According to
Rudolf Bultmann, "Easter stories [...] fall into two groups – stories of the empty tomb and stories of the appearance of the risen Lord, though there are stories that combine them both (Mt 28:1–8, 9f; Jn 20:1, 11–18)."
N. T. Wright emphatically and extensively argues for the reality of the empty tomb and the subsequent appearances of Jesus, reasoning that as a matter of "inference" both a bodily resurrection and later bodily appearances of Jesus are far better explanations for the empty tomb and the 'meetings' and the rise of Christianity than are any other theories, including those of Ehrman.
Dale Allison has argued for an empty tomb, that was later followed by visions of Jesus by
the Apostles and Mary Magdalene, while also accepting the historicity of the resurrection. Christian biblical scholars have used textual critical methods to support the historicity of the tradition that "Mary of Magdala had indeed been the first to see Jesus," most notably the
Criterion of Embarrassment in recent years. According to
Dale Allison, the inclusion of women as the first witnesses to the risen Jesus "once suspect, confirms the truth of the story." According to
Géza Vermes, the empty tomb developed independently from the post-resurrection appearances, as they are never directly coordinated to form a combined argument. While the coherence of the empty tomb narrative is questionable, it is "clearly an early tradition". Vermes rejects the literal interpretation of the story, and also notes that the story of the empty tomb conflicts with notions of a spiritual resurrection. According to Vermes, "[t]he strictly Jewish bond of spirit and body is better served by the idea of the empty tomb and is no doubt responsible for the introduction of the notions of palpability (Thomas in John) and eating (Luke and John)." New Testament historian
Bart D. Ehrman rejects the story of the empty tomb, and argues that "an empty tomb had nothing to do with [believe in the resurrection] [...] an empty tomb would not produce faith". Ehrman argues that the empty tomb was needed to underscore the physical resurrection of Jesus.
Cultural and religious context Although
Jews,
Greeks, and
Romans all believed in the reality of
resurrection, they differed in their respective conceptions and interpretations of it.
Christians certainly knew of numerous resurrection-events allegedly experienced by persons other than Jesus: the early 3rd-century Christian theologian
Origen, for example, argued the resurrection of the 7th-century BCE semi-legendary Greek poet
Aristeas had less evidence than the resurrection of Jesus and did not serve any larger purpose, in contrast to Jesus' death and resurrection for effecting salvation. Origen neither accepted nor denied the immortality of the 2nd-century CE Greek youth
Antinous, the beloved of the Roman Emperor
Hadrian, but rather he merely commented that, unlike Jesus, Antinous was unworthy of worship.
Mark Goodacre writes that using "empty tomb" to refer to the disappearance of Jesus' body may be a misnomer since first-century tombs in Judea were built to house multiple bodies. As such, Mark narrates that the women had seen the spot where Jesus was laid while the later gospels state that the tomb was "new" and/or unused. New Testament scholar
Andries van Aarde has argued that the empty tomb tradition may reflect broader Graeco-Roman and Hellenistic influences rather than originating solely within early Jerusalem-based Jesus movements. He suggests that narratives of divine figures associated with missing bodies or ascensions, such as the deification of
Herakles described by
Diodorus Siculus and satirically referenced by
Seneca formed part of a cultural context in which stories about Jesus developed. Van Aarde further proposes that early Christian theology shows parallels with traditions in which the absence of bodily remains and subsequent exaltation signified divine sonship, reflecting interaction between Jewish and Graeco-Roman religious concepts.
"Assumption" or "translation" stories The composition and classification of the empty tomb story have been the subject of considerable debate. Several scholars have argued that the empty tomb story in Mark is similar to
"assumption" or "translation" stories, and not a resurrection story, in which certain special individuals are described as being transported into the divine realm (heaven) before or
after their death.
Adela Yarbro Collins, for example, explains the Markan narrative as a Markan deduction from an early Christian belief in the resurrection. She classifies it as a translation story, meaning a story of the removal of a newly-immortal hero to a non-Earthly realm. According to Daniel Smith, a missing body was far more likely to be interpreted as an instance of removal by a divine agent than as an instance of resurrection or resuscitation. Richard C. Miller compares the ending of Mark to Hellenistic and Roman translation stories of heroes which involve missing bodies. However, Smith also notes that certain elements within Mark's empty tomb story are inconsistent with an assumption narrative, most importantly the response to the women from the young man at the tomb: ("He is risen"
Mark 16:6). Pointing to the existence in earlier Jewish texts both of the idea of resurrection from the grave and of that of a heavenly assumption of the resurrected,
Dale Allison argues that resurrection and assumption are not mutually contradicting ideas, and that the empty tomb story probably involved both from the beginning.
Skepticism about the empty tomb narrative Early on, the stories about the empty tomb were met with
skepticism. The Gospel of Matthew already mentions stories that the body was
stolen from the grave. Other suggestions, not supported in mainstream scholarship, are that Jesus had
not really died on the cross, or was lost due to natural causes. The absence of any reference to the story of Jesus' empty tomb in the
Pauline epistles and the Easter
kerygma of the earliest church, originating perhaps in the Christian community of Antioch in the 30s and preserved in
1 Corinthians, has led some scholars to suggest that Mark invented it. Allison finds this argument from silence unconvincing. Other scholars have argued that Paul presupposes the empty tomb in the early creed passed down in 1 Cor. 15. Most scholars agree John knew and used the Synoptics Gospels. Recent scholarship has turned away from
source criticism of the gospels or positing hypothetical sources for John. Smith believes that Mark has adapted two traditions of resurrection and disappearance into one Easter narrative.
Resurrection hypothesis Philosophers Timothy McGrew and Lydia McGrew have presented a cumulative
Bayesian case in which the testimony concerning the discovery of Jesus's empty tomb contributes a substantial
Bayes factor favoring the
resurrection hypothesis over alternative explanations. ==See also==