We Will All See Him

In my review of Bruce M. Metzger’s book, The Text of the New Testament: Its Transmission, Corruption, and Restoration, published last February, I described a deliberate change in the text of Mark 14:62.  The statement of Jesus to the high priest that he, the high priest, would see the son of man “coming with the clouds of heaven” was deleted in order to avoid the appearance that the Lord had made a factual error, since, in fact, the high priest would die long before Jesus’ return.  (I added as an editorial comment that “the high priest may yet see Him coming on the clouds!” – by which I meant that the high priest will be raised on the last day along with everyone else, and both the living and the dead will see Him.)

Then at the end of church service last Sunday, the pastor pronounced a benediction which included Revelation 1:7, which says:

Look, he is coming with the clouds,

And every eye will see him,

Even those who pierced him. . . .

The textual critic who deleted Jesus’ statement, and Metzger and Ehrman, and I, too, we all overlooked the fact that scriptures themselves specifically address this very situation!

The Lord, He makes no mistakes.  And we will all soon see Him.

Just Supposing

Suppose, just hypothetically, that you were satisfied as to all of the following:

That the text of the New Testament, as originally written, has for all practical purposes, been fully recovered, as shown by Bruce Metzger and summarized herein at blog post “The Recovery of the New Testament” (February 18, 2024); and

That the authors of the four Gospels either were eyewitnesses of the deeds and teachings of Jesus, or had immediate access to the eyewitnesses, as shown by Richard Bauckham and summarized herein at blog post “Jesus and the Eyewitnesses” (May 13, 2024); and

    That the authors of the Gospels were men of at least ordinary skill and capacity and did their honest best to accurately record the testimony of those eyewitnesses, as shown by Simon Greenleaf and summarized herein at blog post “As to Their Honesty” (April 23, 2024); and

    That Jesus’ disciples had experiences which they honestly believed to be embodied appearances of the risen Christ, and that their lives were thoroughly transformed as a result, even to the point of being willing to die for their belief, as shown by Gary Habermas and summarized herein at blog post “He is Risen!” (March 30, 2024).

    If you were satisfied as to all of that, would you say that it would be rational to believe that Jesus is alive?

    You might.  You might even say it would be irrational not to believe that Jesus is alive.  Or at least, you might, unless your mind were still under the sway of naturalism – the assumption that miracles don’t happen.  For I would say that if God exists, then a miracle can and will happen whenever He wants it to.  One cannot, one must not, decide the question without considering the evidence since, if this miracle happened, then miracles do happen.

    In posts dating from February 18, 2024, I have published four  blog posts summarizing several books which forcefully show that the propositions set forth above are indeed the case.  The Disciples believed they saw the risen Christ.  They were, as a result of those experiences, transformed from cowering fugitives to irrepressible evangelists.  A reliable record of the deeds and teachings of Jesus has come down to us.  If you have not read those posts, please do so.  Write to me at the address shown at the top of the Home Page with your questions and concerns, and also, if you have found these essays useful, please tell your friends about the website.  God bless you.

    ps.  I want to mention how blessed and privileged I consider myself to be for having encountered the works reviewed in this series of blog posts.  I thank my God for the impressive learning, the prodigious industry, and the faithfulness of these authors, and the providence which allowed their works to appear on my desk.

    Jesus and the Eyewitnesses

    Richard Bauckham, Jesus and the Eyewitnesses: The Gospels as Eyewitness Testimony (Wm. B. Eerdman, 2d ed. 2017)

    Book Review

    Thomas Alderman 2024

    I. Introduction.

    Cambridge scholar and New Testament theologian Richard Bauckham has two major complaints about mainstream New Testament scholarship: it assumes that the Gospel tradition reached the authors of the Fourfold Gospel only after a long, uncontrolled process of anonymous oral transmission; and it often exhibits a deep scepticism about the reliability of the text unless each passage can be independently verified.  In this important work, Bauckham deals a decisive blow to both of these misconceptions and makes a powerful argument that the text of the New Testament as it has come down to us is “close to the eyewitness reports of the words and deeds of Jesus.”1

    Continue reading “Jesus and the Eyewitnesses”

    As To Their Honesty

    In my most recent post I published in these pages an excerpt from Simon Greenleaf’s (1783-1853) The Testimony of the Evangelists: The Gospels Examined by the Rules of Evidence, because it so eloquently and brilliantly captures the exalted virtues of our Lord and Saviour, Jesus Christ.  Here I offer another excerpt from the same source because it demonstrates, again very eloquently, how it is impossible that the authors of the New Testament were anything but completely honest in what they were claiming to have seen, heard, and touched.  In elegant prose Greenleaf shows conclusively that the Evangelists were honest men.  One can imagine Greenleaf addressing a jury, who are transfixed by the power of his argument.

    I heartily recommend the full essay, which is in the public domain at http://www.newhumanityinstitute.org/pdf-articles/Simon-Greenleaf-Testimony-of-the-Evangelists.pdf.

    (Excerpt: As to their honesty:)

    The credit due to the testimony of witnesses depends upon, firstly, their honesty; secondly, their ability; thirdly, their number and the consistency of their testimony; fourthly, the conformity of their testimony with experience; and fifthly, the coincidence of their testimony with collateral circumstances.

    Let the evangelists be tried by these tests.

    And first, as to their honesty.

    Here they are entitled to the benefit of the general course of human experience, that men ordinarily speak the truth, when they have no prevailing motive or inducement to the contrary. This presumption, to which we have before alluded, is applied in courts of justice, even to witnesses whose integrity is not wholly free from suspicion; much more is it applicable to the evangelists, whose testimony went against all their worldly interests. The great truths which the apostles declared, were that Christ had risen from the dead, and that only through repentance from sin, and faith in him, could men hope for salvation. This doctrine they asserted with one voice, everywhere, not only under the greatest discouragements, but in the face of the most appalling terrors that can be presented to the mind of man. Their master had recently perished as a malefactor, by the sentence of a public tribunal. His religion sought to overthrow the religions of the whole world. The laws of every country were against the teaching of his disciples. The interests and passions of all the rulers and great men in the world were against them. The fashion of the world was against them. Propagating this new faith, even in the most inoffensive and peaceful manner, they could expect nothing but contempt, opposition, revilings, bitter persecutions, stripes, imprisonments, torments, and cruel deaths. Yet this faith they zealously did propagate; and all these miseries they endured undismayed, nay, rejoicing. As one after another was put to a miserable death, the survivors only prosecuted their work with increased vigor and resolution. The annals of military warfare afford scarcely an example of the like heroic constancy, patience, and unblenching courage. They had every possible motive to review carefully the grounds of their faith, and the evidences of the great facts and truths which they asserted; and these motives were pressed upon their attention with the most melancholy and terrific frequency. It was therefore impossible that they could have persisted in affirming the truths they have narrated, had not Jesus actually risen from the dead, and had they not known this fact as certainly as they knew any other fact. If it were morally possible for them to have been deceived in this matter, every human motive operated to lead them to discover and avow their error. To have persisted in so gross a falsehood, after it was known to them, was not only to encounter, for life, all the evils which man could inflict, from without, but to endure also the pangs of inward and conscious guilt; with no hope of future peace, no testimony of a good conscience, no expectation of honor or esteem among men, no hope of happiness in this life, or in the world to come.

    Such conduct in the apostles would moreover have been utterly irreconcilable with the fact, that they possessed the ordinary constitution of our common nature. Yet their lives do show them to have been men like all others of our race; swayed by the same motives, animated by the same hopes, affected by the same joys, subdued by the same sorrows, agitated by the same fears, and subject to the same passions, temptations, and infirmities, as ourselves. And their writings show them to have been men of vigorous understandings. If then their testimony was not true, there was no possible motive for this fabrication.

    It would also have been irreconcilable with the fact that they were good men. But it is impossible to read their writings, and not feel that we are conversing with men eminently holy, and of tender consciences, with men acting under an abiding sense of the presence and omniscience of God, and of their accountability to him, living in his fear, and walking in his ways. Now, though, in a single instance, a good man may fall, when under strong temptations, yet he is not found persisting, for years, in deliberated falsehood, asserted with the most solemn appeals to God, without the slightest temptation or motive, and against all the opposing interests which reign in the human breast. If, on the contrary, they are supposed to have been bad men, it is incredible that such men should have chosen this form of imposture; enjoining, as it does, unfeigned repentance, the utter forsaking and abhorrence of all falsehood and of every other sin, the practice of daily self-denial, self-abasement and self-sacrifice, the crucifixion of the flesh with all its earthly appetites and desires, indifference to the honors, and hearty contempt of the vanities of the world; and inculcating perfect purity of heart and life, and intercourse of the soul with heaven. It is incredible, that bad men should invent falsehoods to promote the religion of the God of truth. The supposition is suicidal. If they did believe in a future state of retribution, a heaven and a hell hereafter, they took the most certain course, if false witnesses, to secure the latter for their portion. And if, still being bad men, they did not believe in future punishment, how came they to invent that which was to destroy all their prospects of worldly honor and happiness, and to insure their misery in this life? From these absurdities there is no escape, but in the perfect conviction and admission that they were good men, testifying to that which they had carefully observed and considered, and well knew to be true.

    Pearl of Great Price

    Will Durant said it well: The portrayal of Jesus in the Gospels must be true, because no one could have invented such a character:

    That a few simple men should in one generation have invented so powerful and appealing a personality, so lofty an ethic and so inspiring a vision of human brotherhood, would be a miracle far more incredible than any recorded in the Gospels.  After two centuries of Higher Criticism, the outlines of the life, character, and teaching of Christ, remain reasonably clear, and constitute the most fascinating feature in the history of Western man.

    Will Durant, Historian1

    But Simon Greenleaf said it even better:

    Lastly, the great character they have portrayed is perfect. It is the character of a sinless Being; of one supremely wise and supremely good. It exhibits no error, no sinister intention, no imprudence, no ignorance, no evil passion, no impatience; in a word, no fault; but all is perfect uprightness, innocence, wisdom, goodness and truth. The mind of man has never conceived the idea of such a character, even for his gods; nor has history or poetry shadowed it forth. The doctrines and precepts of Jesus are in strict accordance with the attributes of God, agreeably to the most exalted idea which we can form of them, either from reason or from revelation. They are strikingly adapted to the capacity of mankind, and yet are delivered with a simplicity and majesty wholly divine. He spake as never man spake. He spake with authority; yet addressed himself to the reason and the understanding of men; and he spake with wisdom, which men could neither gainsay nor resist. In his private life, he exhibits a character not merely of strict justice, but of flowing benignity. He is temperate, without austerity; his meekness and humility are signal; his patience is invincible; truth and sincerity illustrate his whole conduct; every one of his virtues is regulated by consummate prudence; and he both wins the love of his friends, and extorts the wonder and admiration of his enemies. He is represented in every variety of situation in life, from the height of worldly grandeur, amid the acclamations of an admiring multitude, to the deepest abyss of human degradation and woe, apparently deserted of God and man. Yet everywhere he is the same; displaying a character of unearthly perfection, symmetrical in all its proportions, and encircled with splendor more than human. Either the men of Galilee were men of superlative wisdom, and extensive knowledge and experience, and of deeper skill in the arts of deception, than any and all others, before or after them, or they have truly stated the astonishing things which they saw and heard.2

    1From The Story of Civilization, Vol. III: Caesar and Christ, by Will Durant, p. 557.

    2Simon Greenleaf (1783-1853), The Testimony of the Evangelists: The Gospels Examined by the Rules of Evidence (Full text: chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://www.gutenberg.org/files/34989/34989-pdf.pdf (last visited 4.5.24).)  (Greenleaf, of course, one of the founders of Harvard Law and the Nineteenth Century’s foremost authority on the law of evidence, set out to refute Christianity and became a follower of Christ instead.)

    He is Risen!

         On this Easter weekend it pleases me to share with you something of what I’ve learned from Gary Habermas’ On the Resurrection: Evidences (B&H Academic, 2024).

         There is virtual unanimity among scholars, both liberal and conservative, that the details of the events which gave rise to the Gospel story probably happened  – with the sole exception of the empty tomb, which is accepted by “only” a clear majority of scholars.  That is to say, more particularly, that the scholarly community agrees that the disciples believed they had seen the risen Christ, it transformed them from cowering fugitives into on-fire evangelists, and many of them were martyred for it.  None recanted. 

         As to the Resurrection itself, a strong minority of scholars believe Jesus arose.  For those who do not, there are no plausible naturalistic explanations for the events described above.  Their only theory is a hidebound naturalistic prejudice that there is no God and hence no miracles.  But if God exists then naturalism is false and miracles can and will happen whenever God wants them to. 

         Applying well-accepted historiographical criteria for historicity, it would be almost impossible for the evidence for the Resurrection to be any stronger than it is.  Indeed, considering that we are at a distance of 2,000 years, it is astonishing how extensively documented are the events of the New Testament, such that one can only ascribe it to a meticulous providence.  What are those criteria?  (Time permits only a cursory recounting; I hope to flesh out the following in future posts.)

    • Early attestation. (Check.)
    • Eyewitness testimony.  (Check.)
    • Multiple attestation.  (Check.)
    • Dissimilarity.  (“[A] particular saying may be attributed to someone . . . if it cannot plausibly be [attributed to] . . . the words or teachings of other roughly contemporary sources.”  Habermas, 47.)  The very idea of imagining the sayings of Jesus as coming from anyone else is ludicrous.
    • Palestinian origin.  (Sayings in the Aramaic language, for example.)  The raising of Jairus’ daughter and the cry of dereliction come to mind.
    • Embarrassment.  (Frankly acknowledging words or events which place the author or others in a negative light may reflect a commitment to truth-telling.)  Mark and Peter, for example, are unflinching in describing Peter’s repeated failures.
    • Enemy attestation. The Jews to this day claim that the body was stolen, which means the tomb must have been empty.

    He is risen!

    The Recovery of the New Testament

    Was the New Testament corrupted? Or has it been restored?

    Thomas Alderman 2024

    The Text of the New Testament: Its Transmission, Corruption, and Restoration, by Bruce M. Metzger (Oxford University Press, 3d ed. 1992; 4th ed. with Bart D. Ehrman 2005)1.

    I. Introduction.

    The Apostle Peter exhorts believers to “be ready always to give an answer to every man who asks of you a reason for the hope that is in you.”  1 Peter 3:15.  We certainly ought, therefore, to be prepared in advance to answer those who insist that the text of the New Testament has been so corrupted that we cannot know what its authors were trying to tell us.

    It’s a claim that cannot be lightly dismissed. 

    Continue reading “The Recovery of the New Testament”

    The Divine Personality

    Why do I believe in Jesus?

    I believe, because:

    1. God exists; therefore, a resurrection is possible.

    2. The figure of Jesus as presented in the NT is authentic – it must be.  His character is so magnificent that no one could have invented him if he had not existed – and he predicted he would be killed and that he would rise on the third day; therefore, a resurrection is highly likely.

    3. The tomb was empty, the apostles honestly believed they had seen the resurrected Christ, and thousands immediately became believers – these are facts which the great weight of scholarly opinion acknowledges.  Resurrection is the best way to account for these facts.

    Oh, it’s all too convenient.  We are expected to believe that a man once dead is now alive?

    Well, given that God exists, it does become possible.

    Well, then, if he rose from the dead, then where is he?  Oh, the reason we still can’t see him is that he ascended to heaven!  Now that’s really convenient!  Why should we believe that?

    Here is why.  Given that the figure of Christ as portrayed in the NT is authentic, a resurrection becomes highly likely.  And if he was raised, then the account of the ascension becomes highly likely as well, “convenient” or not.

    As to the authenticity of the figure of Christ as presented in the NT, no one has said it better than Simon Greenleaf:

    § 48. Lastly, the great character they have portrayed is perfect. It is the character of a sinless Being; of one supremely wise and supremely good. It exhibits no error, no sinister intention, no imprudence, no ignorance, no evil passion, no impatience; in a word, no fault; but all is perfect uprightness, innocence, wisdom, goodness and truth. The mind of man has never conceived the idea of such a character, even for his gods; nor has history nor poetry shadowed it forth. The doctrines and precepts of Jesus are in strict accordance with the attributes of God, agreeably to the most exalted idea which we can form of them, either from reason or from revelation. They are strikingly adapted to the capacity of mankind, and yet are delivered with a simplicity and majesty wholly divine. He spake as never man spake. He spake with authority; yet addressed himself to the reason and the understanding of men; and he spake with wisdom, which men could neither gainsay nor resist. In his private life, he exhibits a character not merely of strict justice, but of overflowing benignity. He is temperate, without austerity; his meekness and humility are signal; his patience is invincible; truth and sincerity illustrate his whole conduct; every one of his virtues is regulated by consummate prudence; and he both wins the love of his friends, and extorts the wonder and admiration of his enemies. He is represented in every variety of situation in life, from the height of worldly grandeur, amid the acclamations of an admiring multitude, to the deepest abyss of human degradation and woe, apparently deserted of God and man. Yet everywhere he is the same; displaying a character of unearthly perfection, symmetrical in all its proportions, and encircled with splendour more than human. Either the men of Galilee were men of superlative wisdom, of extensive knowledge and experience, and of deeper skill in the arts of deception, than any and all others, before or after them, or they have truly stated the astonishing things which they saw and heard.[i]


    [i]Simon Greenleaf (1783 – 1853), The Testimony of the Evangelists Examined by the Rules of Evidence Administered in Courts of Law.  (Public domain.  Greenleaf was the 19th Century’s foremost authority on the law of evidence and one of the founders of Harvard Law School.  He set himself to refute Christianity and was converted in the process.)