Thursday, 16 April 2026

Is There Evidence That Jesus Rose from the Dead?

Is There Evidence That Jesus Rose from the Dead?

Is There Evidence That Jesus Rose from the Dead?

The late eminent New Testament scholar Raymond Brown argued that the most prominent view in New Testament Christological studies at the end of the twentieth century was that of moderate conservatism. If Brown is correct that this position (moderate conservatism) is “the most agreed upon scholarly approach to Christology,”[1] it may likewise provide a hint regarding what seems to be a recent positive shift toward a more open view of the resurrection of Jesus.[2]

What accounts for these recent, major research trends? It seems that at least two developments have contributed significantly to the more positive historical outlook today regarding the New Testament text in general and its historical portions in particular. Playing the key roles in these studies pertaining to both Christology as well as to the historicity of Jesus’s resurrection appearances are two recent developments: the application of the historical criteria of authenticity, and the critical recognition of the historical role played by the early New Testament creedal passages. This essay addresses these two recent trends and the data they contribute to resurrection studies, in addition to providing an overview of the Minimal Facts Argument for Jesus’s resurrection.

The Historical Criteria of Authenticity

First, over the past century, historians have been developing and clarifying various tools that help them to assess whether or not an event has occurred in the past. Among the most important has been the use of historical “criteria” in evaluating reported historical events (and sayings). These criteria function like proverbs that guide historians rather than merely inputting data into a mathematical-like formula in order to tabulate whether or not an event is historical.

While there is still some debate regarding the use of the historical criteria, it is important to note that these criteria can only be used to add to the probability that an event has occurred. For example, if a reported event meets the criteria of multiple independent attestation (meaning that it is attested to by a number of different and independent sources), then this can add to the likelihood of the event having occurred. In general, the greater the number of criteria that are met regarding an event, then the greater the probability that the event occurred.

In the same way that everyday tools like hammers and saws have limitations, so too the historical criteria have limitations as tools for historians and for further application by New Testament scholars. If an event fails to meet some of the criteria, then it does not follow that the event is therefore nonhistorical. Trying to use historical criteria for a negative conclusion would be an inappropriate use of the tool—much like trying to use a hammer to saw a piece of wood. The hammer is the wrong tool for the job. The late New Testament scholar Ben Meyer provided a nice summary of the value of historical criteria: “[T]heir presence positively tells in favor of historicity, but their absence does not positively tell against historicity.”[3]

The criteria, then, are among both the historians’ as well as the New Testament scholars’ tools that can add to the confidence level for whether or not an event occurred.

As will be shown in more detail below, the use of historical criteria has led to an increasing affirmation of the events surrounding Jesus’s resurrection. Many of the minimal historical facts surrounding this event meet the standards of multiple criteria. Among the most popular principles for application to the resurrection appearance accounts are the two criteria of early and eyewitness sources, along with multiple independent attestation and embarrassment. The application of these and occasionally other criteria has led a number of critical scholars from a wide variety of theological backgrounds to affirm the historicity of particular events.

Early New Testament Creeds

Second, early New Testament preliterary or creedal material[4] provides another significant reason for the move toward more conservative views of the resurrection data. Perhaps the most helpful way to introduce these almost always brief texts is to say that creeds are basically the answer to this question, What was the theme of the earliest apostolic preaching prior

to the appearance of the very first New Testament writings? The answer is that these traditions filled that role, encapsulating the earliest statements of fundamental strata on which the church is based, even for that majority of early believers who were illiterate but could certainly memorize or sing these messages.

This oral material took various forms such as hymns (Philippians 2:3- 11), sermon summaries (drawn from texts like Acts 2:14-39; 4:8-12), or creedal statements and affirmations of the central doctrinal components of the Christian faith (chiefly 1 Corinthians 15:3ff.[5]). These are crucially important building blocks because these creedal passages predate the writings in which they are presently located. Some are pre-Pauline, meaning that they date from prior to Paul’s conversion! Hence, these texts were foundational. By studying them, we are hearing the earliest Christian gospel message![6]

Ironically, it was scholars who often assumed skeptical positions regarding the New Testament who brought these creeds to light decades ago. These scholars held that the canonical texts were preserved to meet the existential needs or desires of various Christian communities, whether or not Jesus actually taught these things. They said this concern took a priority over the value of preserving the historical material. New Testament scholar Darrell Bock writes that these opponents “argued that the [oral] tradition was influenced more by a concern for the life setting (Sitz im Leben) of the community to which the tradition was directed than for the setting of the event in Jesus’ life.”[7] These earlier researchers operated upon skeptical assumptions regarding these writings and sought to “get behind” the texts to whatever authentic historical material may lie behind it.

However, these presuppositions backfired in the sense of the scholars’ realization that their assuming an unreliable transmission of tradition caused them to acknowledge the confirmed presence of formal, memorized oral traditions that are less susceptible to such bending of the tradition, potentially providing early historical material that existed prior to the writings themselves. So these snippets of the initial proclamations had opened a window into the early content of the Christian message years before it was first written.

Skeptics have recognized this as well, and they now readily concede the importance of the oral formulas. The agnostic Bart Ehrman, for example, writes, “The value of being able to isolate preliterary traditions is that they give us access to what Christians were believing and how they were extolling God and Christ before our earliest surviving writings.”[8] Jewish New Testament researcher Pinchas Lapide even affirmed that Jesus was actually resurrected from the dead and argued that some of these oral traditions, such as stated in 1 Corinthians 15:3ff., could be traced back to the actual eyewitnesses of these events.[9]

Thus, as some critics sought to find the historical material that lurked behind the text, they helped discern various oral traditions that were previously embedded in the texts! These oral formulas have provided scholars with initial information regarding the views of the earliest Christians. These texts have also contributed a line of evidence that argues

against the critics’ own assumptions that the New Testament writers freely created stories based upon their needs. Instead, this process indicated that believers were careful to preserve the oral traditions that were being passed down to them.[10]

The Resurrection of Jesus: The Minimal Facts Argument

These two developments over recent decades—the criteria of authenticity and the realizations regarding the early creedal texts embedded in the New Testament books—have helped immensely in the study of Jesus’s resurrection. Each, in its own way, has gone further in helping to establish the historicity of this event.

While defending an aspect of the more traditional reliability argument, Lydia McGrew recently made a laudatory comment regarding the Minimal Facts Argument. Appreciating it in part, McGrew noted the “near-exclusive use in Christian apologetic circles” of this argument in recent years.[11] Why is this argument so popular of late?

The Minimal Facts Argument is built on two prerequisites:

(1) No historical data are employed unless they are supported by several strong arguments each.

(2) As a result, virtually all critical New Testament scholars (including even atheistic, agnostic, and other non-Christian researchers) agree with the historicity of each fact. Of these two criteria, it should be noted that the first one is by far the more crucial of the two.[12]

Over the years, Habermas has used anywhere from three to eight minimal facts, with the number varying because it is somewhat arbitrary in the sense that virtually no scholar allows only this abbreviated number. Of late, six facts have been the usual quantity.

Employing just six of these facts we would include

(1) Jesus’s death by crucifixion,

(2) that the disciples had real experiences that they thought were appearances of the risen Jesus, and

(3) that the resurrection event was proclaimed a very short time after the crucifixion. Further,

(4) Jesus’s disciples were transformed by these experiences, even to the point of being willing to die specifically for this resurrection message. Last,

(5) James the brother of Jesus and

(6) Paul (Saul of Tarsus) were converted by experiences that they likewise thought were resurrection appearances of Jesus.

A recent count of this research determined that there is a minimum of eight to thirteen arguments of various sorts for each of these six historical facts. These “backup” evidences are of varying strengths, though they draw heavily from both the historical criteria of authenticity as well as the creedal data mentioned earlier.

Most commonly used from the criteria of authenticity are the tests already mentioned: the early and eyewitness sources; along with multiple attestation of sources; plus embarrassing features, such as women being the chief witnesses to Jesus’s crucifixion, His burial, and His resurrection appearances. From the creeds, by far the primary emphasis is on 1 Corinthians 15:3-8. Additional reasons further support these six facts as well. When the entire list of supportive arguments is posted, it is far more apparent why virtually all critical scholars endorse these six facts with very little dispute. But the account does not end there. In turn, this combined case is capable of doing three things:

(1) the strongest evidences favoring Jesus’s resurrection are provided from these data;

(2) they also offer the most crucial refutations of the major naturalistic hypotheses in opposition to this event;

(3) plus, these prior two tactics may be carried out with just this minimal foundation, making this maneuver much more concise and easy to handle.

Perhaps that is why McGrew attested that the Minimal Facts Argument’s “widespread use may be in part a result of the fact that it provides a straightforward template for a debate format.”[13]

In addition, this approach provides a grounding from these historical facts that supplies a foundation for the center of Christian theology; such as the gospel message itself. Finally, these facts also provide bridges to Christian ministry and practice.[14] All in all, this is a remarkable amount of uses for a brief, concentrated historical argument. 



[1] Raymond Brown, An Introduction to New Testament Christology (New York: Paulist, 1994), 14-15, 102.

[2] Cf. Gary R. Habermas, “Mapping the Recent Trend Toward the Bodily Resurrection Appearances of Jesus in Light of Other Prominent Critical Positions” in The Resurrection of Jesus: John Dominic Crossan and N.T. Wright in Dialogue, ed. by Robert B. Stewart (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress, 2006), 78- 92.

[3] Ben F. Meyer, The Aims of Jesus (London, UK: SCM, 1979), 131; cf. also 141.

[4] Although there are differences among these terms, these creeds are sometimes referred to similarly by the terms traditions, confessions, or hymns.

[5] Also Luke 24:34; Romans 1:3-4; 10:9-10; 1 Corinthians 8:6; 11:23-26; 1 Peter 1:21; 2:21, along with the sermon summaries in Acts.

[6] V.H. Neufeld, The Earliest Christian Confessions (Leiden, Netherlands: Brill, 1963), 140-146.

[7] Darrell L. Bock, Studying the Historical Jesus: A Guide to Sources and Methods (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2002), 182.

[8] Bart D. Ehrman, How Jesus Became God: The Exaltation of a Jewish Preacher from Galilee (New York: Harper One, 2014), 216 (emphasis in original).

[9] Pinchas Lapide, The Resurrection of Jesus: A Jewish Perspective (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2002), 99.

[10] Bock, Studying the Historical Jesus, 182-183.

[11] Lydia McGrew, Hidden in Plain View: Undesigned Coincidences in the Gospels and Acts (Chillicothe, OH: DeWard, 2017), 220-221.

[12] For details, see Gary R. Habermas, “The Minimal Facts Approach to the Resurrection of Jesus: The Role of Methodology as a Crucial Component in Establishing Historicity,” Southeastern Theological Review, vol. 3 (Summer 2012), 15-26.

[13] McGrew, Hidden in Plain View, 220.

[14] Gary R. Habermas, The Risen Jesus and Future Hope (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2003).

How Do We Know That Jesus Is God?

How Do We Know That Jesus Is God?

 How Do We Know That Jesus Is God?

Christians who are interested in apologetics must have a firm grasp not only of the positive arguments for the deity of Christ, but also be able to answer objections against Jesus’s deity. In this chapter, we will address both.

Arguments That Demonstrate Christ’s Deity

Jesus Is Yahweh. Yahweh is an Old Testament term for God meanin “LORD.” A comparison of Old Testament verses about Yahweh with New Testament verses about Jesus points to Jesus’s identity as Yahweh. In Isaiah 40:3, for example, we read a prophecy of Jesus: “In the wilderness prepare the way of the LORD; make straight in the desert a highway for our God.”

“LORD” here is literally “Yahweh,” just as “God” is literally “Elohim.” Jesus is the Yahweh/Elohim of Isaiah 40:3 (see Mark 1:2-4).

In Isaiah 44:24 Yahweh asserts: “I am the LORD, who made all things, who alone stretched out the heavens, who spread out the earth by myself.”

In the New Testament, however, Christ is presented as the Creator of “all things” (John 1:3; Colossians 1:16). Christ, as the Creator, is Yahweh, just as the Father is Yahweh. Creation is “from” the Father, but “through” Jesus Christ (1 Corinthians 8:6), and both persons are identified as Yahweh in Scripture. (Such verses are obviously supportive of the doctrine of the Trinity.)

Isaiah witnessed the divine glory of Yahweh in Isaiah 6:1-5. He spoke of Yahweh “sitting upon a throne, high and lifted up” (verse 1). Later, the apostle John—under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit—wrote that Isaiah “saw Christ’s glory” (John 12:41 NET Bible). Yahweh’s glory and Jesus’s glory are hereby equated.

In Zechariah 12:10, Yahweh spoke prophetically: “When they look on me, on him whom they have pierced, they shall mourn for him.” Though Yahweh was speaking, this is clearly a reference to Christ’s future crucifixion. Jesus is described as the one they have “pierced” by the apostle John in Revelation 1:7. (See also Isaiah 44:6 compared with Revelation 1:17; Isaiah 60:19-20 compared with Revelation 21:23; Isaiah 43:11 compared with Titus 2:13.)

Jesus Has the Names and Titles of God. In addition to the above evidences that Jesus is Yahweh or Lord, Jesus in John 8:58 informed some Jews, “Truly, truly, I say to you, before Abraham was, I am.” The Jews immediately picked up stones with the intention of killing Jesus, for they understood He was identifying Himself as Yahweh—the “I AM” of Exodus 3:14. Jesus is Lord.

Likewise, Jesus is identified as Elohim in Isaiah 9:6 (the Messiah is “Mighty God”) and Isaiah 40:3 (“make straight in the desert a highway for our God”). Elohim literally means “strong one” or “mighty God,” and its plural ending (im in Hebrew) indicates fullness of power. It is a common name for God in the Old Testament. Jesus is God.

Further, Jesus is identified as Theos, a common New Testament Greek word translated “God.” It corresponds to the Old Testament Elohim. Jesus is recognized as Theos by doubting Thomas (John 20:28), a jailer (Acts 16:31-34), the apostle Paul (Titus 2:13), and Peter (1 Peter 1:1). The heavenly Father even said to Jesus, “Your throne, O God [Theos], is forever and ever” (Hebrews 1:8).

Jesus is also identified as Kurios, a common New Testament Greek term for “Lord.” It is equivalent to the Old Testament Yahweh. The apostle Paul wrote that Christ was given a name above every name, “that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow…and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord [Kurios]” (Philippians 2:9-11). Paul, an Old Testament scholar par excellence, was alluding to Isaiah 45:22-24: “I am God, and there is no other…To me every knee shall bow, every tongue shall swear allegiance.”

Jesus is Lord.

Jesus Has the Attributes of God. For example, Jesus is eternal. John 1:1 affirms, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.” The word “was” is an imperfect tense, indicating continuous, ongoing existence. When the time-space universe first came into being, Christ already existed as God.

Jesus is also self-existent. As the Creator of all things (John 1:3), Christ Himself must be uncreated. Because He is “before all things” (Colossians 1:17), He does not depend on anyone or anything outside Himself for His existence.

Jesus is omnipresent. He promised His disciples “where two or three are athered in my name, there am I among them” (Matthew 18:20). The only way He could be simultaneously present with believers worldwide is if He is omnipresent. Likewise, after commissioning the disciples to bring the gospel to all nations, Jesus assured them, “I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20). The only way Christ could do this is if He were everywhere present (Ephesians 1:23; 4:10; Colossians 3:11). (Note: The fact that Christ, as God, is everywhere present does not contradict the concept that He also has locality as a human. Christ, in the incarnation, is fully God and fully human.)

Jesus is omniscient. His disciples acknowledged, “Now we know that you know all things” (John 16:30; see also 21:17). Jesus knew the future (John 11:11; 18:4) and knew specific details about what would happen (Matthew 21:2-4). He knew from a distance that Lazarus had died (John 11:14). He knows the Father as the Father knows Him (John 7:29; 8:55; 10:15; 17:25).

Jesus is omnipotent. Christ created the entire universe (Colossians 1:16) and sustains it by His power (Colossians 1:17). In the Gospels we read that He exercised power over nature (Luke 8:25), over physical diseases (Mark 1:29-31), over demonic spirits (Mark 1:32-34), and even over death (John 11:1-44).

In Keeping with His Divine Attributes, Jesus Did What Only God Can Do.

Only God can be the Creator (Isaiah 44:24), and yet Jesus is the Creator (John 1:3; Colossians 1:16). Only God can be the Savior (Isaiah 43:11), and yet Jesus is our “great God and Savior” (Titus 2:13). Only God can forgiv sin (Isaiah 43:25), and yet Jesus forgives sin (Mark 2:5,7).

The Old Testament teaches that only God is the giver of life (Deuteronomy 32:39; 1 Samuel 2:6; Psalm 119). Yet Jesus claims this power for Himself: “As the Father raises the dead and gives them life, so also the Son gives life to whom he will” (John 5:21).

Jesus’s miracles provide further evidence of His divine identity. In the Gospel of John, Jesus’s miracles are often called “signs.” These signs always signify something—in this case, that Jesus is the prophesied divine Messiah. Among the more notable signs performed by Jesus were changing water into wine (John 2:7-8), calming a stormy sea (Matthew 8:26; Mark 4:39; Luke 8:24), feeding 5,000 men and their families (Matthew 14:19; Mark 6:41; Luke 9:16; John 6:11), walking on water (Matthew 14:25; Mark 6:48; John 6:19), and raising Lazarus from the dead (John 11:43-44).

Jesus Accepted Worship as God. The New Testament demonstrates that while holy men refused worship (Acts 14:15), as did angels (Revelation

22:8-9), Jesus accepted worship on numerous occasions, in perfect keeping with His claim to be God. Jesus accepted worship from Thomas (Joh 20:28), the angels (Hebrews 1:6), some wise men (Matthew 2:11), a leper (Matthew 8:2), a ruler (Matthew 9:18), a blind man (John 9:38), an anonymous woman (Matthew 15:25), Mary Magdalene (Matthew 28:9), and the disciples (Matthew 28:17).

Scripture is consistent on the fact that only God can be worshipped. Exodus 34:14 tell us: “You shall worship no other god, for the Lord, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God” (see also Deuteronomy 6:13; Matthew 4:10). The fact that Jesus accepted worship on numerous occasions testifies to His identity as God.

Others Recognized Jesus as God. Thomas saw the wounds of the resurrected Christ and cried out, “My Lord and my God!” (John 20:28).

Paul made reference to “Christ, who is God over all” (Romans 9:5). He referred to Jesus as the one in whom “the whole fullness of deity dwell bodily” (Colossians 2:9). In Titus, Jesus is recognized as “our great God and Savior” (2:13). The heavenly Father’s words to the Son are recorded in Hebrews: “Your throne, O God, is forever and ever” (1:8).

Early followers of Christ recognized His deity. Ignatius, who died by AD 116, wrote of “the blood of God” in chapter 1 of his Letter to the Ephesians. Mathetes, a disciple of the apostles who died AD 130, wrote of Christ as King, God, man, and Savior. Justin Martyr, who wrote about AD 138–165, referred to Christ as the one “who is Himself this God begotten of the Father” (Dialogue with Trypho, ch. 61). Melito of Sardis, who died AD 180, said of the crucifixion “God is murdered.” Irenaeus (AD 120–202) wrote in Against Heresies, “Jesus is Himself in His own right…God, and Lord.”

Jesus’s Deity Was Evident in His Teachings. The teachings of Jesus were always presented as being ultimate and final. Jesus never wavered in this.

He unflinchingly placed His teachings above those of Moses and the Jewish prophets. He always spoke in His own authority. He never said, “Thus says the LORD…” as did the Jewish prophets; He always said, “Truly, truly, I say to you…”

Jesus never retracted anything He said, never guessed or spoke with uncertainty, never made revisions, never contradicted Himself, and never apologized for what He said. He boldly asserted that “heaven and earth will pass away, but my words will not pass away” (Mark 13:31).

One cannot read the New Testament Gospels long before recognizing that Jesus regarded Himself and His message as inseparable. The reason His teachings had authority was because of His identity as God. The words of Jesus were the words of God (John 6:35; 7:37-38; 10:10; 14:27; Matthew 11:28).

Answering Objections to Christ’s Deity

Not surprisingly, cults that deny Jesus is God cite Bible verses that they believe indicate Jesus is lesser than the Father. In each case, they misinterpret the verse in question. Following is a brief sampling of how to answer such cultic misinterpretations:

While John 3:16 makes reference to Jesus as the Son of God, this title indicates not inferiority, but that Jesus has the same divine nature as the Father (John 5:18 makes this clear). Among the ancients, “Son of…” often indicated “Same nature as…” While John 14:28 quotes Jesus as saying the Father was greater than Him, He was speaking positionally—that is, the Father was in heavenly glory, while Jesus was on earth, soon to be crucified.

While Colossians 1:15 calls Jesus the “firstborn [Greek, prototokos] of all creation,” this phrase indicates not that Jesus was created, but rather that He was preeminent. Jesus was presented as preeminent over creation (verse 15) because He created the creation (verse 16) and sustains the creation (verse 17). This is confirmed by recognizing that others in the Old Testament, such as Israel (Exodus 4:22), David (Psalm 89:27), and Ephraim (Jeremiah 31:9), were described as “firstborn” despite the fact that chronologically, other nations were older than Israel, and David and Ephraim had older brothers. In this context, “firstborn” does not always mean first created, but more appropriately refers to preeminence—in the case of Colossians 1:15, Christ’s preeminence.

While Mark 13:32 indicates Jesus did not know the hour of His return, Jesus was speaking only from His finite human nature. Christ in His divine nature is omniscient (Matthew 11:27; 17:27; Luke 5:4,6; John 7:29; 8:55; 10:15; 16:30; 17:25; 21:6-11,17). While fulfilling His messianic mission on earth, Jesus voluntarily chose not to use some of His divine attributes on some occasions (Philippians 2:5-11).

While 1 Corinthians 11:3 says, “the head of Christ is God,” and in John 14:28 Jesus said, “The Father is greater than I,” these passages speak only of the Father’s authority over Jesus. The 1 Corinthians verse indicates that just as a husband is functionally the head of the wife even though both are equally human (Genesis 1:26-28), so the Father is functionally the head of Christ even though both are equally divine (John 10:30).

In John, the Son was simply referring to the Father’s greater office, much like the difference between the offices occupied by the president and vice president. The president is greater than the vice president in terms of office, but they are equal in nature—they are both human. The same is true between the Father and the Son.

While Revelation 3:14 says that Jesus was the “beginning of God’s creation,” the Greek word for “beginning” (arche) carries the idea of beginner—that is, Jesus created God’s creation (see John 1:3; Colossians 1:16).

It is clear to the impartial observer that Scripture—properly interpreted in context—always points to the absolute and unqualified deity of Jesus Christ.

Jesus is God!

Wednesday, 15 April 2026

 What About the Alternative “Gospels”?

What About the Alternative “Gospels”?

What About the Alternative “Gospels”?

For most of church history, Christians have been aware of only four canonical Gospels—Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John. But this was not always so. The Gospels, which were written by the apostles or their companions in the ministry, such as Luke and Mark, were written in the decades immediately following the life, death and resurrection of Jesus.

Though some modern Christians and scholars believe the early writers were rather ignorant and illiterate, that is not the case for several reasons. Those who wrote the first-century Gospels possessed confidence when it came to composing letters and treatises in the Greek language. For example, Luke was a companion of the apostle Paul, and as an educated physician, he was capable of producing a carefully written and researched portrait of Jesus known as the Gospel of Luke.

Matthew was a tax collector. This would have required him to be conversant in different languages, possess mathematical skills, and most likely be capable of communicating in written form.

The other apostles, even being “uneducated” (Acts 4:13), would have maintained acceptable reading and writing capabilities that would have enabled them to write letters to the Christian communities. Some have supposed that the statement in Acts 4:13 means they were unable to communicate in written form. However, the text speaks of no such incapacity, but more precisely of not having rabbinic training.[1]

Matthew, Mark, and Luke were likely written somewhere from AD 40 to 70, and John was probably composed in the late 80s, or early 90s. The early Christians who heard or read the Gospels depended on writings that were based on eyewitness testimonies. Even though the four books did not identify the authors who wrote them, the recipients of these works were well aware from whom they came.

This stands in contrast to the so-called (noncanonical) gospels of the second century, which were often titled using the names of famous individuals from the first century. This was done in attempts to bolster the street credibility of these alternative works. But the early Christians would not likely have been fooled into receiving these works. The authentic canonical Gospels of the first century never had any difficulty with being received by the people of God because of their authenticity and their direct connection with the eyewitnesses. But this does not mean that the early Christians were not careful with regard to what they accepted as the Word of God. Some books, like 2 Peter and Revelation, were available for a number of years before they were widely accepted.

What Is the Origin of the Alternative Gospels?

Whereas Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John were written during the first century, the alternative gospels were not written until the first half of the second century. Though these works bore the names of well-known individuals from the first-century, they originated much too late to have been written by eyewitnesses of the life and resurrection of Jesus. Not only did they lack eyewitnesses, but the authors were not able to interview eyewitnesses, as Luke did for his Gospel.

We have no knowledge of who wrote these alternative gospels, but we do know that these works originated in communities in Egypt, where false doctrine and heresy were prevalent.

Though heretics in Egypt received the alternative gospels, they never gained traction in the rest of the Christian world. Strangely, modern scholars have given them far more credence than even those individuals who were influenced by the orthodox fathers of the Christian church.

The Theology of the Alternative Gospels

What is Gnosticism? To understand why the majority of the church rejected the alternative gospels, we first need to know the dominant theology of those who composed these writings. Because of the media publicity in recent years, many Christians who are not involved in biblical scholarship have become more familiar with the terms Gnostic and Gnosticism, but know little of the beliefs of this philosophy. Gnostic comes from the Greek word gnosis, which means “knowledge.” Gnostics were those who sought hidden knowledge—they believed they were a select group of individuals who had achieved levels of special knowledge not yet attained by others who identified with Christ.

During the first half of the first century, in the city of Alexandria, Egypt, a neoclassical Renaissance had begun in Greek language, literature, and culture. Alexandria became the “new” hub of learning much like Athens had been previously. It was the place where important people would come to learn and do research in the vast Alexandrian library. Among them was a Jew by the name of Philo, a contemporary of the apostle Paul. Philo, who imbibed in Greek philosophy, began reinterpreting the Hebrew Scriptures for the Greek-speaking Jews (Hellenists), which filled the cultural demand for retelling the old stories in new and fanciful ways. In doing this, he sought to gain respectability for the Hebrew stories by allegorizing the various accounts recorded in the Greek Old Testament, such as the story of creation, or the exploits of Samson, or the laws given to the Israelites. After Philo, this style of reinterpreting the Hebrew stories as myths would eventually come to full bloom during the second century under Gnosticism.

The influence of Greek philosophy in the development of Gnosticism. Not only was Greek philosophy influential with regard to how some people interpreted Scripture, but also how they viewed the world and humanity. A significant part of Gnostic thought was to view God, the world, matter and spirit, in a much different way. Generally, Gnostics believed that the material world was impure, and by contrast, the spiritual and immaterial were pure. This perspective on the nature of physical and nonphysical reality led to a new view of creation and ethics.

Unlike the biblical model of creation, in which an immaterial deity identified as Yahweh created the physical universe out of nothing, Gnostics believed that the physical world was created by an evil god. While the creative act originated in the God who is pure spirit, the physical world was made through a cadre of increasingly less pure beings (including the one identified as an evil god). Thus Gnosticism held to a different view of creation and the nature of matter and spirit, as well as an ethical teaching that ran counter to Christianity. Because matter was said to be evil and spirit was said to be good, Gnostics had difficulty with the idea that Jesus was God in human flesh.

Attempts to influence orthodox Christianity. Most scholars believe Gnosticism began in earnest by the second century, most likely after the time of the final destruction of the Jewish people under Hadrian in AD 135.[2] Some have thought that Gnosticism originated during the time of the apostles and the writing of the New Testament, but this is very unlikely.[3]

However, there is no question that various strains of thought from the Greek and the Eastern worlds found their way into Gnosticism during the second century. Among these influences were Platonic (Plato’s) philosophy (which emerged in first-century Alexandria), the stories of the Jews and early Christians, and Zoroastrian dualism from Persia.

The Gnostics attempted to draw Christians away from sound doctrine and the church. One way they did this was through the writing of “gospels” about Jesus that were supposedly composed by first-century apostles such as Peter, James, and Thomas. These alternative gospels, however, were not written during the lifetimes of these individuals, but much later.

Furthermore, these alternative gospels did not speak about Jesus in a manner that reflected the Jewish community and the Hebrew faith depicted in the four authentic Gospels. Rather, they created a uniquely Gnostic Jesus, which was largely rejected by the church.

To some Gnostics, Jesus was seen as a spirit (since matter was impure) sent from the ultimate deity to save humanity by providing special knowledge about salvation. To accomplish this, it was necessary for Jesus

to appear to be human (known as docetism, from the Greek word dokein meaning “to seem” or “to appear”) and share this spiritual knowledge with His disciples, rather than have them express faith in Him. According to Gnostic thought, Jesus never became truly human. Some of these ideas were already developing by the end of the first century, but it wasn’t until later that they became a tenet of the Gnostic belief system.

Of course, one who has read the Gospel of John (John 1:1,14), as well as John’s epistles, would immediately recognize the human Jesus and reject these Gnostic heresies. In addition, John clearly condemned in the strongest

terms (e.g., “spirit of antichrist”) those who made the claim that Jesus did not come in the flesh (1 John 4:1-4; 2 John 7). Paul’s teaching on faith also stood in contrast to the Gnostic view of salvation by special knowledge (Romans 10:9-10).

The Gnostic Gospels

Space limitations permit only a brief mention of the various Gnostic gospels, which were written from approximately AD 120–180. Though the Gnostic gospels have some similarities to the New Testament Gospels, none of the writers were companions (or eyewitnesses) of those who were the original recipients of the apostolic message. The general opinion of scholars who study these alternative gospels is that there are no copies that date into the second century, and the original compositions date from generally the middle of the second century onward.[4]

The Gospel According to Thomas. Possibly the most famous of the alternative gospels is the Gospel of Thomas, which was discovered at Nag Hammadi in Egypt.[5] This work is composed of 114 short sayings attributed to Jesus, and probably dates from about AD 140[6] to 180.[7] There is debate among scholars whether this is truly a Gnostic work, or whether it merely shares aspects of mystical thinking that were present in the first century and were later absorbed into second-century Gnosticism. Even though Thomas contains heretical teaching, it also seems to borrow from the first century New Testament Gospels,[8] though presenting them through Gnostic filters. It also contains references to books that are known to have originated during the second century.[9]

Gospel According to Philip. This is not really a gospel, but a collection of short portions from other Gnostic writers. It summarizes the thinking of some of the disciples of the Gnostic named Valentinus, and was most likely written during the second half of the third century AD.[10] This work also contains a fragmented but seemingly significant statement on page 63 of codex 2, lines 32 through 36: “The companion of the […] Mary Magdalene […] her more than […] kiss her […] on her […].” The suggestion has been made that the restored text would read, “the companion of the [Savior is]

Mary Magdalene. [But Christ loved] her more than [all] the disciples [and used to] kiss her [often] on her […].”[11]

Craig Evans notes that some scholars believe the text indicates that He kissed Mary on her lips, but other words are also possible. Moreover, were these events to have occurred, they should be seen in light of Middle Eastern culture, in which a kiss would have been more a statement of respect and honor than an indication of a romantic relationship.[12]

Gospel According to Mary [Magdalene]. This work is one of the more familiar of the Nag Hammadi gospels because of its use by the novelist Dan Brown in the Da Vinci Code. According to Brown’s novel, Mary was allegedly the wife of Jesus, and this gospel includes additional information.

The pertinent verse reads “Peter says to Mary, ‘Sister, we know that you are much loved by the Savior, as no other woman. Therefore tell us what words of the Savior you know, what we have not heard’” (6:1-2). In this text, as well as the remainder of the book, the focus is upon Mary being received by Jesus as a disciple, not a lover.[13]

Gospel of Truth. According to the majority of scholars, this text is a translation of a Greek original, and the Coptic copy was carelessly transmitted with many scribal errors. This includes individual letters written or erased over, omitted letters inserted above the line of the text or in the margins, and an omitted phrase that is found at the bottom of the page.[14]

There was no title to the book in the manuscript, but modern scholars have used the title Gospel of Truth,[15] although Jacqueline A. Williams suggests that it is reasonable to have been its actual title.[16]

This gospel may be the one spoken of by Irenaeus in his Adversus Haeresis (“Against Heresies”) when he said that the Valentinians used a “Gospel of Truth” that was different from the canonical Gospels.[17] The author of the Gospel of Truth developed a complex and often confusing discussion of the various levels of reality that began from the unbegotten Father through the Son from the Father, explaining how the Son represents the Father to bring persons to knowledge of the Father.[18] This is characteristic of much Gnostic thought, which understands salvation not as faith in Christ, but as gaining secret knowledge.

Additional Gospels. There are several more Gnostic gospels, including The Apocryphon of John, The Apocryphon of James, The Gospel of Nicodemus, the Gospel of the Egyptians, and the Lost Gospel of Peter. Each gospel has unique features, but they share in common a late date, seeking to borrow in various ways from the first-century authentic Gospels. What all these works share in common is an attempt to promote another gospel.

Greater Appreciation for the True Gospels

There has been much attention given to these writings discovered in the sands of Egypt, but not because they help us to understand more about Jesus or the beginning of the Christian church. Rather, their intrigue comes from offering a different look at the person of Christ and a new perspective on salvation, the nature of the universe, and ethical teachings.

None of these books were authored by the person whose name appears on them, and they say little—in some cases, nothing at all—about the historical life of Christ. They only seek to provide additional or alternative sayings of Christ. The Christian who has not had exposure to these books has lost little, if anything.

On the positive side, these works give us a much greater appreciation for the authentic Scriptures of the New Testament, which were written with careful attention to historical detail and spiritual truth!



[1] Craig Evans examines the matter of the literacy of Jesus, but the same type of argument may apply to His disciples. His third consideration, that of the need to

know the law in Judaism, caused parents to take care to teach their children to read. Craig A. Evans, Fabricating Jesus: How Modern Scholars Distort the Gospels (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 2006), 35-38. This is something that has been a consistent characteristic of the Jewish people to the present day.

[2] Smith argues that Egypt is the likely location of the birth of Gnosticism, and that disaffected Jews, upon their loss of identity after the time of Hadrian, and even some Jewish Christians, who could not embrace the entirety of the Christian message, were responsible for its birth and growth from the ideas of several sources. Carl B. Smith II, No Longer Jews: The Search for Gnostic Origins (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2004).

[3] See Edwin M. Yamauchi, Pre-Christian Gnosticism: A Survey of the Proposed Evidences (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock, 2003).

[4] See Evans, Fabricating Jesus, for further discussion.

[5] Helmut Koester, “Gospel of Thomas” in James M. Robinson, The Coptic Gnostic Library: A Complete Edition of the Nag Hammadi Codices (Leiden,

Netherlands: Brill, 2000), vol. 2, tractate 2, 38.

[6] Bertie Gärtner, The Theology of the Gospel According to Thomas, trans. by Eric J. Sharpe (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1961), 271.

[7] Evans, Fabricating Jesus, 55.

[8] Philip Jenkins, Hidden Gospels: How the Search for Jesus Lost Its Way (New

York: Oxford University Press, 2001), 71; Evans, Fabricating Jesus, 62-77.

[9] Philip Jenkins, Hidden Gospels, 70; see Bart D. Ehrman, Lost Scriptures: Books that Did Not Make It into the New Testament (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003), 20; also see Craig A. Evans, Noncanonical Writings and New Testament Interpretation (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 1992), 162-168.

[10] Wesley W. Isenberg, “Gospel According to Philip,” and James M. Robinson,

“Gospel of Thomas,” The Coptic Gnostic Library: A Complete Edition of the

Nag Hammadi Codices, vol. 2, tractate 3, p. 131.

[11] Evans, Fabricating Jesus, 211.

[12] Evans, Fabricating Jesus.

[13] Evans, Fabricating Jesus, 212.

[14] Harold W. Attridge and George W. MacRae, S.J., “The Gospel of Truth” in Ames M. Robinson, The Coptic Gnostic Library: A Complete Edition of the Nag Hammadi Codices (Leiden, Netherlands: Brill, 2000), vol. 2, tractate 2, 63.

[15] Attridge and MacRae, “The Gospel of Truth,” 65-66.

[16] Jacqueline A. Williams, Biblical Interpretation in the Gnostic Gospel of Truth from Nag Hammadi (Atlanta, GA: Scholars Press, 1988), 3.

[17] W.W. Isenberg, “The Gospel of Truth” in Robert M. Grant, ed., Gnosticism: A

Source Book of Heretical Writings from the Early Christian Period (New York: Harper & Brothers, 1917), 146-161.

[18] Attridge and MacRae, “The Gospel of Truth,” 71-72.