Pints With Aquinas - 155: 5 reasons Christ rose from the dead, W/ Trent Horn
Episode Date: April 23, 2019Support me on Patreon here or directly here. Get Counterfeit Christs by Trent Horn here. Get Hidden in Plain View by Lydia McGrew here. Listen to that debate on Unbelievable? Between Tim McGrew an...d Peter Boghossian here. Here's the text we read from Aquinas: I answer that, It behooved Christ to rise again, for five reasons. First of all; for the commendation of Divine Justice, to which it belongs to exalt them who humble themselves for God's sake, according to Luke 1:52: "He hath put down the mighty from their seat, and hath exalted the humble." Consequently, because Christ humbled Himself even to the death of the Cross, from love and obedience to God, it behooved Him to be uplifted by God to a glorious resurrection; hence it is said in His Person (Psalm 138:2): "Thou hast known," i.e. approved, "my sitting down," i.e. My humiliation and Passion, "and my rising up," i.e. My glorification in the resurrection; as the gloss expounds. Secondly, for our instruction in the faith, since our belief in Christ's Godhead is confirmed by His rising again, because, according to 2 Corinthians 13:4, "although He was crucified through weakness, yet He liveth by the power of God." And therefore it is written (1 Corinthians 15:14): "If Christ be not risen again, then is our preaching vain, and our [Vulgate: 'your'] faith is also vain": and (Psalm 29:10): "What profit is there in my blood?" that is, in the shedding of My blood, "while I go down," as by various degrees of evils, "into corruption?" As though He were to answer: "None. 'For if I do not at once rise again but My body be corrupted, I shall preach to no one, I shall gain no one,'" as the gloss expounds. Thirdly, for the raising of our hope, since through seeing Christ, who is our head, rise again, we hope that we likewise shall rise again. Hence it is written (1 Corinthians 15:12): "Now if Christ be preached that He rose from the dead, how do some among you say, that there is no resurrection of the dead?" And (Job 19:25-27): "I know," that is with certainty of faith, "that my Redeemer," i.e. Christ, "liveth," having risen from the dead; "and" therefore "in the last day I shall rise out of the earth . . . this my hope is laid up in my bosom." Fourthly, to set in order the lives of the faithful: according to Romans 6:4: "As Christ is risen from the dead by the glory of the Father, so we also may walk in newness of life": and further on; "Christ rising from the dead dieth now no more; so do you also reckon that you are dead to sin, but alive to God." SPONSORS EL Investments: https://www.elinvestments.net/pints Exodus 90: https://exodus90.com/mattfradd/ Hallow: http://hallow.app/mattfradd STRIVE: https://www.strive21.com/ GIVING Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/mattfradd This show (and all the plans we have in store) wouldn't be possible without you. I can't thank those of you who support me enough. Seriously! Thanks for essentially being a co-producer coproducer of the show. LINKS Website: https://pintswithaquinas.com/ Merch: https://teespring.com/stores/matt-fradd FREE 21 Day Detox From Porn Course: https://www.strive21.com/ SOCIAL Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mattfradd Twitter: https://twitter.com/mattfradd Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mattfradd MY BOOKS Does God Exist: https://www.amazon.com/Does-God-Exist-Socratic-Dialogue-ebook/dp/B081ZGYJW3/ref=sr_1_9?dchild=1&keywords=fradd&qid=1586377974&sr=8-9 Marian Consecration With Aquinas: https://www.amazon.com/Marian-Consecration-Aquinas-Growing-Closer-ebook/dp/B083XRQMTF/ref=sr_1_4?dchild=1&keywords=fradd&qid=1586379026&sr=8-4 The Porn Myth: https://www.ignatius.com/The-Porn-Myth-P1985.aspx CONTACT Book me to speak: https://www.mattfradd.com/speakerrequestform
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Christ is risen. Indeed, He is risen. Happy Easter to everybody. I hope y'all are going to
have a beautiful time rejoicing in the Lord. Man, I love this time of year. This is my absolute
most favorite time of year. Ever since I went Byzantine, it has just been an absolute joy.
I mean, it was a joy when I'd go to the Roman church as well, but there's just something about
Easter when you go to a Byzantine church. It's so celebratory that you expect at any moment someone's going to rush out with a plate full
of vodka shots and you just start slamming them back. I mean, this is just a wild, powerful,
beautiful, beautiful celebration. And today is going to be a wonderful podcast. I'm going to
be speaking with Trent Horn, apologist at Catholic Answers,
on Christ's resurrection and why we have really good reasons to think that this is not
just a pious story, not just something that we tell ourselves or which the apostles invented.
We're going to take a look, a real look at the New Testament and see why, not just the New
Testament either, but like from secular scholars and see why we have very compelling reasons to think the New Testament
is reliable. So, if you are doubtful of the resurrection of Christ, this is going to really
help you. If you know people who are doubtful and are maybe questioning you about it, this is going
to really help you respond to them. Before we get to Trent, I'm going to share with you five reasons that Thomas Aquinas gives for why Christ rose from the dead. Here we go.
Okay, okay, okay. Let's take a look at Aquinas' five reasons for why Christ rose from the dead, why it was necessary.
This comes from the Tertiopas, question 53.
And I'm going to read his respondio, okay?
He said,
He said it behooved Christ to rise again for five reasons.
Let me just tell you what those five reasons are, and then we'll read through Aquinas' main response. Okay, so number one, it reveals God's justice.
Number two, it was necessary for the confirmation of our faith in Christ.
Number three, it gives us hope for the resurrection of our bodies. Number four,
it means death to sin and new life in Christ for us. And finally, number five, it completes the
work of salvation. So, Aquinas says, first of all, for the commendation of divine justice,
to which belongs to exalt them who humble themselves for God's sake. According to Luke 1.52,
Consequently, because Christ humbled himself even to the death of the cross,
from love and obedience to God, it behooved him to be uplifted by God to a glorious resurrection.
God, it behooved him to be uplifted by God to a glorious resurrection. Hence, it is said in his person, thou hast known, that is approved, my sitting down, that is my humiliation and passion,
and my rising up, that is my glorification in the resurrection. And this again comes from Psalm 138.
Here's the second reason. It's for our instruction in the faith. Since our belief
in Christ's Godhead is confirmed by his rising again. Because according to 2 Corinthians 13.4,
although he was crucified through weakness, yet he liveth by the power of God. And therefore,
it is written, if Christ be not risen again, then is our preaching vain.
So, and we also read in Psalm 29, 10 says, Aquinas, what profit is there in my blood,
that is in the shedding of my blood, while I go down as by various degrees of evil into corruption,
as though he were to answer none. For if I do not at once rise again, but my body be corrupted,
none. For if I do not at once rise again, but my body be corrupted, I shall preach to no one,
I shall gain no one. So, that's the second point that Aquinas gives for why Christ rose from the dead to confirm our faith in him. And again, that's what the majority of today's episode is
going to be about. Thirdly, Aquinas says, for the raising of our hope, since through seeing Christ, who is our head, rise again, we hope that we will likewise shall rise again.
Hence it is written in 1 Corinthians 15, 12.
Just notice, by the way, how often Aquinas cites scripture.
Powerful, powerful.
He says, hence it is written in 1 Corinthians, now if Christ be preached that he rose from the dead, how does some among you say
that there is no resurrection of the dead? And in Job 19, 25-27, I know that is with certainty of
faith that my Redeemer, that is Christ, liveth. Having risen from the dead, and therefore in the
last day, I shall rise out of the earth. This my hope is laid up in my bosom.
Here's the fourth reason. He says to set in order the lives of the faithful, according to Romans
chapter six, verse four, as Christ is risen from the dead by the glory of the father. So we also
may walk in newness of life and further on Christ rising from the dead dieth now no more. So do you
also reckon that you are dead to sin, but alive to God? And here is the fifth and final reason.
The fifth reason that Christ rose from the dead was in order to complete the work of our salvation.
Because just as for this reason, did he endure evil things in dying that he might deliver us from evil, so was he glorified in rising again in order to advance us towards good things.
According to Romans 4.25, he was delivered up for our sins and rose again for our justification.
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appreciate it. You guys are awesome. If you're one of those 15%, thank you, thank you, thank you.
All right, here we go. Trent, thanks for being on Plants with Aquinas.
Thank you for having me, Matt.
How have you been? What's been going on?
Well, I have been busy as can be, as per usual. I'm finishing my master's degree in bioethics right now at the University of Mary. So I just completed my final thesis.
I'm going to go to give a presentation on it in Bismarck here in a few weeks, just shortly right
after Easter. And yeah, so I'm doing that and finishing my other book, Counterfeit Christ,
is going to be coming out here probably in a few weeks as well. And that's kind of my
coming out here probably in a few weeks as well. And that's kind of my book on who the real Jesus is and how a lot of other people can end up misunderstanding him, both non-religious people
and religious people. Yeah, I just saw the pamphlet come in the mail from Catholic Answers.
The front cover looks terrific. Well done. Sometimes that's the biggest battle is getting
the publisher to put a wonderful front cover on it. I thought that one was terrific.
Yes, it really is true that a book is judged by its cover.
People do judge a book by its cover.
So if your book gets saddled with a bad cover,
that will affect the number of people that end up reading it.
But I'm happy with it.
If you go online, check it out.
It's Counterfeit Christs.
And the cover artist did a great job of taking different icons, images of Jesus,
but putting behind them all of the symbols of the counterfeit.
So we have the socialist Jesus, the gay affirming Jesus, the prosperity theology Jesus, the Muslim Jesus, mythological Jesus.
It's all right there.
And yeah, I cover the wide gamut in that book, and I'm happy when it gets out soon.
I remember you were telling me that with your book on abortion, a lot of people had the mentality,
well, I already know that abortion is wrong, so I don't need this book. So, what do you say to
people who are like, well, I already know about the counterfeit Christs, and I know I'm not
following them, so why do I need this book? Well, what I would say is, you may know that
they're counterfeits, but do you know what you would say if a Jehovah's Witness challenged you and said,
well, where does Jesus say, I am God in Scripture? What would you do if someone challenged you with
the Muslim Jesus? Or if an atheist said, if Jesus really lived, then why didn't more ancient
historians write about him? Why isn't he the most famous person in the ancient world?
So we may know who the real Jesus, for those who know the real Jesus, we also have to be able to
defend the real Jesus. But it's also possible that we can slide into subtle heresies. We may think,
oh yeah, I know Jesus. I'll say, well, do you have your Christology right? I might say, for example,
do you think it's possible Jesus could have sinned? They say, well, I mean, he's a human being. I mean,
he could have sinned, but he didn't. I'd say, oh, that's not the case because Jesus is
a divine person. That's impossible. So, it's little things like that, that understanding
the mystery of the Incarnation. It's very important and it's intricate in part. So,
I think this book will help bring a lot of people up to speed and equip them when they're challenged
with different views of who the real Jesus is.
Now, one of the things we Christians point to to prove that our faith is the true faith is the fact
that Christ rose from the dead. And here we are around Easter time, and we want to talk about that
because I think a lot of people think that maybe you can come up with arguments for the existence
of God, but they're not really sure why they should choose, say, Christianity over Islam
or some other religion. So, let's talk about that. I mean, do you find the evidence for
the resurrection of Christ compelling? Is that one of the primary reasons you chose to be a Christian?
Oh, absolutely. I had always believed there was a God out there. I was a deist, but I didn't think
God really cared, and so, you know, there's just a God out
there, whatever. But I also thought that religion was just a crutch for people. It's just something
that you rely on if you don't have good critical thinking skills. And I thought all religions
were basically the same. But then I saw that the evidence for Christianity was very different than
the evidence that's offered for every other religion. And that central piece of
evidence would be Jesus Christ's bodily resurrection from the dead. And that really moved me to see
debates between Christians and atheists and seeing the good arguments that Christians were putting
forward for the evidence for Jesus. In fact, it's not just Christians who understands this.
You take, for example, Antony Flew. At one time, he was one of the most famous
atheists of the 20th century. And in a dialogue with Gary Habermas, the Christian apologist,
Antony Flew said, the evidence for the resurrection is better than for claimed miracles in any other
religion. It's astoundingly different in quality and quantity. So even Flew, he was not convinced
of it, but he knew,
he admitted that the evidence for Jesus is very different than we have for any other
ancient or even modern religious figure. Okay, well, where do you begin? How do you begin to
convince somebody that Christ rose from the dead? Already, I think a lot of people feel like if
you're defending it, you're just kind of biased in favor of your own religion, and there really
isn't any evidence. So, where do you begin?
Well, there's different ways that you can put forward a defense of Christ's resurrection.
One way that I find to be helpful is something that's called the minimal facts approach,
and that's been championed by people like Gary Habermas or Mike Lacona.
And William Lane Craig also puts forward this approach.
The idea here is, look, we're not going to say, oh, Jesus rose from the dead because the Bible says so, and the Bible is either the word of God or it's an incredibly reliable book, so we can trust what it says, therefore Jesus rose from the dead.
Because then, you know, you've already, you're, in order to establish the truth of the resurrection, you're using a premise itself that'll be very controversial to people who don't believe in God. So, saying the Bible's the word of God, or even the lesser claim that the
Bible is just extremely reliable so we can trust what it says, many skeptics will say, well, I don't
think the Bible's really reliable at all. And so, you've got a lot more to prove there before you
can get to the resurrection. So, what I try to say is, all right, let's just look at the Bible like it's a set of ancient Greek manuscripts, a set of ancient documents talking about this man named Jesus,
Jesus of Nazareth. What are the minimal facts we can agree on? What are the minimal facts we can
all agree on, despite our different religious views? So aside from the mythicists who say
Jesus never existed, and I can count the number of
scholars with PhDs in the relevant fields who teach at major universities who believe that,
I can count them on, I think, one hand. You talk to most people and say, well, yeah,
there was a guy named Jesus, and yes, he taught, and yes, he was crucified. Okay,
well, there's certain basic facts we can agree on, like that Jesus was crucified,
and that the first, his followers,
his immediate followers, preached soon after his death that he had risen from the dead.
And so you put together these facts, then you ask, okay, look, what explains this? Both of us
need to explain these sets of facts. I hold that they're explained well by Jesus rising from the
dead, that that is the best explanation. You may have a different explanation. You've got to give
me some kind of explanation for why we have the Christian faith at all,
and let's see which explanation best accounts for the data that we have in front of us.
Yeah, I mean, I suppose most people may just not care, and to them, trying to defend Christ's
resurrection or to argue against it is like arguing that Joseph Smith received those golden
tablets from, who was it, the Archangel Gabriel? I forget who gave them.
Moroni.
Moroni, sorry. Yeah. And so, you know, you wouldn't, like, just like, I wouldn't invest
a bunch of time researching that. So, I wouldn't do a good job arguing against it. But is your
argument, that's fine, you don't have to, but if you're going to take me up and challenge me that
Christ never rose from the dead, at that point you need to kind of provide some evidence for your position.
True. I think that anyone who makes a claim carries a burden of proof, whether your claim is that the end of Jesus' life was a natural end or it was a supernatural end that was completed through his bodily resurrection
from the dead.
Everybody has a burden of proof.
Now, some of you may say, well, I don't really care.
Dealing with apathy is probably one of the hardest things one can deal with when it comes
to evangelism.
I'll take someone who wants to have a debate any day of the week over somebody who just
doesn't really care.
But you can still ask, I think, very simple and gentle questions like, who do you think
Jesus is?
Or why do you think, I guess the most folksy way to, like, who do you think Jesus is? Or why do you think,
I guess the most folksy way to put it, why do you think this whole Christianity thing got started?
How do you think this got started? And there, you're just asking for their opinion on something.
And they may say something, if they're not scholarly, if they're just, you know, your
regular man on the street will say, well, you know, Jesus's followers, they believed in him,
and so they wanted to
preach this, this message of hope, or it was a legend that developed over a long period of time.
And then you should just ask questions, say, well, you know, do you, do you really believe
that? Like, is this, because people want to say, well, Christianity is a good thing. It's just,
you know, I don't, I don't totally believe in it. They say, well, it can't really be,
because if this isn't true, then we're talking. This is crazy pants stuff here.
You know, if you believe if you believe that this guy rose from the dead, you will rise from the dead to death is not the end to say death is not the end that radically changes how you view life.
Yeah, because if you think you're going to because I tell you all the time who call Catholic Answers Live, they'll say, especially on the shows, like, why aren't you religious?
They'll say, well, I don't care. My life is fine right now. You know, they'll say, I go to work, I have my friends, I have my Netflix, everything's
fine. I don't need religion because I'm happy. And, you know, so people sometimes will dispute
and debate with them and say, well, are you really happy? I mean, what if you have the fullness of
happiness in becoming Christian? And they may not, they say, well, I still feel pretty good right now.
So that's why I like to ask the question, well, look, what if, though, you live forever?
You know, what if at death that's not the end?
What are you going to do for eternity?
Like, I don't want to watch Netflix for eternity.
Any earthly activity we engage in for eternity will become hellish.
I mean, I love science fiction.
There's a lot of great science fiction works that deal with the question of immortality and whether immortality is a great thing.
And usually people who have immortality in science fiction come to regret it.
They come to regret it.
There's a great short story.
I think it was harland ellison
wrote it about someone who ends up being immortal now he becomes immortal because of the diabolical
uh scheming of an evil mastermind computer but the so the title of it is called it's it's really
creepy the title is i have no mouth but i must scream it's You'll have to look it up. I will have to look that up. Yeah.
Yeah. I might, I might be transposing it, the title, but, uh, but the, the, the fear, I mean,
being immortal, like eventually you would just, you would just start to lose your mind. And the
reason for that is we are not in this form, in this stage of life, we are not capable of receiving anything that is infinite or unending because we're broken, fallible, fallen human beings.
The only thing, so if we're going to live for eternity, if we're going to have infinite duration of life ahead of us, then I'm going to want something that can satisfy my desires for happiness infinitely.
The only thing that's infinite in its nature is God.
desires for happiness infinitely. The only thing that's infinite in its nature is God. So that's where I'm going to say, look, if you're going to live forever, are you right with God or are you
not right with God? And so what the Bible teaches is that Christ rose for our justification, Romans
4.25, and then we have hope in Christ's resurrection. 1 Corinthians 15 says that Christ's
resurrection is the first fruits. It's an agricultural term. That means in the crops in your farm, there's some fruits when they start to turn and they're ripe and they're
ready to be harvested, that signals the rest of the harvest is ready.
Oh, that's cool. I didn't know that.
Yeah. So that's what Paul uses that reference, that metaphor in 1 Corinthians 15, where he says
that Christ's resurrection, it's the first fruits of the resurrection. And now we can have the
promise of our resurrection to rise from the dead. Maybe not immediately, but we've been ushered into that
final age of the resurrection, that if Christ is risen, we will rise. Because what Paul was
dealing with, and you read in 1 Corinthians 15, the Corinthians are saying, oh, maybe there is
no resurrection from the dead, or we've missed it, or there's not going to be, there is no
resurrection from the dead. And Paul says, well, wait a minute. If Christ did not rise from the dead, or we've missed it, or there's not going to be, there is no resurrection from the dead. And Paul says, well, wait a minute. If Christ did not rise from the dead, if the way
he said, if there's no resurrection from the dead, then that means that Christ didn't rise from the
dead. But Christ did rise from the dead. Therefore, there is a resurrection from the dead. So Paul is
using a form of logical argument called modus tollens. So you're probably
familiar with modus ponens and modus tollens. So basically, the way you can validly argue,
there's two ways you can validly argue. If A, then B. A, therefore B. You can do that,
or you can do if A, then B, not B, then not A. Those are the valid ways. If you try to do it any other way, it becomes a logical
fallacy. So the way I could explain it to you is, so let's say if I am in San Diego, California,
if I'm in San Diego, then I'm in California, if A then B. If I'm not in California, then I'm not
in San Diego. So that's modus tollens. So what Paul is arguing here is that if there's no
resurrection from the dead, Christ is not risen. But then he does modus tollens. He says, but not
be. Christ has risen. Therefore, there is a resurrection from the dead. So that's the
argument he's using. And if you're curious, and your followers can look this up, the way of
totally botching modus ponens is the fallacies are called affirming the consequent or denying the antecedent.
And we can get into that, of course, another time.
Yeah, fascinating stuff.
All right, so we've begun to deal a little bit with the apathy that someone might have.
Let's take a look at some alternative explanations someone might offer for why Christ didn't rise from the dead.
And no doubt you'll see these in some, perhaps, opinion articles in newspapers and online around this time. So, you know, someone will say,
well, it's so fantastic to think that Jesus rose from the dead. Any other explanation has to be
more plausible. So, you know, how do we really know that Jesus died on the cross? Maybe he
passed out on the cross and was put into the tomb later or something like that. Yeah,
that sounds super improbable, but it's a lot more, surely it's a lot more probable than him rising from the dead.
What about that one?
Right.
That deals a little bit with probability theory.
And you'll have people, especially atheists, who, I mean, the thing is you'll have people who will argue, they're atheists who will argue there is essentially no chance that Jesus rose from the dead using a probability theorem called Bayes' theorem, which was developed by actually by a clergyman.
I think his name was Robert Bayes.
But then you had people like Richard Swinburne, an Orthodox Christian philosopher, Richard Swinburne, who said you can use Bayes' theorem to argue there's a 93% chance that Jesus rose from the dead.
So these probability theorems only really work based on the numbers you put in. So, you know, garbage in, garbage out.
And with Bayes' theorem and with probability statistics, Bayes' theorem relies heavily on
the prior probability of an event. So when someone says, well, it doesn't matter what,
we could say, you know, aliens or time-traveling wizards or, you know, there's, or even any other kind of a really strained natural explanation to account for the
resurrection. Any of that's going to be better than Jesus rising, and better than a miracle,
because miracles just don't happen. But here, I would say, well, how do you know miracles are so
improbable? You're assuming in your prior probability that miracles are the least
likely of all events. Why do you think that? So I'm going to want to dive in deeper to see what's
driving this assumption. So if you're talking about it strictly saying, well, you use frequency,
well, you know, miracles are very infrequent. I would first one dispute that and say, well,
how do you know if they're infrequent or not? Miracles are a funny sort ofquent. I would first one dispute that and say, well, how do you know if
they're infrequent or not? Miracles are a funny sort of thing. I mean, there's something for a
bumper sticker. Miracles are a funny sort of thing? Well, the thing is, a miracle by definition is a
suspension of the laws of nature. So, they're not something that's easily replicated in the
laboratory. I mean, if you want to prove that water boils at 100 degrees
Celsius, it's easy to get a bunch of pots going and set them off and do that. You replicate it.
But there's lots of people who have claimed to have had miracles happen to them. Craig Keener,
a New Testament scholar, actually wrote a two-volume work on miracles, and he assembles,
I think, thousands of reports of miracles, of people having interactions
with the deceased, of people whose limbs have been healed, miraculous healings that can't be
explained scientifically. So lots of people have claimed to have had some kind of, you know,
there's lots of people who claim that. Now, a lot of people say, well, I don't believe that. I think
most of those aren't genuine. Well, that's an open debate we can have. I think that your worldview is going to, and this goes in, it's not so much frequency, your worldview is
going to start to claim what you think the probability of a miracle is. If you think that
there is no God, then you're going to say, well, there are no miracles. I remember once talking on
the radio with an atheist, and he said, you know, I don't believe all these miracle reports. I don't believe all these things. And I said to him, well, let me ask you this. Now, maybe many of those miracles
reports are false or disingenuine, but if even one of them is correct, then my view is right,
and that there is a God. So I asked him, which is more likely? Every single report of a miracle
throughout human history has been false, or at least one of them,
one of the millions or hundreds of thousands of accounts, at least one of them is true.
And he said, well, it's more likely they're all false. I said, well, how do you know that? He
said, because, you know, there's, God is just made up, you know, there's no one to do miracles.
I said, so wait, you're arguing in a circle now. You're saying, you know, I don't believe in
miracles, you know, there is no God because there's no miracles to prove it,
and there's no miracles to prove it because there is no God.
So you have to be careful with probability theory when it comes to frequency
because I would say, well, why do you think the Big Bang started the universe?
We've never observed Big Bangs.
Any other theory we come up with is going to be better than that.
Maybe everything's a simulation.
We run simulations on computers right now. So, I mean, that's got to be better than a Big Bang because we don't observe them.
That's where I see sometimes the problem with when people appeal just to probability theory in this
way. Okay. Well, that's really great. Well, let's say people aren't necessarily talking about
probability in that strict academic sense. They just think it seems maybe just Jesus didn't die.
What do you say to people who say that?
Because I've seen that thrown about on some of these late-night specials,
that he just fainted and then was put in the tomb and then walked out,
and they thought he had risen.
Right.
That one's called the swoon theory.
I think there was a German forum critic, Carl Venturini,
probably would be one guy who proposed that.
The idea that how you explain it. So once again, you're trying, notice the person is trying to explain these
facts. We agree Jesus was crucified. We agree that his followers thought he rose from the dead.
And a fair number of people might be willing to even buy that his tomb was empty. Now, if Jesus
just awoke in the tomb naturally, he was unconscious, not dead. And then people thought he had risen
from the dead. That would explain all the facts. But there's more problems with this theory.
One, it would be incredibly unlikely that Jesus would survive being crucified. I mean,
the Romans were very good at what they did, and the Gospels describe Jesus undergoing
extremely intense suffering leading up to his crucifixion. So, Josephus records three people who, three of his friends were being crucified,
and he asked for them to be taken down. And even with the best medical care the Romans could offer
them, only one of them survived. Jesus doesn't, we don't see him getting medical care, he's just
thrown into a tomb. So, one, I think it's highly, extremely unlikely Jesus would survive crucifixion.
But even if he did, the fact is the disciples aren't idiots.
They would see, oh, he hasn't risen from the dead.
He's just miraculously cheated death.
He would still have holes in his hands.
He'd be covered in blood.
He'd be weak.
He'd be incoherent.
You wouldn't say to yourself, ah, Jesus, I want a resurrection body just like that when I
get to heaven. No one's going to say something like that. So I don't think it accounts for the
resurrection belief the apostles had, which is not merely a resuscitation or cheating death,
but gloriously rising from it. And Paul talks all the time in Philippians 3.21, in his letter to the Romans,
he says that we will be changed and glorified, transformed to be like his resurrection body.
Well, what do you think of the objection that the disciples made up the resurrection? So,
they've been following this Jesus character for three years, they had invested their entire life
in him. The idea that he would be so defeated, they just had to come up with a story that was better than
the fact that they had just wasted their last three years. And so, maybe they did die, and they
knew it, but they did something with his body, and they just began to preach that he had risen.
Well, here's the thing. They would actually fit in well with people of their own time
that failed messiahs were something that people were accustomed to. I mean, there were
different messiah claimants around the time of Jesus. You had someone named the Egyptian,
you had Theudas, you had different individuals who claimed to be the messiah, had followers,
and then turned out to be frauds. They turned out not to be the messiah because they were either
killed or they were driven into exile.
So what we would say is, look, what would a first century Jew do in the case, in the face of a failed Messiah?
It's easy for us to armchair here in the 21st century and say, oh, well, they would go on and just kind of preach this and make up a story to vindicate what they had done.
Okay, that's your 21st century speculation.
what they had done. Okay, that's your 21st century speculation. But why don't we go back to the historical record and see what first century Jews actually did when this happened to them?
And what N.T. Wright has shown is that Jews who came across a failed Messiah, they would recognize
it was a failed Messiah. And so they would either go back to their old lives. There's no point in
preaching failure because, you know, what's the point?
Nothing's been accomplished that you're going to go preach your Messiah.
Guess what?
The Romans are still in charge.
You know, it seems everything seems to be lost.
Most of them either went back to their old lives or they tried to see if perhaps one
of the fake Messiah's family members was the true Messiah.
So we would expect then that if the apostles were going to follow this pattern, they either would go back to their
old lives or maybe say that one of Jesus's relatives, like James, for example, either his
cousin or stepbrother James, say maybe he's the real Messiah and elevate him or elevate one of
the other apostles in Jesus's place. Instead, you could
get them going out and they're preaching this. And sometimes non-religious people put this out
there too. And they'll say, well, they wanted to preach people a good message. I would say,
well, how is it a good message? You're selling goods that don't accomplish what they're supposed
to do. You're selling something you can't pay, saying, oh, believe in this resurrection,
you'll rise from the dead, even though we know this guy's a total failure. I mean,
you'd have to be totally out of your mind or a really, really bad person to sell the hope for
eternal life on nothing at all, instead of just giving up. And then who was the church historian
that said it's very unlikely that they should all hold to this account and no one would say, okay, we just made it up as they were being either hunted or put to death?
I cannot remember. You're talking about a modern historian or an ancient historian?
No, it was an ancient church historian. But either way, the point—
I mean, it might have been Eusebius is our go-to when it comes to, so yeah, it's probably Eusebius. Yeah, but that's a good point too. I mean, even though we might not have compelling evidence to
think that all of the apostles died, except John, although that is tradition, the fact that they put
themselves in that kind of danger and were at least hunted, why would you do that and not back
down if you just made this up? Right, and that's actually, so the martyrdom of the apostles is an
important point that comes up
in defending the faith on the resurrection. And I've seen some people like Richard Dawkins and
others who have said that the fact, you know, some people will say this, who would die for a lie?
So that's, you know, the idea that let's say some people say just flat out, they're just lying to,
you know, increase their notoriety and live off of being preachers, things like that.
And the retort to that is who would die for a lie? Now, some critics like Dawkins and others
will say, oh, it's easy to answer who would die for a lie, 9-11. And then they just rub their
hands, you know, clap their hands and say, oh, there you go, I've answered your argument. And
say, well, no, you haven't understood the crux of the argument here. Who would die for a lie? Yes, the suicide bombers, those who
die, for example, for Islam today, people who are martyrs today for something like Islam,
I believe they are dying for a lie. But they believe they are sincerely dying for the truth.
Who would die for a lie does not prove the truth of what they are dying for, but it proves the sincerity of the believer.
So the point of the apostles' martyrdom is that they sincerely believed Jesus rose from the dead.
And we would ask, well, what caused that belief in them?
Because the people who die today for Islam, or even for Jesus, do not have that immediate encounter with Muhammad or with Jesus to know
whether it's true or not. Someone who dies in Islam today, they have no way of knowing if what
they're dying for is true or false. But the apostles would have known whether Jesus really
rose from the dead or he did not. Well, then this leads us to the next objection that maybe the
disciples were sincere, but they were sincerely wrong. Maybe they just had hallucinations of Jesus
and were willing to die because they believed they were right, but Jesus didn't actually rise
from the dead. Right, and that's the most common variant hypothesis is to say, well,
the apostles just simply hallucinated that Jesus had rose from the dead.
I just want to pause here a moment, though, Trent, and point out what you mentioned a moment ago.
You notice that all of these objections that we hear from people or we'll read in the
newspapers do take into account those minimal facts that you brought up earlier. Oh yeah,
they do. Most people will say, okay, well, I'll grant you this. And so it's important to establish
these minimal facts. And a good way for us to do that is through actually, counterintuitively,
is not through the Gospels. The Gospels are an
important witness, but it's through the writings of Paul. In particular, Paul's letter to the
Corinthians in 1 Corinthians chapter 15. So even the people who deny Jesus existed,
even people like Richard Carey and others will say, well, yeah, of course St. Paul existed.
We have it. Well, they call him Paul. They'd say, yes, Paul existed. We have his writings.
They would say that Romans and Corinthians are authentic letters of Paul. No getting around that.
And that Paul knew the apostles, because we know that from Galatians, Paul met with them in
Jerusalem. And in 1 Corinthians 15 contains a creed in verses three through eight that talks
about Jesus, talks about his death and being buried, and then him appearing again to Peter,
to James, the rest of the brethren, to 500 believers at once, and then finally to Paul himself.
So here we've got the death, we've got the post-resurrection appearances. I would say the
Gospels provide good evidence that Jesus' tomb is empty. So yeah, they agree on the minimal facts.
The question is, all right, hallucination. Now, there's a lot of problems with this.
It doesn't explain all the minimal facts.
First, if this was merely a hallucination, we would expect the apostles to hallucinate
just that Jesus were spiritually raised into heaven, not bodily raised.
Also, if the apostles were just making it up, we would expect that as well, because
it's harder to prove, oh, if you're making up a bodily resurrection, okay, we would expect that as well, because it's harder to prove that, oh,
if you're making up a bodily resurrection, okay, we'll go, here's Jesus' tomb, here's his bone box,
we found, you know, the bones of Jesus buried outside of Jerusalem, the game is over. Well,
no, no, we mean he was spiritually resurrected. Okay, we can't really falsify that.
So we would expect them to hallucinate if they were, at their time, they did not believe that there was a bodily resurrection because they didn't believe the end of the world had arrived yet.
They would believe that Jesus was taken into heaven and you would experience him in some kind of a vision.
So if you read, for example, there's a gentleman, sorry, there's a first century wonder worker named Apollonius of Tyana.
And this is someone
Jesus is always compared to. Say, well, Apollonius' followers believe that he rose from the dead too,
and how is that any different than Jesus? Well, the story of Apollonius, we got one source written
like 200 years later. So it's not reliable. But even if there's a historical core there,
in the resurrection account of Apollonius, his followers are sitting around
figuring out what to do. He's dead. They're drawing shapes because they're into Greek mathematics.
And one of them wakes up from sleep and says that he saw Apollonius and that he's alive. He has a
dream. You know, one person, this is what you think of a hallucination account, something in
dreams or something in a vision. That's not what we receive in the Gospels and in Paul. We're talking about actual appearances of Jesus bodily to the
disciples, which you can't chalk that up to a hallucination.
Pete Yeah, okay. And then I guess, finally, I'd ask, what would you say to people who just want
a couple of lines? How would you convince people in a couple of sentences that the New Testament
is reliable at all? Because obviously, this could be an entire dissertation. But I'm just
like the people out there who are kind of chatting with their friends and co-workers,
and the co-worker says, well, look, even if all that's true, basically, the Bible isn't reliable
anyway. So, yeah, maybe you can make the story coherent, like you can make Star Wars coherent,
because something's coherent doesn't
mean it's factual. So, yeah, what's your kind of soundbite for why the New Testament's reliable?
Well, first, I would say, don't worry about defending the New Testament if, you know,
I'll give you a soundbite for that, but I would say if someone says it's not reliable,
ask them to prove why. Well, why don't you think it's reliable? Because a lot
of times they just assume because the New Testament describes miracles, it's not reliable.
But ancient historians like Josephus and Tacitus also describe miracles, but we don't say, oh,
we have no idea what happened in ancient Rome because they're not reliable. Historians will
say, well, there's reliable parts in here and less reliable parts. So I would ask the person, okay, which parts of the Bible are reliable? Like, was there a Jerusalem?
Was there a Pontius Pilate? Was there a Jesus? Which parts are reliable and which aren't? And
you'll quickly see sometimes the biases come through. The non-miraculous parts are reliable,
but the miraculous parts aren't. So here, it's not a question of history, it's a question of
philosophy. You know, what do you consider to be possible in our world? So you want to make them defend their claim that it's not reliable. Now,
if they say to you, okay, but why should I believe these stories weren't just completely made up? Why
do you think they're reliable? You're right, there's a lot of evidence as we go forward,
but my soundbite would be this. We have multiple sources describing the life of Jesus that were
written by authors who are reliable within the lifetime of eyewitnesses. So I would say, look,
here's how I'll compare. I know the New Testament. Let's take the Gospel of Mark, for example,
which Mark is the traveling pannion of Peter. And we'll compare it to the Gospel of Peter,
which Mark is the traveling panyon of Peter. And we'll compare it to the Gospel of Peter written 200 years later. The Gospel of Peter is made up. If you were making up a story,
you would pick a really famous person to attribute it to, like Peter. You'd see it was
written hundreds of years later. It contains anachronisms or false details. You're trying
to describe a time period you're far removed from. And it clearly has legendary embellishment in it.
However, if you look at something like the Gospel of Mark, if I'm going to make up a story about
Jesus, who the heck is Mark? Who is Luke? Or why would you pick Matthew, who's on the lower rung
of the totem pole of the apostles? Even John, it's not necessarily the case that it's the
Apostle John who is the author behind that gospel. You're picking authors here that would
make sense if these were just lesser known but real historical figures who had interactions with
the apostles. We have evidence that they were written within a few decades of the events they
describe, which is great by ancient standards. The first biography of Alexander the Great
was written 400 years after his death, but we still have an accurate account of his life.
Finally, there are details in the Gospels themselves that attest to their authenticity.
So there are things like the cowardly, stupid behaviors of the apostles you might want to
redact if you were making things up. Also, even in the letters of Paul and in the Gospels,
Jesus is not used as a ventriloquist dummy to solve the
problems of the early church. For example, if you read in Paul's letters, there's a big dispute
about whether you could sacrifice, eat meat that had been sacrificed to idols. Like, could you eat
it? Is it, you know, forbidden now because it was used for an idolatrous purpose? Do you have to be
circumcised to be a Christian? These were being debated in the early church, so if the
Gospels were being written during that time, we would just expect the authors to use Jesus as a
ventriloquist dummy to settle those disputes, but they don't. That editorial restraint shows the
Gospel authors were not writing theology for their own time, they were recording history and God's revelation shortly before they were writing.
Finally, there's a great... Lydia McGrew is a modern author who's written on this.
Oh, she's brilliant.
Oh, she's wonderful. Though I will say there's different approaches. Lydia McGrew is
critical of the minimal facts approach, and I appreciate her arguments, and so I'm actually
working on a kind of synthesis of understanding the best approach to the resurrection. I'd love to do a whole monograph just on that. So that's my
caveat there. But the McGrews have wonderful work on this, and Lydia McGrew wrote a book that
brought back an argument from J.J. Blunt that there are undesigned coincidences in the Gospels,
that there are details in the Gospels that when you combine
all of the accounts together, these separate evangelists, you see they're describing the
same events but from different perspectives. And so there are these little coincidences in
their writings, like the fact that Philip was chosen during the feeding of the 5,000 to go
and buy bread, even though he's a minor apostle, because the one place they could go buy bread,
we learn in another Gospel, was Philip's hometown. Little things like that, these little historical
details that when they come together, we see, oh, these are things that a forger would never just
come right up and figure out. So that's... Fascinating.
Yeah, so you look up undesigned coincidences in the gospels. The first author who came up with
that was J.J. Blunt. Lydia McGrew is a more modern treat.
Has she wrote a book on it yet? Yes, she has. Let me, let's see, I think I could,
you know, find it. Yeah, find that out. I got to check that out. Yeah, for those who are
looking to listen to a debate where a theist completely and utterly trounces an arrogant
atheist, it's a bit of schadenfreude, you know when tim mcgrew that's lydia's husband debated an atheist
on the english show unbelievable so to our listeners yeah type in tim mcgrew unbelievable
question mark that's the name of the podcast and yeah i as i say the point isn't just to make people
look bad but we want to put forward your case and show that
it can stand up to scrutiny. The book, by the way, is called Hidden in Plain View,
Undesigned Coincidences in the Gospels and Acts. Is this an academic kind of book?
Because I'm getting there. Yeah, it's a DeWard publishing. So,
Tim and Lydia are a bit more academic of writers but i find them to be
good at communicating yeah they're their perspective so i think it'd be it'd be well worth it for anyone
to get yeah yeah but anyway that just just to kind of round up what i was saying there people people
gotta go check that that uh debate that tim mcgrew did with the atheist i forget the atheist name but
it was so sad because the atheist came out swinging veryantly, like this faith stuff is just a bunch of hogwash.
And it was incredible how Tim just dismantled everything he was saying.
Well, let's see.
Was that with Peter Boghossian?
Yes, Boghossian.
Oh, Peter Boghossian is...
So, he wrote a book called A Manual for Creating Atheists.
Yeah, that's what they were debating.
That's what they were talking about.
Oh, my goodness.
That's terrible.
I wrote a critical review of A Manual for creating atheists when it came out.
And I'd love to debate Peter Boghossian and have him on my podcast, The Council of Trend.
Oh, yes.
I've actually set up a few debates and dialogues here in the future, so people will know once those are online.
I'd love to have him come on the show, but I read Manual for Creating Atheists, and there's some good things in there about epistemology, but Boghossian is just so
pompous about dismissing theistic arguments. And, well, he basically argues in the book
that if someone believes in God, even after having atheistic arguments explained to them,
they must be brain damaged.
Right. Yeah.
And so, yeah, I would love to have him just.
So that's why it was so satisfying to have Tim McGrew just destroy him.
It was just, you deserve this.
Yeah.
So Trent, you got to go listen to it as well.
It's fantastic.
Oh, absolutely.
But yeah, so hubris is a great way to describe Bogosian's work and many other atheists who
just simply dismiss
religious claims and are not willing to investigate the arguments that are put forward for them.
Yeah. Well, that's terrific. That's a good answer, because I think it's so much easier to
tear down than to build up. It's so much easier to dismiss something than to argue for something.
So, I like your tactic there, Trent.
If someone just says the New Testament's unreliable, they're making a claim to knowledge
there. And so, the temptation can be, well, you need to build. But instead, you could turn it
back on them and say, okay, well, prove it. And I think that might, not always, but it might show
sometimes that that person really doesn't know why. It's just a lot easier to dismiss it than
to perhaps listen to the arguments for why the New Testament's reliable.
Right. And so, another great resource I'd recommend on the reliability of the New Testament
would probably be Craig Blomberg. Craig Blomberg has written a book called The Historical Reliability
of the Synoptic Gospels, and a separate book, The Historical Reliability of John's Gospel.
And he goes through, because you can go through and compare what we know from ancient history to say, does this line up with what we know about ancient
Judea, the language, the geography, the customs, the internal chronology of the Gospels? Does that
make sense? And you put that together and you can actually see that it's very reliable, what it
describes. The book of Acts itself is extremely reliable. Colin Hemer wrote a book called The
Book of Acts and the
Setting of Hellenistic History. And time and time and time again, Acts will describe unique details
such as the depth of harbors or an obscure title for a Roman official in a particular province
that was unique to that province. And Acts will get it right, and secular history will back it up.
I'll give you a great example of this. In the year 41 AD, in the early 40s, Emperor Claudius
expelled all the Jews from Rome. And it's possible he did that because the Jews and Christians were
fighting about Jesus. The Roman historian Suetonius tells us it was because of somebody
named Crestus they were all booted, which might be a dispute about Jesus. So the Jews were kicked out of Rome in the early 40s AD. Only two historians record
that. One is Suetonius, and the other is Luke. In Acts 18, at the beginning of Acts 18, Paul meets
Priscilla and Aquila and says they had just left Rome because Claudius had expelled the Jews. Now,
Suetonius had not recorded this. People would say, oh, well, Luke bungled it again. There was no expulsion of the Jews in Rome
in 40 AD. That's ridiculous because Tacitus doesn't tell us, Josephus doesn't describe this.
Right, but they don't describe everything. They're not infallible historians. And in 1893,
Pope Leo XIII was writing his Be Providentis Mus Deus, and he made the point And in 1893, Pope Leo XIII was writing,
be providentis imus deus, and he made the point then, in 1893, still the same today,
that the Bible, this is my paraphrase, he'll say that the Bible always gets rigorously questioned,
but secular historians are treated as infallible or always given the benefit of the doubt. And
that's a double standard we ought to bring out in our conversations.
How has learning all of this about the reliability of Christ's resurrection
impacted and continues to impact your own faith life and experience of Easter?
Well, it gives me peace and it gives me hope. I will tell you, though, that reading this and
studying this is one thing, but I was very blessed a few years ago. I've been to
the Holy Land twice. The last time I was there was a year ago, and I was there for Easter. I was
leading a pilgrimage. And knowing what I've read in the New Testament studies, I actually, it's so
funny, there are two tombs of Jesus in Jerusalem. There's the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, which is
in the old city of Jerusalem, and then you've got one that's kind of called the Protestant tomb.
It's the one all the Protestants like to go to because it doesn't have icons.
It doesn't reek of Catholicism.
It's like a very pristine garden tomb.
It looks like something from, you know, a vacation Bible school animated show.
But when you look at the history, you'll say, nope, there is no historical evidence this is the tomb of Jesus.
the history, you'll say, nope, there is no historical evidence this is the tomb of Jesus.
And yet, but when you go to the actual tomb of Jesus and see the evidence lining up that,
oh, this was right outside the city walls, and this lines up with archaeology, this lines up with history, this is not some kind of pious fiction. So I remember on last Easter, when I
went there, I took our group. I was actually the only person willing to do this. I got up at five
in the morning and walked to the old city. It was still night. And I, you know, just like the women,
the Gospels describe, they went up when it was dawn or it was still dark and went to the tomb.
I remember walking there, it was quiet to the old city and going to Jesus's tomb and sitting right
in front of it. And then three hours later, getting to have sunrise mass or having morning mass
with the Latin patriarch and everybody there, though the Eastern Orthodox are celebrating Palm of it. And then three hours later, getting to have sunrise mass or having morning mass with
the Latin patriarch and everybody there, though the Eastern Orthodox are celebrating Palm Sunday,
and they always give the Catholics a hard time. It's kind of like watching brothers pick on each
other. But otherwise, it was... Gosh, that sounds beautiful.
It was. Was it just driven home to you in a new and deeper way?
It was. Just both my academic learning has really helped me,
but also being able just to feel that and experience it directly.
And that was actually with John Paul Tours.
They did the pilgrimage, and I organized it.
And if anyone's interested in great pilgrimages like that,
they should check out John Paul Tours.
Is it John Paul Tours or John Paul the Great Tours?
What is it?
Paul the Great Tours.
Is it?
Well, I want to say it.
I don't want to get it wrong.
Yeah, John Paul Pilgrimages and Tours.
Mark Pierce is the CEO of it.
He was a great guy.
He attended.
Yeah, he's awesome.
He did a great job.
It's John Paul Pilgrimages and Tours.
There you go.
Yeah,.com.
Terrific.
Well, tell us one more time about your new book, where people should pick it up, and why they should get it.
Yeah, so the new book is called Counterfeit Christ, How to Find the Real Jesus Among the
Imposters. And you can pick it up. It's available for pre-order on Amazon. You can get it at our
website at shop.catholic.com. And I go through there all the false views people have about Jesus,
whether it's the non-religious view that Jesus is just your buddy or your friend, that he's a mystery, we can't know anything about his life,
it's lost to the sands of time, it's a legend. The atheist view that he was copied from pagan
deities like Horus or Osiris. Also other religions, like the Jewish view that Jesus was just a rabbi,
or the Muslim view Jesus was just an imam, how Muslims and Jehovah's Witnesses misunderstand Jesus and deny his full divinity.
Also, how ideologues, like people who try to say Jesus was a socialist or Jesus
would affirm gay relationships. So you see that in academia all the time. Even popular people
would say, oh, Jesus never said anything about homosexuality, so what's the big deal? Well,
I show what he really did say about those matters. And then finally, even when Protestants misunderstand
Jesus, like that Jesus is a prosperity preacher, he wants you to be wealthy, or that Jesus would
condemn Catholics to hell for not worshiping him correctly. I go through all that in the book,
and you can get that at shop.catholic.com. Once again, the name of the book is Counterfeit
Christ's How to Find the Real Jesus Among the Impostors. Looks awesome. Yeah, thanks for all your work
doing this. This is terrific. How many books is this now? 40? 50? We're getting up there.
You're the new Peter Kreeft. Yeah, well, I don't think I'll ever catch up with him. It's the
paradox of infinity. I take one step forward, he writes three more books. This would be book number
eight. I think Peter Kreeft has written like 80 books. So maybe, and he's still writing, so maybe one day,
but yeah, I think this is book number eight. Terrific. Well, thanks for all your work,
Trent. And then your podcast, it's so exciting to hear that you're going to be doing some more
debates and things like that, the Council of Trent, hey? Yeah, so that's available at
trenthornpodcast.com. You can get it for free on iTunes and Google Play. If you're a premium subscriber, you get access to things like my Catechism Study Series, bonus episodes, being able to suggest show topics, correspond with me.
But yeah, so we're doing, you know, we do all kinds of things about theology, apologetics, but hopefully here over the summer, I've already lined up a few guests. We're going to transition into having
once a week a debate or dialogue with someone who is not Catholic. And so there'll be debates
or chats, you know, it'll run the gamut. Most of the people who are Protestant and even not
Christian. And so I'll be letting people know those will probably start here around June or
July as we begin taping here at the end of spring. Cool, man. Well, thanks for all your work and God bless. Thanks for being on the show and happy
Easter. Oh, happy Easter to you too, Matt. All right, sweet. Thank you so much for tuning into
Pints with Aquinas. Do you know that when you review Pints with Aquinas on iTunes, that actually
really helps us? I didn't realize that it did in the beginning. I heard people saying that you
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see all the free stuff i'll give you in return for being a great supporter cheers bye And I would give my whole life
To carry you, to carry you
And I would give my whole life
To carry you, to carry you
And I would give my whole life
To carry you, to carry you
To carry you, to carry you
To carry you you There were birds in your tears
falling from the sky
into a dry river bed
that began to flow
down to a
cross tower and high up above the water
and maple trees surrounded
It leaves caught flame
With golden embers