THE
RESURRECTION
OF
JESUS CHRIST
An Historical
Fact
By Reverend Thomas Considine, P.P.
M.A. (Oxon)
Australian Catholic Truth Society, No. 1225 (1955)
* * * * *
This pamphlet on the Resurrection of
Jesus Christ is written for two groups of people, the one composed of
Catholics and the other of non-Catholics.
There are Catholics who know in the
main the teaching of the Church on Christ our Lord and the meaning of
Easter but are somewhat vague on the historical basis on which their
faith rests. By the grace of God, their faith is secure, but they
sometimes feel the need of being able to give an account of the hope
that is in them. For them, this pamphlet may be what St. Luke (1, 4)
wished his Gospel to be, a means whereby they may be able to understand
the instruction they have received, in all its certainty.
The other group to whom it may be of
help are those non-Catholics who are aware of the presence of the
Catholic Church in the world and are struck by its vitality; this
vitality is a source of resentment for her enemies and gratitude for
her friends, but is a source of bewilderment for those who are neither.
They would like to know something of the origin of this institution,
very old but always young.
The pamphlet will not take the place
of the spoken word, no more than St. Luke's Gospel did. The Gospel, as
one may learn from the New Testament, needs to be handed on by those
commissioned to preach. But it may enable such non-Catholics to get a
glimpse of the origins of the Catholic Church and encourage them to ask
further questions in the pursuit of the answer to the riddle of life.
* * *
The author recommends readers to read
the underlined
sections first; it is complete
in itself. The remainder of the pamphlet contains the proof of some of
the statements in the underlined sections.
* * * * *
INTRODUCTION
LET us begin with the present.
The world is not very Christian, or at least there are very many people
in the Western countries who are only vaguely Christian; they do not
consciously guide their lives by Christian teaching.
Yet the whole of the Western
world bears traces of an influence that
has helped to mould the characters of all peoples living in the West.
Even those who consciously renounce all allegiance to Christianity owe
much to this influence. Many of their ideals, though often distorted
because torn from their framework, they owe to the Christian Church.
Traces of the influence of the Church are everywhere manifest, for it
has exercised a deep and wide influence on the history of mankind.
In every city, town and
village of the Western world, there are
buildings of every kind that owe their origin to the Christian Faith.
Some are very old or are in ruins: some are recent, and some still in
the course of erection. They comprise churches, schools, monasteries,
hospitals, laboratories. Those who built them were inspired by motives
rooted in their Christian religion. And these are only external
evidence. The internal evidences are more impressive.
The regulating of the working
week and of the year indicates how deeply
was the Christian view of the universe ingrained in the life of the
people. The week of seven days and the observance of the Sabbath,
though not Christian in origin, got their present form from the
Christian Church. The holiday times of Christmas and Easter are
Christian. With many, the real meaning is almost totally lost. But the
times were chosen, and the meanings attached to them were decided, by
the Church, and their observance became universal. The very word
holiday meant holy-day. The calendar by which the world regulates
national and international affairs is the Gregorian Calendar, the
calendar reformed under the authority of Pope Gregory XIII. It was
accepted by the world because of the authority of the Christian Church.
The laws by which the Western
world lives are shot through and through
with evidences of Christian influence In a recent little book of
lectures, The Changing
Law,
Sir Alfred Denning, one of the Lord justices of the Court of Appeals of
England, writes: "The common law of England has been moulded for
centuries by judges who have been brought up in the Christian Faith.
The precepts of religion, consciously or unconsciously, have been their
guides in the administration of justice."
Perhaps the best way to
realize how vital has been the Christian
influence on Western civilization is to consider what would be left if
we took away what was due to Christianity. For some centuries now, the
governments of countries nominally Christian have relied in practice on
"reason alone." The Christian guide to life is "Reason enlightened by
Faith."
The achievements of science,
divorced in practice from faith, have been
great; but Bertrand Russell, in one of his broadcast lectures during
his Australian tour, made a significant admission. After praising these
achievements, he said: "So far we have not been able to eliminate
fear." Is there any reason to believe that science , unenlightened by
faith, will ever eliminate fear? Does not the present state of acute
world anxiety point in the opposite direction? We all know what the
Fascist, the Nazi, the Communist theories of life, which deny the
Christian Faith, produce in practice.
Western civilization, of
course, does not complete the picture. The
Church has been very active in other countries as well. Africa, the
Middle East (where the Church began), the Far East, the Pacific
Islands, all bear testimony to her influence. But for our present
purpose, it is enough to point out how vital and enduring that
influence has been in the civilization with which the likely readers of
this pamphlet are familiar.
What was the cause or origin
of this great movement in the history of
mankind? The Church herself has her explanation. Her explanation is
that she was founded by an historical figure, Jesus Christ, Who died
and rose from the dead. The Church's enemies do not accept this
explanation; and, if evidence is produced in support of the Christian
explanation, they deny its worth. But they deny it not for historical
reasons, but because it contradicts what they have already decided on.
They say: "How could such a cock-and-a-bull story about a resurrection
have been true? Isn't it easy to see that once Christianity got under
way, these mythical accounts would arise?"
The Christian position is
this: "Yes, we realize that what we say is
unusual and unexpected, but the fact is that that is what actually
happened." Let us examine this explanation and see on what evidence it
rests.
WHO
WAS JESUS CHRIST?
There was a time when the
opponents of Christianity even denied the
existence of an historical Christ. But there is no dispute today about
some of the facts in the life of Jesus Christ. He lived in Palestine,
put himself forward as a teacher, exerted a great influence on the
Jewish people, incurred the hostility of the Jewish leaders. He was
condemned to death by them, and they forced the hands of the Roman
Governor, Pontius Pilate, to put the sentence into execution. He was
crucified and taken down for dead, and was buried. That is the account
of the four Gospels. It is accepted now by every writer on the subject.
DID
CHRIST RISE FROM THE DEAD?
What happened after that? It
is here that honest divergence of opinion
can arise, until the evidence is sifted and weighed. The evidence of
the gospels is that the disciples of Jesus Christ maintained that He
arose from the dead but that those who brought about His death denied
it. The onus of proof was on the disciples, for, in common human
experience, dead men do not come to life again. But denial was not
enough to discredit the claim. The
empty tomb had to be explained.
But before discussing the
empty tomb, the first step in arguing the
truth of the resurrection is to show that the early Christians did
believe it. We began this pamphlet by asking what was the source of the
great influence Christianity has exercised on the world. Catholics say
that it was the resurrection of Christ. If Christ rose from the dead,
is it any wonder that His teaching exerted such an influence and is it
any wonder that after 1900 or nearly 2,000 years the movement He began
still exerts influence?
But did He rise from the
dead? What is the evidence for it ? The first point we have to
establish is that the early Christians did believe in the resurrection
and that it was part of the gospel. If belief in the resurrection was a
late development, as some of the deniers of the resurrection allege,
then our whole case is worthless. Where are we going to get the
evidence? We say that as well as the evidence of tradition we have the
evidence of the New Testament. Opponents have denied the validity of
the New Testament, and, in the main, their objections take this form:
"The New Testament writings describe the resurrection as an actual
occurrence, but the resurrection did not take place because it could
not, and so the New Testament is inadmissible as trustworthy evidence."
Outline of Argument
In general outline the
argument of the informed Catholic is this. The earliest Christian
records show that the first Christians always appealed to the
resurrection as an important proof of the message they had to give, the
Gospel, as they called it. The worth of the New Testament evidence
generally is corroborated by a constant tradition and by evidence of
pagan authors writing a few decades later. There is no reason to deny
the historical worth of the New Testament except for the extraordinary
story that is being told, and the writers reveal that they were well
aware that they were relating an extraordinary story. Whether the
resurrection is believed or not, there is no good reason to doubt the
facts they relate in connection with it.
It is manifestly impossible
to rebut the arguments of those who impugn the worth of the New
Testament as historical documents, if the arguments are based not on
the evidence but on hypothesis. Again, if the origins of Christianity
are not such as are described in the New Testament, what were its
origins? The multitude of contradictory hypotheses that have been put
forward to explain its birth and growth, is an indication of the weak
case there really is, against the truth of the resurrection.
It is beyond the learning of
most of us to assess fully the value of the arguments for and against
the worth of the New Testament. We give, however, an example, found not
far from home, of the type of reasoning that is common with those who
do not accept the traditional Christian view of the New Testament and
the resurrection. It is not beyond the ability of most of us to detect
its worthlessness and its dependence on hypothesis and not on evidence
{See Appendix Section II (b) }.
Early Belief in the Resurrection
The following references to
passages from the New Testament show how close is the association
between belief in the resurrection and the kernel of the Gospel. We
would point out that the order of appearance of the various books of
the New Testament is still a matter of dispute among biblical scholars.
However, one need not be a biblical scholar to see that, though it may
not be easy to determine the exact order, it is possible to say that
one book is earlier or later than another. The evidence is in the books
themselves.
The Acts of the Apostles, for
example, is later than the gospel of St. Luke, because in the Acts
there is a reference to the gospel. So it is easy to see that by
piecing together the evidence in the writings themselves, scholars can
arrive at some measure of agreement as to what books are early and what
late. If then there is reference in an undoubtedly early book to the
resurrection, it is evidence that the resurrection was an early belief
of the Christian Church. It doesn't matter, however, in what order we
examine the New Testament books; in almost every one of them, early or
late, there is a reference to the close association between belief in
the resurrection and the essence of the Gospel.
THE
EPISTLES OF ST. PAUL
In I Thess. 1, 10, written about 51, St. Paul wrote: "You have turned
away from idolatry to the worship of God, so as to serve a living God,
a God who really exists, and to wait for the appearance of his son from
heaven, Jesus, whom he raised from the dead, our Saviour from the
vengeance that is to come."
St. Paul write his First Epistle to the Corinthians about 55. In the
15th chapter, there is a long discussion on the Christian belief in the
resurrection of all men from the dead and the resurrection of Christ.
(The whole chapter is given in the appendix, Section IV.) Here we point
out that
this passage is complete proof of
(1) that the Apostles appealed to the
resurrection as proof of the truth of the gospel, and
(2) that belief in the resurrection was not a late growth.
In the Epistle to the Romans, written about 57, in 1, 4, we read:
"marked out miraculously as the Son of God by his resurrection from the
dead, our Lord Jesus Christ", and again in 8, 11, "If the spirit of him
who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised up Jesus
Christ from the dead will give life to your perishable bodies too, for
the sake of his Spirit who dwells in you."
In Ephesians, 1, 20, written about 61, we find: "measure it by that
mighty exercise of power which he showed when he raised Christ from the
dead and bade him sit on his right hand above the heavens."
In Philippians, 2, 8-9, written also about 61 we read: "he lowered his
own dignity, accepted an obedience which brought him to death, death on
a cross. That is why God raised him to such a height."
In Colossians, 2, 12, written also about 61, we have: "You, by your
baptism, have been united with his burial, united too with his
resurrection."
In Hebrews, 13, 20, written about 65, we read:
"May God the author of peace, who has raised our Lord Jesus Christ from
the dead . . . grant you . . . , to do his will, etc."
In I Peter, 1, 3, written about 67 (or perhaps even earlier), we read,
"Blessed be that God, that Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who in his
at mercy has begotten us anew, making hope live in us through the
resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead."
THE
ACTS OF THE APOSTLES
The references we have taken from the Epistles occur in them just as
reminders of what the readers already knew. In the Acts of the Apostles
we get accounts of how the Apostles first went about the work of
preaching the Gospel. The Acts were written between 62 and 65, and in
them St. Luke describes the progress of Christianity from the
resurrection onwards. St. Luke has always been found a most accurate
historian. His descriptions then of the earliest events in the history
of the Church cannot be doubted. In these accounts of the Apostles'
"technique" in preaching, we invariably find two arguments,
(1) Christ rose from the dead, and
(2) we are witnesses of it.
While the Apostles and disciples were awaiting the coming of the Holy
Ghost, they decided to fill the place vacated by Judas. In the
discussion, St. Peter said: "There are men who have walked in our
company all through the time when the Lord Jesus came and went among
us. One of these ought to be added to our number as a witness of his
resurrection" (1, 21-22).
On the day of Pentecost, St. Peter preaches to the Jews in Jerusalem;
he said: "This Jesus has God raised again, whereof we are witnesses"
(2, 32).
He used the same argument to the crowd after the healing of the lame
man in the temple, "But the author of life you killed, whom God has
raised from the dead, of which we are witnesses" (3, 15).
It was his argument before the Jewish Council, before whom the Apostles
were brought. "Be it known to you all and to all the people of Israel
that by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ of Nazareth, whom you
crucified, whom God has raised from the dead, even by him this man
stands before you whole. . . . We cannot but speak the things which we
have seen and heard" (4, 10, 20.)
We read in chapter 5 that the Apostles were again thrown into prison,
released by an angel and again brought before the Jewish Council. St.
Peter and the others replied: "we ought to obey God rather than man.
The God of our fathers has raised Jesus whom you put to death, hanging
him upon a tree . . . and we are witnesses of these things" (5, 30-32).
ST.
PAUL IN THE ACTS
When St. Paul comes on the scene in the book of the Acts, he uses the
same argument. In Acts 13 we read how he preached in Pisidian Antioch.
In his address he said: "On the third day, God raised him from the
dead. He was seen over a space of many days by the men who had come up
with him from Galilee to Jerusalem; it is they who now bear witness of
him before the people."
When he was preaching in Thessalonica, we read (17, 3): "Over a space
of three sabbaths he reasoned with them out of the scriptures,
expounding these and bringing proofs from them that the sufferings of
Christ and his rising from the dead were foreordained; 'The Christ,' he
said, 'is none other than the Jesus whom I am preaching to you'."
When he was in Athens, some of the Athenians thought he was preaching
another pair of oriental gods, Jesus and Resurrection, so closely was
the resurrection associated with the essence of the gospel. The
Athenians on the Areopagus listened interestedly to what he had to say
about God and repentance, but when he said (17, 31), "the man whom he
has appointed for that end he has accredited to all of us, raising him
up from the dead", they declined to hear any more. (The moderns who
reject the resurrection as a cock-and-a-bull story, were not the first
to reject it on that ground.)
THE
FOUR GOSPELS
It is impossible to give excerpts from the Gospels as separate
references to the resurrection. The narratives of all four Gospels
culminate in a description of the death and resurrection of our Lord
Jesus Christ. They have to be read in their entirety. Without the
resurrection, the Gospels lose all point. The specific references to
the resurrection in the four Gospels are given in the appendix (see all
of Section V).
TESTIMONY OF PAGAN AUTHORS
IT is clear that there is a mass of
evidence from the New Testament that the resurrection was an integral
part of the first preaching of the Gospel. The worth of the New
Testament as trustworthy evidence is borne out by the unconscious
testimony of two pagan writers of the early second century, Tacitus and
Pliny the younger. We do not quote them as witnesses to the early
Christian belief in the resurrection, but as evidence for the worth of
the New Testament as recording what happened. As they were pagans we
cannot expect their testimony to throw much light on the doctrine of
the early Christians. Their testimony is given from the point of view
of outsiders, and rather hostile ones. It in no way contradicts but
confirms the history of the Church as we learn it from the New
Testament. (The extracts are given in full in the Appendix (in Sections
I and II).
Tacitus
Tacitus was an historian;
Pliny was governor of a Roman province, engaged in the administration
of justice. Tacitus's allusion to the Christians is short but it
corroborates the New Testament on these points:
1. Christ
was put to death by Pontius Pilate.
2. The early Christians were opposed and misrepresented.
3. Christianity spread rapidly.
4. The Christians were put to death for their faith.
Of course Tacitus does not
say they were put to death for their faith as such. He says they were
killed "not so much for the crime of firing the city as of hatred
against mankind." We might remember that Christ said, as reported in
Matt. 10, 24-25: "A disciple is no better than his master. . . . If
they have cried 'Beelzebub' at the master of the household, they will
do it much more readily to the men of his household."
Pliny
Pliny's letter gives more
corroboration of the beliefs and history of the early Christians as we
know them from the New Testament. It shows:
1. The rapid spread of the faith.
2. The Christian abhorrence
of idolatry.
3. The high moral code of the
Christians.
4. Their readiness to obey
the civil law.
5. The belief in the
Eucharist.
6. The existence of a liturgy
associated with the celebration of the Eucharist.
7. The belief in the divinity
of Christ.
(In the appendix, in Section
II (b), in a
short commentary on an edition of Pliny's letters, we give an example
of the method of dealing with neutral sources used by those who do not
accept the Christian tradition).
THE PROBLEM OF THE EMPTY TOMB
All this evidence leaves no
doubt that the early Christians believed that Christ rose from the dead
and regarded it as an integral part of the Gospel. However, belief that
an event occurred is not proof that it did occur. We have so far only
succeeded in disposing of the objection to the resurrection that the
early Christians did not believe in it, that it was a later growth. We
have still to argue that the evidence for the resurrection is
overwhelmingly strong.
One other point that has to
be emphasized before we begin to argue from the evidence is this. The
problem of the empty tomb was urgent from the beginning. It could be
argued that while there can he no doubt that from after Pentecost the
Christians believed in the resurrection and based their faith on it,
that does not dispose of this objection. Between the burial and
Pentecost, there was a gap of fifty days; during this time there would
be a calm in which the final Christian philosophy, built on a supposed
resurrection, took definite shape; but also during this calm the Jewish
leaders would have ceased to be very interested in the man from
Galilee; once he was executed, there would be no reason to trouble much
about his leaderless followers; how could the Jews, after Pentecost,
have any positive means of disproving a resurrection - the body or the
remains of it were, of course, no longer in the tomb - but could they
be expected to know or to explain what had become of it?
This is only a negative sort
of objection and, like an argument from silence, has value only to
raise doubts against a positive position. Again, however, the evidence
is against it. There is abundant evidence that the problem was urgent
from the beginning. There is St. Matthew's account of the Jewish
anxiety about the burial and the possibility of deception by Christ's
disciples, and the placing of an armed guard, and there is his account
of the story they spread to explain the empty tomb, namely, the
disciples stole it.
All this fits in with what we
know from other sources. That the movement begun by Christ was of
sufficient weight to move the Jewish leaders to contrive his death is
admitted by all. Is it likely they forgot about it immediately after
the crucifixion and they would not have heard rumours of an alleged
resurrection, and if they did hear, that they would not have taken some
measures to cope with a resurgence of the trouble ? There is plenty of
evidence that less than two months after the crucifixion, the "trouble"
began to stir again. There is the arrest of the Apostles after the cure
of the lame man in the temple and the repressive measures which turned
into the active persecution with which St. Paul was associated.
And all this fits in with the
statement of Tacitus: "Christus, from whom the name had its origin,
suffered the extreme penalty during the reign of Tiberius at the hands
of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilate, and a most mischievous
superstition, thus checked for the moment, again broke out not only in
Judea, the first source of the evil, but even in Rome."
The Tomb Was
Empty
The evidence so far, then,
leads to this position. Christ was crucified as the leader of a
"subversive" movement; he was buried but on the third day the tomb was
found empty.
What happened to the body ?
The Jewish authorities, if they could have produced the body, could
have countered the resurrection story by producing it, and they had
good reasons for being anxious to counter the story. But there is no
evidence that they produced the body. The contemporary evidence is that
they said that while the guards were asleep, the disciples came and
stole the body; the Christians declared that Christ had risen from the
dead.
Modern
Hypotheses
Many centuries later,
unbelievers put forward a number of hypotheses to explain the empty
tomb. One explanation is that Christ was not really dead but in a dead
faint, and revived in the tomb. There is, of course, not the slightest
evidence for this. The soldier whose duty it was to see that the
crucified men were dead, had broken the legs of the thieves, but when
he came to Christ he saw that He was already dead; it is unlikely that
the thieves had been scourged before crucifixion, as Christ had been.
Christ was apparently dead, but to be quite sure he was dead, the
soldier ran the body through with a spear. Moreover, this explanation
is inadequate to explain how an exit was made from the tomb, how the
disciples came to believe in a resurrection, or what did finally happen
to the revived Christ.
We are left with two
explanations for which there is evidence that they were in circulation
at the time, the Jews' explanation that the disciples stole the body
and the Christian explanation that Christ rose from the dead.
Jewish Leaders'
Explanation
We examine the first
explanation. It is the only explanation that can be entertained, if the
resurrection is denied. This explanation assumes that the disciples
were somehow inferior men, that is, lacking in intelligence or moral
worth or both. There is no evidence that they were. The evidence is
that they were plain, average men, and seemingly, of no high secondary
education. But plain, average men are not, on that account, odd or
inferior men; they can be very wise men. Learned men can be very
inferior men. The French king called James I of England, "the most
learned fool in Christendom", and history seems to think him right. On
the other hand uneducated men can be both fools and rogues. As average
men, the disciples could have been rogues or fools, but, we repeat,
there is no evidence that they were. The evidence is all the other way.
The Disciples
Rogues?
If they stole the body the
disciples must have been rogues or fools. If they were more fools than
rogues, they might have thought that by stealing the body they could
somehow carry on the work of Christ, whatever it was they thought it to
be. This is a more plausible suggestion than that they were rogues. We
will examine it shortly. But what, if they were more rogues than fools?
If they were, they might have thought that they could derive some
material gain, economic or political, from the fraud. There is evidence
that some of them, some time before the crucifixion, had their eyes on
political benefits from the gospel of the kingdom. But the view that it
actuated them in stealing the body cannot be entertained for long. The
history of the early church, as given in the New Testament
(corroborated, as we have seen, by pagan authors), shows that after the
Ascension, all the disciples considered the mission of Christ to have
been a purely spiritual one. Granted that they stole the body with some
idea of perpetrating a fraud and, human nature being what it is, they
would not have persevered for long in a fraud which they expected would
yield material gain but was resulting in persecution and death.
The Disciples
Fanatics?
There is, then, the view that
the disciples were deluded fools or fanatics of some sort. As is well
known, fanaticism can spur men on to extremes of heroism, however
irrational or deluded. But heroism is not of its nature fanatical. All
men revere the brave man who knows the danger and perseveres in the
course he has set himself. He is always ready to "listen to reason,"
but until he sees reasonable cause for a change, he will continue on
his course. The fanatic sees that in life there is no escaping hardship
and the risk of death; he adopts a fatalistic attitude and is deaf to
every argument. The brave man is resolved because he has examined the
situation honestly; the fanatic acts on impulse. Now there is no
evidence that the disciples were fanatics, but there is strong evidence
that they acted as normal honest men would act; they were moved by the
evidence before them. Their argument always was: "We have seen it."
The Gospel narratives make it
clear that the Apostles were normal men. They were originally rather
worldly-minded; they found it hard to understand the mystery of the
kingdom; they were somewhat cowardly, or better, as yet unused to
overcoming fear. Peter was like the most of us - "big talk," when the
danger is remote, but inclined to yield when it is imminent. After the
crucifixion, they were in a state of confusion; they forgot about the
prediction of Christ that He would rise again. When the announcement of
the resurrection was first made, they were disinclined to believe. One
of them, Thomas, was a thorough sceptic - "Until I have seen the mark
of the nails in His hands, until I have put my finger into the mark of
the nails, and put my hand into His side, you will never make me
believe." But eventually they were all convinced, and it was the
evidence that convinced them - "We have seen it."
CONVINCING
OTHERS
In these our days, amongst
people who have somewhat lost their grip of the Christian tradition,
there is a tendency to adopt a non-committal attitude to these
arguments. They cannot but see their cogency, but still they hang back.
It is not a new tendency; it was the tendency of the men with whom the
apostles had to deal; it had been their own tendency. The Apostles'
method of approach to their contemporaries is itself proof that they
were not fanatics. They knew that what they were preaching was
something that their hearers regarded as extraordinary; they themselves
had felt the full weight of the objections against their preaching;
they had considered the implications of the doctrine so far as it would
affect themselves, but the evidence was compelling. This comes out very
clearly in the 15th chapter of St. Paul's First Epistle to the
Corinthians. (Read it for yourself in your Bible or in the appendix,
(at Section IV)
bearing the following points in mind.)
ST. PAUL
DISCUSSES THE RESURRECTION
St. Paul is answering
enquiries from the Corinthians on points of doctrine. Some of the
Corinthians were inclined to deny the teaching of Christ on the
resurrection of the body, somewhat in the style of many people today,
who claim to be Christians but choose or reject at will various
elements of the Christian Revelation. St. Paul writes to explain
further the doctrine and appeals to the resurrection of Christ. First
of all, he reminds them of the main Christian teaching: "The chief
message I handed an to you as it was handed on to me, was that Christ,
as the Scriptures had foretold, died for our sins, that he was buried,
and then, as the Scriptures had foretold, rose again on the third day."
(verses 3 & 4) He then tells them that He was seen after His
resurrection on a number of occasions by different individuals and
groups of disciples.
He then argues: If you say
there is no resurrection from the dead, then Christ could not have
risen. If He has not risen, then the whole of your faith is useless.
And we - this is a most important point - are shown to be guilty of
having given false testimony against God. We have testified that God
raised Christ from the dead, and this could not be true if there is no
resurrection from the dead. Manifestly Paul was very conscious of the
necessity of loyalty to truth; no "pious fraud," no wishful thinking
for him. He goes on to emphasize that if there is no resurrection, then
the rest of their faith is vain, those who died in the faith are lost,
and Christians are the unhappiest of people, for they lose in this
world and their hope for the next is a delusion. But the fact is -
Christ did rise from the dead, and just as surely as He rose to a life
of glory, so also will those who belong to Him.
Later on in the chapter, St. Paul stresses the fact that he has to
undergo much hardship and persecution for the gospel. What use is it,
if the dead do not rise. Better to follow the advice, "Eat and drink,
for tomorrow we die." (verse 32)
There is no trace of the
fanatic or deluded fool in all this. St. Paul squarely faces the issues
raised by the mystery of life. Men are animals with animal desires;
they have also an intellectual and moral life. The two lives are often
at variance. Which is the more important? Men have always agreed that
any lie or deceit in the soul is treason, and fatal to the well-being
of the whole man. St. Paul knows this well, and it could not be that he
or the other Apostles - St. Paul expressly identifies himself with the
others (15, 11) - were party to a plot to foist some superstitious
doctrine on the world on the basis of a faked resurrection.
SUMMING UP
In brief, the historical case
for the resurrection is this. Christ died and was buried. No one doubts
this now. The evidence of the New Testament, backed by a constant
church tradition, is that from the beginning, the Christians said He
rose from the dead and that they appealed to the resurrection as proof
of the gospel they preached.
The New Testament also shows
that the Apostles were honest men of strong common sense, who had been
convinced by the evidence, and like brave men, were prepared to die for
a doctrine that their love of truth had led them to accept. The
reliability of the New Testament as truthful documents is attested by
the evidence of pagan authors, so far as the pagan authors touched upon
the matter. Those who impugn the veracity of the New Testament build
more upon hypothesis than on evidence.
Those of our readers who
wonder whether the modern critics of the New Testament or the upholders
of the orthodox Christian tradition are the more worthy of trust have
to decide for themselves, from their personal knowledge of each, which
they will choose to trust. We give in the Appendix some
considerations they can ponder over. (Especially in Sections II (b) and
III.)
Finally, the resurrection of
Christ, if true, will explain the undeniable fact of the profound
influence of the Christian Church in the history of the world; if not
true, how is that influence to be explained ? Whatever we think about
it, Christ either rose or did not rise. There is the evidence that He
did rise; we reject it at our peril. The traditional Christian teaching
has been that once we believe in the resurrection - and we will believe
it, given honesty of intention - the universe ceases to be
unintelligible.
APPENDIX
I
From
the Annals of Tacitus (xv, 44)
Tacitus has been recording the great fire of Rome in A.D. 64, and
telling of the means taken by Nero to repair the material damage, and
of the religious rites performed to propitiate the pagan gods. He
continues:
"But all human efforts, all the lavish gifts of the emperor, and the
propitiations of the gods, did not banish the sinister belief that the
conflagration was the result of an order" (i.e., of Nero),
"consequently, to get rid of the report, Nero fastened the guilt and
inflicted the most exquisite tortures on a class hated for their
abominations, called Christians by the populace. Christus, from whom
the name had its origin, suffered the extreme penalty during the reign
of Tiberius at the hands of one of our procurators, Pontius Pilate, and
a most mischievous superstition, thus checked for the moment, again
broke out not only in Judea, the first source of the evil, but even in
Rome, where all things hideous and shameful from every part of the
world find their centre and become popular. Accordingly, an arrest was
first made of those who pleaded guilty; then, upon their information,
an immense multitude was convicted, not so much of the crime of firing
the city, as of hatred against mankind. Mockery of every sort was added
to their deaths. Covered with the skins of beasts, they were torn by
dogs and perished, or were nailed to crosses, or were doomed to the
flames and burnt, to serve as a nightly illumination, when daylight had
expired."
"Nero offered his gardens for the spectacle, and was exhibiting a show
in the circus, while he mingled with the people in the dress of a
charioteer or stood aloft on a car [chariot]. Hence even for criminals
who deserved extreme and exemplary punishment, there arose a feeling of
compassion; for it was not, as it seemed, for the public good, but to
glut one man's cruelty that they were being destroyed."
II A
From the Letters of Pliny the Younger
(Traj. 96)
Pliny was a contemporary of Tacitus, He was appointed Governor of
Bithynia by the Emperor Trajan in 111 or 112. He was a literary man
and, in writing his letters, even official ones to the emperor, he had
his eye on future publication. He was in Bithynia for a year and died
soon after his return to Rome, probably in 114, aged 52.
"It is my custom, sir, to refer to you all matters in which I am
doubtful. For who can better guide my indecision or instruct my
ignorance.
"I have never been present at the investigations concerning Christians.
And so I do not know what is the usual object and extent of either
punishment or enquiry. And I have wondered not a little whether there
should be any distinction made between ages or whether the very tender
are to differ in no way from the stronger; should pardon be given on
repentance or is it of no avail for one who was completely a Christian
to cease to be one; should the very name be punished, if it is not
associated with evil deeds, or is it evil deeds going with the name
that are to be punished. Meanwhile, in the case of those who have been
reported to me as Christians, this is the procedure I have followed.
"I asked them themselves if they were Christians. Those who confessed I
questioned a second and a third time, threatening punishment. Those who
persisted I ordered to be led to execution. For I had no doubt that,
whatever might be the nature of their belief, pertinacity and
inflexible obstinacy should certainly be punished. There were others of
similar madness, who since they were Roman citizens, I have entered up
for transfer to the city (Rome).
"Before long, merely as a result of the matter being dealt with, - as
usually happens - the accusation became more common and more varieties
of it appeared. A list was handed in bearing no signature and
containing the names of many.
"Those who denied that they were or had been Christians, after they had
invoked the gods in my presence and had made supplication with incense
and wine before your image, which for this purpose I had ordered to be
brought in together with the statues of the divinities, and they had
moreover reviled Christ - none of which things, it is said, can they be
forced to do who are in real truth Christians, - I decided to have
dismissed. Others named by the informer, said they were Christians and
soon denied it; they had been indeed, but had ceased to be, some three
years since, some a greater number of years since, a few even twenty
years since. All of these venerated your image and the statues of the
gods, and reviled Christ.
"They declared, however, that this was the sum-total of their fault or
error: they were accustomed on a given day to assemble before daylight
and recite together in alternating verses (secum invicem dicere) a hymn to
Christ as to a god (quasi deo),
and to bind themselves by a sacrament, - not to some wicked enterprise
- but not to commit thefts or robberies or adulteries, not to break
their solemn word, not to refuse to return a loan when called upon;
when these rites were over, the custom was to depart and to meet again
to take food, but food that was common and harmless (promiscuum et innoxium). But this
they had ceased to do after my edict, whereby, following your commands,
I had banned the existence of clubs. For this reason I believed it all
the more necessary to find out, even under torture, what was the truth
of the matter from two maidservants, who were called deaconesses. I
found nothing but a superstition, depraved and unrestrained.
"Accordingly, I have postponed the enquiry and have hastened to consult
you. For the matter seemed to me worthy of consultation, especially in
view of the number of those in danger. For many of every age, of every
rank, of both sexes too, are being called into danger and will be
called. This contagious superstition has permeated not only the cities
but even the villages and the country districts; and yet it seems it
can be halted and corrected. Certainly it is pretty well agreed that
the temples, which up to the present have been almost deserted, have
now begun to be frequented, and the accustomed sacrifices, for a long
time discontinued, have been resumed, and fodder for the victims is
being sold, for which up till now a buyer was rarely found. From this
it is easy to conjecture what a multitude of people can be reformed if
there be room for repentance."
II
B
Note on Pliny's Letter *
In the edition of Pliny's letters still in use at the Melbourne
University [in 1955], there is to be found an instance of how
untrustworthy is modem learning, when there is question of Christian
teaching, and how hypothesis usurps the place of an honest examination
of the evidence. The edition is a selection of the letters, edited with
notes by Prichard and Bernard, printed at the Clarendon Press and first
published in 1872.
Among the notes to the letter we have just given, there is this one:
"QUASI DEO; these words are evidently thrown in by Pliny and must not
be regarded as evidence of the belief of the church at that time in the
Divinity of Christ."
There are two questions to be considered:
(i) What truth there is in the note,
(ii) why was it included.
It is said that the words quasi deo
are "evidently thrown in." But there is no ground in the text for
saying so. The evidence is that they were not "thrown in," but
carefully chosen. Pliny was manifestly trying to give a just account of
the situation in Bithynia. He was handing on information he had
acquired after careful examination. The natural reading of his words is
that the Christians had told him that they worshipped Christ as God. If
they did say that, and there is abundant evidence from the New
Testament that they did regard him as God, how else could Pliny have
put it? Less naturally the words could be understood to mean that Pliny
was putting his interpretation on what the Christians told him. The
words are not "evidently thrown in."
But even on that reading of the words, the passage is evidence that the
Christians believed in the divinity of Christ. There must have been
something in what the Christians told him of their worship of Christ
that would cause the fair-minded Pliny to describe it as rendered to
Christ "as to a god."
Pliny, of course, didn't believe that Christ was divine but his
information came from the Christians; it is impossible to imagine what
they could have told him except on the basis that they believed Christ
was divine. We must also remember that the charge against the
Christians was not crime but the very profession of Christianity. It
was a question of ultimate loyalty, Caesar or Christ? The old Roman
Republic had ended. It is now the will of Caesar that gives authority
to law. The divinity of the emperor was worshipped throughout the
Empire, - hence his image at the trial of the Christians. It is
manifest that Pliny had chosen his words carefully; the Christians
"evidently" had told him they worshipped Christ as God; if they
worshipped the emperor and reviled Christ, they could go free.
Now why was the note put in? It is most emphatic; it is directed to
correcting the impression gained from the natural reading; it has no
foundation in the text and it is not necessary for an understanding of
grammar or syntax. The answer, we are sure, is to be had from recalling
the date of the first edition of the book. It was in 1872. The higher
criticism of the Bible was then in full swing. In 1835 David Strauss
had published a book in which he popularized the view that whatever was
extraordinary in the Gospels was myth. This view, with varying
modifications, was put forward by a number of subsequent writers, and
in 1883 Ernest Renan published his Life
of Christ. In these books the traditional Christian doctrines
were knocked over one after another. There has been a reversal of this
attitude in more recent times, but in 1872 the view of the higher
critics would have been very strong. One doctrine early attacked and
denied was the early Christian belief in the divinity of Christ.
III
The Attitude of Sir William Ramsay
The following extract from a recent Scripture commentator, C. S.
Dessain, will be helpful to assessing the value of the higher criticism
of the New Testament. "The extraordinary accuracy of St. Luke has also
been demonstrated by the recent discoveries of archaeology. The story
of the 'conversion' of Sir William Ramsay, who had been brought up to
regard Acts as a second century forgery, is well known, and the
archaeological evidence can be found in his books. 'Every incident
described in the Acts is just what might be expected in ancient
surroundings. The officials with whom Paul and his companions were
brought into contact are those who would be there. Every person is
found just where he ought to be; proconsuls in senatorial provinces,
Asiarchs in Ephesus, stregoi in Philippi, politarchs in Thessalonica,
magicians and soothsayers everywhere. . . . The magistrates take action
against them in a strictly managed Roman colony like Pisidian Antioch
or Philippi, where legality and order reigned; riotous crowds try to
take the law into their own hands in the less strictly governed
Hellenistic cities like Iconium and Ephesus and Thessalonica.' (The Bearing of Recent Discovery on the
Trustworthiness of the New Testament (1915), 96.")
IV
From First Epistle to Corinthians (Chap.
15.)
Here, brethren, is an account of the gospel I preached to you. It was
this that was handed on to you; upon this your faith rests; through
this (if you keep in mind the tenor of its preaching) you are in the
way of salvation; unless, indeed, your belief was ill-founded. The
chief message I handed on to you, as it was handed on to me, was that
Christ, as the scriptures had foretold, died for our sins, that he was
buried, and then, as the scriptures had foretold, rose again on the
third day. That He was seen by Cephas, then by the eleven Apostles, and
afterwards by more than five hundred of the brethren at once, most of
whom are alive at this day, though some have gone to their rest. Then
he was seen by James, then by all the Apostles; and last of all, I,
too, saw him, like the last child, that comes to birth unexpectedly. Of
all the Apostles, I am the least; nay, I am not fit to be called an
apostle, since there was a time when I persecuted the church of God;
only by God's grace, I am what I am, and the grace he has shown me has
not been without fruit; I have worked harder than all of them, or
rather, it was not I, but the grace of God working with me. That is our
preaching, mine or theirs as you will; that is the faith which has come
to you.
If what we preach about Christ, then, is that He rose from the dead,
how is it that some of you say the dead do not rise again ? If the dead
do not rise, then Christ has not risen either; and if Christ has not
risen, then our preaching is groundless, and your faith, too, is
groundless. Worse still, we are convicted of giving false testimony
about God; we bore God witness that he had raised Christ up from the
dead, and he has not raised him up, if it is true that the dead do not
rise again. If the dead, I say, do not rise, then Christ has not risen
either; and if Christ has not risen all your faith is a delusion; you
are back in your sins. It follows, too, that those who have gone to
rest in Christ have been lost. If the hope we have learned to repose in
Christ belongs to this world only, then we are unhappy beyond all men.
But no, Christ has risen from the dead, the first fruits of all those
who have fallen asleep; a man had brought us death, and a man should
bring us resurrection from the dead; just as all have died with Adam,
so with Christ all will be brought to life. But each must rise in his
own rank; Christ is the first-fruits, and after him follow those who
belong to him, those who have put their trust in his return. Full
completion comes after that, when he places his kingship in the hands
of God, his Father, having first dispossessed every other sort of rule,
authority, and power; his reign, as we know, must continue until he has
put all his enemies under his feet, and the last of these enemies to be
dispossessed is death. God has put all things in subjection under his
feet; that is, all things have been made subject to him, except,
indeed, that power which made them his subjects. And when that
subjection is complete, then the Son himself will become subject to the
power which made all things his subjects, so that God may be all in all.
Tell me, what can be the use of being baptized for the dead, if the
dead do not rise again? Why should anyone be baptized for them? Why do
we, for that matter, face peril hour after hour? I swear to you,
brethren, by all the pride I take in the name of Our Lord Jesus Christ,
that death is daily at my side. When I fought against beasts at Ephesus
with all my strength, of what use was it, if the dead do not rise
again? Let us eat and drink, since we must die tomorrow. Do not be led
into such errors; bad company, they say, can corrupt noble minds. Come
back to your senses, like right-minded men, and sin no longer; there
are some, I say it to your shame, who lack the knowledge of God.
V
From the Four Gospels
The following are the references to
the resurrection from the four Gospels, as presented by Archbishop
Alban Goodier, S.J., in his book, "The
Risen Jesus" (Burns, Oates, 1943). [The Scripture translation
here is a slightly amended version of the Douay-Rheims New Testament.]
V
(a)
THE EMPTY TOMB
And when the Sabbath was past, Mary Magdalen and the other Mary, the
mother of James and Salome, bought sweet spices that coming they might
anoint Jesus. And on the first day of the week, very early in the
morning when it was yet dark and when it began to dawn, they came to
see the sepulchre, bringing the spices which they had prepared. And the
sun being now risen they said one to another:
'Who shall roll us back the stone from the door of the sepulchre.' And
behold there was a great earthquake and looking, they saw the stone
rolled back, taken away from the sepulchre. For an angel of the Lord
descended from Heaven and coming rolled back the stone for it was very
great, and sat upon it. And his countenance was as lightning and his
raiment as snow. And for fear of him the guards were struck with terror
and became as dead men.
And the angel answering said to the woman: 'Fear not you for I know
that you seek Jesus who was crucified. He is not here for he is risen
as he said. Come and see the place where the Lord was laid.'
And entering into the sepulchre they found not the body of the Lord
Jesus. And they saw a young man sitting on the right side clothed with
a white robe. And it came to pass as they were astonished in their mind
at this behold two men stood by them in shining apparel.
And as they were afraid, and bowed down their countenance towards the
ground, they said to them: 'Be not affrighted. Why seek you the living
with the dead. You seek Jesus of Nazareth Who was crucified. He is not
here, but is risen. Behold the place where they laid him. Remember how
he spoke unto you when he was yet in Galilee, saying the Son of man
must be delivered into the hands of sinful men and be crucified and the
third day rise again. But going quickly, you all tell his disciples and
Peter that he is risen. And behold he will go before you into Galilee.
There you shall see him as he told you. Lo I have foretold it to you.'
And they remembered his words.
Matthew 28, 1-7; Mark 16, 1-7; Luke 24, 1-8; John 20, 1.
V
(b)
THE FIRST APPARITION
But they going out quickly, Fled from the sepulchre with fear and great
joy, for a great trembling and fear had seized them. And they said
nothing to any man, for they were afraid.
(Mary Magdalen ran therefore and comes to Simon Peter and to the other
disciple whom Jesus loved and says to them: 'They have taken away the
Lord out of the sepulchre and we know not where they have laid him.')
And behold Jesus met them saying: 'All hail.'
But they came up and took hold of his feet and adored him. Then Jesus
said to them: 'Fear not. Go tell my brethren that they go into Galilee.
There they shall see me.'
Matthew 28, 8-10; Mark 16, 8; Luke 24, 9, 10; John 20, 2.
V
(c)
THE FIRST WITNESS
And going back from the sepulchre they told all these things to the
eleven and to all the rest. And it was Mary Magdalen, and Joanna, and
Mary of James, and the other women that were with them who told these
things to the apostles. And these words seemed to them as idle tales
and they did not believe them.
Luke 24, 9-11.
V
(d)
PETER AND JOHN
But Peter rising up went out and ran to the sepulchre, and that other
disciple. And they came to the sepulchre. And they both ran together
and that other disciple did outrun Peter and came first to the
sepulchre. And when he stooped down, he saw the linen cloths lying, but
yet he went not in. Then comes Simon Peter following him, and stooping
down he saw the linen cloths laid by themselves, and went into the
sepulchre. And saw the linen cloths lying and the napkin that had been
about his head not lying with the linen cloths, but apart, wrapped up
into one place. Then that other disciple also went in who came first to
the sepulchre. And he saw and believed. For as yet they knew not the
scripture that he must rise again from the dead. The disciples
therefore departed again to their home. And Peter went away wondering
in himself at that which was come to pass.
Luke 24, 12; John 20, 3-10.
V
(e)
MARY MAGDALEN
But he rising early the first day of the week appeared first to Mary
Magdalen, out of whom he had cast seven devils. Mary stood at the
sepulchre without, weeping. Now, as she was weeping, she stooped down
and looked into the sepulchre and she saw two angels in white, sitting
one at the head and one at the feet where the body of Jesus had been
laid.
They say to her: 'Woman, why weep you?'
She says to them: 'Because they have taken away my Lord, and I know not
where they have laid him.' When she had thus said she turned herself
back and saw Jesus standing, and she knew not that it was Jesus.
Jesus says to her: 'Woman, why weep you? Whom seek you?'
She, thinking that it was the gardener, said to him: 'Sir, if you have
taken him hence tell me where you has laid him and I will take him
away.'
Jesus says to her: 'Mary'.
She, turning, says to him: 'Rabboni.' (Which is to say: 'Master.')
Jesus says to her: 'Do not touch me for I am not yet ascended to my
Father. But go to my brethren and say to them I ascend to my Father and
to your Father, to my God and your God.'
Mary Magdalen comes and tells the disciples that had been with him, who
were mourning and weeping. 'I have seen the Lord, and these things he
said to me.' And they, hearing that he was alive and had been seen by
her, did not believe.
Mark 16, 9-11; John 20, 11-18.
V
(f)
THE DISCIPLES AT EMMAUS
And behold, after that, he appeared in another shape to two of them
walking that same day as they were going into the country to a town
which was sixty furlongs from Jerusalem named Emmaus. And they talked
together of all these things which had happened. And it came to pass
that while they talked and reasoned with themselves, Jesus himself also
drawing near went with them, but their eyes were held that they should
not know him.
And he said to them: 'What are these discourses that you hold with one
another as you walk and are sad.'
And the one of them answering whose name was Cleophas said to him: 'Are
you only a stranger in Jerusalem and have not known the things that
have been done there in these days?'
To whom he said: 'What things?'
And they said: 'Concerning Jesus of Nazareth who was a prophet, mighty
in work and word before God and all the people. And how our chief
priests and princes delivered him to be condemned to death and
crucified him. But we hoped that it was he that should have redeemed
Israel. And now besides all this, today is the third day since these
things were done. Yea, and certain women also of our company affrighted
us, who, before it was light were at the sepulchre, and, not finding
his body, came saying that they had also seen a vision of angels who
say that he is alive. And some of our people went to the sepulchre and
found it so, as the women said, but him they found not.'
Then he said to them: 'O foolish and slow of heart to believe in all
things which the prophets have spoken. Ought not Christ to have
suffered these things and so to enter into his glory.'
And beginning at Moses and all the prophets he expounded to them in all
the scriptures the things that were concerning him. And they drew nigh
unto the town whither they were going, and he made as though he would
go farther.
But they constrained him saying: 'Stay with us, because it is towards
evening and the day is now far spent'. And he went in with them. And it
came to pass, whilst he was at table with them, he took bread, and
blessed, and broke, and gave to them.
And their eyes were opened and they knew him. And he vanished out of
their sight.
And they said to one another, 'Was not our heart burning within us
whilst he spoke in the way, and opened to us the scriptures.'
And rising up the same hour they went back to Jerusalem and they found
the eleven gathered together and those that were with them saying, 'the
Lord is risen indeed and has appeared to Simon.' And they told what
things were done in the way and how they knew him in the breaking of
bread. And they, going, told it to the rest; neither did they believe
them.
Mark 16, 12, 13; Luke 24, 13-35.
V
(g)
FIRST APPEARANCE TO THE APOSTLES
Now when it was late that same day, the first of the week, and the
doors were shut where the disciples were gathered together for fear of
the Jews, whilst they were speaking of these things, at length Jesus
appeared to the eleven as they were at table, and came and stood in the
midst of them. And he upbraided them with their incredulity and
hardness of heart because they would not believe them who had seen him
after he was risen again.
And he said to them: 'Peace be to you. It is I. Fear Not.'
But they, being troubled and frightened, supposed that they saw a
spirit. And he said to them: 'Why are you troubled and why do thoughts
arise in your hearts ? See my hands and feet. That it is I, myself,
handle and see, for a spirit has not flesh and bones as you see me to
have.'
And when he had said this he showed them his hands and feet and his
side. But while yet they believe not and wondered for joy, he said:
'Have you here anything to eat?'
And they offered him a piece of broiled fish and a honey-comb. And when
he had eaten before them, taking the remains, he gave to them. The
disciples therefore were glad when they saw the Lord.
He said therefore to them again: 'Peace be to you. As the Father has
sent me, I also send you.'
When he had said this, he breathed on them and he said to them:
'Receive all you the Holy Ghost. Whose sins you shall forgive they are
forgiven them; and whose sins you shall retain, they are retained.'
Mark 16, 14; Luke 24, 36-43; John 20, 19-23.
V
(h)
THE APPARITION TO THOMAS
Now Thomas, one of the twelve, who is called Didymus [the Twin], was
not with them when Jesus came.
The other disciples therefore said to him: 'We have seen the Lord.'
But he said to them: 'Except I shall see in his hands the print of the
nails and put my finger into the place of the nails, and put my hand
into his side, I will not believe.'
And after eight days, again his disciples were within, and Thomas with
them. Jesus comes, the doors being shut, and stood in the midst and
said: 'Peace be to you.'
Then he said to Thomas: 'Put in your finger hither and see my hands and
bring hither your hand and put it into my side, and be not faithless
but believing.'
Thomas answered and said to him: 'My Lord and my God.'
Jesus says to him: 'Because you has seen me, Thomas, you have has
believed. Blessed are they that have not seen and have believed.'
John 20, 24-29.
V
(i)
BY THE SEA OF TIBERIAS
After this Jesus showed himself again to the disciples at the sea of
Tiberias. And he showed himself after this manner. There were together
Simon Peter and Thomas, who is called Didymus, and Nathaniel, who was
of Cana of Galilee, and the sons of Zebedee, and two others of his
disciples.
Simon Peter says to them: 'I go a-fishing.'
They say to him: 'We also come with you.' And they went forth and
entered into the ship. And that night they caught nothing. But when the
morning was come, Jesus stood on the shore, yet the disciples knew not
that it was Jesus.
Jesus therefore said to them: 'Children, have you any meat?'
They answered him: 'No.'
He says to them: 'Cast the net on the right side of the ship and you
shall find.'
They cast therefore, and now they were not able to draw it for the
multitude of fishes.
That disciple therefore, whom Jesus loved, said to Peter: 'It is the
Lord.' Simon Peter, when he heard that it was the Lord, girt his coat
about him, for he was practically naked, and cast himself into the sea.
But the other disciples came in the ship, for they were not far from
the land, but as it were two hundred cubits, dragging the net with
fishes.
As soon, then, as they came to land, they saw hot coals lying and fish
laid thereon, and bread. Jesus says to them: 'Bring hither of the
fishes which you have now caught'.
Simon Peter went up and drew the net to land, full of great fishes, one
hundred and fifty-three, and although there were so many the net was
not broken.
Jesus says to them: 'Come and dine.'
And none of them who were at meat dared ask him: 'Who are you?' knowing
that it was the Lord. And Jesus comes and takes bread and gives them,
and fish in like manner. This is now the third time that Jesus was
manifested to his disciples after he was risen from the dead.
When, therefore, they had dined, Jesus said to Simon Peter: 'Simon, son
of John, love you me more than these?'
He says to him: 'Yea, Lord, you know that I love you.'
He said to him: 'Feed my lambs.'
He says to him again: 'Simon, son of John, love you me?'
He says to him: 'Yea, Lord, you know that I love you.'
He says to him: 'Look after my lambs.'
He says to him the third time: 'Simon, son of John, love you me?'
Peter was grieved because he had said to him the third time: 'Love you
me?'
And he said to him: 'Lord, you know all things - you know that I love
you.'
He said to him: 'Feed my sheep. Amen, amen, I say to you, when you were
younger you did gird yourself and did walk where you would. But when
you shall be old, you shall stretch forth your hands and another shall
gird you and lead you whither you would not.'
And this he said, signifying by what death he should glorify God.
And when he had said this, he says to him: 'Follow me.'
Peter, turning about, saw that disciple whom Jesus loved, following,
who also leaned on his breast at supper, and said: 'Lord, who is he
that shall betray you?'
Him, therefore, when Peter had seen, he says to Jesus: 'Lord, and what
shall this man do?'
Jesus says to him: 'So if I will have him to remain till I come, what
is it to you? Follow you me.'
This saying therefore went abroad among the brethren that that disciple
should not die, yet Jesus did not say to him: 'He should not die', but,
'So if I will have him to remain till I come, what is it to you?'
This is that disciple who gives testimony of these things and has
written these things and we know that his testimony is true.
John 21, 1-24.
V
(j) ON THE MOUNT OF GALILEE
And the eleven disciples went into Galilee, unto the mountain where
Jesus had appointed them. And seeing him, they adored, but some
doubted.
And Jesus coming, spoke to them saying: 'All power is given to me in
heaven and in earth. Going therefore, into the whole world, preach the
gospel to every creature. And, all you, teach all nations, baptizing
them, in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost,
teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you. He
that believes and is baptized shall be saved, but he that believes not
shall be condemned. And these signs shall follow them that believe, -
In my name, they will cast out devils; they shall speak with new
tongues; they shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly
thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay their hands upon the
sick, and they shall recover. And, behold, I am with you all days even
to the consummation of the world.
Matthew, 28, 16-20; Mark 18, 15-18.