CRUCIFIXION
& RESURRECTION
OF THE CHRIST
If the righteous Jesus - the
Messiah, who refused to be called "good" by his disciples and taught them
"No one is good expect God alone" (Mk. 10:18)
was to visit us and listen to the leading evangelical missionaries of our
era preaching the “Christianity”, what would
surprise him the most? Probably he would be astonished to see that
a religion bearing his personal epithet having its primary roots not in
his teachings but in
the accounts of his Crucifixion and Resurrection that are recorded in the
various Revised Versions of the New Testament.
According to
the Bible (Book of Acts 2:24 and John 17:4), the act of Resurrection was
not performed by Jesus himself. It was done by the ever living God, whom
Jesus served and glorified during his Ministry. However, Paul postulated
in the under mentioned verse that this particular act of Resurrection was
the sole base of "Christian Faith":
And if Christ be not raised, your
faith is vain; ye are yet in your sins. Then they also which are fallen
asleep in Christ are perished. 1 Corin.
15:17-18
(All quotations are from K.J.V.)
Here is an important question from another important perspective:
Are these biblical
records of the Crucifixion and the Resurrection that are written by apostles,
self complementing or self contradicting?
Please read below and see if you can reconcile
the historical records.
QUERY NO. 1:
What was the time in the
day, when Christ was nailed to the cross?
a) Apostle Mark records;
“And
it was the 3rd Hour (i.e. about 9 a.m.),
and they crucified Him”.
(15:25)
Briefly,
Jesus the Christ was Crucified in the early forenoon.
b) Apostle John records;
“…and
about the 6th Hour (i.e. about Noon):
and he (Pilate) said unto the Jews, Behold
your King!” (19:14).
The story continues giving details of the legal proceedings
that followed. Finally, the verdict for Crucifixion was delivered and the
Christ was taken to the place of his Crucifixion and “they crucified him”
(19:18).
Briefly, Jesus the Christ was
Crucified sometime
in the late afternoon.
Since the Crucifixion happened ONCE, which
record is to be considered as not trustworthy?
A Christian Critic's Remark:
Under the title "answering-islam", sub-title Rebuttals to Akbarally
Meherally, Section A, Part 3, a Christian critic writes:
The Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke)
used a different method to number the hours of day than John. Matthew,
Mark, and Luke used the traditional Hebrew system, in which the hours of
the day were numbered from sunrise (approximately 6:00 AM), which places
the crucifixion at about 9:00 AM, or the third hour by this system..
John, did not employ the Hebrew system, he
used the Roman civil day. The Roman system defined a day from midnight
to midnight, as we do today. Pliny the Elder (in Natural History 2.77)
and Macrobius (Saturnalia 1.3) give us historical confirmation of this
fact. Therefore, using the Roman system which was used by John, the trial
of Jesus ended around the sixth hour (6:00 AM), which was the first hour
of the Hebrew system used by Matthew, Mark, and Luke.
My Response:
1. Apostle John was not a Roman citizen. Apostle
John was a Jew like the rest of the apostles. The Gospel John had written
was of Jesus, who too was a Jew by birth. The followers for whom the text
was written were mostly Jews or following the Hebrew system. The critic
has given no logical, satisfactory answer as to why John had discarded
the prevalent Hebrew system and adopted the Roman system.
2. The critic has also not given an explanation
as to why would Pilate, a Roman Governor, give up his sleep and convene
his Court in the dark of night at about 4 or 5 a.m. and deliver his verdict
by 6 a.m., when most of his citizens were yet in their beds? Did the Roman
Courts used to meet at 4 or 5 a.m.?
3. The critic's attempt to salvage the "self
contradictory" texts, within the four Gospels, falls flat and all the doors
for further arguments are closed when the texts in The New Revised Standard
Version and The New English Bible read; "about
noon" and in the Phillips Modern English Bible
reads; "toward midday". In the marginal
notes of The New American Standard Bible it reads: "I.e.
noon" for "the sixth hour" (John 19:14).
I suggest the critic should rather spend his
energy and time convincing the editors of the Bible to adopt his unique
theory of Hebrew and Roman timings, before trying to convince the surfers.
QUERY NO. 2:
What was the
day when Christ was Crucified?
a) The first three Gospels record that
Christ was alive on the
“day of unleavened bread, when the Passover
must be killed (sacrificed).” (Lk. 22:7). That evening Christ ate
with his disciples the Passover Seder (A Jewish ceremonial dinner or supper
held on the first night of Passover to commemorate the Exodus.) (Lk. 22:14).
Thereafter, Christ spent the night on the Mount of Olives, praying (Lk.
22:40). On the next day Christ was brought before Pilate, tried and crucified.
(Lk. Chapter 23).
( also see Mt. 26:20-30; Mk. 14:17-25; Lk. 22:14-23)
Briefly, Christ was Crucified the day following the Passover Seder.
b) Apostle John records; when Christ
was lead from Caiaphas unto the Pilate’s Headquarters, the Jews did not
enter the Hall of Judgment “lest they should be defiled”
to "eat the Passover" (18:28).
“And it was the preparation of the Passover”
(19:14) when the verdict for the Crucifixion was delivered by Pilate and
Christ was taken to the place of his Crucifixion and “they
crucified him.” (19:18).
Briefly,
Christ was Crucified on the day of the Passover Seder.
Since the Crucifixion happened ONCE, which
record is to be considered as not trustworthy?
QUERY NO. 3:
Where did the risen (raised up) Christ
first meet his disciples in a group?
a) Apostle Luke
records; the risen Christ met for the first time his eleven
disciples in Jerusalem. He talked to them
and also ate "a piece of a broiled fish and of an honeycomb". (24:33-43).
There is no reference of their meeting in Galilee.
b) Apostle Matthew
records; the risen Christ himself spoke to Mary and her friend and said;
"Be not afraid, go tell my brethren (disciples) that they go into Galilee
(nearly 100 miles North of Jerusalem), and there shall they see me." (28:10).
The "eleven disciples went away into Galilee"
and
"they
saw him". (28:16-17). There is no reference
of their meeting in Jerusalem.
QUERY NO. 4:
How
many disciples were present when the risen Christ saw his disciples in
a group for the first time?
a) Matthew, Mark
and Luke record; eleven. (Judas
was not present).
b) John records;
ten.
(Judas & Thomas were not present).
c) Paul records;
twelve
(see
1 Corinthians 15:5).
Note: A
theological statement can be interpreted with a kind of play or leeway
for having more than one interpretation. What scope does a recorded historical
event, specifying the specific date and time of a singular occurrence has
for the kind of variations that we have just observed?
Paul who made the Act of Resurrection the sole base of "Christian
Faith" also postulated:
... a man is not justified by the
works of law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ… by the works of the law
shall no flesh be justified. Gal.
2:16
This is a serious statement.
What if the risen Christ was to question his followers; Did I really give
Paul the authority make the Act Of Resurrection the base of "Faith" and/or
to abrogate my original teachings and replace them with his own?
To read the contradictory testimonies
given by Paul, that are recorded in the Book of Acts as to what did Jesus
Christ really tell Paul and what he really did not tell, on the road to
Damascus, please click:
DAMASCUS
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