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Religious Scholars Troubled by Resurrection Delusions

By
Rachel Zoll
AP Religion Writer
Sat, Mar. 22 2008 05:48 AM ET
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On Easter Sunday, Christians will proclaim the message at the heart of their faith — "He is risen" — and will affirm the hope that God will raise all the dead at the end of time.

But this belief is deeply misunderstood, say scholars from varied faith traditions who have been trying to clear up the confusion in several recent books.

"We are troubled by the gap between the views on these things of the general public and the findings of contemporary scholarship," said Kevin Madigan and Jon Levenson, authors of the upcoming book, "Resurrection, The Power of God for Christians and Jews."

The book traces the overlooked Jewish roots of the Christian belief in resurrection, and builds on that history to challenge the idea that resurrection simply means life after death. To the authors, being raised up has a physical element, not just a spiritual one.

Levenson last year wrote a related book, "Resurrection and the Restoration of Israel: The Ultimate Victory of the God of Life." Meanwhile, N.T. Wright, a prominent New Testament scholar and author of the 2003 book "The Resurrection of the Son of God," has just published, "Surprised by Hope: Rethinking Heaven, the Resurrection and the Mission of the Church."

Debate about Christ's Resurrection has focused on whether Jesus rose bodily from the dead after the Romans crucified him on Good Friday, or whether Resurrection was something abstract.

Wright's 2003 book was considered one of the most important recent arguments that Jesus was physically resurrected.

The three scholars also have been challenging the idea, part of Greek philosophy and popular now, that resurrection for Jews and the followers of Jesus is simply the survival of an individual's soul in the hereafter. The scholars say resurrection occurs for the whole person — body and soul. For early Christians and some Jews, resurrection meant being given back one's body or possibly God creating a new similar body after death, Wright has said.

Madigan and Levenson, among other scholars, also emphasize that resurrection for humankind is a belief that Christians and Jews share. Christians generally find it difficult to imagine that a faith that doesn't believe in Christ's Resurrection can believe in resurrection at all.

But "as the early church was developing, rabbis were making resurrection an article of normative belief," Madigan and Levenson said in e-mailed answers to questions from The Associated Press. "That is something many Jews do not know. Like many Christians, they are under the misimpression that resurrection is a uniquely Christian hope."

Jews in the time of Jesus believed that resurrection was bodily and communal — in that it brought justice to the oppressed and renewed creation, wrote Madigan, who teaches Christian history at Harvard Divinity School, and Levenson, who teaches Jewish studies there. That Jewish belief was absorbed and reshaped by the earliest Christians to form part of their religion.

Most modern-day Jews don't know this. Except for the Orthodox branch of Judaism, Jewish groups deleted belief in resurrection from the traditional prayer book during revisions that began during the 19th century in response to rationalistic, Enlightenment thought.

Public understanding of resurrection has been influenced not only by modern rejection of the idea of miracles, but also by popular culture.

Alan F. Segal, a Barnard College professor and author of "Life After Death: A History of the Afterlife in Western Religion," notes that most Americans expect the afterlife will be a continuation of life on earth — "like a really good assisted-living facility."

He also said that belief in an existence beyond death persists among Americans no matter how little they observe their religion. In the 2005 Baylor Religion Survey, 82 percent of respondents said they "absolutely" or "probably" believed in heaven. Nearly 71 percent said they "absolutely" or "probably" believed in hell.

But their ideas have been molded by Western individualism, and scholars say many important teachings from early Christianity have been skewed as a result. Indeed, even debating the specifics of resurrection may seem far removed from 21st century life.

Yet Wright and others say the church should teach what the first Christians believed. Wright also has argued that the physical reality of a future world after death shows "the created order matters to God, and Jesus' Resurrection is the pilot project for that renewal."

Madigan and Levenson have an additional motivation. They said they wrote the book to help Jews and Christians understand more about their theological bonds.

Amy-Jill Levine, a New Testament scholar at Vanderbilt University's Divinity School, said interest in resurrection — along with reincarnation, ghosts and contacting the dead — has grown in recent years.

"The more chaotic our world, with war and disease, hurricanes and famine," she said, "the more many seek a divine response to the problem of evil."

Copyright 2008 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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aritonang
  • Tue Apr 08, 2008 12:06 am
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Thank you for the great article, Miss Zoll. Although I wish you could write a better title.

Yes, resurrection in Christianity is central and vital to our believes in the Lord
Personally I am very interested in the way the Lord rejoice His resurrection and travels to many places and meet lots of people and also have picnic either breakfast or luncheon wherever He goes after that great Sunday. It was a victory picnic wherever He goes.

One of my most memorable moments in the holy land was in the Galilee where Christ have breakfast with His disciples after they netted about 153 fishes (at Mensa Christi) and also in Jerusalem where the Lord ascended to Heaven plus the Viri Galilea church.
seedplanter
  • Sun Mar 23, 2008 7:04 pm
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Dwen, I read an intriguing article about the beliefs of Brits regarding the resurrection.

As it turns out… “The opinions of atheists are especially interesting. 23% of respondents identified themselves as such, but 14% of these think Easter was about Jesus dying for the sins of the world, 12% believe he rose again from the dead, and, remarkably, 7% think he was son of God.” Yes, I know I had to read it two or three times to make certain I was reading it correctly.

http://www.christiantoday.com/article/over.half.of.britons.believe.jesus.rose.from.the.dead/17383.htm
SAFox
  • Sun Mar 23, 2008 1:09 pm
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If Jesus had not been resurrected would we be having this conversation? I doubt it.

Those who first proclaimed the Christ as risen from death knew that if they were lying about it they would be sinning by saying He was alive if in fact He were still dead. They went to their graves proclaiming "He is risen!!" They put everything on the line. The safety of their families, their lives, fortunes & sacred honor...every thing! It is hard to believe that liars would be so bold in proclaiming a lie that could cost them so dearly. They knew the risk & took it gladly!

If they were not telling the truth, as Paul said, we would be of all mankind the most miserable & we would still be trapped by the power of our sin.

I know Jesus is alive because of what happened in me when I -prayed the simple prayer "Jesus come into my heart, forgive my sin & help me live for You!" He did just that & has proven Himself so faithful over the years since that November day in 1969 when I experienced Him my self!

Yes! I am experienced! I hope Jimi & Eric knew & know what I'm talkin' about!

If you are not sure ask Him! Just be of sincere heart & ready to repent & follow Him. Pray something like "God I am a sinner. Your Book says that to me. Jesus, please forgive my sin, come into my heart (innermost being) & help me know You! Make me born again by your Spirit. Thank you " Then start reading the Bible. Start with the Gospel of John & the book of Romans.

He is alive! He is risen! Go with Him while you can.
Brother Walt
  • Sun Mar 23, 2008 8:03 am
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About 25 years ago on an early but sunny morning I was walking around a beautiful small lake. Life had't been very good to me. I had lost everything dear to me. As I passed a Christian college I had worked at for several years, I happened to look up at three empty crosses on a hill. Suddenly, tha chapel bells began to peal. The melody was familiar, "The Old Rugged Cross," rang out and it suddenly occurred to me that it was Resurrection Day. The Feast of First Fruits! Yeshua Hameshiach had risen!
No Easter ever goes by without me calling to remembrance that day.
Oh, the old rugged cross and the precious blood that was shed, for without the shedding of blood there is no remission for sins. The lamb of God that was slain from the foundation of the earth.
Christ is risen indeed!
TWPeck
  • Sun Mar 23, 2008 4:57 am
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Dwen,
Real truth does not rely on public survey.

Response to Quote 1
"I cannot imagine a God who rewards and punishes the objects of his creation, whose purposes are modeled after our own -- a God, in short, who is but a reflection of human frailty. Neither can I believe that the individual survives the death of his body, although feeble souls harbor such thoughts through fear or ridiculous egotisms. "
- Albert Einstein, obituary in New York Times, April 19, 1955
And Einstein was not wrong, he just misunderstood God or perhaps he never had children who went astray.

"A man's ethical behavior should be based effectually on sympathy, education, and social ties and needs; no religious basis is necessary. Man would indeed be in a poor way if he had to be restrained by fear of punishment and hope of reward after death.
- Albert Einstein, "Religion and Science," New York Times Magazine, November 9, 1930"
Unfortunately, the heart is not mathematics (Einstein's genius). The reality is that it is when man "follows his heart" that he does the most evil. If there is no ground, then the basis for moral ground if found in those who have the most power - and rarely does that exact for good. Einstein may have thrown off his religious underpinnings but he held fast to their virtues and that in them which he saw as good and worthwhile. Seems a little hypocritical to pick and choose.
wrhalver
  • Sat Mar 22, 2008 11:26 am
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I'm more troubled that the scholars are troubled.
The scriptures are quite clear about what the resurrection means.

If we die as sinners (physical death), we also die to God (eternal spiritual separation from God).

Christ's resurrection is the only way to die with our sins forgiven (physical death), and then live with God (eternal spiritual togetherness with God).

All we must do is believe. But Satan loves to confuse us with Reasonable Doubt.
oldstudent
  • Sat Mar 22, 2008 10:54 am
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Well of course the Jewish people believed in a physical resurrection and that the Christian belief is based off of that hope. Outside of the Saducees and some fringe elements of the population, they had bone boxes and a record of expecting to be physically raised when messiah came to put the world aright. Only the ignorant or the liar will claim anything else. Ignorance is overcome with teaching, liars are overcome by Yeshua.

Grace and Peace,
Jim
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