I have watched the video of the debate between Bart Ehrman and William Lane Craig. I think Ehrman could have engaged with Craig’s position much better. Craig states that there are four historical facts:Proinsias wrote:There is an interesting William Craig Lane and Bart Erhman debate on youtube which delves into this:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FhT4IENSwac
Jesus was buried by Joseph of Arimathea
The empty tomb was discovered
There were post-mortem appearances of Jesus
That the disciples believed that Jesus was resurrected.
Craig talks a lot about multiple attestations. However he doesn’t examine the nature of the gospels to provide evidence that there are multiple attestations. I would have liked to see Ehrman state why there were not independent accounts of the resurrection.
It is clear from reading Matthew and Luke that their account of the burial of Jesus by Joseph of Arimathea is based on the account on Mark. John’s version seems later than Mark’s and may well be based on it or Luke’s account. Therefore the only evidence we have for the burial of Jesus by Joseph of Arimathea is Mark. It has also been suggested that Mark might create names for some of the characters in his gospel - It should be noted that some people think Mark created the name Jairus because it means "he will awaken" in Mark 5:21-43 for the father of the daughter who people thought was dead, but was in fact sleeping. These people therefore say that Arimathea can mean something like Best doctrine. It has also been suggested that Joseph of Arimathea should be seen as representative of the authorities and I would agree with this. In fact the early Kerygma (Acts 2:23-36, 5:29-32 and 10:34-43) not only doesn’t have Joseph of Arimathea it doesn’t have Jesus being buried. It is not until Luke sets out Paul’s teaching that Jesus’ burial is mentioned in Acts 13:27-29,
“[27] For those who live in Jerusalem and their rulers, … condemning him.
[28] Though they could charge him with nothing deserving death, yet they asked Pilate to have him killed.
[29] And when they had fulfilled all that was written of him, they took him down from the tree, and laid him in a tomb.”
However again there is no mention of Joseph of Arimathea.
I think Craig said that resurrection was not something Jews could believe and then says that when Paul says “was buried” and “then raised” Jews would automatically know that the physical body was needed for resurrection. I am not convinced this is true. In 2 Maccabees 7 the bodies of the seven brothers are fried until burnt (v 5 “The smoke from the pan spread widely”). The belief in being resurrected does not seem to need to have either a whole body or a body at all, because the bodies may have been burnt.
Craig seems to state that because Paul says Jesus is buried in 1 Cor 15:4 this has to mean there was an empty tomb. Lots of people disagree. In fact in an earlier letter of Paul he doesn’t even mention Jesus being buried - 1Thes 4:14. The argument that 1 Cor 15:2-7 goes back to an earlier tradition can also be used to claim that it wasn’t in the original letter to the Corinthians but was added later. There is no mention of the empty tomb in the letters of Paul or in the early Kerygma and therefore the case for multiple attestations is poor. I did like Ehrman’s position that as women were marginalised it therefore makes sense for Mark to have created the story.
I think Craig said that Paul differentiates between resurrection appearances and visions. Please can someone state where? I think it is clear that Paul believed in a spiritual rather than physical resurrection and if 1 Cor 15:2-9 was written by Paul he believed that his experience of seeing the Risen Lord was the same as that experienced by the disciples.
Craig dismisses the differences in the resurrection appearances stories. They cannot be so easily dismissed and seem to demonstrate that while there was a belief in resurrection appearances no one could quite remember where they happened and who was present.
The only evidence that has multi-attestation is that the early Christians believed that God had raised Jesus up and he appeared to some of them and we call this resurrection. We have no agreement on the empty tomb or Joseph of Arimathea and no agreed understanding of the nature of resurrection.
What I also didn’t like was Craig saying that numeric values can be used in historical probability as an argument that the resurrection was probable. If you roll a six sided die and the die is balanced there is a clear one in six chance of getting each of the numbers. The chance of my being resurrected soon after my death is very small. I know this because millions of people have died and few have been written about as being resurrected. Historical probability is not about numeric values but weighing the evidence. We would say that the evidence that Julius Caesar existed and was killed in Rome is good, but the evidence that there was a King Arthur in Britain is poor and the evidence that he had a round table of knights is so poor it just couldn’t have happened. It therefore should be a discussion of whether the evidence is poor or good. However I don’t believe that many people would dispute that the early Christians believed that Jesus was resurrected but our accounts differ on what this means. There is a problem about how an historian can establish that this belief is a probable fact. People say they see ghosts but can historians say that it is probable that a certain person saw a ghost; no all they can say is that the certain person believes they saw a ghost.