Christian Origins and The Resurrection of Jesus
Christian Origins and The Resurrection of Jesus
Christian Origins and The Resurrection of Jesus
N.T. Wright
Prologue
The souls of the righteous are in the hand of God, and no torment
will ever touch them. In the eyes of the foolish they seemed to
have died, and their departure was thought to be a disaster, and
their going from us to be their destruction; but they are at peace.
(3:1-3)
In the time of their visitation they will shine forth, and will run like
sparks through the stubble. They will govern nations and rule over
peoples, and the Lord will reign over them forever. (3:7-8)
These righteous Jews who have been martyred at the hands of the pagans
are for the present at peace, safe with God, but the immortality of their
souls is only the prelude to their rising again and being set in authority
over the kingdoms of the earth, within the one kingdom of God. What the
passage offers, over and above the other evidence we have briefly
considered, is an account of what happens to the righteous dead in the
interval between their torture and death and their rising again: their souls
are looked after by God.
Resurrection belongs, then, within the revolutionary worldview of
second-Temple Judaism. What part does it play within the Jewish hope
for life after death? There was within Judaism a considerable spectrum of
belief and speculation about what happened to dead people in general, and
to dead Jews in particular. At one end were the Sadducees, who seem to
have denied any doctrine of post-mortem existence (Mark 12:18;
Josephus, War 2:165). At the other were the Pharisees, who affirmed a
future embodied existence, and who seem to have at least begun to
develop theories about how people continued to exist in the timelag
between physical death and physical resurrection. And there are further
options. Some writings speak of souls in disembodied bliss, some
speculate about souls as angelic or astral beings, and so forth. We cannot,
then, simply assert that Greeks believed in immortality and Jews in
resurrection. Things were never that simple.
A Kingdom-of-God Movement
The third step is to put these two together and to notice the
contrast. It is clear that, whatever the early Christians said, the kingdom
of God had not come in the way that first-century Jews had been
imagining. Israel had not been liberated, the Temple was not rebuilt, and
—looking wider in the cosmos—evil, injustice, pain, and death were still
on the rampage. The question presses, then: Why did the early Christians
say that the kingdom of God had come?
Once again, let us be clear. If, after the death of Simon bar-Giora
in Titus’s triumph in Rome, or if, after the death of Simeon ben-Kosiba in
135, you had claimed that Simon, or Simeon, really was the Messiah, you
would invite a fairly sharp response from the average first-century Jew. If,
by way of explanation, you said that you had had a strong sense of Simon,
or Simeon, as still being with you, still supporting and leading you, the
kindest response you might expect would be that their angel or spirit was
still communicating with you—not that he had been raised from the dead.
So far as we know, the followers of the first-century messianic or quasi-
messianic movements were fanatically committed to the cause. They, if
anybody, might be expected to suffer from cognitive dissonance after the
death of their great leader. In no other case, however, right across the
century before Jesus and the century after him, do we hear of any Jewish
group saying that their executed leader had been raised again from the
dead.
They had, after all, the two normal options open to them. They
could simply have gone back to their fishing, glad to have escaped
Jerusalem with their lives. They could have switched to a different tack,
given up on messianism (as did the post-135 rabbis), and gone in for some
form of private religion instead, whether of intensified Torah-observance,
private gnosis, or something else. They clearly did not do that. Anything
less like a private religion than going around the pagan world saying that
Jesus was the Messiah of Israel would be hard to imagine.
We must, then, ask once again: Why did Christianity even begin,
let alone continue, as a messianic movement, when its Messiah so
obviously not only did not do what a Messiah was supposed to do but
suffered a fate which ought to have showed conclusively that he could not
possibly have been Israel’s anointed? Why did this group of first-century
Jews, who had cherished messianic hopes and focused them on Jesus of
Nazareth, not only continue to believe that he was the Messiah despite his
execution, but actively announce him as such in the pagan as well as the
Jewish world, cheerfully redrawing the picture of messiahship around him
but refusing to abandon it? Their answer, consistently throughout the
evidence we possess, was that Jesus, following his execution on a charge
of being a would-be Messiah, had been raised from the dead.
A Resurrection Movement
The second step builds on what I was saying in the first part of this
lecture about Jewish expectations of the resurrection. As we saw,
“resurrection” in second-Temple Judaism functioned within a controlling
narrative about the exile and restoration, and about the suffering and
vindication of the martyrs. Let me remind you again: it began life as a
metaphor for the return from exile, the renewal of the covenant, and the
cleansing of Israel from her sins. “Resurrection” was referred to in
various ways, and it took its place within quite a wide range of speculation
about the future of humankind in general and Israel in particular after their
actual bodily death. The resurrection of the dead was thus both a symbol
for the coming of the new ages, and itself, taken literally, one central
element in the package: when YHWH restored the fortunes of his people,
then of course Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, together with all God’s people
down to and including the martyrs who had died in the cause, would be
reembodied, raised to new life in God’s new world. Where second-
Temple Jews believed in resurrection then, that belief concerned on the
one hand the reembodiment of formerly dead human beings, and on the
other the inauguration of the new age, the new covenant, in which all the
righteous dead would be raised simultaneously. Resurrection meant both
that the dead would be alive again with new of renewed bodies and that
the Age to Come had at least been inaugurated.
If therefore at any time in this period you had said to a Jew, “The
resurrection has occurred!” you would have received the puzzled (or
irritated) response that it obviously had not, since the patriarchs, prophets,
and martyrs were not walking around alive again, and since the restoration
spoken of in Ezekiel 37 clearly had not occurred either—not to mention
the great prophecies of Isaiah and the rest. And if, by way of explanation,
you had said that you did not mean all that, that what you meant was that
you had had a wonderful new sense of divine healing and forgiveness, or
that you believed the former leader of your movement was alive in the
presence of God following his shameful torture and death, your
interlocutor might have congratulated you on having such an experience,
and discussed with you such a belief, but he or she would still have been
puzzled as to why you would talk of “the resurrection of the dead” in
referring to either of these things. These things imply were not what “the
resurrection of the dead” was about.
Equally, there arc plenty of people who produce wild and fantastic
theories to explain that Jesus did not really rise from the dead at all or
leave an empty tomb behind him. I think of a book called The Tomb of
God, published two years ago, which ends up saying that the bones of
Jesus now lie in a sealed tomb in southwestern France.8
The trouble with this is that if you had said to a first-century Jew
that you had had a wonderful experience of the forgiveness (or the love
and grace) of God, she or he would have been delighted for you. But if
you had gone onto say that the kingdom had come, that a crucified leader
was the Messiah or that the resurrection had occurred, they would have
been deeply puzzled if not downright offended. This language is simply
not about private experiences, even communicable private experiences, of
forgiveness. It is about eschatology, about something happening within
history that resulted in a world being now a very different place. Neither
Bultmann nor Schillebeeckx can explain from the texts the rise of
Christianity as we know it.
You see, it would have been very natural for first-century Jews,
especially if they bad belonged to a kingdom-of-God movement already,
to say of a leader who had paid the ultimate penalty at the hands of the
authorities, that his soul was in the band of God, that he was alive to God,
that he had been exalted to paradise, and that be was therefore among the
righteous who had been unjustly put to death but who would rise again to
rule the world in God’s good time. (This is, of course, exactly what
Wisdom 3:1-9 does say?) And if Jesus’ followers had indeed had a sense
that he was alive in a nonphysical way, and even that he was still present
with them in some fashion, this is how they would have expressed it. But
in so doing they would not have been claiming (to stress the point again)
that the eschaton, the longed-for kingdom of God, had now arrived; they
would not have been saying that their crucified leader was the Messiah;
and above all they would not have been saying that he had been raised
from the dead or that “the resurrection of the dead” had now occurred.
It will be obvious that I have dealt with only a tiny fraction of the
theories that have been advanced as to what happened at Easier, but I hope
I have said enough to show that the proponents of any theory that the body
of Jesus remained in the tomb while the early Christians said the
resurrection had occurred have a formidable task ahead of them, simply in
terms of first-century history. What we find, rather, is the universal early
Christian claim that Jesus had gone, as it were, through death and out the
other side, that he was not just in some intermediate state or wine
disembodied existence, but that his body had been transformed m a way
for which they, his followers, had been quite unprepared, but with which
they had had to come co terms. And they gave this as the reason why they
believed his kingdom-announcement had indeed reached its climax, its
fulfillment, in his death and resurrection. They gave this as the reason why
they continued to regard him as Messiah despite his shameful death. They
gave this as the reason for saying that “the resurrection” had in principle
already happened. What is more, they wove this belief so firmly into their
theology, their praxis, their stories, aid their symbols that (unless we are
prepared to stop writing history and start writing fantasy instead) we
cannot envisage their communal life without it.
But what was it that happened, and how did the first Christians
describe it? That is the question that will occupy us in the second lecture,
as we look in more detail at the actual rise of Christianity in the light of
the key texts from Paul and the gospels.
1 See N.T. Wright, Christian Origins and the Question of God, vol. 2: Jesus and the Victory of God
(London: SPCK; Minneapolis: Fortress, 1996).
2 See further N.T. Wright, Christian Origins and the Question of God, vol. 1: The New Testament and the
People of God (London: SPCK; Minneapolis: Fortress, 1992) 189-99.
3 For further information on the Sadducees’ denial of the resurrection, see Wright, New Testament and
the People of God (London: SPCK; Minneapolis: Fortress, 1992) 211-212.
4 See Wright, New Testament and the People of God, 309-10.
5 See N.T. Wright, The Climax of the Covenant: Christ and the Law in Pauline Theology (Edinburgh: T.
& T. Clark, 1991; Minneapolis: Fortress, 1992) 41-55.
6 Wright, Jesus and the Victory of God, chapter 11.
7 See Martin Hengel, The Zealots: Investigations into the Jewish Freedom Movement in the Period from
Herod I until 70 A.D., David Smith, trans. (Edinburgh: T. & T. Clark, 1989 [2nd edition, revised, 1976])
331-32.
8 Richard Andrews. The Tomb of God: The Body of Jesus and the Solution to a 2000-Year-Old Mystery
(Boston and London: Little, Brown, 1996).
9 See Rudolf Bultmann, “New Testament and Mythology: The Mythological Element in the Message of
the New Testament and the Problem of its Re-interpretation,” in Kerygma and Myth: A Theological
Debate, Hans Werner Bartsch, ed., Reginald H. Fuller, trans. (London: SPCK, 1953), 38-43.
10 Edward Schillebeeckx, Jesus: An Experiment in Christology, Huber Hoskins, trans. (New York:
Crossroad, 1979), 384.
11 Schillebeeckx, Jesus, 380-97.
12 Gerd Lüdemann, The Resurrection of Jesus: History, Experience, Theology, John Bowden, trans.
(London: SCM, 1994).
13 Lüdemann, Resurrection of Jesus, 95-100, 176-77.
14 Lüdemann, Resurrection of Jesus, 82-84.