Well, why would they have fabricated their accounts? To make
them more marketable? If anything, they had made their Gospel accounts highly
unmarketable. How?
- Turning Jesus into a God. The idea that a man could also be God was highly unacceptable.
- Making an utterly disgraced crucified man into God was doubly unacceptable.
- Making Gentiles co-heirs with Jews was absolutely anathema and was guaranteed to alienate the Jews.
- The consistent denigrating of Israel and her leadership was highly offensive and led to persecution.
- The teachings never appealed to Jewish pride as the teachings of the rabbis would do.
- The Gospels inevitably attacked the influential and elevated those who were scorned.
- Their teachings of Jesus were both difficult to understand and impossible to perform. They were inevitably humbling and wouldn’t produce a gratifying success experience.
These teachings and accounts of the life of Jesus were
utterly unmarketable. Why then did the Apostles record them? Evidently, they
were convinced that they were accurate and notarized them in their blood of
martyrdom.
Besides, if the Apostles had been trying to market a new
religion with themselves as its Patriarchs, they would have portrayed
themselves positively. Instead, we are left with the impression that they were
clueless. For one thing, the Jesus of the Gospels never complemented them. He
only praised the faith of two people, both Gentiles. He never told His
Apostles, “You are growing spiritually” or “Good job” or “I chose the very best
when I chose you.” Instead, it was one correction followed by the next. He even
prophesied that they all would abandon Him during His crucifixion, and they
did.
In the Gospels, they even described themselves as ignorant
racists who consistently failed to believe Jesus and to understand His
teachings. These are certainly not the descriptions of salesmen who want to
promote their product. Instead, they seem to be the writings of people who had
become convinced that they were writing about a truth far greater than their dignity
and welfare.
They give every indication that they were people who had met
the risen Christ. Subsequently, we see that they were changed men who now
understood the Gospel and had been changed by it. They had become so changed
that it no longer mattered to them if they bared their failings before the world.
They had become convinced of the Gospel of their Savior that they never
recanted of what they had written, even at the point of martyrdom.
The evidence for this is so strong that even skeptical
scholars acknowledged:
·
“Even the atheist Ludemann conceded: ‘It may be
taken as historically certain that Peter and the disciples had experiences
after Jesus’ death in which Jesus appeared to them as the risen Christ.’” (Lee Strobel)
·
Paula Fredriksen, Jewish NT scholar, confessed: “The
Disciples’ conviction that they had seen the risen Christ…is historical
bedrock, facts known past doubting.”
The Gospels and the lives of the Apostles give us no
indication whatsoever that the Apostles had been motivated to distort or
fabricate what they had seen and heard.
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