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Biblical Contradictions
The Christian Bible is a collection of the majority of documents supporting the
historicity of Jesus, and the only reliable sources for details on his life.
Those who advocate the theory that Jesus is a myth consider contradictions in
the Bible to impeach the credibility of those documents. Those who oppose the
theory generally consider the contradictions to be inconsequential and largely
the result of the orally-transmitted roots of the documents. A significant
minority of Christians hold to the concept of Biblical Inerrancy and assert that
contradictions are apparent only and result from human failings to properly
interpret the Bible.
The following is a partial listing of claims by skeptics of contradictions in
major biographical details of Jesus's life and death. Those who deny the
historicity of Jesus would claim that facts such as these should not be in
dispute.
Genealogy
Matthew 1:1-16 traces Jesus's lineage from King David's son Solomon through to
Joseph's father, Jacob. Luke 3:23-31 traces a completely different lineage from
King David's son Nathan to Joseph's father, Heli. Christian apologists
traditionally explain this discrepancy by suggesting that one records a
patrilineal genealogy while the other a matrilineal one, but both identify
different fathers for Joseph and neither mentions Mary. Further, there is no
historical precedent for indicating a matrilineal genealogy for a first-century
Jewish man, and especially not to establish that man's royal heritage.
Early childhood
According to Matthew 2:13-16, Mary and Joseph fled with the infant Jesus to
Egypt in order to escape Herod's slaughtering of "all the children that were in
Bethlehem, and in all the coasts thereof, from two years old and under." The
family does not return until the end of Herod's reign. In Luke 2:39-40, the holy
family returns directly to Nazareth from Bethlehem, traveling to Jerusalem every
year for the Passover feast. No mention of any acts of infanticide is made.
The Disciples
The Disciples of Jesus were twelve men personally selected by Jesus and who
served as his traveling companions throughout his ministry. They would have come
to know each other as well as any close family member.
Matthew 4:18-20 and Mark 4:18-20 both recount the same story of how Jesus
selected his first Apostle, Peter, but the stories of Peter's selection from
Luke 5:2-11 and John 1:35-42 are completely different. However, many
apologetists might argue that Matthew and Mark's accounts just say where Peter
was found, that Luke's account goes indepth, that John's talks about how the
news of the Messiah was told to Peter, and who knew in Luke that Jesus claimed
to be Lord.]
Matthew 10:2 and Mark 3:16-19 both list the same set of disciples. Luke 6:13-16
omits Thaddaeus and includes Judas son of James in his place. Acts 1:13,26
agrees with Luke but adds that the remaining disciples chose Matthias to replace
Judas Iscariot. John neither provides a list nor indicates their number, though
it does mention nine of them by name at various places.
The trial
According to Matthew 26:18-20, 26:57-68, 27:1-2, Mark 14:16-18, 14:53-72, and
15:1, Jesus's initial hearing was at night on the first evening of Passover; in
the morning, he was taken to Pontius Pilate. Luke 22:13-15 and 54-66 record the
hearing as having taken place in the morning, and in John 18:28 and 19:14 it
happened the day before. This is especially significant as the first evening of
Passover was and is one of the holiest days of the year for Jews, a day on which
conducting business of any kind would be anathema.
In Matthew 26:59-66 and Mark 14:55-64, Jesus is tried by the entire Sanhedrin,
the Jewish high court. In Luke 22:66-71, there was no trial, but only an inquiry
held by the Sanhedrin. In John 18:13-24, Jesus was never brought before the
Sanhedrin at all; Jesus only had private hearings before Annas and Caiphas.
Matthew 27:11-14 reports that Jesus maintained a stoic silence at his hearing
before Pilate. According to John 18:33-37, Jesus answered all the charges
eloquently and at length.
The chief priests and elders persuade the people to demand the release of
Barabbas in Matthew 27:20, whereas in Mark 15:11 only the chief priests are
responsible, and in Luke 23:18-23 the people seem to decide for themselves
without prompting from leadership.
The Resurrection
Biblical accounts of the resurrection differ on a great number of details of
varying significance, including who was at and who went to the tomb, when they
arrived, whether nor not the stone covered the tomb, whether or not there was an
earthquake, who did what afterwards, how and to whom Jesus made his initial
appearances after his resurrection, and the reactions of those he appeared to.
The discrepancies are generally attributed to either an understandable confusion
on the part of those who witnessed this most extraordinary event, or a sure sign
of multiple sources offering creative fictional interpretation of an event they
were not witness to themselves.
The Ascension
In both Mark 16:14-19 and Luke 24:50-51, the Ascension takes place the same day
as the Resurrection. In Mark, while seated at a table in or near Jerusalem,
Jesus commands the Disciples to spread the Gospel and tells them that they may
identify themselves to unbelievers by their invulnerability to poison and
abilities to heal the sick and then is received into Heaven. In Luke, the
Disciples are outdoors at Bethany where Jesus was in the act of blessing them
when he was carried up to Heaven.
In Acts 1:9-12, forty days have passed, during which Jesus continued to preach
the Gospel. The Disciples are northeast of Bethany, at Mount Olivet. Jesus
delivers a brief final message to his Disciples and is taken up and received by
a cloud. Two men, clothed in white, appear out of nowhere to tell the Disciples
that Jesus will return in the same manner as he was taken.
Matthew contains no mention of the Ascension.
Events only recorded in the Bible
In addition to the numerous contradictions in the Bible's own account of Jesus's
life, those who reject the historicity of Jesus consider the numerous
spectacular events recorded only in the Bible and nowhere else as irreparably
condemning the Bible's reliability as a historical account.
Those who hold to the historicity of Jesus generally, though not universally,
acknowledge that the Bible is not to be considered the literal truth, and that
it contains many obviously-mythical elements; rather, they consider what follows
to be later additions to the core truth of the historical Jesus, in much the
same way that a caught fish gets bigger each time in the re-telling. Those who
hold that Jesus is a myth see no evidence that any fish was ever caught in the
first place.
Star of Bethlehem
Although many explanations have been offered for the Star of Bethlehem, no
actual record of any such astronomical phenomenon can be found.
Flight to Egypt
Also as mentioned above, Matthew 2:13-16 records the holy family as having fled
to Egypt. Though they may well have remained incognito while they lived there,
the Bible says nothing on the matter one way or the other. If they did not keep
their identities hidden, it is most likely that Philo, who was living in
Alexandria at this time, would have recorded the presence of the prophesied and
persecuted future King of the Jews.
Public miracles
The Bible records Jesus as having performed some very public miracles, in front
of crowds numbering, in some cases, in the thousands. He healed the sick, blind,
and lame; he raised the dead; he walked on water; and he fed multitudes with
table scraps. History is replete with people doing such deeds, but every other
instance is universally assumed to be mythic fiction.
Public ministry
Jesus preached the Sermon on the Mount to a crowd of "multitudes," and the
Sermon on the Plain to "great multitude of people out of all Judea and
Jerusalem, and from the sea coast of Tyre and Sidon, which came to hear him, and
to be healed of their diseases." This clearly indicates that Jesus must have
been a popular figure known throughout the entire region; yet, no mention is
made of any preacher giving such a sermon to such crowds.
The only problem with the statement above is that with whom was Jesus popular
with? The poor! Within this era of history, who is going to believe poor, blind,
crippled individuals about the Savior of the world? The assertion above proves
nothing.
The trial
Jesus's trial is notable for what it describes as a great many of the most
egregious possible violations of Jewish and Roman law and custom by all
officials involved. The trial is said to have taken place during Pesach, one of
the holiest holidays for Jews then and now, on which such activities are most
strictly forbidden. There was no need for the Jews to appeal to Roman authority
for assistance in the trial; they had full authority from the Romans to execute
anybody for any reason sanctioned by their own laws. There was even less reason
for the Romans to agree to intervene in what would have been to them internecine
provincial politics. The behavior of the Sanhedrin, such as spitting on Jesus,
would have been just as shocking to people then as would similar action by the
members of the United States Supreme Court today. If Pilate had agreed to take
the case, he would not have permitted an unruly mob to have remained present,
let alone have a say in the trial. While the Romans courts, like all courts,
surely freed the guilty and executed the innocent, they never would have
publicly declared their intention to do so any more than would any modern court;
Pilate's acquiescence in granting the mob Barabbas in exchange for Jesus is
incomprehensible. Finally, had Pilate actually acted as described, Rome would
have had his head on a platter, figuratively if not literally, for letting a mob
dictate his actions as well as for general gross misconduct.
In short, if even one aspect of the trial happened as described, it would have
caught the attention--and raised the ire--of a great many important people in
the region and beyond. If all of it happened as described, it would have been
the most scandalous trial of the millennium.
The crucifixion
While there are undoubtedly many people who were crucified who remain unknown to
history, various records of countless crucifixions survive. Romans saw
crucifixion as a most ignominious way to die, and, as such, crucifixions often
caught the attention of local historians. Sometimes Romans would crucify
hundreds of people a day, but they also crucified people singly or in small
groups. Josephus records many of these, including that of a Jesus who was the
son of a man named Stada, but nobody recorded any crucifixion of a charismatic
rebel preacher who could be mistaken for Jesus Christ.
Portents at Jesus's death
The Gospels record ominous portents as having occurred at the time of Jesus's
death. As recorded in Matthew 27:45-54 and similarly in the other synoptic
Gospels, a three-hour darkness was "over all the land"; the veil of the temple
was rent; there was an earthquake; and the graves opened and dead saints
"appeared unto many" in Jerusalem.
No eclipse would have been astronomically possible at the time; Pesach,
according to the lunar calendar, always is celebrated with the start of the full
moon, and eclipses can only happen when the moon is new. Further, no eclipse
ever lasts for more than a few minutes--let alone three hours. No account of
this most remarkable event, visible from "all the land," can be found outside
the Gospels.
Records of major earthquakes from the period are rather comprehensive, yet no
recorded earthquake happened at a time when the crucifixion could have happened.
The rending of the veil of the temple would have been a most remarkable
occurrence, yet it remained intact until the temple was destroyed in 70 CE.
Had presumably all the graves in the area been opened and a corresponding number
of dead saints "appeared unto many" in Jerusalem, it is absolutely certain that
those many would have reported the fact, yet none did.
The Resurrected Jesus
Acts 1:3 says that, for forty days after his resurrection, Jesus continued his
ministry, yet no extra-Biblical record can be found of the most remarkable fact
of a man, very publicly executed, continuing to do for over a month that which
got him executed in the first place.
The Ascension
According to Acts 1:9, Jesus Ascended to Heaven from atop Mount Olivet, which
would have been in full view of all of Jerusalem. Once more, no account of the
Ascension can be found outside of the Bible.
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