonius' Life of Caligula, and the dubiousness of
the Gospel accounts becomes plain.
[8] Ancient historians on the
crossing: Appian, Civil Wars; Cassius Dio, History; Plutarch,
Caesar; Suetonius, Divus Iulius. For modern scholarship and
material evidence: Ronald Syme, The Roman Revolution (1939); M.
Gelzer, Caesar: Politician and Statesman, 6th ed. (1968); L.
Kreppie, Colonization and Veteran Settlement in Italy: 47-14 BCE
(1983); P.A. Brunt, The Fall of the Roman Republic and Related
Essays (1988).
[9] This was a subject of my
Columbia University Master's Thesis, The Cultural History of the
Lunar and Solar Eclipse in the Early Roman Empire (1998). But
the general point is carried much further with different
examples in my online essay Kooks and Quacks of the Roman
Empire. Relevant scholarship is cited in the endnote there.
[10] "On Superstition", Moralia
168C. Seneca also wrote a work on superstition that does not
survive but for a few quotes in book 10 of Augustine's City of
God, and it reveals similar hostility to elite religion from the
masses, and the craziness of popular religious opinions.
[11] Most relevant to this fact
is Graham Anderson's Sage, Saint and Sophist: Holy Men and Their
Associates in the Early Roman Empire (1994); but consider Paul's
mode of argument in his letter to the Galatians as an example of
how assertions of authority mattered more than a presentation
and analysis of witnesses and evidence.
[12] Cf. n. 10 above for the only
two examples of pagan tracts devoted to debunking popular cults.
Their form of argument is relevant: they did not conduct
historical investigations to refute factual claims of
distasteful cults, but argued against them solely on ethical,
aesthetic, and philosophical grounds. This was the usual way skeptics dismissed cults like Christianity
-- a detailed
investigation wasn't worth their time. For example, in the
correspondence between Pliny and Trajan (Pliny the Younger,
Letters 10.96-7), the interrogation of a few local cult members
in Asia Minor led Pliny to conclude that Christianity was such a
"depraved superstition" that he saw no reason to investigate it
further. The exception proves the rule: we have no real
parallels for what Lucian did in his story Alexander the False
Prophet, and even that was a matter of coincidence: Lucian, by
chance a keen-minded Epicurean and prolific and talented writer,
just happened upon the scene of this new cult as it was
beginning. Similar coincidence drove him to write skeptically on
The Death of Peregrinus (both are available in Lionel Casson's
Selected Satires of Lucian, 1968).
[13] Matthew alone records a
supposed skeptical attack of Jews, namely the charge that the
body of Jesus had "really" been stolen (28:11-15; cf. 27:62-6;
28:4). But this appears in no Jewish writings, of the first
century or even later, and as a Christian story it is suspect:
it involves reporting secret conversations that no Christian
could have been witness to, and Matthew does not explain how he
heard of those events. He only says "This story [of theft] was
spread around among Jews until today." But apparently, not in
print. There are many reasons to doubt the veracity of this
report: see my analysis of the guarding story in Section 2g of
the larger Why I Don't Buy the Resurrection Story. However, as I
note there, an ad hoc charge of theft could well have been an
intuitive response to the story when the story adopted an empty
tomb motif, whenever that was (in my opinion, probably after the
Jewish War concluded in 70 CE ), and in that respect Matthew may
simply be inventing a story to "debunk" a new charge raised by
the adoption of a new empty tomb story a generation or two after
the religion began (so that what he thinks or claims is "until
today" is really just "today").
[14] Referring to the Vita Genofevae above, as well as material covered in Kooks and Quacks
of the Roman Empire, and events related in the Gospel of Peter.
Also, cf. Section 1a of the larger Why I Don't Buy the
Resurrection Story.
[15] Cf. Section 2 of the larger
Why I Don't Buy the Resurrection Story for a parallel argument,
and for an elaboration of the methods of history applied to
miracle accounts, see my Review of In Defense of Miracles.
[16] The ultimate starting points
for those interested in studying the Roswell legend are three
books: Kal Korff's The Roswell UFO Crash: What They Don't Want
You to Know (2000) surveys the real evidence meticulously,
proving the legend entirely bogus, while UFO Crash at Roswell:
The Genesis of a Modern Myth (1997) by Benson Saler, Charles
Ziegler, and Charles Moore, relates the development of the
legend itself, and Toby Smith's Little Gray Men: Roswell and the
Rise of a Popular Culture (2000) explains how the legends became
so popular. See also Philip J. Klass, The Real Roswell
Crashed-Saucer Coverup (1997). In support of the legend, see for
example Roswell: Have You Wondered? Understanding the Evidence
of UFO's at the International UFO Museum and Research Center
(1999) by the Leacock family, and Kevin Randle's The Truth About
the UFO Crash at Roswell (1999). For a bibliography of skeptical
sources on the whole UFO/alien abduction phenomenon, cf. NYASK.
[17] Cf. Section 2d of the larger
Why I Don't Buy the Resurrection Story for much more on this
subject and the relevant verse citations.
[18] Acts 12:2. Cf. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian
Church, s.v. "James, St, 'the Great'."
[19] Josephus, Jewish Antiquities
20.200-1; Hegesippus apud Eusebius, History of the Church 2.23.
Cf. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church, s.v. "James,
St, 'the Lord's brother'" and Jeffery Jay Lowder's discussion of
the Josephus reference in Josh McDowell's "Evidence" for Jesus:
Is It Reliable?.
[20] Tacitus, Annals 15.44. This was written c. 117 CE
[21] None of the Apostolic lists
match exactly (Mk. 3:14-19; Mt. 10:2-4; Lk. 6:13-16), and all
the Gospels name among the witnesses various different people,
most of whom are not mentioned by Paul (1 Cor. 15:3ff.). Cf. W.
Frend, Martyrdom and Persecution in the Early Church (1965) in
the light of more recent work, e.g. D. Wood, ed., Martyrs and
Martyrologies (1993) and Robin Lane Fox, Pagans and Christians
(1986), pp. 434-50.
[22] Eusebius repeats the same
story, attributing it to Hegesippus, but we know now that it
derives from the Gospel of Peter. For scholarship and modern
consensus on Peter, cf. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian
Church, s.v. "Peter, St."
[23] On hallucination as a cause
of sacred or mystical visions, see my discussion of Habermas on
the Post-Resurrection Appearances of Jesus. Also relevant are
the historiographical issues addressed in my discussion of
Beckwith.
[24] I discuss all of these
features in detail in Section 3 of the larger Why I Don't Buy
the Resurrection Story.
[25] Cf. part of my essay on the
New Testament Canon, and all the relevant entries for each
author or book in The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church
for consensus and sources of scholarship, cf. also s.v.
"Synoptic Problem."
[26] I discuss this vision and
Paul's Christology in sections 3a through 3f of the larger Why I
Don't Buy the Resurrection Story. Paul's declarations of the
"creed" of his religion also support this: physical resurrection
is nowhere stated to be a necessary belief. 1 Cor. 15:3-11 I
discuss in the links above, but to that can be added 1 Tim.
3:16, where the necessary elements of the religion are listed as
the incarnation, spiritual justification, some connection with
angels, the teaching of the Gospel, and the ascension. The
physical appearances get no mention. Likewise, Paul's summary of
the Gospel at Philippians 2:6-11 omits a physical resurrection:
instead of being raised, Jesus is merely exalted after death by
being given a powerful "name." And Colossians 1:13-29 summarizes
the theology of the Gospel, yet makes clear that by giving his
body Jesus removed sin (vv. 22), and that after death his "body"
became the church (vv. 24; supported by Ephesians 5:30, where it
says we are now Christ's body). This strongly implies that there
was no "body" of Jesus after his death, except the power of his
name and message, and thus the church itself.
[27] Paul probably had to use so
many metaphors and go to such length to explain the nature of a
spiritual resurrection to a congregation clearly confused about
it because it was one of the important novel features of the
religion. Excusing members from God's Laws, such as regarding
circumcision, was another. Though Jews were more resistant than
most people of that day to syncretism with Hellenistic and
Persian ideas, they were far from immune, and Christianity was
always more popular with Hellenic Gentiles than with Jews, and
more popular with Hellenized diaspora Jews than with the
Jerusalem orthodoxy. Even so, novel ideas made their way even
into mainstream Judaism, as is evident from the allegorizing and
mysticism of the Jewish philosopher Philo, the adoption of a
notion of Hades in the Book of Enoch similar to that held by
popular mystery-religion, the gradual replacement of Hebrew
scriptures with Greek, the importation of Hellenic magic (by
attributing it to the Wisdom of Solomon), and the Zoroastrian
idea of a flaming hell -- all are prime examples.
[28] There are at least three
endings to Mark in circulation that were combined into what we
now read in the Bible, but the mss. tradition shows they began
as separate additions. The longest, usually identified as vss.
16:9ff., is found only in post-4th century manuscripts (for all
the following, see the apparatus for the relevant passages in
The Greek New Testament, Fourth Revised Edition). Outside the
mauscript evidence, which is decisive, the addition seems to be
first partly quoted in the late 2nd century, in a passage of
Irenaeus (Against All Heresies 3.5), but that text is also a
late manuscript (and a Latin translation, not the original
Greek) that could have been redacted to match the Gospel that
was in circulation at the time. There is evidence of that very
fact in the same passage, with regard to his quotation of the
first verse of Mark: the words "son of God" are recognized as
not being original to that Gospel (cf. ibid. apparatus; also,
Bart Ehrman's The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture: The Effect
of Early Christological Controversies on the Text of the New
Testament 1993, pp. 72-5), and in fact those words appear in
only two of three surviving Latin translations and do not exist
in the one surviving fragment of that passage in the original
Greek. We do not have the original Greek for his mention of the
ending of Mark, and therefore it remains probable that it, too,
was added by a later translator.
Other than that one reference
(which, if genuine, would suggest that Irenaeus added the ending
to Mark to help his case against the Gnostics), the longest
addition seems to first appear in some Coptic manuscripts in the
early 4th century, and begins to be added to most Greek versions
over the course of that and the following century. It is cited
already in the 4th century by a few Christian authors. On this
whole issue, still of key relevance is F.C. Conybeare's essay
"On the Last Twelve Verses of St. Mark's Gospel," The Expositor,
5th ser., 2 (1895), pp. 401-21; even though recent research has
superceded him, as in the recovery of the Coptic mss., I have
been unable to find a convenient summary of more recent work.
[29] Probably not meant by Mark
as an angel, cf. my Review of Homer and the Gospel of Mark.
[30] See my essay on The New
Testament Canon and Bart Ehrman's The Orthodox Corruption of
Scripture: The Effect of Early Christological Controversies on
the Text of the New Testament (1993).
[31] On Heracles, the references
to his ascension on a cloud are found throughout ancient
literature (cf. K. Galinsky, The Herakles Theme 1972), but most
notably in the earliest Christian apologetic work, Justin
Martyr's Trypho 69-70. On Apollonius, cf. Philostratus, Life of
Apollonius of Tyana 8.30. Empedocles is also a paradigm example
of a vanished wise man (Diogenes Laertius 8.67-8); citing
Heraclides of Pontus, the story clearly predates Jesus -- Hermippus
had even attempted to invent a clever secular account of the
story (Diogenes Laertius 8.69). There are also precedents for
this in Jewish scripture: Elijah and Enoch were raised into
heaven (2 Kings 2:1-18), and a similar legend was growing among
Jews in the early 1st century regarding Moses (cf. The Oxford
Dictionary of the Christian Church, s.v. "Moses, The Assumption
of").
[32] For more of my discussion of
Matthew and Mark's "appearances" see sections 2g and 3g of the
larger Why I Don't Buy the Resurrection Story.
[32a] There are good arguments
that this passage is in fact a later addition, and that the
original Lukan text has been tampered with (see pp. 212-17 of
Bart Ehrman's The Orthodox Corruption of Scripture: The Effect
of Early Christological Controversies on the Text of the New
Testament, 1993). However, that only reinforces the point: the
texts show legendary development over time, even as the outcome
of tampering. How many passaged were tampered with that we can't
detect? We will never know. See, for example, Stephen Carr's
examples in The Textual Reliability of the New Testament.
[33] see Section 3h of the larger
Why I Don't Buy the Resurrection Story; also relevant to Luke is
Section 3k.
[34] see Section 3i of the larger
Why I Don't Buy the Resurrection Story.
[35] I collect numerous
references to revivals in Section 2e of the larger Why I Don't
Buy the Resurrection Story; on Asclepius, the decisive reference
is Asclepius: Collection and Interpretation of the Testimonies,
Edelstein & Edelstein, eds. (1945).
[36] 1 Kings 17:17-24; 2 Kings
4:19-37; Mark 5:21-43 [w. Matt. 9:18-26, Luke 8:40-56], Luke
7:11-17, Acts 9:36-43, John 11:5-44. Jesus compared to Elijah:
Mark 6:15, 8:28, 9:11-13; Matthew 11:14, 16:14, 17:10-12; Luke
9:8, 9:19; John 1:21.
[37] This rivalry was certainly a
prominent influence on Christianity: cf. Thomas Matthews, The
Clash of Gods: A Reinterpretation of Early Christian Art (1993)
and Harold Remus, Pagan-Christian Conflict Over Miracle in the
Second Century (1981).
[38] The Thracian god Zalmoxis
(also called Salmoxis or Gebele'izis) was buried, resurrected
and deified in his own lifetime, as described in the
mid-5th-century BCE by Herodotus (4.94-96), and also mentioned
in Plato's Charmides (156d-158b) in the early-4th-century BCE
According to the hostile account of Herodotus' Greek informants,
Zalmoxis buried himself alive, telling his followers he would be
resurrected in three years, but he merely resided in a hidden
dwelling all that time. His inevitable "resurrection" led to his
deification, and a religion surrounding him, which preached
heavenly immortality for believers, persisted for centuries.
Innana (also known as Ishtar), a
Sumerian goddess whose crucifixion, resurrection and escape from
the underworld is told in cuneiform tablets inscribed c. 1500
BCE, attesting to a very old tradition. The best account and
translation of the text is to be found in Samuel Kramer's
History Begins at Sumer, pp. 154 ff., but be sure to use the
third revised edition (1981 or later), since the text was
significantly revised after new discoveries were made. For
instance, the tablet was once believed to describe the
resurrection of Innana's lover, Tammuz (also known as Dumuzi).
Kersey Graves, for example, thus mistakenly lists Tammuz as one
of his "Sixteen Crucified Saviours."
[39] Bowersock, 1994. The notion
still floats around, usually citing hopelessly outdated
scholarship, that somehow all these works of fiction post-date
Christianity. Many do. But the whole genre does not. Some are
dated to the first century CE and even B.C., and these we
believe are late -- many similar works existed earlier but have
not survived. See Graham Anderson, Ancient Fiction: The Novel in
the Graeco-Roman World (1984); Richard Stoneman & J.R. Morgan,
eds., Greek Fiction: The Greek Novel in Context (1994); and
Susan Stephens & John Winkler, eds., Ancient Greek Novels
(1995). The genre of historical fiction itself begins in the 4th
century BCE with Xenophon's The Education of Cyrus (though the
idea was begun with the very dialogues of Plato).
But we have one definite proof
that the resurrection motif in fiction predates the 1st century:
the Latin satire of that very genre, The Satyricon by Petronius.
This is positively dated to around 60 CE (Petronius was killed
under the reign of Nero, and makes fun of social circumstances
created by the early Caesars) and is a full-fledged
travel-narrative just like Acts, with a clear religious motif.
However, Petronius is making fun of that motif, and also writing
in Latin, yet we know the genre began in the Greek language.
Thus, in order for Petronius to move the genre into Latin and
make fun of it, it must have pre-existed the time of his writing
and been popular enough to draw his attention. Indeed, the
satire itself may actually have existed in a Greek form before
Petronius took it up: P. Parsons, "A Greek Satyricon?" Bulletin
of the Institute of Classical Studies 18 (1971) pp. 53ff. It
should be noted that Petronius pokes fun at the resurrection
theme in section 140.frg2, where the hero compares his
restoration from impotence to the "resurrected Protesilaus," and
attributes it to Mercury's known role in "bringing back the
dead." Similarly, Plutarch relates a spoof of the motif in
popular theatre, where a performing dog acts out its death and
resurrection on stage to the delight of the emperor Vespasian
("On the Cleverness of Animals," Moralia 973e-974a). In order to
have something to spoof, the motif must predate the year 80.
[40] Of course, our closest
source is Josephus himself, who fought in the war and witnessed
the sack of Jerusalem and who relates it all in detail in his
apologetic history The Jewish War (with some more material in
his other works). For scholarship on the war, cf. E.M.
Smallwood, The Jews Under Roman Rule (1976); R. Furneaux, The
Roman Siege of Jerusalem (1973).
[41] To make the point clear,
Thomas was not denigrated or condemned for asking for hard
evidence, and he was given it, thus God, as depicted here,
accepted his prima facie right to that evidence before
committing to belief. The Gospel goes on to emphasize that
others who waive that right are also blessed, but that does not
affect the fact that they have that right, as recognized in
Thomas. On my views regarding the ethics of belief, see my
essays A Fish Did Not Write This Essay, Do Religious Life and
Critical Thought Need Each Other?, and What an Atheist Ought to
Stand For.
[42] This is related to the
argument I make in Section 1 of the larger Why I Don't Buy the
Resurrection Story.
[43] This is a true story: the
man's name is Elisha Graves Otis, cf. s.v. "Otis, Elisha
Graves," Encyclopedia Britannica.
[44] See 41 above.
Copyright 2000 by Richard C. Carrier. Copying is freely
permitted, provided credit is given to the author and no
material herein is sold for profit.
Brief Biography of Richard
C. Carrier
Mr Carrier was born in 1969 and
is an instructor of Ancient History. He holds the following
degrees:
-
B.A. History (minor in
Classical Civilization), UC Berkeley (1997)
-
M.A. Ancient History,
Columbia University (1998)
-
M.Phil. Ancient History,
Columbia University (2000)
Titles:
-
Graduate Student Instructor
(Columbia University)
-
Librarian's Assistant
(Electronic Texts Service: Butler Library, Columbia
University)
and is a member of (among
others):
-
Member of the Association of
Ancient Historians
-
Member of the History of
Science Society
-
Member of the Historical
Society Publications:
and is fluent in:
-
English
-
German
-
French
-
Latin
-
Greek (Ancient)
Richard married Jennifer Robin
Paynter in 1995. |