REFLECTIONS ON EASTER AND THE RESURRECTION
Hello everyone. I hope you have all either had a very good Easter or, in case you are Eastern Orthodox, are celebrating a very good one today. I grew up going to a Russian Orthodox church every Sunday, and I still remember how beautifully the church was decorated on Easter each year. Nowadays I celebrate Easter on the Western date. That is to say, I really haven't been doing much in the way of Easter celebrations ever since I stopped going to church, until this year. I tried to observe Lent, with some degree of success; painted some eggs; and had a nice Easter meal on Easter Sunday last week. Because I also have two birthdays two celebrate around this time of year, I've been feeling quite festive in general. In particular, however, my increased attention to Easter means that I've been spending more time lately about what exactly it is that we celebrate and commemorate on this feast—that is, the story of the Passion and the subsequent Resurrection. I'd like to share some of my thoughts with you here.
I have been reading the book Jezus van Nazaret: een realistisch portret (Jesus of Nazareth: A Realistic Portrait) by Paul Verhoeven. That's right: the film director, known for blockbusters like Total Recall and Basic Instinct, has something of a private obsession with the historical Jesus, and he is in fact a member of an American society, the Jesus Seminar, that studies the historicity of the Gospels. In his book, which was only published in Dutch, Verhoeven uses his own criteria to determine which of the things written in the Gospels actually happened. He writes off as fiction everything that violates the laws of nature. For instance, he does not believe that the Resurrection happened in the sense of Jesus' dead body literally, physically coming back to life, because there is no way according to what we currently know about the laws of physics that describes how this would have happened. He also considers fictional other miracles, such as the multiplication of the bread and fish, and the transformation of water into wine. I am inclined to agree with Verhoeven here; after all, everything we know tells us that such things are impossible. An important part of the definition of 'miracle' is that a miracle should be impossible according to the laws of nature, but this is not a good concept from a physical point of view: the laws of physics (i.e. the laws of nature) describe precisely that which happens, and are therefore inherently inviolable. Things that are contrary to the laws of nature per definition do not happen, therefore if something happens, that means it must be in accordance with the laws of nature, and if something happens that appears to be contrary to them, then either it only appeared to happen, or it did happen but it only appeared to contradict the laws of nature. Predictably, certain religious Christians will now object: but if the Resurrection did not physically take place, that undoes the entire fundament of our religion! I think this is a nonsensical objection, and I will explain why below, but let us first look at the conclusions Verhoeven draws in his test of the Gospels' historical veracity.
Verhoeven has another criterion to distinguish historical fact from historical fiction, and I think this second criterion is the most interesting. He also counts as fiction everything that makes too much sense from a dramaturgical point of view: if something is just a little too much of a nice coincidence, he says it is not probably that it really happened. After all, reality is often chaotic and random; events usually do not line up neatly and meaningfully. Instead, such neatly-fitting events or sequences of events are more likely to have been added on later to help create a 'good story', one that you would find in the plot of a Hollywood movie. Verhoeven, who was already a well-known director in his native country the Netherlands before coming to the US, looks at the Gospels with a filmmaker's eye, something he is of course very able to do. This leads to what I think is a refreshing take on this perhaps most fundamental to Western culture of all stories. In particular, he describes a psychological development he believes Jesus must have undergone. (I found it exciting to read as it unfolds—if you don't want the development to be spoiled, please stop reading here and go read the book first.)
According to Verhoeven, Jesus began preaching about the Kingdom of God that would soon be brought about, without seeing Himself as playing a role in that Kingdom. At the time, there was quite some dissatisfaction with and resistance to the Roman occupation of Palestine, which Verhoeven does quite a good job of placing in its historical and political context. He states that there were various groups who were against the Roman occupation with varying degrees of militancy, and that these groups began to think of Jesus as a figurehead for the overthrowing of the Roman government and the restoration of the kingdom of David. Jesus, however, did initially not believe such a change should be brought about through human action, let alone through violent means, and rejected this idea. Verhoeven describes the occasion of the multiplication of the bread and fish as an encounter with such more militant revolutionaries, who wanted to make Jesus the leader of their resistance movement, which Jesus and His disciples prevented by leaving the scen). Later on, Jesus increasingly came to believe that the Kingdom of God, of which the political undertones are now clearly apparent, should be established through human (but still non-violent) action, with Himself playing an important role in the new order to be established. Of course, such subversiveness would lead to trouble with the Romans, and Verhoeven describes quite intricately how, according to him, Jesus was sentenced to death in absentia and was fleeing the Roman (and local Jewish) authorities more or less continuously after that. It is noteworthy here that Verhoeven believes Jesus visited Jerusalem at least three times, as described in the Gospel of John (but not in the other three canonical Gospels), which is important for his chronology. Jesus knows, so to speak, that if the Romans get Him, it will be game over for Him. Over time, in between these visits, the movement of Jesus and His followers changes from an initially very optimistic one focused on the idea of establishing the Kingdom of God during Jesus' lifetime to one characterized by the idea that Jesus should sacrifice Himself, that his inevitable death at the hands of the Romans is part of God's plan. In this vision, the Kingdom of God will arrive on Earth through Jesus' sacrifice. This becomes especially important after Jesus is called to Bethany in Judaea because of Lazarus. Of course, according to Verhoeven, Jesus did not actually resurrect Lazarus from four days of death, because this is impossible. Rather, Verhoeven believes Lazarus was an important figure in Jesus' movement and that he was held captive by the Jewish authorities instead of ill, as it says in the Gospel. Because Lazarus would likely have been tortured until he revealed Jesus' whereabouts, Jesus decides to go to Bethany to save Lazarus, knowing that this will mean a certain death for Himself. This makes sense in the state of mind proposed by Verhoeven, where Jesus had at this point already accepted that He would have to sacrifice His own life. But upon arrival, Jesus find that Lazarus is already dead, probably as a result of torture. After this, writes Verhoeven, Jesus 'radicalizes': He becomes more militant and no longer dismisses the use of violence. This development is seen in other 'resistance' and 'freedom' movements, who often start out peacefully and eventually adopt violence in order to bring about their good cause. Eventually, Jesus is arrested and crucified. Verhoeven thinks that His betrayal was not foreseen, like it says in the Gospels—this was added in later to 'improve the story', and the betrayal in fact came unexpectedly. (By the way, Verhoeven also believes it was not Judas Iscariot who committed the betrayal—but if you want to know his reason for believing this, as well as many other interesting details, you should read the book.)
All in all, the overall sense conveyed by Verhoeven's book is that the story of Jesus' eventual capture and death is incredibly tragic, that it is a failure: Jesus does not succeed in His attempts to establish the Kingdom of God on Earth, He does not succeed in saving His good friend Lazarus and He then dies an untimely and wholly unnecessary death. It really makes you incredibly sad to read it described that way: a real tearjerker, in Hollywood terms. Of course, the story of the Resurrection turns the whole thing around, by having Jesus' self-sacrifice turn Him into the ultimate victor, the King that overcomes all injustice and reigns supreme. But if you believe, like Verhoeven, that Jesus never rose from the dead, because that is impossible, the story gets the aforementioned tragic reading—not bittersweet, simply tragic. In that case, I thought when pondering this, that means Christianity is extremely strange! After all, it means Christians worship as our God—not merely the son of God, but actually God Himself—a failure, someone Whose mission in life failed, for Whom everything went wrong, Who was laughed at, mocked, horribly mistreated, and killed in the most dishonourable of ways. One of the biggest losers in history, as it were. Why in the world would you worship a loser like that as your God? It makes so little sense, on the face of it, that the story of the Resurrection pretty much has to be tacked on to give any logic to the whole thing. Without it, the element of zero-turned-hero, of the outcast Who returned to become the ultimate winner, the ruler of the world Who dominates His former torturers and murderers for all eternity, seems to be completely gone. This, I believe, is the thinking of Christians who believe that Christianity without the Resurrection makes no sense and therefore desperately cling to the idea of a literal, bodily Resurrection even though they know very well that such a thing is impossible. One can easily see how, in the early days of Christianity, the Resurrection story helped 'sell' the religion to new converts. A story of someone Who overcame death itself to become the ultimate King of Kings—now that's impressive, especially to the average person who is impressed by displays of power and dominance and who is not interested in the losers, the weak, the outcast, but rather looks down on them as an example of how not to do things. One only needs to consider the prevalence and popularity of 'unlikely return to dominance' stories in today's Hollywood movies (those most archetypal modern myths) to see that the human mind, ever sensitive to stories and symbols, still works that way—even in so-called 'modern' and 'civilized' cultures.
One could also suggest that perhaps Christ survived the crucifixion—something which is highly unlikely, but for which there is at least room within the laws of fiction—and laid in the grave for three days, then regained consciousness. This would mean that He essentially spent three days in a coma. But I don't think that is a satisfactory take; apart from the fact that it is extremely improbable that one would survive such a violent ordeal, if it were really true that Jesus walked and talked three days later, there would no doubt have been more scriptures with sayings and actions attributed to Him. It is unlikely that He would just disappear without a trace (and, for what it's worth, I also do not think the Ascenscion literally happened in the sense that Jesus levitated all the way into Heaven). Now I have to address an obvious question: if you do not believe that people can rise from the dead, why would you continue to worship a loser and a failure, who was killed without honour, as your God? Why not simply drop Christianity altogether and become an atheist, or even if you continue to believe in God reject the idea that Christ is God and become some sort of nonreligious theist? This is no doubt the mindset of those who call Christians "Christcucks" and believe that Christianity, with its injunction to love one's enemy and turn the other cheek, is full of weakness and for losers, not a respectable attitude to live your life by. But Paul Verhoeven does not see it this way and neither do I. Let me explain. Verhoeven writes (p. 208, my translation):
[...] The vision of human beings envisaged by Jesus can only become a reality out of humans' own actions: to act nobly towards those who have not had the chance to take care of themselves; to overcome our own spite and resentment and receive the one who admits to being in the wrong with open arms; to treat our enemies as a human being, equivalent to ourselves, when they are knocked to the ground defenseless. In short: to realize that all humans, even all animals, are living beings slike ourselves and have just as much of a right to live as we do. [...]
He contrasts this with the vision he ascribes to Jesus, in which the Kingdom of God would be brought about purely through 'God's action', without any action on the part of humans. But I think Verhoeven misses something here, and that is probably also why I am a Christian and he is not. In a way, it is frustrating because he only just misses it: it's like watching a golf ball almost going into the hole but then coming to a stop right on the edge. Let me tell you what that is. I do not think of the Kingdom of God as something that will be established one day and then exist forever. On the contrary, I think of it as something that has to be established again and again, day after day after day, through the kind of action and attitude to life described in the above quote. To that extent, I agree with Verhoeven. Unlike Verhoeven, however, I do not see this as an opposition between 'God's action' and 'human action'. I believe that God is in all humans, just as in Christ; indeed, that God is in everything, and that God can work through human action. It is up to us to be 'like Christ': to embody this vision, to live it out, and thereby establish the Kingdom of God by continuously acting it out in the world. As far as I'm concerned, this goes not only for Christians but for all people, regardless of religion or lack thereof; but I believe this is the central message of Christianity. I also believe this is what Jesus had in mind; I do not believe Jesus had the kind of naïve image of God's action that Verhoeven ascribes to Him. Incidentally, this vision on life reminds me of a vision often put forth by Jordan Peterson, and which is (a large part of) the reason Peterson is particularly popular with Christians, especially Orthodox Christians. In this vision, ...
Non-championship race that I improvised (while you wait for the actual FISA World Stock Car Championship to start with the Daytona 500) in order to maintain the unbroken presence of Holden in auto racing. Take that, V8 Supercars!
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All car liveries painted by J.A. Brown
Video and audio editing by J.A. Brown
For those of you with an interest in linguistics and evolution of language. In this presentation at the Dutch Annual Linguistics Day, held at Utrecht University in 2020, I discuss the concept of iconicity in language: the sound of words being somehow indicative of their meaning.
I now have a system for blog posts on my website, as part of the deWordPressification process: https://jabrownswebsite.com/writing
Hello, community!
You haven't heard anything from Events Related to Potential or the FISA WSCC in a while, but behind the scenes I've been working hard on the TV graphics!
Check it out: on the formation lap, it says "FORMATION LAP". During the race, it says the actual lap number, not the number of laps completed, which is what I want. When the race finishes, it says "FINISH" (and changes the text "Leader" to "Winner" ). It still needs to look prettier, but I'm getting there...
I did a 10-lap test race to test these graphics and Stewart-Haas Racing took the first three places! How about that?!
Daytona race day is coming closer, folks! STAY TUNED!!