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Introduction
While Christian beliefs are presumably
much more widely known, especially in the Western world,
some adherents to the major non-Christian religions also
make claims that some of their historical rabbis,
prophets, gurus or "messiahs" rose from the dead.
Judging from the relevant religious literature, it
appears that such non-Christian claims are often
ignored, perhaps because there is little awareness of
them. Even if the existence of such beliefs is
recognized, almost never is there any in-depth answer to
the question of whether such claims could possibly be
grounded in supernatural events of history.
This essay is an examination of several
sample resurrection-claims in non-Christian religions
from ancient to modern times. The primary emphasis will
be placed on whether these claims can themselves be said
to be historically based on supernatural occurrences. To
pursue this goal, historical and other critical criteria
will be applied to these religious beliefs. Lastly, a
few comments will be addressed to the issue of whether
these resurrection claims provide any apologetic basis
for non-Christian belief systems.
1. Non-Christian Claims of Apotheosis and
Resurrection
As part of a dialogue between atheists
and theists,2
Robert Price has recently charged
that not enough attention has been paid to non-Christian
religious phenomena. In particular, Price points to
reports of post-death phenomena found in other belief
systems, citing cases where ancient heroes were said to
have experienced apotheosis(which consists of being
taken to heaven and divinized) or where they supposedly
appeared to their followers after death, usually to
comfort them.3
Such claims are by no means rare,
especially since the emergence of the History of
Religions school in the late nineteenth century, which
often focused attention on ancient mythology and on the
mystery religions, in particular.4 But both
because this phenomenon has been thoroughly discussed in
the last one hundred years and especially because it is
rather difficult to assess data concerning mythological
persons in historical terms, we will focus our attention
on claims involving actual persons.5
Even Price considers the
mythological hypothesis to be "untenable".6
For such reasons, little will be said in this essay
concerning non-historical (or chiefly mythical) persons
who were reportedly apotheosized or raised from the
dead.7 In each of these cases we find
numerous problems such as a decided lack of historical
data, reports that are far too late or stories about
mythical personages who never lived.
Rather, our attention will be placed on
the comparatively fewer number of claims that historical
persons were either apotheosized or raised from the
dead. Examples in the former category include Julius
Caesar, Augustus Caesar, Apollonius of Tyana and
Antinous. Examples of the latter (resurrection) include
Rabbi Judah, Kabir, Sabbatai Sevi, Lahiri Mahasaya and
Sri Yukteswar.
Apotheosis appears to be most common in
the ancient world, whereby historical persons were said
to have been snatched up to heaven and divinized. In
Roman times, this process was frequently portrayed by
the sighting of a comet or star in the sky which was
believed to be the departed soul of the hero. For
example, Suetonius reports that after the death of
Julius Caesar,
... a comet
appeared about an hour before sunset and shone for
seven days running. This was held to be Caesar’s soul,
elevated to heaven; hence the star, now placed above
the forehead of his divine image.8
Interestingly, comets were said to signal
the deaths of Emperors Claudius and Vespasian.9
During the cremation of Augustus Caesar, Suetonius also
relates that "an ex-praetor actually swore that he had
seen Augustus’ spirit soaring up to Heaven through the
flames".10 Another instance concerns Antinous,
the favorite slave of Emperor Hadrian. When Antinous
died, Hadrian accepted the teaching that a certain star
was created from the soul of his slave. Hadrian built a
city at the site of Antinous’ death and erected several
statues in his honor around the Roman empire.11
One ancient statue of Antinous proclaimed that he was
glorified in heaven and that he was actually Osiris.12
A last and perhaps the major example of
apotheosis concerns Apollonius of Tyana, a first-century
Neo-Pythagorean philosopher who was reputed to have
exhibited numerous special powers, including the working
of miracles. Apollonius’ long life was reported in great
detail by his major biographer, Philostratus, who
concludes his account by claiming that Apollonius
disappeared from a temple and was thus probably
transported to heaven and divinized. We are also told
that he later appeared in a dream to a young man in
order to convince him of the truth of immortality.13
With regard to historical persons for
whom a resurrection is claimed, five such cases will be
briefly mentioned. Rabbi Judah I was a major Jewish
teacher who was instrumental in completing the
compilation of the Mishnah about A.D. 200. It is
reported in the Gemaras that, after his death in A.D.
220, "He used to come home again at twilight every
Sabbath Eve". On one such occasion, a neighbor came to
the Rabbi’s door but was turned away by his maid. When
Rabbi Judah heard of this incident, he stopped coming
back to his home so that he did not upstage other
righteous persons who did not return to their homes
after death.14
Kabir was a religious teacher of the
fifteenth and sixteenth centuries who attempted to
combine certain facets of both the Hindu and Moslem
religions. After his death, usually placed at 1518, it
was reported that Kabir’s followers were arguing over
whether to cremate his body according to Hindu customs
or to bury his body in keeping with Moslem habits. To
stop the controversy, Kabir himself is said to have
appeared to his followers and directed them to draw back
the cloth placed over his body. When this was done,
flowers were found instead of the body of Kabir. The
Hindus burned half of these flowers while the Moslems
buried the other half.15
Sabbatai Sevi was a seventeenth-century
Jewish teacher who proclaimed that he was the Messiah, a
claim which was further voiced by a prophetic figure
named Nathan, a Jewish contemporary. After Sabbatai’s
death in 1676, it was reported that his brother Elijah
went to the tomb only to find a dragon guarding the
entrance. Upon being allowed to pass, Elijah discovered
no body, but found that the cave was full of light. It
was also reported that Sabbatai did not actually die,
but only appeared to do so, a teaching which gained wide
acceptance among his followers. Nathan agreed that
Sabbatai had not died, and stated that he would soon
show himself.16
A nineteenth-century Hindu guru named
Lahiri Mahasaya died in 1895 and was cremated after
reportedly telling his followers that he would rise
again. Afterwards it was said that he appeared to three
followers, each individually. These meetings were said
to have been rather brief, occurring in three different
cities at about the same time. It was also said that
Mahasaya’s body appeared to be transfigured.17
Lastly, another Hindu guru named Sri
Yukteswar died and was buried in 1936. One of his chief
disciples, Paramahansa Yogananda, tells us that one week
after seeing a vision of the Hindu avatar Krishna and
more than three months after his master’s death, he
witnessed a flesh and blood appearance of the dead
Yukteswar while he was meditating. He reports that he
touched his teacher’s body and then had a two-hour
conversation with him, chiefly about the nature of the
afterlife. Yogananda also relates an incident which
occurred about three months earlier, where an elderly
woman also reported seeing Yukteswar after his death.18
If such cases of apotheosis and
resurrection are thus reported in a straightforward
manner without the aid of critical investigation (as
they too often are) some might get the idea that claims
of post-death phenomena are common and some might even
say that such events actually do occur regularly. Some
researchers, like Price, seem to encourage skepticism
concerning all such data in light of the various
parallels.19 Others, like Yogananda, conclude
that there have been numerous spiritual masters in the
world religions who have been raised. Interestingly,
Yogananda illustrates this statement by referring to the
resurrection of Jesus.20
To be continued…
Notes
1 Taken
with permission from www.garyhabermas.org. Originally
published in Religious Studies v25.n2 (June
1989): pp167(9). Cambridge University Press.
2
"Christianity Challenges the University: An
International Conference of Theists and Atheists",
which took place in Dallas, Texas on 7-10 February
1985.
3 Robert
Price, "Is There a Place for Historical Criticism?"
especially pp. 2-3, 14-25.
4 For an
example, see Otto Pfleiderer, The Early Christian
Conception of Christ: Its Significance and Value in
the History of Religion (London: Williams and
Norgate, 1905).
5 Even
Pfleiderer, for instance, is critical of his own work
(ibid. pp. 153-9) and agrees that such mythology
cannot account for the earliest Christian origins
(ibid. pp. 157-8).
6 Price,
pp. 19-20.
7 Examples
of such would include stories that Romulus was taken
to heaven and glorified, later appearing to Julius
Proculus (Ovid, Metamorphoses 14.805-51;
Fasti 2.481-509). Conflicting reports are given by
Livy, who states that Romulus either disappeared in a
storm, later being declared a god or that he was
killed by senators (The History of Rome 1.16).
(Interestingly enough and similar to problems pointed
out below, Ovid and Livy wrote about 700 years after
Romulus was supposed to have lived. This large gap is
in addition to questions pertaining to the likelihood
that Romulus even existed at all.) Hercules, a hero of
Greek mythology, is said to have burned to death on a
funeral pyre, afterwards-being taken to heaven and
glorified by Jupiter. See Thomas Bullfinch,
Mythology (New York: Dell Publishing Company,
Inc., 1959), pp. 122-3. But Rouse reports the
conflicting tale that Hercules died after putting on
an enchanted robe, after which his soul went to
heaven. See W. H. D. Rouse, Gods, Heroes and Men of
Ancient Greece (New York: New American Library,
1957), p. 70. Aeneas, a hero of Homer’s Iliad
and the chief character in Virgil’s Aeneid, is
said to have settled near the Tiber River later in
life. Having disappeared after a battle, it was
reported that he joined the gods (Price, pp. 28-9).
Aristaeus is said to have entered a fuller’s shop,
where he died. When his relatives arrived, he was
nowhere to be found. So it was assumed that he had
been taken to heaven. He was then supposed to have
reappeared seven years later, disappeared, and
reappeared yet again, 340 years later (Origen,
Against Celsus 3.26). Origen provides numerous
criticisms of these stories (Against Celsus
3.27-9). Lastly, Asclepius was a physician who was
said to have healed through the use of medicines and
ointments. He was killed by Jupiter (Zeus) but revived
again and placed either among the stars (Rouse, p. 87)
or among the gods (Bullfinch, p. 106). For accounts of
the mystery (or vegetation) "gods" see Pfleiderer,
especially pp. 91-100.
8 Suetonius,
The Twelve Caesars, translated by Robert Graves
(Baltimore: Penguin Books, 1957), 1.88.
9 Ibid.
v.46 and x.23, respectively.
10 Ibid.
II.100.
11 Dio
Cassius, Roman History, 69.11.2. See David R.
Cartlidge and David L. Dungan, Documents for the
Study of the Gospels (Cleveland: William
Collins, 1980), p. 199.
12 Ibid. p.
198.
13
Philostratus, The Life of Apollonius of Tyana,
translated by F. C. Conybeare, two volumes, Loeb
Classical Library (Cambridge: Harvard University
Press, 1969), especially vm.3i.
14 Israel
W. Slotki, editor, The Babylonian Talmud (Seder
Nashim, Kethuboth), translated by S. Daiches (n.p.:
The Rebecca Bennett Publications Inc., 1959), Vol.
III, XII.103A.
15 James
Hastings, editor, Encyclopedia of Religion and
Ethics, s.v. "Kabir, Kabirpanthis", pp. 632-4.
16 See
especially Gershom Scholem, Sabbatai Sevi: The
Mystical Messiah (Princeton: Princeton University
Press, 1973), pp. 917-29.
17
Paramhansa Yogananda, Autobiography of a Yogi (Los
Angeles: Self-Realization Fellowship, 1956), PP-
348-50.
18 Ibid.
pp. 413-33.
19 Price,
especially pp. 14-25, 28-30.
20
Yogananda, p. 313; cf. p. 349.
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