Part two (of two) of Farrell Till's rebuttal of Dr. James Price's response to Jim Lippard's article "The Fabulous Prophecies of the Messiah":
TILL
Contemporary
records were also strangely silent about the earthquake at the time of Jesus's death, which
allegedly shook open the graves of many saints
who then went into the city and appeared unto many (Matt.
27:52-53). Like the supernatural darkness at midday,
word of such a remarkable event as this
would surely have been spread through the region, if not the
known world, so that
references to it would have been left in contemporary records, but none exist. The historian Seneca was born in 4 B.C., the
same year that most New Testament
scholars fix the time of Jesus's birth.
He and Pliny the Elder, another
contemporary of Jesus, wrote detailed accounts of all of the known natural disasters and phenomena,
past and present, earthquakes, floods,
meteors, comets, eclipses, etc., but neither one mentioned
either a three-hour
darkness at midday or an earthquake that shook open tombs and resurrected "many" dead
people. In chapter 24 of *The Decline
and Fall of the Roman
Empire,* Edward Gibbon refers to the silence of Seneca and Pliny on the midday darkness and accepts
this as reason to believe that no such
event ever happened.
The
silence of Josephus about such remarkable events as these is also hard to imagine. His father, Matthias, was a priest in
Jerusalem at the very time that
Jesus was allegedly crucified and resurrected (*The Life of Flavius Josephus,* 2:7-12), so we
can hardly imagine Josephus's father
witnessing such phenomenal events as the midday darkness and
the resurrection
of "many" saints and not talking about them in the family circle as Josephus was growing
up. Likewise, we can't imagine Josephus
not referring
to these events if his father had indeed mentioned them. Josephus mentioned several minor Messianic
claimants, whom history has now all but
forgotten, but he made only two short, disputed references
to a Messiah whose life
was accompanied by truly amazing events. There is argument from silence; there is argument from
unreasonable silence, and it is unreasonable
to think that really remarkable events like these could have
happened without
any contemporary references to them having survived.
My
personal position is not that Jesus of Nazareth was merely a fictional or legendary character but that he very
well could have been, because the
evidence is simply insufficient to establish as historical
fact that this man was an
actual person. The strange silence of
contemporary records concerning
the New Testament claims of amazing signs and wonders that accompanied the ministry of Jesus is
certainly reason enough to believe that
he was at best a quasihistorical person, whose life was
later exaggerated and
legendized to the point that it would be correct to say that the Jesus of the gospels simply did not exist.
As I begin addressing Dr. Price's
claims of prophecy fulfillment, we will see that most of his
evidence consists
only of what the New Testament says happened in the life of Jesus. In a word, we will see that
practically all of Dr. Price's evidence assumes
the historical accuracy of the New Testament documents. We will see him
arguing that the New Testament says that Jesus was born of a
virgin, and so this
proves that he was born of a virgin. We
will see him arguing that the New
Testament claims that he was born in Bethlehem, and so this proves that he was born in Bethlehem, and so
on. Dr. Price's claim that Jesus of Nazareth existed and fulfilled many
Messianic prophecies is a claim that is
fraught with too many problems to be taken seriously by
rational people. He is, in effect, claiming that a
person who may not have existed fulfilled
certain events that may not have happened, whose historicity
depends entirely
upon an assumption that everything the New Testament claims is historically accurate.
At
this point, I could simply stop and say that Dr. Price's prophecy fulfillment claims have been
rebutted until he can remove the problems that
I have identified in this posting. However, I will begin in my next posting to take his arguments one by one and
show that even if we assume the historicity
of Jesus of Nazareth, Dr. Price's arguments are insufficient to establish undeniable prophecy
fulfillment. I don't know if Dr. Price intends to respond to my rebuttals,
but if he does, I invite him to begin
with a major problem that arises from something he said in
the following quotation
excerpted from the conclusion of his article:
PRICE
What
is surprising is the prophecies that Lippard failed to discuss. He stated that he discussed
the most important ones, but the
most important ones relate to Jesus' resurrection. The Old Testament does foretell the
resurrection of the Messiah, and God
really did raise Jesus from the dead. This event validates
the righteous
character of Jesus, the truth of His Messianic claims, the truth of fulfilled Messianic
prophecy, and the validity of Christianity.
TILL
Aside
from the obvious fact that establishing beyond reasonable doubt that Jesus of Nazareth did literally die
and then literally return to life poses
immense problems for Dr. Price, I am going to lay an added
burden on him. The New
Testament does claim that the resurrection of Jesus was prophesied, but no one can identify any Old
Testament prophecy of the Messiah's
resurrection that was worded so clearly that no reasonable
person can deny that this
was what the prophecy meant. I know that
the apostles Peter and Paul,
according to Luke, claimed that Psalm 16:8ff was a prophecy of Jesus's resurrection, but only someone
desperate to find a resurrection prophecy
could read this text and find any reason to believe that it
was predicting a Messiah's
resurrection from the dead.
This
prophecy will very likely come up later if Dr. Price decides to participate in a debate on prophecy
fulfillment, but for now, I want to call
his attention to what Luke alleged that Jesus told his
disciples the night of his
resurrection: "Thus it is written that the Christ should suffer and rise again from the dead the third
day" (Luke 24:47). The apostle Paul
also alleged
that the scriptures had spoken of the Messiah's resurrection on the third day: "For I delivered
unto you first of all that which also I
received, that Christ died for our sins according to the
scriptures, and that he
was buried and he has been raised on the third day ACCORDING TO THE SCRIPTURES" (1 Cor.
15:3-4). So here are two New Testament
statements, one of them
allegedly made by Jesus himself, that the scriptures(which would have had to have been the Old
Testament) had spoken of the Christ's
resurrection ON THE THIRD DAY.
I
now issue a challenge to Dr. Price. I
defy him to find any Old Testament
passage that ever prophesied that the Messiah would be
resurrected on the third day.
Farrell Till
Farrell Till
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