at the
Church of the Teutonic Order, Vienna, Austria. The artwork depicts Christ's crucifixion and
burial (left), and resurrection (right).
Foundation of Christian faith In
Christian theology, the death, resurrection, and
exaltation of Jesus are the most important events, and the foundation of the Christian faith. The
Nicene Creed states: "On the third day he rose again in accordance with the Scriptures". According to Terry Miethe, a Christian philosopher at Oxford University, the question Did Jesus rise from the dead?' is the most important question regarding the claims of the Christian faith." According to
John R. Rice, a Baptist evangelist, the resurrection of Jesus was part of the plan of
salvation and
redemption by
atonement for man's sin. According to the
Roman Catechism of the Catholic Church, the resurrection of Jesus causes and is the model of the resurrection of all the dead, as well as the cause and model of
repentance, which the catechism calls "spiritual resurrection". Summarizing its traditional analysis, the Catholic Church states in its Catechism: For orthodox Christians, including a number of scholars, the resurrection of Jesus is taken to have been a concrete, material resurrection of a transformed body. Scholars such as
Craig L. Blomberg and
Mike Licona argue there are sufficient arguments for the historicity of the resurrection. In secular and
liberal Christian scholarship, the post-resurrection appearances are often interpreted as being subjective
visionary experiences in which Jesus's presence was felt, as articulated in the
vision theory of Jesus's appearances. In the 21st century, modern scholars such as
Gerd Lüdemann and
Bart D. Ehrman have proposed that
Peter had a vision of Jesus due to severe
grief and
mourning. Ehrman's "tentative suggestion" is that only a few followers had visions before convincing most, but not all of their associates, that Jesus was raised from the dead. Eventually, these stories were retold and embellished, leading to the story that all disciples had seen the risen Jesus. The belief in Jesus's resurrection radically changed their perceptions, concluding from his absence that he must have been exalted to heaven, by God himself, exalting him to an unprecedented status and authority. Ehrman notes that "Christian apologists sometimes claim that the most sensible historical explanation for these visions is that Jesus [physically] appeared to the disciples". While the vision theory has gained support among critical scholars since the last quarter of the 20th century, conservative Christian scholars who believe in a bodily resurrection reject the visionary theories in favor of a literal interpretation of the textual accounts of a physical resurrection.
First ekklēsia The belief in the resurrection by Jesus's early followers formed the proclamation of the first
ekklēsia (). The "visions of the resurrected/exalted Christ" reinforced the impact Jesus and his ministry had on his early followers, and interpreted in a scriptural framework they gave the impetus to Christ-devotion and the belief in the exaltation of Jesus. Jesus's death was interpreted in light of the scriptures as a redemptive death, being part of God's plan. The subsequent appearances led to the resumption of the missionary activity of Jesus's followers, with
Peter assuming the leadership role in the first
ekklēsia (which formed the basis for the Apostolic succession). In the
Antiquities of the Jews, a 1st-century account of Jewish history by
Josephus, believers of the resurrection are discussed. However, this reference to the resurrection is widely believed to have been added by a
Christian interpolator. Within the
non-canonical literature of
Gospel of Peter, there is a retelling of the resurrection of Jesus.
Exaltation and Christology Christ-devotion The New Testament writings contend that the resurrection was "the beginning of His exalted life" as Christ and Lord and the inauguration of a new eschatological age ushering in the last days. As Borg and Crossan note, "For Mark the kingdom of God is already here because the Son of Man is already present". as in Romans 1:4. The other early Christology is "high Christology", which is "the view that Jesus was a pre-existent divine being who became a human, did the Father's will on earth, and then was taken back up into heaven whence he had originally come", According to the "evolutionary model" c.q. "evolutionary theories", as proposed by Bousset, followed by Brown, the Christological understanding of Christ developed over time, from a low Christology to a high Christology, as witnessed in the Gospels. According to the evolutionary model, the earliest Christians believed that Jesus was a human who was exalted, c.q.
adopted as God's Son, when he was resurrected, signalling the nearness of the
Kingdom of God, when all dead would be resurrected and the righteous exalted. Later beliefs shifted the exaltation to his baptism, birth, and subsequently to the idea of his eternal existence, as witnessed in the Gospel of John. According to Ehrman, these two Christologies existed alongside each other, calling the "low Christology" an "
adoptionist Christology", and the "high Christology" an "incarnation Christology". While adoptionism was declared
heresy at the end of the 2nd century, it was adhered to by the
Ebionites, who regarded Jesus as the Messiah while rejecting his
divinity and his
virgin birth, and insisted on the necessity of following
Jewish law and rites. They revered
James the brother of Jesus (James the Just); and rejected
Paul the Apostle as an
apostate from the Law. They show strong similarities with the earliest form of Jewish Christianity, and their specific theology may have been a "reaction to the
law-free Gentile mission". In the "pre-existence" Christology, Christ's resurrection and exaltation was a restoration of the exalted status he already had, but had not grasped at, as described in Philippians 2:6–11.
Redemptive death Jesus's death was interpreted as a redemptive death "for our sins", in accordance with God's plan as contained in the Jewish scriptures. The significance lay in "the theme of divine necessity and fulfilment of the scriptures", not in the later Pauline emphasis on "Jesus's death as a sacrifice or an expiation for our sins". For the early Jewish Christians, "the idea that Messiah's death was a necessary redemptive event functioned more as an apologetic explanation for Jesus's crucifixion" "proving that Jesus's death was no surprise to God".
Call to missionary activity The New Testament accounts describe the resurrected Jesus calling his followers to missionary activity in what has been traditionally labelled as the
Great Commission, where he instructs them to "make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and the Holy Spirit". According to Dunn, the appearances to the disciples have "a sense of obligation to make the vision known".
Helmut Koester states that the stories of the resurrection were originally
epiphanies in which the disciples were
called to a ministry by the risen Jesus, and were later used as evidence of the event. Biblical scholar
Géza Vermes argues that the resurrection is to be understood as a reviving of the self-confidence of the followers of Jesus, under the influence of the Spirit, "prompting them to resume their apostolic mission". According to
Gerd Lüdemann, Peter convinced the other disciples that the resurrection of Jesus signalled that the end-times were near and God's Kingdom was coming, when the dead would rise again, as evidenced by Jesus. This revitalized the disciples, starting off their new mission.
Leadership of Peter Peter claimed forcefully that Jesus appeared to him, and legitimised by Jesus's appearance he assumed leadership of the group of early followers, forming the Jerusalem
ekklēsia mentioned by Paul. He was soon eclipsed in this leadership by James the Just, "the Brother of the Lord", which may explain why the early texts contain scarce information about Peter. According to
Gerd Lüdemann, Peter was the first who saw Jesus, noting that Peter and Mary both had appearance-experiences, but arguing that the tradition of Mary's appearance is a later development, and her appearance probably was not the first. According to
Christian proto-orthodoxy, Peter was the first to who Jesus appeared, and therefore the rightful leader of the Church. The resurrection forms the basis of the
Apostolic succession and the institutional power of orthodoxy, as the heirs of Peter, to whom Jesus appeared, and is described as "the rock" on which the church will be built. Though the Gospels, and Paul's letters, describe appearances to a greater number of people, only the appearances to the
Twelve Apostles count as lending authority and Apostolic succession.
Paul – participation in Christ The appearance of Jesus to Paul convinced him that Jesus was the risen Lord and Christ, who commissioned him to be an apostle to the Gentiles. According to Newbigin, "Paul presents himself not as the teacher of a new theology but as the messenger commissioned by the authority of the Lord himself to announce a new fact – namely that in the ministry, death and resurrection of Jesus, God has acted decisively to reveal and effect his purpose of redemption for the whole world". The teachings of the apostle Paul form a key element of the Christian tradition and theology. Fundamental to Pauline theology is the connection between Christ's resurrection, and
redemption. In 1 Corinthians 15:13–14, 15:17, and 15:20–22, Paul writes: The
kerygma of 1 Corinthians 15:3 states that "Christ died for our sins"- The meaning of that
kerygma is a matter of debate, and open to multiple interpretations. Traditionally, this
kerygma is interpreted as meaning that Jesus's death was an atonement or ransom for, or propitiation or expiation of, God's wrath against humanity because of their sins. With Jesus's death, humanity was freed from this wrath. In the classical Protestant understanding, which has dominated the understanding of Paul's writings, humans partake in this salvation by faith in Jesus Christ; this faith is a grace given by God, and people are justified by God through Jesus Christ and faith in Him. More recent scholarship has raised several concerns regarding these interpretations. According to
E. P. Sanders, who initiated the so-called "
New Perspective on Paul", Paul saw the faithful redeemed by participation in Jesus's death and rising. Though "Jesus's death substituted for that of others and thereby freed believers from sin and guilt", a metaphor derived from "ancient
sacrificial theology", the essence of Paul's writing is not in the "legal terms" regarding the expiation of sin, but the act of "participation in Christ through
dying and rising with him". According to Sanders, "those who are baptized into Christ are baptized into his death, and thus they escape the power of sin ... he died so that the believers may die with him and consequently live with him".
James F. McGrath notes that Paul "prefers to use the language of participation. One died for all, so that all died. This is not only different from
substitution, it is the opposite of it".
Polycarp (69–155), and
Justin Martyr (100–165). The understanding of the
Greek Fathers of the death and resurrection of Jesus as an atonement is the "classic paradigm" of the
Church Fathers, who developed the themes found in the New Testament. During the first millennium AD, the ransom theory of atonement was the dominant metaphor, both in eastern and western Christianity, until it was replaced in the west by Anselmus's satisfaction theory of atonement. The ransom theory of atonement says that Christ liberated humanity from slavery to sin and
Satan, and thus death, by giving his own life as a
ransom sacrifice to Satan, swapping the life of the perfect (Jesus), for the lives of the imperfect (humans). It entails the idea that God deceived the devil, and that Satan, or death, had "legitimate rights" over sinful
souls in the
afterlife, due to the fall of man and
inherited sin. The ransom theory was first clearly enunciated by
Irenaeus (c. 130–c. 202), who was an outspoken critic of
Gnosticism, but borrowed ideas from their dualistic worldview. In this worldview, humankind is under the power of the
Demiurge, a lesser God who has created the world. Yet, humans have a spark of the true divine nature within them, which can be liberated by
gnosis (knowledge) of this divine spark. This knowledge is revealed by the
Logos, "the very mind of the supreme God", who entered the world in the person of Jesus. Nevertheless, the Logos could not simply undo the power of the
Demiurge, and had to hide his real identity, appearing as a physical form, thereby misleading the Demiurge, and liberating humankind. In Irenaeus' writings, the Demiurge is replaced by the devil, while
Justin Martyr had already equated Jesus and the Logos.
Origen (184–253) introduced the idea that the devil held legitimate rights over humans, who were bought free by the blood of Christ. He also introduced the notion that the devil was deceived in thinking that he could master the human soul.
Late Antiquity and early Middle Ages Following the
conversion of Constantine and the
Edict of Milan in 313, the
ecumenical councils of the 4th, 5th and 6th centuries, that focused on
Christology, helped shape the Christian understanding of the redemptive nature of the resurrection, and influenced both the development of its iconography and its use within Liturgy. Belief in bodily resurrection was a constant note of the Christian church in antiquity.
Augustine of Hippo accepted it at the time of his conversion in 386. Augustine defended resurrection, and argued that given that Christ has risen, there is resurrection of the dead. Moreover, he argued that the death and resurrection of Jesus was for the salvation of man, stating: "to achieve each resurrection of ours, the savior paid with his single life, and he pre-enacted and presented his one and only one by way of sacrament and by way of model". The 5th-century theology of
Theodore of Mopsuestia provides an insight into the development of the Christian understanding of the redemptive nature of resurrection. The crucial role of the sacraments in the mediation of salvation was well accepted at the time. In Theodore's representation of the
Eucharist, the sacrificial and salvific elements are combined in the "One who saved us and delivered us by the sacrifice of Himself". Theodore's interpretation of the Eucharistic rite is directed towards the triumph over the power of death brought about by the resurrection. The emphasis on the
salvific nature of the resurrection continued in Christian theology in the next centuries, e.g., in the 8th century Saint
John of Damascus wrote that: "... When he had freed those who were bound from the beginning of time, Christ returned again from among the dead, having opened for us the way to resurrection" and Christian iconography of the ensuing years represented that concept.
Roman Catholic Church The resurrection of Jesus is the good news that the Roman Catholic Church proclaims: "the revelation in Jesus Christ of God's mercy to sinners". The importance of the resurrection is connected to the incarnation of Jesus: by becoming incarnate God has assumed every human unto himself, for his humanity is made of every human (just as a temple is made of stones), and by resurrecting himself God has also resurrected every human. By rising from the dead, Jesus is the beginning of the resurrection of the dead on Judgment Day and the beginning of the spiritual resurrection (justification or "new life") of sinners, since Jesus is the first human resurrected by God, as the head of the human race as God incarnate, whereby in him all people have already been resurrected and justified, since his resurrection is the principle of the resurrection of the dead and justification of sinners. The resurrection is a historical yet transcendent event. The historical resurrection transcends
spacetime by affecting every human, from Adam and Eve's repentance after the fall, to the purported resurrection of
Lazarus (who returned to an earthly life), to the conversion of Saint Paul, to the resurrection of the dead on
Judgment Day. By rising from the dead, Jesus shows what the risen bodies of the saints (i.e., justified sinners) will be like. From the moment of his incarnation, Jesus's soul experienced the
beatific vision, because he is true God and true man, and from the moment of his resurrection Jesus's body shared in his soul's experience of the beatific vision. At the resurrection, Jesus's whole humanity was deified, and so, shares in the personal mode of existence of the Second Person of the Trinity.
Deification includes four properties: impassibility (freedom from evil, i.e., temptation, sin, suffering, error, inconvenience, boredom, Satan, and death), subtility (freedom from restraint by the laws of science, which includes
shapeshifting,
teleportation,
time travel, control over nature, and superhuman senses and prowess), agility (one's body will not act faster than one's mind or give in to emotion and impulse, for the body will be as obedient to the soul as the soul is to God), and clarity (resplendent beauty and the
five crowns).
Present day In contemporary
theology, many scholars interpret the resurrection of Jesus less as a strictly historical or physical event and more as a theological or existential expression of renewal, faith, and continuing religious meaning. Some New Testament scholars, including
John Painter and Martin de Boer, identify a motif in resurrection traditions that link them to biblical creation themes and to Paul’s writings about spiritual transformation. Willi Marxsen and others argue that the Gospel resurrection narratives emphasize the continued significance of Jesus’ message rather than providing verifiable historical descriptions. Similarly, theologians such as
Andries van Aarde interpret resurrection belief as part of a broader historical development of ideas about renewal. Scholars such as
Rudolf Bultmann and
Hans Conzelmann argue that literal claims of resurrection is less important to Christianity than claims about salvation through Jesus. These perspectives, alongside interpretations such as those summarized by
Marcus Borg, often present the resurrection as symbolizing moral transformation, divine love, and the ongoing relevance of Jesus’ teachings within modern Christian thought. Thorwald Lorenzen finds "a strange silence about the resurrection in many
pulpits". He writes that among some Christians, ministers and professors, it seems to have become "a cause for embarrassment or the topic of apologetics". The idea of a bodily resurrection remains controversial. According to psychiatrist and author Adrian Warnock, many Christians neglect the resurrection because of their understandable preoccupation with the Cross. == Easter ==