Why Apologists Don't Talk About the Ascension

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  • čas přidán 6. 08. 2024
  • Christian apologists like Gary Habermas, Mike Licona, and William Lane Craig love to talk about the evidence for the resurrection, but they are mostly silent about the evidence for the ascension. In this video we look at some of the reasons why.

Komentáře • 1,5K

  • @saintbrush4398
    @saintbrush4398 Před 2 lety +183

    You know whats also never at all talked about? When after the resurrection, apparently old saints and prophets rose from the grave and walked around. Literally no one has ever addressed this and everytime I would ask apologists about it. Never gotten an answer, just "Ill make a video about it some day."

    • @rudra62
      @rudra62 Před 2 lety +33

      Actually, it was right after - or at the end of the crucifixion when the world turned dark, the sun stopped shining, the earth opened, and the dead rose from their graves. This is in the absence of any evidence of either an earth quake nor a solar eclipse around that time in that part of the world.

    • @olderthandadirt
      @olderthandadirt Před 2 lety +44

      The Biblical Zombies are my favourite part of the Bible! Do they die again? Make the video please!

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Před 2 lety +25

      @@olderthandadirt How is that not a movie? Passion narrative morphs into a zombie apocalypse.

    • @wildzeke
      @wildzeke Před 2 lety +1

      @@scambammer6102 Hopefully another tv series from Mike Flanagan.

    • @danielschaeffer1294
      @danielschaeffer1294 Před 2 lety +16

      Apologists can get away with this in part because it’s in only one Gospel - Matthew, I think. But besides the ridiculousness of the concept, all these “resurrections” have an odd theological implication. If Jesus resurrected himself to prove his divinity, aren’t these other “prophets” demigods by default? I’ve always been amused by the horror-movie aspect of this. Imagine Christ showing up in “the upper room” like Jack Nicholson in “The Shining.” “Heeeeeere’s Jesus!”

  • @devilamaycare8294
    @devilamaycare8294 Před 2 lety +102

    Matt: describing the ascension story as "seeming suspiciously convenient"
    Me, a former Mormon: "like Angel Moroni taking the gold plates back to Heaven, lol"
    Matt: "a lot like the Mormon story of Joseph Smith returning the Golden Plates to Moroni after translating the Book of Mormon."
    😆

    • @bradleymosman8325
      @bradleymosman8325 Před 2 lety +1

      No one knows what an Ascension or resurrection would actually look like. How would you or I describe such things? Are we arguing against the Fact itself, or simply the language used to express it? An example would be the near death experiencers. Those people find it impossible to describe what they've experienced. It is too "Other".

    • @michellebrown4903
      @michellebrown4903 Před 2 lety +3

      @@bradleymosman8325 but some of the fantastical happenings in the bible are pretty clearly stated . Which is why non Theists call them out . And John Smith and his " golden plates " , was he just nicking the congregational collection?

    • @thatoneguy7603
      @thatoneguy7603 Před 2 lety +2

      I think we all saw that episode of South Park.

    • @zenbanjo2533
      @zenbanjo2533 Před 2 lety +5

      @@bradleymosman8325 but, Bradley, we do know what an ascension would look like. Luke describes it in acts chapter 1.
      That seems to me as astonishing as the resurrection itself. Matt has a good point, it is very odd that this is not described elsewhere in the official holy documents.
      I don’t see any honest way to argue that this is a historic incident.

    • @normanclatcher
      @normanclatcher Před rokem +2

      @@thatoneguy7603 dum dum dum dum dumb~

  • @Venaloid
    @Venaloid Před 2 lety +80

    4:32 - Exactly, I'm glad someone else is talking about this: when you hear that someone "came back to life", you would expect them to be alive again for the rest of their natural life. But if, instead, the story is that they came back to life only to disappear shortly thereafter, that would sound like an excuse for them still being dead.

    • @dmiller4511
      @dmiller4511 Před 2 lety +5

      Exactly.

    • @SadisticSenpai61
      @SadisticSenpai61 Před 2 lety +12

      It always struck me that Jesus acted and behaved exactly like a ghost post-resurrection. He didn't use doors, he didn't eat, sleep, etc. He just showed up for a brief bit of time, then disappeared again. Even in the Doubting Thomas story (only recorded in the last canonical gospel to be written), Jesus just appears suddenly in the middle of the room. And the concept of ghosts being able to make themselves solid and interact with items and people is hardly a new one - there's all kinds of weird ghost stories where ghosts are able to move things around, touch ppl (and be touched by ppl when they want to be), etc
      One of the things that always struck me as odd was the women at the tomb supposedly witnessed the moment of resurrection in at least one of the gospels (earthquake, angels rolling away the stone), yet Jesus is nowhere to be found. He doesn't walk out of his tomb. Apparently the only reason for the angels rolling the stone away is so that ppl can see that Jesus isn't inside it anymore. When Jesus brought Lazarus back to life in the Gospel of John, Lazarus literally had to walk out of his tomb and the implication is that Lazarus then lived out the rest of his life as a normal person - that always implied to me that Jesus' body didn't rise from the dead like Lazarus' did.

    • @pavld335
      @pavld335 Před 2 lety +6

      Yeah I've always wondered this too. It would be much more impressive to have a 2,000 year old man living today.

    • @BrianStanleyEsq
      @BrianStanleyEsq Před 2 lety

      Or an "excuse" for there being no body or (non-empty) tomb.

    • @mikebarnes7734
      @mikebarnes7734 Před 2 lety +1

      @@SadisticSenpai61 Having survived the terrible experience of crucifixion, Jesus was not going to reveal himself so as to be arrested again !

  • @MythVisionPodcast
    @MythVisionPodcast Před 2 lety +8

    This is a very interesting video my friend! I would love to talk with you on MythVision Podcast if you're down?

  • @stephenbailey9969
    @stephenbailey9969 Před 2 lety +31

    If the resurrection is as true as the first century eyewitnesses claimed, then the ascension is no big deal. Either miracles happen or they don't. If miracles happen, then all of our common notions might be wrong.
    Theologically, the ascension is important primarily as the model by which Christ would return, when 'every eye will see him'.
    Reason is a tool with which we attempt to understand personal experience (either received information or directly perceived phenomena). Belief and unbelief are chosen reactions to the conclusions of that process.
    The early Christians did not claim belief based on a series of received concepts, rather on personal experience of miraculous phenomena. That is no different than many Christians today who claim personal experience of the miraculous.
    How each of us reacts to all of those claims is, of course, a personal choice which will be informed by our own personal experiences.

    • @satariel777
      @satariel777 Před 2 lety +4

      I have to disagree. Yes, miracles can happen. But the Ascension clearly implies a 3-Tiered-Universe, as mentioned in the video. The reason the Ascension poses such a big problem, theologically, is not because it’s miraculous, but because it’s non-sensical.
      If Jesus is all-knowing, he would know that the universe is not 3-Tiered. There would be absolutely no reason for him to literally rise. The “every eye” argument falls flat because it is clearly untrue. Not every eye will see something just because it is elevated several hundred feet into the air.
      Also, I take issue with your claim that early Christians based their faith on personal experience and miraculous phenomena. That is markedly untrue. “Blessed are those who have NOT SEEN, and yet still believe”. The vast majority of early Christians never encountered Jesus or his miracles in person. Furthermore, and understanding of early church history shows us that early Christianity was VERY MUCH based on “received concepts”, if by received concepts you mean theological and philosophical reasoning and conceptualizing. So was much of Judaism.

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Před 2 lety +3

      Paul thought that he saw Jesus resurrected, but none of the people he converted did. Your assertion that most early Christians witnessed miracles isn't even supported by your own holy book.

    • @stephenbailey9969
      @stephenbailey9969 Před 2 lety +1

      @@satariel777 Acts chapter 1:
      "And when he had said these things, as they were looking on, he was lifted up, and a cloud took him out of their sight. And while they were gazing into heaven as he went, behold, two men stood by them in white robes, and said, “Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking into heaven? This Jesus, who was taken up from you into heaven, will come in the same way as you saw him go into heaven.”
      He ascended and disappeared into the clouds. He returns on the clouds and every eye will see him (Revelation 1:7).
      Sounds pretty straightforward, without much theorizing.
      As for how a person became a follower back there and how a person becomes a follower today, it is entirely the same.
      Jesus is not a concept. He is a person, the Lord of all. And he comes into believers lives with love and power, if they will but open the door of their heart to him. What is described in the New Testament is continuing today.
      As a sixty year old person who spent most of his adult life as an atheist and hedonist, I can tell you from my personal experience that miracles are real. Jesus changed me. and continues to change me. And he is doing the same for every follower of Jesus that I know. (And yes, the showy miracles of healing, tongues, dreams and visions, knowledge, etc., are still happening today in every corner of this planet.)

    • @masstv9052
      @masstv9052 Před 2 lety +7

      @@stephenbailey9969 Yet nobody can show a miracle to any science? Miracles are real only to people who WANT them to be real. Mental gymnastics are a hell of a drug.

    • @stephenbailey9969
      @stephenbailey9969 Před 2 lety

      @@masstv9052 What you are describing is a tautology.
      The scientific method disallows taking into consideration miraculous or supernatural explanations for phenomena. Scientists are only permitted to consider naturalistic causes. Therefore science cannot 'prove miracles'.
      When scientists (or doctors) find something that is inexplicable, they are simply silent or give the closest naturalistic possibility.
      But many scientists and doctors at the end of the work day when they have taken off their 'science hats' will admit that they have witnessed things that could be described as miracles.
      You can do the research and find their testimonies.
      My own testimony is this: I was an atheist and a skeptic most of my life. I'm not anymore. As Shakespeare wrote, "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, Than are dreamt of in your philosophy."

  • @josephpatterson2513
    @josephpatterson2513 Před 2 lety +49

    Good insight. When I was an Anglican priest we noticed this fact also that non-liturgical Christians don't ever talk about the ascension. It's interesting that evangelicals threw out the ascension when they abandoned the liturgical calendar which may explain why it's a part of NT Wrights apologetic since Anglicans celebrate the ascension every year.

    • @kamion53
      @kamion53 Před 2 lety +12

      I really wish Ascendion Day was thrown out or exchanged for another official holiday, because at the midst of the week everything is closed and the next day nobody is available either. For a non-religious person Ascension Day is the most useless and senseless holyday possible.
      Even as a religious kid I thought it and cold and empty day, a bit like St Nick going back to Spain after Dec 5. What's there to celebrate? He left his buddies there standing in the rain?
      ( there were clouds weren't they, so it probably did rain too.)

    • @harpsichordkid
      @harpsichordkid Před 2 lety +1

      The Ascension is at least implied in every church using the Sursum Corda, as most early Protestants did. The Ascension is especially important to the Reformed understanding of the sacrament, and this would have included the early Church of England also. The Black Rubric actually drives the point home when refuting localized presence. As Paul wrote, “[God] hath raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus.”

    • @MrJMB122
      @MrJMB122 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kamion53 It's only useless if you don't understand the theology or why we celebrate.

    • @MrJMB122
      @MrJMB122 Před 2 lety +2

      @@harpsichordkid I'm Eastern orthodox so the ascension is a big deal.

    • @kamion53
      @kamion53 Před 2 lety +2

      @@MrJMB122 I do understand the theology behind it coming from a Reformed background and even then I thought it not much worth celebrating.
      Mainly because Ascension Day and Pentacost have no link with tradional rituals or costums like Christmas and Eastern. The only "tradition" I know of were the motorcycling contests held in the neighbourhood I grew up at Ascesion Day. Not particular a Christian inspiring habit. There are a few other religious days over the year like an equivalent of Thanksgivings Day but those are strickly connected with the church and not a national holiday.
      Although the country is more and more secular then 50 years ago it still clings to a meaningless holiday which could be exchanged for a national holiday that has far more meaning to a growing group of people like the End of Ramadan. But then the Calvinists would go up in flames and the Catholics would probably demand the Assumption of Maria ( August 15) should be decleared a national holiday.

  • @studyhelp7479
    @studyhelp7479 Před rokem +10

    Thank you so much! I've just come across your channel. I love how you present your ideas, which are so full of knowledge and technical insight; but you do this clearly, and also humbly and with the intent really to inform (in my opinion). I'll be looking forward to hearing from you in 2023! All best wishes for the Mid-winter season! CHEERS from the UK, Patrick.

    • @waitstill7091
      @waitstill7091 Před rokem

      A modern day Galileo using a telescope to debunk geocentrism with heliocentrism.
      Telescope = Internet
      Geocentrism = Trinitarianism
      Heliocentrism = Monotheism

  • @joycesky5041
    @joycesky5041 Před 2 lety +39

    Another thing apologists won’t talk about is the ZOMBIE apocalypse of saints parading around the city of Jerusalem!

    • @kingsman428
      @kingsman428 Před 2 lety +3

      Shut up, there will be a movie coming 🤣

    • @jasonkiley8417
      @jasonkiley8417 Před 2 lety

      Hahahahaaaaa✅

    • @smacvie
      @smacvie Před 2 lety

      Where in the Bible it says that zomie thing, or maybe you watch too much fiction movie about zombie or you are just trying to insult. The Bible says the body of all will be transformed to eternal glory or eternal damnation after all of us are judge.

    • @anime.soundtracks
      @anime.soundtracks Před 2 lety +1

      @@smacvie it's in matthew 27:52-53.. and congrats you just found yet another biblical contradiction between matthew's vs paul's idea of resurrection

    • @smacvie
      @smacvie Před 2 lety

      @@anime.soundtracks you read with your head our your foot, Jesus resurrection was historical , Paul was using metaphorband analogy for clarification and understanding of the then believer's and in some using baptism, the power of the Holy spirit until the ultimate resurrection in Jesus Christ second coming which will be up from the grapes if we are dead and transformed body if we are alive that day ascending and meeting our Lord in heaven, did you get my simple connection if not then you will not get it...

  • @11kravitzn
    @11kravitzn Před 2 lety +16

    It's important to keep in mind what these apologists really are. They aren't historians or philosophers, however much they try to come across that way. They are advocates, lawyers, press secretaries. Their object is to justify an already-given belief (e.g. the Nicene creed). Whatever it takes to do that, they will do. The whole point is to reaffirm the beliefs that their (Christian) readers already hold. However much ground they give up, to that extent they have failed.
    So of course they don't talk about the ascension. Did Jesus fly into space like a rocket? Did he fly past alpha Centauri? What happened to the matter of his emphatically physical body? Who cares: as long as the questions aren't raised, they can't challenge belief.

    • @69eddieD
      @69eddieD Před 2 lety +4

      "It's important to keep in mind what these apologists really are."
      They're Liars for Jesus.

    • @11kravitzn
      @11kravitzn Před 2 lety +2

      @@69eddieD They don't think of themselves that way. They don't think of it as lying. They think the truth is whatever corroborates or justifies what they "know" (i.e. their dogma).

    • @zachthomas4005
      @zachthomas4005 Před 2 lety +1

      Hey speaking of dogma, have you seen the documentary called expelled? It's on youtube.

    • @jeffparent2159
      @jeffparent2159 Před 2 lety +1

      Intellectually dishonest is a better term. Once pointed out how inherently flawed their arguments is, any continued use of the flawed argument shows they do not care about truth.

    • @11kravitzn
      @11kravitzn Před 2 lety

      @@jeffparent2159 Again, they think they are being honest, that is, saying what is true. But, as they see it, truth has to be compatible with the dogma or it can't be true. The dogma is undeniable, incontrovertible, rock solid, as they see it, and it can't be moved. So everything has to be built around that.
      They have ways of rebutting or rationalizing any criticism made against their favorite arguments. That the argument supports dogma is a big mark in it's favor, as they see it. William Lane Craig is a textbook example of this. He has answers to any rebuttal. He thinks they are good rebuttals, even if they aren't. He thinks he knows the truth (namely, the dogmas), and he thinks he cares about truth. Specifically, he thinks that he has access to this truth by direct contact from God/the Holy Spirit.
      Don't try to frame theists as stupid. Many aren't. They're wrong, I think, but they aren't drooling fools. Give them some credit, they're as human as you are. Don't write them off or underestimate them or treat them like inferiors. They're just very confused and stuck believing a falsehood that means a lot to them. They're not liars or idiots or evil or anything like that (most of them, anyway). They're regular people like you and me. Your goal shouldn't be to berate them but to convert them (or stop them from converting more people, or etc) and to do that you need to understand them. Read the Bible, Augustine, Aquinas, Pascal, Tolstoy, Chesterton, CS Lewis, WLC. Or talk to them. It takes work but it'll help you understand them and thus be better at convincing them there's better things to believe.

  • @williammarkland8351
    @williammarkland8351 Před 2 lety +4

    Like many other commentators I also had never thought about this. Excellent, clear, non-sensational talk. I hope you get more subscribers.

  • @billcook4768
    @billcook4768 Před 2 lety +13

    I don’t think apologists would have the slightest trouble with the accession. Jesus choose to leave visually in a way his followers could comprehend. Duh. Now the Zombies of Matthew 27, that’s something apologists never talk about.

    • @locutusdborg126
      @locutusdborg126 Před 2 lety +1

      The Walking Dead should credit Matthew 27 for its inspiration.

    • @carlosa.9533
      @carlosa.9533 Před 2 lety

      William Lane Craig said the zombies are a hyperbole or something

    • @poppysunsettlingstories
      @poppysunsettlingstories Před 2 lety

      @@carlosa.9533 "A" hyperbole.

    • @carlosa.9533
      @carlosa.9533 Před 2 lety

      @@poppysunsettlingstories weird but thanks

    • @ast453000
      @ast453000 Před 2 lety

      I think it's more of a problem than that. For Christians, it's a really big deal that Jesus's body rose physically from the dead. He's not just supposed to be just a spirit or ghost thing. The tomb is supposed to be empty. Thomas even puts his hand in one of the wounds of Jesus' living body (so much for having your wounds healed after the resurrection lol).
      So the problem is: how can a physical body survive in space? There is no oxygen in space. Your bodily fluids boil. There is no way a physical body could survive the temperatures and radiation.
      The lazy apologist can always say it's all just magic, but even if Jesus could magically survive all these things, where is he? Is his physical body floating out in space somewhere? Is his physical body outside the universe somewhere? It's all pretty embarrassing. Or it should be. I know there's no embarrassing someone who believes in magic.

  • @ladyselenafelicitywhite1596

    C.S.Lewis talked about the Ascension.

  • @noxnc
    @noxnc Před 2 lety +9

    6:30 “The modern christian can’t accept it as it comes…”
    Flat earthers: I’m gonna stop you right there. ✋

  • @PaulVanderKlay
    @PaulVanderKlay Před 2 lety +32

    CS Lewis in his book Miracles sees the ascension as integral for tackling the subject of worldview. For me it was something very important to wrestling with all the issues I do in my channel. It's also important that the Ascension makes the cut in the Apostles Creed.

    • @esevre
      @esevre Před 2 lety

      L

    • @JamesRichardWiley
      @JamesRichardWiley Před 2 lety +2

      The Ascension is one more miracle from the human miracle factory.

    • @Ken_Scaletta
      @Ken_Scaletta Před 2 lety +3

      This shows why CS Lewis was a hack.

    • @thomasmaughan4798
      @thomasmaughan4798 Před rokem +1

      @@Ken_Scaletta "This shows why CS Lewis was a hack."
      Is that a good thing or a bad thing? It is impossible with modern English when "sick" is now apparently a good thing. "Dope" is a good thing. Many things are both good and bad, or good or bad.

    • @Ken_Scaletta
      @Ken_Scaletta Před rokem +2

      @@thomasmaughan4798 Hack means amateur.

  • @mr.t957
    @mr.t957 Před rokem +2

    Hi Matt, it is helpful to read scripture when in meditation with an open mind beyond acadaemia and bias. I understand it is scary to not be able to explain a mystery, that is why I became a biomedical scientist. May the peace be with you ✌

  • @grayintheuk8021
    @grayintheuk8021 Před 2 lety

    Really good point, I don't think I've ever heard about the Ascension either.
    Many thanks and keep up the great work, only just found your channel with this as the first video.
    Well made and thoughtful. Thanks I'll subscribe and a big thumbs up.

  • @ryangibson7126
    @ryangibson7126 Před 2 lety +65

    I always took the ascension to be a convenient way of explaining why there is zero evidence of Jesus' existence post-crucifiction. It's almost as if he died and then, I don't know, remained that way.

    • @travelsouthafrica5048
      @travelsouthafrica5048 Před 2 lety +2

      yeah , well it depends on what you would consider " evidence" because Jesus appeared to Paul quite some time after His ascension , He also appeared to John of Patmos that was also post ascension and there have been many other claimed appearances
      but I would say that John's is the best because of the Revelation , this document hes been so accurate when it comes to prophesy that either John was the greatest clairvoyant of all time or he got the information from someone else
      why would he have lied and said he got it from Jesus if he could just as easily claimed the fame for himself ?

    • @ryangibson7530
      @ryangibson7530 Před 2 lety +6

      @@travelsouthafrica5048 That's kind of parallel to the point I'm making. The ascension story was tacked on quite late, as the video states, potentially to record a myth about Jesus the early Christians believed. There is no corroborating evidence for the ascension, and only Luke mentions it. What I'm saying is, this strikes me that Christians felt like there was a bit of a plot hole in their story that Jesus was resurrected, because, well, where is he? Where was he living and teaching? He was conveniently only alive for a month after his resurrection, and then mysteriously disappeared. This stinks of a post hoc explanation for the fact that Jesus wasn't actually around to verify his resurrection to anybody of importance for any extended period of time. If the ascension story wasn't tacked on it would be problematic for the spread of the gospel during the early stages.

    • @travelsouthafrica5048
      @travelsouthafrica5048 Před 2 lety +6

      @@ryangibson7530 if you and I conspired about something for whatever reason , and you and i both know we were lying about something that never happened
      would you suffer terrible interrogation and
      death ? to keep the lie alive ?
      the apostles all died except one , for what they claimed they witnessed , people don't sacrifice themselves for a lie

    • @ryangibson7530
      @ryangibson7530 Před 2 lety +8

      @@travelsouthafrica5048 I wouldn't, but lots of people die for a lie. The Jonestown Massacre is a prime example. Again though, this doesn't really address my point.

    • @travelsouthafrica5048
      @travelsouthafrica5048 Před 2 lety +1

      @@ryangibson7530 this might help you understand , if you want to that is , I often find atheists do not want to understand , but that is up to you czcams.com/video/Xyz-g5yuF20/video.html

  • @paulschlachter4313
    @paulschlachter4313 Před 2 lety +11

    So basically apologists can choose:
    - Declare heaven and hell spiritual "locations" and deny their original ancient physical meanings
    - Defend the biblical flat earth
    - Defend: "The more you get away from the center of gravity of the earth the closer you get to heaven."
    - not talk about it

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety

      The bible doesn't teach a flat earth. And there is no mention of gravity or where specifically heaven resides

    • @paulschlachter4313
      @paulschlachter4313 Před 2 lety +5

      @@kaptaink1959 Isaiah 40 _"22 It is he who sits above the circle of the earth, and its inhabitants are like grasshoppers; who stretches out the heavens like a curtain, and spreads them like a tent to dwell in"_
      The word for circle used here is חוּג (chug). It does not, like some apogists claim, mean sphere.
      If the biblical earth is not flat where does Jesus ascent to / descent from? Hint: clouds!
      Also consider the tower of Babel and the mountain stories in the bible. Go up and you come closer to heaven.

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety +1

      @@paulschlachter4313 it's poetic language. Not meant to be literal description of earth

    • @paulschlachter4313
      @paulschlachter4313 Před 2 lety +3

      @@kaptaink1959 Suspiciously convenient, isn't it? Jesus's ascension is also poetic, right? - A can of worms that you just opened. What's the criteria that you know it's ment figuratively vs literally?

    • @greglogan7706
      @greglogan7706 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kaptaink1959
      As you and I both know there is no "Bible" rather there a collection of at least 66 documents written by all sorts of man with all sorts of ideas and you have to sort of parse your way through each one to determine what each man believed at that time the real issue is what was the dominant ANE cosmology and basically it said there's a flat Earth and a solid dome.... That appears to be what we primarily see in most of these gentlemen's documentation and thit's the documentation and that is not surprising we just shouldn't be using it as fact

  • @shelbyguitarmusic
    @shelbyguitarmusic Před 6 měsíci

    You've put out some great content. Would love to have more, if you feel like it!

  • @justinbezanson8338
    @justinbezanson8338 Před 2 lety +2

    Love this. I'll be here for more of this.

  • @Terrestrial
    @Terrestrial Před rokem +4

    The reason it's never depicted in films as it's written in the New Testament is that the visual of Jesus taking off into the clouds like Superman would be unavoidably comical.

  • @ben-theamateurexegete6747
    @ben-theamateurexegete6747 Před 2 lety +67

    More of this kind of content, please and thank you!

    • @jackgraham5342
      @jackgraham5342 Před 2 lety +1

      Indeed found this by accident instant like and sub

  • @ndjarnag
    @ndjarnag Před 2 lety

    Nice channel man. Glad I found it.

  • @Clockwork_Myr
    @Clockwork_Myr Před 2 lety

    Great video that had me thinking the entire time, good work!

  • @yetanotherjohn
    @yetanotherjohn Před 2 lety +17

    It reminds me of how "miraculous healings" can fix ANYTHING but amputation xD

    • @greyeyed123
      @greyeyed123 Před 2 lety +4

      Or decapitation. lol

    • @rudra62
      @rudra62 Před 2 lety +3

      @@greyeyed123 Inconveniently, the dead stay that way, regardless of who prays for them or how.

    • @666mrdoctor
      @666mrdoctor Před 2 lety

      @@rudra62 what about Lazarus?

    • @rudra62
      @rudra62 Před 2 lety +2

      @@666mrdoctor Do you have evidence that Lazarus was actually dead? In fact, do you have evidence Lazarus was actually alive?
      Note that many people can be seen on modern, sensitive equipment to be alive who even a few decades ago, would have been declared dead. To an untrained eye without all of the electronics, the person would seem "dead".

    • @BennyTwennyGrand
      @BennyTwennyGrand Před 2 lety

      Big Fact right there‼️

  • @deewesthill4705
    @deewesthill4705 Před 2 lety +12

    As a kid in fundamentalist and "new thought" churches, i was far more interested in "the ascension" than "the resurrection". This is because i'd occasionally see magazine articles about how modern doctors could perform what seemed like miracles by resuscitating people declared "clinically dead", so to me "the resurrection" story didn't seem extraordinary. And while there were aircrafts and parachutes, no one outside of the Bible story and other fairytales was reported to fly or be pulled up bodily into the sky by supernatural means. But in church no one ever mentioned "the ascension". I recall pondering it and comparing flying Jesus to the flights of Superman, Wonder Woman, and Mary Poppins with her magical flying umbrella.

  • @abc456f
    @abc456f Před 2 lety

    Very thoughtful and well put. New subscriber status earned.

  • @pastoraaroncrowley
    @pastoraaroncrowley Před 2 lety +11

    I just want to point out the Biblical accounts about the ascension by Luke. In the Gospel, Luke says Yeshua (Jesus) “was carried up into heaven.” It’s a vague description, but then Luke describes it in Acts a bit more vividly. “As they were looking on, He [Yeshua] was lifted up, and a cloud took Him out of their sight” (Acts 1:9).
    The Biblical narrative does not imply that He continued to ascend into the sky and is ascending throughout the universe. The picture painted in the Bible is that He was lifted into a cloud. There’s no detail about how high He went before they could no longer see Him. There’s no detail about whether the cloud was already in the sky or did it appear in that moment. Very few details are given, nor are they necessary.
    Like does it need to be more complicated than that He was lifted in the air and disappeared behind a cloud to transition into the spiritual dimension?

    • @gerardjayetileke4373
      @gerardjayetileke4373 Před 2 lety

      This view ignores the simple 3 tiered cosmology the ancients, including the first century Christians may well have believed in. No transition into a spiritual dimension required, because heaven was just above the clouds. And in another place Paul says that His coming or presence is hidden by the clouds, or something on those lines (can't remember the verse).

    • @gareth2736
      @gareth2736 Před 2 lety

      The evidence could be explained by the writers of the gospel making up a mythical account, or God accomodating their view of reality in how Jesus ascended so they understood what happened, or the apostles understanding what they saw in the terms of their view of the world even though had we been standing there with our different understanding we would have interpreted what we saw differently.

    • @birdcar7808
      @birdcar7808 Před 2 lety +2

      ​@@gerardjayetileke4373 There's historical evidence that the early Christians would not have widely believed in a 3 tiered cosmology. Firstly, the Ancient Israelites began to believe in elements of Hellenistic cosmology (which includes a round earth) since around the 300's BCE. Second, Luke's audience would have primarily been Hellenistic gentiles who believed in a round earth. It doesn't make sense that the author of Luke, who may or may not have believed in a 3 tiered cosmology, would tell a bunch of people who almost certainly didn't believe in a 3 tiered cosmology, that it existed - and done so in such a roundbout way in just a few lines of a narrative.
      It seems more likely to me that the author of Luke was simply focused more on imagery and furthering a message that it is possible for humans to enter heaven (this belief is what attracted most people to Christianity in those days), and was not attempting to assert that heaven is above a dome over the earth and Jesus went physically through that dome. Especially since he never actually says that; seems a very inefficient way of convincing people who didn't believe in a 3-tiered cosmology, if that's what he was trying to do.

    • @gerardjayetileke4373
      @gerardjayetileke4373 Před 2 lety +1

      @@birdcar7808 I don't see why we have to go round the issue so much. The belief that someone ascended upwards is predicated on the belief that the destination was above earth. Luke does not have to be explicit about this because it was already a strongly held belief, that heaven was above. At least from a human pov. It doesn't matter what model of a 3-tiered cosmology they believed in, because embedded in this is a multi tiered heaven as well. So it doesn't matter. I think Luke's narrative at least partially is a polemic against Caesar, and the ascension is a case in point. There are many places where Luke does just this. It does not need such elaborate explanations.

    • @birdcar7808
      @birdcar7808 Před 2 lety +1

      ​@@gerardjayetileke4373 But this was not a strongly held belief. That was my whole point. Luke's audience, Hellenistic gentiles, did not believe in a three tiered cosmology. The author of Luke himself may not have believed in it because it was not as common among Ancient Israelites by then due to Hellenistic influence. Thus, it seems likely that he would need to include some explanation of a three-tiered cosmology considering his audience didn't believe in it, if he really was trying to further belief in it.

  • @baxterwilliams2170
    @baxterwilliams2170 Před 2 lety +48

    Wonderful take. I have always pointed to the ascension as another proof of the 3-layer cosmology in the Bible. But Christians normally respond that he just disappeared into another dimention AFTER reaching the clouds lol

    • @davidlines7
      @davidlines7 Před 2 lety +16

      This is a great point! Jesus said he ascended to the right hand of the father. Yahweh’s throne was supposed to be on top of the firmament. We have gone past the firmament in space, and Jesus is not there.

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety +3

      A Christian would never use the phrase ' disappeared into another dimension'. If you have quotes please post them

    • @baxterwilliams2170
      @baxterwilliams2170 Před 2 lety +9

      @@kaptaink1959 quote is directly from my dad. He is a physics teacher and tries to square his knowledge of the universe with his faith with strange results at times.
      You are right I shouldn't say it's a "normal" response, but he isn't the only one to say it to me.

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety +2

      @@baxterwilliams2170 Maybe an attempt to bring a physical idea to a theological concept

    • @silveriorebelo8045
      @silveriorebelo8045 Před 2 lety +2

      you are still there?? - poor soul...are you too smart, or can you not accept that that truth may come through antiaquated representations? - you should know that your kind of 'cosmological' objections only work with biblical fundamentalists

  • @Erin__D
    @Erin__D Před 2 lety +53

    The NASA shirt was a nice touch ;)
    The problem with the ascension was one of the first MAJOR points that brought me into me deconstruction.

    • @Chance57
      @Chance57 Před 2 lety +14

      @Islayman Ritual sacrifice for forgiveness of sin was already big with the temple at the time (Korban), they just wanted to on-up everything by tossing in human sacrifice on top. Making yourself human in order to sacrifice yourself unto yourself to appease yourself is some peak "Mysterious Ways™" nonsense.

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety +1

      @Islayman so you spent how many years researching, talking with scholars, etc etc. What did you find out?
      As a child I had a hard time believing that jumbo jets could fly. So I just decided it was an illusion. Pssh to talking to an engineer or even a pilot

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety

      @Jebus Hypocristos show your proof please.

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety

      @@Chance57 The sacrifice happened long before the Temple. And what was sacrificed to atone for sin? A young lamb with out blemish. Jesus's death on the cross had nothing to do with appeasing God. But God providing the lamb (Jesus) to atone for everyone's sin and no future sacrifice is needed.

    • @Hambone3773
      @Hambone3773 Před 2 lety +2

      @Islayman God doesn't just forgive because blanket forgiveness is unjust and selective forgiveness is arbitrary without an object of faith to accept or reject to divide those who do trust God from those who do not. The choosing of sacrifice is not an arbitrary object of faith either, but rather acts as a universally understood concept of the gravity of what's at stake in dealing with God: life or death. Sacrifice pre-existed Judeo-Christianity and it was the franca lingo of polytheistic religion. Sacrifice was considered desirable by the gods...it demonstrated total piety of the believer by costing the believer something valuable. But Judaism changed the meaning of sacrifice from mere appeasement of the god's through honor to a means of atonement. Other religions of the ancient world simply do not include a concept of atonement. Gods were to be appeased when offended and bartered with for favor but the God of Israel was always pictured as a perfect moral judge who demanded perfect moral character of his people and this required a system of atonement lest the holiness of God destroy corrupted humanity through mere presence alone. Therefore sacrifice became a way of understanding how holiness could be conferred upon people who are clearly are morally incapable of perfect behavior (the life of an animal is in its blood and without the shedding if blood there is no forgiveness if sin). Christianity borrows the theology of atonement through a sacrifice and applies it to Jesus rather than animals. It becomes a once and for all system of atonement that replaces a system of animal sacrifices.
      It therefore objectively separates people who believe they need perfecting (the humble) from those who do not believe they need perfercting (the proud) or who believe they can perfect themselves or who believe there is no judging god to be reconciled to.

  • @savoirfaire6181
    @savoirfaire6181 Před rokem +1

    Thank-you for your videos. I have gone through your same journey and you are being honest with the issues.

  • @DutchJoan
    @DutchJoan Před 2 lety +1

    New sub here. I'm enjoying your content, especially for its academic value and slightly different perspective that I haven't come across before. You have a calm way of going into detail and I can understand you well.
    Personally I would be interested in your take on M.T. Wright's book.

  • @anthonypaul1351
    @anthonypaul1351 Před 2 lety +9

    A truly lucid and intelligently presented view of the issue at hand without all the emotional baggage. Very well done! I would also like to see more like this... Thank you!

  • @petemaguire8677
    @petemaguire8677 Před 2 lety +9

    I completely agree with you. I'm a Christian and it has always bothered me that modern Christians (mostly protestants) refuse to talk about the ascension. And I think you are right that they are somewhat embarrassed by it.
    There is a huge problem with modern apologetics in that it is prominently a materialist christianity and therefore doomed.
    They have lost the ancient symbolic language and are stuck with our post enlightenment materialism.
    Jonathan Pageau has done some great work on his CZcams channel about this stuff if anyone is interested but I guess for a comments section I am limited in saying you must start to understand that 'ascending to heaven' does not mean flying into space and a myth doesn't mean a made up story

    • @bobsurface908
      @bobsurface908 Před 2 lety +5

      Hmmmmmmmaayyyyybeee...
      But then you get into the whole mushy "what is a description of a true event with witnesses, and what is a myth or metaphoric or fable-based story?"
      And that leads to the unfortunate "your belief is wrong because 'x' is a metaphor vs. no you got it wrong: my story is literally true but YOURS is a fable!" fight.
      The how do you decide who's right...or if they're both wrong and it's all fairy stories? Or just partially wrong.
      I'm a former Christian - now in the "Jesus probably existed and preached, but wasn't divine - plus the stuff he actually did and said is utterly swamped in Paulist bullcrap" camp. And it is patently and obviously visible which bits have a basis in things Jesus actually did and said, and which bits were cut from whole cloth later.

    • @petemaguire8677
      @petemaguire8677 Před 2 lety

      @@bobsurface908 yeah, I hear ya. And listening to Christian preachers dancing around with wildly different “interpretations” of bible passages was and is infuriating. And they could always twist the scriptures to say what they wanted them to say. And yeah, you can use Paul to do this more than anything else in the NT books.
      But, to speak to your first paragraph, I think the problem we have is the understanding of the symbolic religious language and worldview. It is neither a scientific view (literal) or a metaphor. A symbol is a richer third way of understanding. One that brings it all together (including Paul).
      Jordan Peterson scratched at it with his biblical lecture series. But there are others like Jonathan Pageau that completely transformed my frame of reference

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Před 2 lety +3

      @@petemaguire8677 Just a dodge to avoid defending your ridiculous book. "Oh it doesn't mean what it says. It means what I want it to say."

    • @signposts6189
      @signposts6189 Před 2 lety

      @@scambammer6102 What's ridiculous about the book?

    • @andylane3739
      @andylane3739 Před rokem

      @@signposts6189 - Revelations seems VERY influenced by psylocibin. Take 3 to 4 grams of freeze dried, you may see some cool imagery from your subconscious.

  • @samuelandmarikaadams9837
    @samuelandmarikaadams9837 Před 2 lety +7

    Thank you sir! Some really good points and something I hadn't thought about.
    It might also be a question of where they put their energies. From a theological perspective if the resurrection never happened even Paul says "your faith is in vain". Also from a sceptical position if the resurrection cam be shown to be true all the other objections are irrelevant.
    So this might influence it also, the fact that it is a cornerstone.
    But what you said I think is definitely part of it too

  • @skwirlnone1543
    @skwirlnone1543 Před 2 lety +12

    The reason apologists dont talk about the ascension is because people dont question it. Though i have heard plenty of apologists talk about it. Apologists focus on the issues being brought forth though first not random issues. Keep asking questions and the apologists will start producing content.

  • @historicalbiblicalresearch8440

    Thanks for exposing this embarrassing plothole. Shouldn't Jesus leave a ton of instructions before leaving or at least his own written flawless gospel?

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety +2

      Jesus spent 3 years with his disciples, teaching them what they needed to know. And surely repeated the lessons over and over again. His gospel was written in their hearts and minds. the non literate had excellent memories. stories told out loud in front of the clan so the speaker could be told of errors. In Medieval Europe troubadours could learn a song after hearing once. they probably used basic music that could be adapted to stories rather than making new song for each

    • @historicalbiblicalresearch8440
      @historicalbiblicalresearch8440 Před 2 lety +2

      @@kaptaink1959 but we don't know any of that for sure. The disciples only speak 35 words in the NT most of them by Peter

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety

      @@historicalbiblicalresearch8440 is my theory unfounded? Do ancient teachers only give a lesson once? We're 1st Century cultures better at remembering information. And the Gospels are about Jesus not the apostles. They say alit in their letters

    • @partydean17
      @partydean17 Před 2 lety

      It wasnt supposed to be like that from what I gather. It's more of a "I knew you and treated you this way. Then you go to the next person and do the same for them. Then so on and so on"
      It didnt really need the stories and letters to accomplish that. They just really helped and may have actually hurt

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Před 2 lety

      @@kaptaink1959 You are totally FOS. There's no reason to think ancient people had better memories. Just make stuff up why don't you.

  • @rei-rei
    @rei-rei Před 2 lety +5

    I would love to see an apologist address this in a debate.

  • @bdubya7646
    @bdubya7646 Před 2 lety

    Great stuff, very well presented.

  • @davidofoakland2363
    @davidofoakland2363 Před 2 lety

    I see that you are connoisseur of the great English philosopher Douglas Adams too! Good video, and a subject one doesn't hear too often in theological discussions. Keep up the good work, I look forward to viewing your next release.

  • @jankafka7330
    @jankafka7330 Před 2 lety +26

    I liked "the industry of Christian apologetics". A tragedy that apologists aren't seen as the laughable fools they are but have created and sustained an industry as dangerous to the world as the military industrial complex.

    • @raminagrobis6112
      @raminagrobis6112 Před 2 lety +1

      "As dangerous as the military industrial complex"? Stay away to from the brown acid, man!
      Seriously. Such language will never help you convincing others.

    • @jirojhasuo2ndgrandcompany745
      @jirojhasuo2ndgrandcompany745 Před 2 lety +4

      @@raminagrobis6112 Christianity has been used by the Military Industrial Complex time and time again to justify invasion and destruction of other sovereign nations that do not bow down to Western Hegemony.

    • @MadebyKourmoulis
      @MadebyKourmoulis Před 2 lety +2

      @@jirojhasuo2ndgrandcompany745 never mind the fact those actions are not supported anywhere in scripture.

    • @MadebyKourmoulis
      @MadebyKourmoulis Před 2 lety

      @Alex Funk that is incorrect. Christianity is built off Jesus christ with Jewish foundations. Show me a single verse Jesus teaches violence. Jesus teaches to love your neighbor. He describes the highest form of love as laying your life down for them. Not destroying them.
      I agree Christians have done wrong and will do wrong but it goes against scripture.
      And let's not forget athiest governments of stalin, mao and the like have killed way more people than Christians have ever even dreamed of.
      And before you mention it the US government is NOT Christian and hasn't been.

    • @69eddieD
      @69eddieD Před 2 lety +2

      It bothers me too that these blatant quacks and bald faced liars are taken seriously. They should be mocked and vilified.

  • @anitareasontobelieve378
    @anitareasontobelieve378 Před 2 lety +25

    I asked as kid if Jesus had a rocket ship and was told I shouldn't ask questions.

    • @nathanielhellerstein5871
      @nathanielhellerstein5871 Před 2 lety +3

      If you shouldn't ask them questions, then they shouldn't tell you answers.

    • @philipfarnam6013
      @philipfarnam6013 Před 2 lety +5

      My earliest Sunday School memory at age 4-5 was something like that. Among ourselves we thought it meant that he'd learned to fly like superman. We thought that's what "risen" meant. They sure as hell didn't tell us what a virgin was, either!

    • @tomellis4750
      @tomellis4750 Před 2 lety +6

      @@philipfarnam6013 Risen means the church wants your dough.

    • @JohnWaaland
      @JohnWaaland Před 2 lety +1

      @@philipfarnam6013 Maybe they had told you that Jesus had 'risen' but didn't tell you what he did with it! Lol, U know, the sex ed part of things.

    • @rogerdearth3026
      @rogerdearth3026 Před 2 lety +5

      Science ask questions that cannot be answered. Religion has answers that are not to be questioned.

  • @thedarknessthatcomesbefore4279

    Enjoyed and well put together and new sub.

  • @Zift_Ylrhavic_Resfear
    @Zift_Ylrhavic_Resfear Před 2 lety

    Thanks for the video :)

  • @FaughtyEmit
    @FaughtyEmit Před rokem +4

    Glad to hear this being talked about. This was one of the first issues that started off my deconversion journey.

    • @waitstill7091
      @waitstill7091 Před rokem +1

      Post Christianity here we come.

    • @jasonodell79er
      @jasonodell79er Před rokem

      @@waitstill7091 lmao. Believe in your globe eh?

    • @waitstill7091
      @waitstill7091 Před rokem +2

      @@jasonodell79er The future is brighter when Christianity is exposed for what it is. Or better yet, what it is not!

    • @dragonmartijn
      @dragonmartijn Před rokem

      @@waitstill7091 Brighter? Hell awaits, you mean?

    • @waitstill7091
      @waitstill7091 Před rokem +1

      @@dragonmartijn "Heaven is not discussed in the Torah, in order to emphasize the necessity to do what's right because it's right, and not for the reward, or to avoid punishment."
      Rabbi Menachem Weiman

  • @tommysmith5479
    @tommysmith5479 Před 2 lety +17

    Really enjoyed this video - very interesting... I hadn't really thought about the lack of discusion on the ascension. Further, you mentioned Joseph Smith returning the golden plates... I didn't realise that (I knew about the golden plates - just didn't realise he gave them back). Well, that's rather convenient, isn't it!!!!

    • @AlDunbar
      @AlDunbar Před 2 lety +4

      Clearly, Joseph Smith was not in it for the money.
      LOL

    • @tommysmith5479
      @tommysmith5479 Před 2 lety +2

      @@AlDunbar Extremely LOL

    • @williamroberts8470
      @williamroberts8470 Před 2 lety

      It's boring and basic. It's like watching children playing with magnets and listening to their reasoning behind it. This is an amateur attempt at disproving what is unqualifiable in our current understanding of things.

    • @tommysmith5479
      @tommysmith5479 Před 2 lety +1

      @@williamroberts8470 "Our current understanding of things" - you sound like a Jehovah's Witness.

    • @williamroberts8470
      @williamroberts8470 Před 2 lety

      @@tommysmith5479 no I'm a truck driver haha. I'm referring to science.

  • @dynamic9016
    @dynamic9016 Před rokem

    Thanks much for this video.

  • @UDCTANG
    @UDCTANG Před 2 lety

    Great video! 🤘🏽🤘🏽

  • @LM-jz9vh
    @LM-jz9vh Před 2 lety +6

    *Although the biblical narratives depict Yahweh as the sole creator god, lord of the universe, and god of the Israelites especially, initially he seems to have been Canaanite in origin and subordinate to the supreme god El.* Canaanite inscriptions mention a lesser god Yahweh and even the biblical Book of Deuteronomy stipulates that *“the Most High, El,* gave to the nations their inheritance” and that “Yahweh's portion is his people, Jacob and his allotted heritage” (32:8-9). A passage like this reflects the early beliefs of the Canaanites and Israelites in polytheism or, more accurately, henotheism (the belief in many gods with a focus on a single supreme deity). *The claim that Israel always only acknowledged one god is a later belief cast back on the early days of Israel's development in Canaan.*
    *It is generally accepted in the modern day, however, that Yahweh originated in southern Canaan as a lesser god in the Canaanite pantheon* and the Shasu, as nomads, most likely acquired their worship of him during their time in the Levant.
    *Yahweh in the Canaanite Pantheon*
    The biblical narrative, however, is not as straightforward as it may seem as it also includes reference to the Canaanite god El whose name is directly referenced in `Israel' (He Who Struggles with God or He Who Perseveres with God). *El was the chief deity of the Canaanite pantheon and the god who, according to the Bible, gave Yahweh authority over the Israelites:*
    When the *Most High [El]* gave to the nations their inheritance, when he separated the sons of men, he fixed the bounds of the peoples according to the number of the Sons of God. For Yahweh's portion is his people, Jacob his allotted heritage. (Deuteronomy 32:8-9, Masoretic Text).
    The Canaanites, like all ancient civilizations, worshipped many gods but chief among them was the sky-god El. *In this passage from Deuteronomy, El gives each of the gods authority over a segment of the people of earth and Yahweh is assigned to the Israelites who, in time, will make him their supreme and only deity; but it is clear he existed beforehand as a lesser Canaanite god.*
    Yahweh, according to Amzallag, was transformed from one god among many to the supreme deity by the Israelites in the Iron Age (c.1200-930 BCE) when iron replaced bronze and the copper smelters, whose craft was seen as a kind of transformative magic, lost their unique status. *In this new age, the Israelites in Canaan sought to distance themselves from their neighbors in order to consolidate political and military strength and so elevated Yahweh above El as the supreme being and claimed him as their own.* His association with the forge, and with imagery of fire, smoke, and smiting, worked as well in describing a god of storms and war and so Yahweh's character changed from a deity of transformation to one of conquest.
    *As the Israelites developed their community in Canaan, they sought to distance themselves from their neighbors and, as noted, elevated Yahweh above the traditional Canaanite supreme deity El.* They did not, however, embrace monotheism at this time. The Israelites remained a henotheistic people through the time of the Judges, which predates the rise of the monarchy, and throughout the time of the Kingdom of Israel (c.1080-c. 722).
    Google *"Yahweh - **WorldHistory.Org.**"*
    Watch Dr Christine Hayes at Yale University. Watch lecture 7 from 30:00 minutes onwards and lecture 8 from 12:00 to 19:00 minutes.
    Google *"Jews and Arabs Descended from Canaanites - Biblical Archaeology Society."*
    Google *"Canaanite Religion - New World Encyclopaedia."*
    Google *"Canaanite Religion - **Realhistoryww.com**"*
    Google *"Canaanite Phoenician Origin of the God of the Israelites."*
    Google *"The Phoenician God Resheph in the Bible - Is That in the Bible?"*
    Google *"God's Wife Edited Out of the Bible - Almost."*
    Google *"Yahweh's Divorce from the Goddess Asherah in the Garden of Eden - Mythology Matters."*
    Google *"Married Deities: Asherah and Yahweh in Early Israelite Religion - Yahweh Elohim."*
    Google *"How the Jews Invented God and Made Him Great- Archaeology - Haaretz."*
    Google *"The Invention of God - Maclean's"*
    Google *"The Boundaries of the Nations - Yahweh Elohim."*
    Google *"Excerpt from “Yahweh and the Gods and Goddesses of Canaan” by John Day - Lehi's Library."*
    Google *"How Did the Bible’s Editors Conceal Evidence of Israelite Polytheism - Evolution of God by Robert Wright."*
    Google *"A Theologically Revised Text: Deuteronomy 32:8-9 - Ancient Hebrew Poetry."*
    Google *"Biblical Contradiction #3: Which God is the Creator of the Heavens and Earth: Yahweh or El?"*
    Google *"Biblical Contradiction #27. Are Yahweh and El the Same God or Not?"*
    Google *"Mark Smith: "Yahweh as El’s Son & Yahweh's Ascendancy - Lehi's Library."*
    Google *"Quartz Hill School of Theology - B425 Ugarit and the Bible."*
    Google *"The Origins of Yahweh and the Revived Kenite Hypothesis - Is That in the Bible?"*
    Google *"Yahweh, god of metallurgy - Fewer Lacunae."*
    Google *"Polytheistic Roots of Israelite Religion - Fewer Lacunae."*
    Google *"Biblical Polytheism - Bob Seidensticker."*
    Google *"Combat Myth: The Curious Story of Yahweh and the Gods Who Preceded Him - Bob Seidensticker."*
    Google *"Religious Studies: El, Yahweh and the Development of Monotheism in Ancient Israel."*
    Google *"Decoupling YHWH and El - Daniel O. McClellan."*
    Google *"Yhwh, God of Edom - Daniel O. McClellan."*
    Google *"The Most Heiser: Yahweh and Elyon in Psalm 82 and Deuteronomy 32 - Religion at the Margins"* based on the *majority scholarly consensus.*

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety

      You cant take one verse that contains El Elyon and claim that Hebrews worshiped more than one god. The old Testament uses the phrase multiple times to mean YHWH. As are the words Elohim or El Elyown.

    • @shaunigothictv1003
      @shaunigothictv1003 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kaptaink1959
      The bible is actually a book with stories set in real geographical places featuring real homosapien groups/cultures - but the stories are purely mythological.
      Talking Snakes, (genesis 3), talking donkeys (numbers 22) etc.
      Not to mention a worldwide flood that systematically wiped out every known homosapien group on the planet - EXCEPT eight people who managed to trap millions of animals and insects and physically herd them onto a small boat complete with enough food for ALL the animals and humans for a year.
      Geologists and scientists have all destroyed the global flood theory many times already.

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Před 2 lety

      @@shaunigothictv1003 well the places are real. the groups/cultures are highly idealized and mostly invented long after the fact.

    • @shaunigothictv1003
      @shaunigothictv1003 Před 2 lety

      @@scambammer6102 Agreed.
      Excellent point.

  • @greglogan7706
    @greglogan7706 Před 2 lety +3

    Matt,
    As a Christian theist (albeit not an evangelical), welcome to the ex-evangelical now non believer Podcast circuit. I have actually been thoroughly blessed by the half dozen or so quite competent fellow ex-evangelical atheist podcasters. I can tell just from my limited exposure that you are a very clear thinker and you have the evangelical scene pretty well nailed.
    I also really appreciate you bringing up this matter of the Ascension. It is something that it seems we all rather lightly skip over.. One of the questions it raised in my mind is how to correlate 1Cor 15 appearances with this Jesus popping up like popcorn in Acts chapter 1.

  • @veganatheistandmore
    @veganatheistandmore Před 2 lety

    Great video! Thank you!

  • @David.McDonald
    @David.McDonald Před 2 lety

    Great video!

  • @bobdobbs8700
    @bobdobbs8700 Před 2 lety +17

    Yes, this is one of things that stuck in my throat as a kid. In the sect I grew up in (Jehovah's Witnesses) the ascension is not ignored; it's probably given just as much emphasis as the resurrection. Every time the ascension was mentioned I'd remember that quotation of Paul's that "flesh & blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of God." Well then at what point did Jesus cast off his fleshly body? Surely before he reached the stratosphere! It would have been much better if God just beamed his son up Scotty style.

    • @d2westruth
      @d2westruth Před 2 lety

      And perhaps He did

    • @nikloff1815
      @nikloff1815 Před 2 lety

      JW's don't believe in physical resurrection. They believe he was raised in spirit and took on physical form when desired like angles in past appeared in physical bodies to Abraham etc. They don't elaborate on what was done with Jesus body but they definitely deny resurrection of his physical body. I was a JW also.

    • @bobdobbs8700
      @bobdobbs8700 Před 2 lety +1

      @@nikloff1815 Thanks. I just learned this while commenting on another video. I guess I must have fallen asleep during that lesson. It always seemed evident to me from the gospel accounts that Jesus' resurrection was physical -- that he wasn't just a ghost. I regret I didn't know this during my inquisition with the elders. I would have loved to hear them explain to me how a ghost could eat fish & suffer from wounds.

    • @davidpelto8824
      @davidpelto8824 Před 2 lety

      Dear ignorant one: Jesus was in a resurrected body, and the very passage you quote says that body is not flesh and blood.

    • @bobdobbs8700
      @bobdobbs8700 Před 2 lety

      @@davidpelto8824 The very term 'resurrected body' implies that it IS flesh & blood. If Jesus' new body wasn't made of flesh & blood, then what happened to the one that was? In the gospel of John you have Jesus allowing Thomas to press his fingers into the spear wound on Jesus' resurrected body (John 20:24-29). If it was an entirely new body, why did it still have the wounds inflicted by the crucifixion?

  • @banba317
    @banba317 Před 2 lety +5

    Apologists also ignore the fact that many people (allegedly) rose from the dead before Jesus; it was almost common place in various cultures, from the Bronze Age through the 1st century. They don't talk about all those dead people who "... came up out the tombs..." on the day of the crucifixion and no one follows up on Lazarus! If it's so common, why is Jesus' resurrection so special?

  • @patmullarkey7659
    @patmullarkey7659 Před 2 lety

    Well done! It always puzzled me.

  • @triplejudy
    @triplejudy Před rokem +1

    As an outspoken Atheist, I’m continually astounded how anyone could be duped into believing in any sort of random, “magical sky daddy” existing
    w/o shred of verifiable data or empirical, science based evidence!

  • @larrys9879
    @larrys9879 Před 2 lety +5

    An apologist job is to tell believers what they want to hear, at least if they want to keep their job. Facts, logic, reason, science and history have little or nothing to do with apologetic arguments.

    • @philipfarnam6013
      @philipfarnam6013 Před 2 lety

      At this late date, it's quite impossible to determine what actually happened if, indeed, anything happened. All that remains is an agenda and the agenda is all: Churches, Inc.; Tax-free businesses. Shepherds and sheep.

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Před 2 lety

      @Kenneth McRae if you can't even type a good comment why would I read your book?

  • @adamashing7633
    @adamashing7633 Před 2 lety +40

    Amazing, haven't ever thought about this before.
    I for one would be extremely interested in a critical view of some of NT Wright in general as I can't quite put a finger on why I don't like his works but they are extremely popular amongst more academic Christians.

    • @invisiblegorilla8631
      @invisiblegorilla8631 Před 2 lety +5

      I second that! Would love to see Mr. Hartke tackle some of NT Wright's scholarship.

    • @michaelbrickley2443
      @michaelbrickley2443 Před 2 lety +1

      @@invisiblegorilla8631, don’t put this guy on a pedestal, just another weak minded supposed faither who decided the world of hopeless atheism was the way to go. It’s not. Smh

    • @ritawing1064
      @ritawing1064 Před 2 lety

      Seconded...well, thirded, really.

    • @JohnWaaland
      @JohnWaaland Před 2 lety +1

      @@michaelbrickley2443 OK, I'll take a bite on this one. How do you possibly get off saying that he is a "supposed faither" ?? Just astounding the level of disconnect here . U sir have no idea about what his motivations were before. Foithermore, you'd have to be a mind-reader! OR, do you just guess that it's not possible for someone to truly believe and then years later reverse course? How long have you been a 'believer'??

    • @gareth2736
      @gareth2736 Před 2 lety +1

      If you are an athiest you might not like his works because you disagree with him, there.might not be anything more profound than that going on.

  • @-mattwood
    @-mattwood Před 2 lety

    Really great point made here. Would love to hear this topic discussed and debated.

    • @thomasmaughan4798
      @thomasmaughan4798 Před rokem

      "Would love to hear this topic discussed and debated."
      There's not much to debate. Choose a belief. Done!

  • @Agent_Lokii
    @Agent_Lokii Před 2 lety

    Great content!! I think if your audio quality increases, you will get a lot bigger!

  • @TestifyApologetics
    @TestifyApologetics Před 2 lety +4

    I think Harnack's arguments for dating Luke early and the number of difficult and minute things that Luke casually shows himself to be reliable on is enough evidence for me to have a level of trust on the story. (Referring to Colin Hemer's book on Acts) Also, Christians believe they too will ascend with Jesus and meet him in the air when he returns per 1 Thessalonians 4:16-18. So I'm not entirely sure it is something they are entirely embarrassed of, but you do raise a good point about the overall oddity of it and you could be right to say that is why some shy away from it. I know it was something Ludemann pressed Craig on in his debate with him, iirc. I'd have to go back and check.
    The fact that the resurrection appearances suddenly stopped is something I've seen more than one apologist say is actually evidence against hallucinations. Here is a quote from George Park Fisher:
    "Had the followers of Jesus been in that state of mind out of which the illusions of hallucination might arise, and if this had been the source of what they thought to be actual reappearances of Jesus, these manifestations would have been much more numerous." But the convenience thing is a fair point and using the analogy of the Golden Plates is interesting.
    Anyway, good first video! Your thoughts on this topic raise the level of the discussion by a lot. Looking forward to more! Hope you don't mind the 2 cents, figure a comment helps the algorithm.

    • @Ken_Scaletta
      @Ken_Scaletta Před 2 lety +2

      Luke-Acts was written in the late 90-s to early 110's CE and is extremely unreliable.
      The claim that "resurrection appearances stopped" implies that they ever began in the first place. The post-resurrection appearances in the Gospels are all late additions to the narrative. It looks like the original belief was only that Jesus had gone to heaven and that stories about appearances on earth did not begin to be written until Matthew's Gospel, no earlier than the 80's CE.
      There is not a single shred of actual evidence that any of the disciples ever claimed to have seen Jesus on earth. The empty tomb story didn't even exist before Mark. What's most likely,, as per Crossan and Ehrman among others - is that Jesus' followers fled when he was arrested and that none of them ever really knew what happened to the body. The first "appearance" claims probably happened in Galilee, probably by Peter, but we don't know what he claimed to have seen. I think the first visions of Jesus were of Jesus in Heaven, ala the vision of Stephen, but it was also not unheard of for people to think that certain individuals came back in other bodies. We can see that right in the Gospels with John the Baptist being called an incarnation of Elijah and witha all the shape-shifting stories about Jesus.

  • @ZangelDemon
    @ZangelDemon Před 2 lety +7

    So modern Christians are more likely to accept the ascension as mythology, while more traditional Christians need the ascension to be as read because that aspect is interwoven into the overall narrative and is required in order to keep the Jenga tower from toppling over. Remove one piece and the gap you notice it leaves makes you take a closer look at the other pieces.

  • @edwardwicks304
    @edwardwicks304 Před 2 lety +2

    Not sure that I get your point. The Scripture don't give us much information about the ascension. Jesus went up and dissapeared into the clouds. We are told that when He comes back again the He will appear in the clouds. He will catch His Saints up in the clouds. What's more to say? Are you implying that the resurrection didn't happen? There's overwhelming evidence for the resurrection.

    • @AlDunbar
      @AlDunbar Před 2 lety +1

      Can you give an example or two outside of the bible of the evidence of which you speak?

  • @beckc.5084
    @beckc.5084 Před 2 lety +1

    I think it's just because it doesn't come up all that often. Apologists are not evangelists or pastors, they don't have to address everything you need to know about Christ in order to be saved, especially if they subscribe to the "minimal facts approach" (which by the way, is an approach I don't really agree with.) But, in general, until a skeptic advances a challenge on a specific topic, they don't really need to talk about it, especially if it's something easily defensible (like the ascension, once the resurrection has been established). So I think it's a bit uncharitable to instantly jump to the conclusion that it's because apologists are this ill-intentioned "industry complex" or that they feel "embarrassed", etc...
    But I have to admit, you're kinda inspiring me to start talking about the ascension more when I talk about the resurrection. It's definitely another powerful confirmation of Jesus being the Messiah, from a fulfilled prophecy point of view.
    Anyway, your portrayal of Acts 1 is very distorted. I think you're pushing on that rigid literalist interpretation a bit too much. Just because the word "heaven" often also has the connotation of "sky" in Hebrew, doesn't mean that everytime you see it in the text, the writers had no clue it could also refer to something more than just the literal sky. I mean, even Jesus did that all the time, so that would be also Jesus' own problem, not just Luke's. He said "kingdom of heaven" (malkuth ha shamayim) so many times in the gospels, and yet no scholar would assume he was talking simply about the sky above. Surely the apostles saw Jesus be taken up into the sky. But that doesn't mean he didn't also enter a different realm. The two don't contradict each other, and forcing that contradiction is a bit artificial.
    The thing is, there's no need to postulate conspiracy theories about the ascension of Jesus Christ as a later invention to "explain the lack of appearances of Jesus after the apostolic age", for the simple fact that the ascension is completely consistent with what Jesus himself had been teaching about himself & what the prophetic profile of the Messiah required. And if Jesus fulfilled all the previous prophecies I'm not sure why I should all of a sudden doubt his ascension. So this conspiracy theory is adding too many new assumptions, to something that could be explained much more simply, (especially after having given evidence that the resurrection happened).
    "No one has ascended into heaven except he who descended from heaven, the Son of Man." John 3:13
    "Jesus said to her, “Do not cling to me, for I have not yet ascended to the Father; but go to my brothers and say to them, ‘I am ascending to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.’”" John 20:17
    "“When the Son of Man comes in his glory, and all the angels with him, then he will sit on his glorious throne." Matthew 25:31
    "Then will appear in heaven the sign of the Son of Man, and then all the tribes of the earth will mourn, and they will see the Son of Man coming on the clouds of heaven with power and great glory. 31And he will send out his angels with a loud trumpet call, and they will gather his elect from the four winds, from one end of heaven to the other." Matthew 24:30-31
    "So, if they say to you, ‘Look, he is in the wilderness,’ do not go out. If they say, ‘Look, he is in the inner rooms,’ do not believe it. 27For as the lightning comes from the east and shines as far as the west, so will be the coming of the Son of Man." Matthew 24:26-27
    "64Jesus said to him, “You have said so. But I tell you, from now on you will see the Son of Man seated at the right hand of Power and coming on the clouds of heaven.”" Matthew 26:64
    etc. These are all Jesus' own words.
    The question is, if the ascension is a fable invented by the apostles, then why did Jesus constantly allude to it, and how exactly did Jesus think he would "come descending with the clouds of heaven" if he never ascended to the Father's right hand in the first place?

  • @ztrglider
    @ztrglider Před 2 lety +16

    I was surprised when you said N.T. Wright instead of C.S. Lewis. Lewis has a pretty widely known chapter on the ascension in one of his books--'Miracles' if I recall correctly.

  • @josephwalsh7546
    @josephwalsh7546 Před 2 lety +6

    Mr Hartke's fundamentalist literalist background is showing. If a ruler ascends to a throne it doesn't mean he went up to a throne on a higher elevation or in the sky. Similarly when people say some one ascended to a higher moral plane or level of consciousness that also in no way denotes a physical, vertical elevation. Ditto for ascending the corporate ladder. In fact, ascension in usual usage infrequently denotes physical vertical movement.

    • @jaclo3112
      @jaclo3112 Před 2 lety +4

      Except the majority of christians over the last 2000yrs believe the necromancer demigod literally floated up into the clouds...as stated in the bible itself.
      Christian mythology has always specifically differentiated the ressurection, ascension and exaltation (being seated on the throne as per a monarchy model) as distinct and literal. If the ascension into the physical clouds as described in the bible is nothing more than metaphorical...then why not the reanimation of the demigod from the dead. At least it would make more sense and be consistent with the metaphor device. But then how does one determine what is literal and what is metaphorical in the bible screeds?

    • @zayobayo2175
      @zayobayo2175 Před 2 lety

      @@jaclo3112 Because it's way way more explicit about the Resurrection than the Ascension. Plus there's evidence

    • @jaclo3112
      @jaclo3112 Před 2 lety +2

      @@zayobayo2175 please provide the evidence that a jewish necromancer demigod reanimated from the dead.

    • @signposts6189
      @signposts6189 Před 2 lety

      @@jaclo3112 What the heck is a Jewish necromancer demigod?

    • @jaclo3112
      @jaclo3112 Před 2 lety

      @@signposts6189 I take it you've never read the bible? The human sacrifice god of christian mythology in the bible is jewish, indulges in the magic of necromancy...and is a product of a human woman and a supernatural god...hence by definition a demigod. This particular demigod of christian mythology also practices blood magic along with human sacrifice. it's pretty barbaric and gross when you think about it.

  • @MJ-do8fg
    @MJ-do8fg Před 2 lety

    Great video! When will we get a book shelf tour?

  • @PBAmygdala2021
    @PBAmygdala2021 Před 2 lety

    First time here. Liked and subscribed.
    Re: Assention, have you studied the many other Jewish Midrashic works that also contain assentions? Ex: Assention of Isaiah, 2 Baruch, and 4 Ezra. It was a common literary trope after the fall of the temple.
    P.S. "Evangelical Industrial Complex" - brilliant!

  • @smashexentertainment676
    @smashexentertainment676 Před 2 lety +5

    I'll have to see jesus's ascension telemetry first, before I may even think of reconsidering. Otherwise he might just as well have been beamed back to mothership, which sounds way more plausible.

  • @tomtozer6714
    @tomtozer6714 Před 2 lety +4

    I'm not sure why it matters that apologists do or don't talk about the ascension, for a couple of reasons. If the evidence for the resurrection is convincing, then the ascension just makes sense. Also, the ascension doesn't seem like the kind of event that is going to leave around physical evidence like an empty tomb or a shroud. More, while apologists may not address the ascension, you can be sure plenty of Christian theologians have written about it. I found this video rather meh.

    • @partydean17
      @partydean17 Před 2 lety

      Yeah theologically speaking Jesus the teacher and leader sends the Holy Spirit to help his friends. He didn't start a traditional religious empire. It was a spiritual one. This seems more the point and moving into heaven to be the mediator. I don't know any Christians that would think this is more silly than talking donkeys, pigs being sent off of mountains, or the fact the dead walked the Earth again

    • @Ansatz66
      @Ansatz66 Před 2 lety +2

      "If the evidence for the resurrection is convincing, then the ascension just makes sense."
      It makes sense that Jesus would fly into the sky? Isn't it a bit odd? Where was he going? Into space? And why would there even be an ascension? Why wouldn't Jesus just continue his ministry? It's a weirdly suspicious coincidence that Jesus would disappear shortly after returning to life. The ascension seems to make far more sense if we _don't_ find the evidence for the resurrection convincing.

    • @erichodge567
      @erichodge567 Před 2 lety +2

      No, what would've made sense would have been for Jesus to have walked into Pilate's office and said, "Remember me?" That would have gotten everybody talking, and maybe someone would have written down a truly contemporary account from the Roman perspective, which would have been much better evidence.

    • @partydean17
      @partydean17 Před 2 lety

      @@erichodge567 better evidence isnt the point. Its about the lives he touched. And those changes inspiring more. And more from them.

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Před 2 lety

      @@partydean17 Jesus hasn't touched anybody for 2000 years you are just touching yourself.

  • @mickqQ
    @mickqQ Před 2 lety +1

    Good content
    Keep going 👍

  • @baileyschmidt5349
    @baileyschmidt5349 Před 2 lety

    Great video

  • @thinkconsider2639
    @thinkconsider2639 Před 2 lety +5

    Recent ex-Christian here as well. I respect your value of truth and will be subscribing for more of these fascinating videos!

  • @jacquedegatineau9037
    @jacquedegatineau9037 Před 2 lety +5

    Just as Jesus used agricultural or shepherding metaphors to communicate with his audience... why wouldn't he "ascend" in a way that would help the witnesses understand where he was going and for what purpose?

  • @skatter44
    @skatter44 Před 2 lety +2

    "Confirmation bias"? How so? This seems like an odd complaint. I don't think it's obvious that Luke made this up.

  • @anthonypc1
    @anthonypc1 Před 2 lety

    Very good points to consider.

  • @utubepunk
    @utubepunk Před 2 lety +16

    Solid stuff. Why do you only have 74 subscribers?? It's criminal!

    • @AlDunbar
      @AlDunbar Před 2 lety +1

      395 a month later. When did he start his channel?

    • @Richie_P
      @Richie_P Před 2 lety +1

      @@AlDunbar 9 more hours and it's up to 421

    • @octem2251
      @octem2251 Před 2 lety

      Well there are 3 or 4 guys that have monopoly of the Atheist Industrial Complex in CZcams: the guy from RationalityRulwes, CosmicSkeptic, an indian guy that reads the Bible every week, and an ex-JW. Maybe they should go out and see if they can get a real audience, in the real world

    • @utubepunk
      @utubepunk Před 2 lety +1

      @@octem2251 The Atheist Industrial Complex. Lol. Okay, dude. 👍

    • @octem2251
      @octem2251 Před 2 lety

      @@utubepunk well yes, I was generous, it's more like a big farm

  • @sophistichistory4645
    @sophistichistory4645 Před 2 lety +21

    0:46 ......"Evangelical Industrial Complex"
    Now, that's goddamn funny!!

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety

      a joke is not an argument

    • @tomellis4750
      @tomellis4750 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kaptaink1959 May illuminate a point better than an essay. Years ago, 2 SA farmers talking. One says Dis you know Bishop Tutu is dead. Dead, dead, I didn't know he had been arrested.

  • @seanhogan6893
    @seanhogan6893 Před rokem

    Great intro to the topic.
    Can you do the analysis of NT Wright's explanation? Otherwise it feels a little bit unfair to call out William Lane Craig referring to the ascension requiring a discussion of it's own and then never getting back to it.

  • @clayhamilton3551
    @clayhamilton3551 Před rokem +2

    When I was a believer, the ascension was something that always stuck out as odd to me… Most Christians that I knew acknowledged that heaven was not physically above the earth like ancient people believed, but it was like another dimension. So why did Jesus need to get beamed up by Scotty when he could have just warped to the “heaven dimension”?
    It was one of many things that I just preferred to ignore because it sounded too mythological

    • @joejoe-lb6bw
      @joejoe-lb6bw Před rokem

      Levitation up into the sky is more dramatic then a Star Trek transporter fade out.

  • @erichodge567
    @erichodge567 Před 2 lety +3

    I was wondering if anyone else noticed this. Apologists are all over the Resurrection, so skeptics train their fire on it as well, but the Ascension is a very, very fat target. It is hard to spiritualize away, since it is very graphically described, and is essential to Christian doctrine since Luke has an angel tell the amazed disciples that Jesus will come back precisely as he left.

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety

      i think apologist don't focus on the Ascension because the Christian movement would have continues even if Jesus stayed on earth. it is not a necessary for the resurrection story to be true.

    • @erichodge567
      @erichodge567 Před 2 lety +1

      @@kaptaink1959 , which would be true except for John 16:7, in which Jesus tells his apostles:
      "But I tell you the truth, it is for your benefit that I am going away. Unless I go away, the Advocate will not come to you; but if I go, I will send Him to you."
      If the Christian movement is to continue, it must have the Holy Spirit, and so Jesus must ascend to his Father. Therefore, the Ascension is absolutely essential doctrine in Christianity.

    • @kaptaink1959
      @kaptaink1959 Před 2 lety

      @@erichodge567 thanks that is very thought provoking. let me mull this over. Good day to you

    • @erichodge567
      @erichodge567 Před 2 lety

      @@kaptaink1959 , and good day to you.

  • @Goodkidjr43
    @Goodkidjr43 Před 2 lety +7

    Why don't critics of Christianity analyze as to why eleven out of the twelve apostles were tortured and executed for their faith in an obvious lie that they all knew to be false? Anti-Christians are mostly silent about this glaring fact. Only it it were true, would they knowingly face horrible deaths.
    Next....

    • @johnsannicolas2015
      @johnsannicolas2015 Před 2 lety +2

      Would you say the same about suicide bombers who die in the name of Allah? Is Islam true as well?

    • @tremontefr5617
      @tremontefr5617 Před 2 lety

      They died because their lies pissed people of power off, because their actions were seen as a power grab. It’s the same reason Jesus was killed. Thousands of Germans died believing they were the super race. Just because you die believing something doesn’t make it true. The only apostle that could write and was literate never even met Jesus. Ever play telephone? It’s all a fairy tale

    • @signposts6189
      @signposts6189 Před 2 lety

      @@johnsannicolas2015 How are people with a death wish (suicide bombers) the same as people who are persecuted with beatings, imprisonment and death threats they'd rather not go through on the same level?

  • @New_Essay_6416
    @New_Essay_6416 Před rokem

    Excellent points 👍

  • @poppysunsettlingstories

    Was going to subscribe but I saw you have 666 subscribers and I couldn't stand to spoil it.

  • @wildzeke
    @wildzeke Před 2 lety +24

    Perhaps the ascension story would be more believable if Jesus rode a flying horse to heaven.

    • @alisaurus4224
      @alisaurus4224 Před 2 lety +1

      ISWYDT

    • @gerardczerwien8906
      @gerardczerwien8906 Před 2 lety

      How clever...perhaps you should take up clownology as a full time study.

    • @michellebrown4903
      @michellebrown4903 Před 2 lety

      Well ,yeah ,it would of added an Arabian Nights flavour to the story. How about a carpet?

    • @thatoneguy7603
      @thatoneguy7603 Před 2 lety

      A rocket ship would be the only logical conclusion.

  • @NightDocs
    @NightDocs Před 2 lety +17

    I agree it’s all BS but I guess I don’t understand why the focus on the ascension. As the story goes there’s not much evidence you could present that would back up the story even if we lived in a parallel universe where all the Bible myths are true

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Před 2 lety +4

      Yeah the ascension is not more BS than the rest of it. Still, Jebus flying up into the sky like mighty mouse is an amusing image.

    • @Goodkidjr43
      @Goodkidjr43 Před 2 lety +2

      Nothing is more "BS" than believing that Jesus did not exist. The evidence is overwhelming. Yet, these atheists cling to their beliefs. Sad....

    • @DanielBoonelight
      @DanielBoonelight Před 2 lety +2

      @@Goodkidjr43 lol tell us you don't understand what an atheist is without telling us you don't understand what an atheist is... 🤣

    • @DanielBoonelight
      @DanielBoonelight Před 2 lety +5

      @@Goodkidjr43 also... tell us about some of this "overwhelming evidence." what is it? if the evidence were so "overwhelming," then why doesn't every region on the planet believe it? oh, right... it isn't at all.

    • @real.evidence
      @real.evidence Před 2 lety +6

      @@Goodkidjr43 What’s sad is that you would make such an ignorant assertion that there is overwhelming evidence of the Jesus as depicted in the New Testament. The New Testament Jesus is a highly mythologized figure, one that modern historiography cannot substantiate because there are almost no contemporary sources of this Jesus figure in the first century that are independent or outside of the New Testament. Further, historians have no disinterested sources, only evangelical sources from believers. There may have been some type of itinerant Jewish rabbi who was killed by the Romans for accusations of sedition against Rome, but the reliable surviving sources of evidence we have fails to corroborate any of the theological claims made by the New Testament authors. The New Testament is theology masquerading as history. Christianity emanated from Jewish theology, Greek Hellenism, and pagan theology.

  • @davidclark5618
    @davidclark5618 Před 2 lety

    Loved the video. You bring up great points. The ascension is indeed paralleled in assumption stories, more specifically that of Romulus. However, correlation doesn’t necessarily mean causation while it can mean that. This is a legitimate and important point among historians. For elaboration, I would check out ‘Historian’s Fallacies’ by Fischer. Having said that, in the immediate context, it is more likely Luke is being influenced by Dan.7:13. In Dan.7 the son of man is ‘brought up to the ancient of days and all authority is given to him.’ This is far more likely the context Luke is working with especially when realizing this takes place after the great commission and Jesus’ common self designation as the Son of Man.

  • @gramps5595
    @gramps5595 Před 2 lety

    A great presentation, thank you. You have earned another subscriber. I would be interested in your examination of the ascension of Jesus and I would also be very interested in any research regarding the "Ascension of Isaiah" which apparently was a compilation of earlier verbal and written myths which appeared in the first century. I am wondering if Paul read and relied on this publication to any extent, because it covers a fantastical version of Jesus's spritiual crucifixion and resurrection, which I suspect might be part of the scriptures from which Paul said had informed his new gospel along with the Greek and Mithran philosophies.

  • @MBarberfan4life
    @MBarberfan4life Před 2 lety +3

    It's slick of Craig to try and separate the ascension from his supposed "case" for the resurrection. The fact that Jesus conveniently disappears-- AND isn't seen for thousands of years-- are pieces of data that count against the resurrection. Craig is cherry-picking

    • @scambammer6102
      @scambammer6102 Před 2 lety

      Hey if I just got crucified and resurrected, I'd take off too man.

    • @MatthewQuigley
      @MatthewQuigley Před 2 lety

      Actually Jesus is seen by Paul years after death, resurrection and ascension. Which is a hole in the plot as Jesus is not supposed to be on earth after ascension.

  • @ComputingTheSoul
    @ComputingTheSoul Před 2 lety +4

    As a Roman Catholic, I think I can give a few reasons why.
    If Christ did heal people instantaneously and rose from the dead, is the Ascension really much of a leap?
    If we, with the scriptures, believe that Christ is the existence that is provided to all things, as he upholds all things (Hebrews 1:3), and he shows this by recreating people both spiritual (Mark 2) and also physically (John 9), not to mention instantaneously, does this not make manifest the fact that he is this existence? This is before we get into interesting things like Daniel predicting the Crucifixion (or maybe his baptism) to the year in Daniel 9:24-27 and all of the other prophecies of the Old Testament sometimes up to 1400 odd years before his incarnation.
    You have Christ showing himself to have all of the attributes of God already. The Ascension is, comparatively, small fare in terms of it happening.
    So, I would reject it's an awkward question philosophically. In fact, I think it's really easy to take account of. Him moving in a way which we aren't accustomed to seeing men do is accounted for by the fact that he is God. We also see it with various saints as well, so mere participation in God's being is more than sufficient.
    As for attestation, it's in the longer ending of Mark as well, so there is multiple attestation. I would also dispute that the acts account is any more than 30 years post Ascension, because if it were then why doesn't he mention the Martyrdom of St Paul and St Peter?
    In terms of it being suspiciously convenient, this would make some degree of sense if it wasn't cooked into Jesus' entire view of the Old Testament. He explicitly states in Matthew 24 that there will be a final day of judgement. How can one come upon the clouds of heaven if not up there?
    It seems to me that Jesus' entire Eschatology is based on what is described here as the Apostles basically coping.
    This view is even cooked into the specific psalm he references, as YHWH is sat at the right hand of YHWH, while YHWH places his enemies underneath his feet (Sometimes Jews will point out that the word "Adoni" is used to describe Lord in the first line, but the later context makes it clear that the Adoni is YHWH, and hence we have the Hypostatic Union).
    In terms of "Mythology", I don't understand why people in the west are so insistent on this view. These sorts of things happen all of the time. They tend to happen more in places like India and in Africa, but they also happen in the West. We have 1000+ year old Eucharistic Miracles which have had scientific tests on them. There is an entire historiography on the Miraculous Tilma of Guadalupe. There are the thousands of people who saw Fatima, including people who were not aware of the story leading up to it. Likewise, there is at least one medical study into Lourdes.
    "But" you may ask "Why can't we find him up there in the clouds". First off, I think that this understanding of heaven makes very very little sense. As Moshe Greenberg points out in his book on the Religion in (Old Testament) Israel, by at the very least later Judaism, there is an understanding of Creatio Ex Nihilo, and hence a sort of Classical Theism (In other words, God isn't superman). In other words, there is reason to doubt Bultmann, and I vigorously reject it as does the entire Christian Tradition. Even St Paul does in Hebrews, for how can God uphold all things and grant their existence if he is bound by position? So, God is in heaven, but heaven is outside of the universe. But when we speak of "Where is Christ's Body?", we must remember God is omnipotent under the view of Later Judaism, and so God could retain Christ's body in any way he wishes.
    To say that this is "mythological", in my view, is a denial of the present reality in which we live. To hold reality to this view that all is matter is to break reality, because to hold this is to say that somehow properties, which all have one origin in matter, can somehow cancel each other out and stratify those properties universally. However, if all is matter, then how can this be? We would need something to be less than matter, which is dependent on matter, and hence there is a contradiction.
    To close, you can think it's cope from apologists, but I don't really think it is.

    • @markdomar4944
      @markdomar4944 Před 2 lety

      Lots of 'ifs' there. Typical lack of evidence response from a Christian who believes the Pope is God's representative on earth, that Mary was and remained a virgin (like that would matter AT ALL), and thinks a man who could be a pedophile can forgive your sins.

    • @JohnWaaland
      @JohnWaaland Před 2 lety

      Sure seems logical that God could work out all those "contradictions" and all that other theology U spoke of to simply make creatures like himself who wouldn't have to suffer and then eventually some (the few) go toddling off to heaven, BUT, then throwing away most of his creation into the firey pit! You'd think 🤔!? Seems like God wouldn't be able to do anything less. IF he's all so perfect! NO amount of scriptural mumbojumbo has yet to come up with anything credible on how a perfect God who CANNOT sin somehow found himself some sin in a closet? somewhere in the cosmos by way of making humans and then allowing them to sin via...., well, U know, that whole nonsense in the garden. What's so terrible and why do some people find it so difficult to accept the idea of nothingness after death? OF COURSE, I want to live on in some great afterlife! But all you have to do is accept the idea of nothingness after death and all that other stuff (Bible) goes away. Including God. You simply won't be missing out on anything!
      I get it. We find strength in stories of a loving God and heaven, etc. But we should be telling fantasy from reality as adults everybody. And, I think it's ok to find strength in these ideas if God is going to take EVERYONE to heaven. Otherwise, how could we possibly find strength / comfort in these things of God if at the same time we accept /believe in a hell for unbelievers!? For example... family U love, friends, strangers, anyone! We don't even need to know all those other people in the world to have a healthy respect for them by way of not wanting to see them as going to a hideous, unnecessary, convoluted, and any other appropriate word to stick in here, place called hell 🔥🚒!!! And should U think that everyone going to heaven is unjust because it doesn't punish the murderer, etc. consider what punishment is really about. Separation from killing anymore. That's what we try to do here on earth with the murderer. That's what happens at death (can't murder anymore). AND, how about God using the same idea? Simple construct of the murderer being repurposed into a non-murdering person. Perfect! What's not to like?
      Yes, I know, you will try to hold on to the idea God must torture people in hell because, of course,.....got it from the Bible. We can do better!

    • @ComputingTheSoul
      @ComputingTheSoul Před 2 lety

      @@markdomar4944 Where are the ifs?

    • @ComputingTheSoul
      @ComputingTheSoul Před 2 lety

      @@JohnWaaland You've not named a single contradiction

    • @JohnWaaland
      @JohnWaaland Před 2 lety

      @@ComputingTheSoul Well you throw down so much convoluted theology/philosophy I can't make heads or tails. I won't go long like I did before and I wanted to come back to the central issue here. Obviously, peoples concerns over the idea of hell is very important! It's the key to all this religion stuff. Religion is very interesting! But when people merge into literal ways of thinking we harm ourselves and possibly others.
      You're free of course to believe in a literal way. Can be damaging though. When kids are fear mongered into heaven because who wants to go to hell? But heaven/hell are INVISIBLE and we haven't got all of this theological stuff worked out yet. And will we ever as long as it's INVISIBLE?
      Why can't all of us just talk about religion as storys of myth, legend and the like. It's interesting and full of drama! But, we completely go off the rails when we teach kids that they must genuinely fear things within religion that we are taking literally.
      Parents tell their kids about Santa and then later it falls away. But when the kid realizes that it's myth does the parent say, guess what? Santa really does exist and you can believe it's really true. Of course not! So why do we treat invisible things within religion as tho it's literally true?
      I'm trying to uphold the idea of reality and non-reality, fact from fiction, etc.
      If you go into a bookstore/library and cannot tell the difference between fact/fiction, don't worry, things are clearly marked....lol. I realize separating the two can be hard sometimes but seriously a god that walks on water, parts the Red Sea, and has power to LITERALLY toss a person into hell or lovingly float a person into heaven?
      See our dilemmas here?
      People have it really rough trying to figure out which religion to follow but if we don't take it literally we'll neither make the mistake of fear mongering about hell OR overpromising this invisible thing called heaven!
      So, what does the Catholic church teach about hell? I'm STILL confused 🤔

  • @Ujasoncook9267
    @Ujasoncook9267 Před 2 lety

    I want to know more about the zombie outbreak on resurrection day in Roman controlled Jerusalem. Anybody got any historic material from governing authorities of that time period regarding 1000 dead people hanging around?

  • @mrlearningscholar4078

    As Catholics the ascension of our Lord is literally one of the most important dogma and we have it in the Rosary prayer or in Ignatius mediation where we picture ourselves seeing Jesus ascension and examining the moment and what it means.

  • @d2westruth
    @d2westruth Před 2 lety +4

    Perhaps the main reason that apologists don't bring the ascension into their discussions is simply because it isn't necessary. When it comes to atheism/agnosticism Christians are being attacked on the resurrection front and center and therefore they must defend it. Likewise with Judaism. They attack the resurrection, not the ascension. Islam levels a similar attack on the resurrection of Jesus simply because they don't believe that Jesus was crucified to begin with. But oddly enough, Islam DOES believe in the ascension. Neither the ascension nor the resurrection are attacked by the practitioners of most other religions. So when it comes to apologetics, once a Christian has persuaded an unbeliever on the merits of the resurrection, the ascension is accepted as a matter of course. Therefore, why would you expect Christians to bring up an argument no one is arguing about? That would make no sense.
    Secondly, the New Testament doesn't teach that the ascension was the first time that Jesus had gone to the Father. You remember that when Jesus was raised from the dead Mary Magdalene wasn't supposed to touch him because he hadn't returned to the Father yet. But by the end of the day it seems as if he had, because when he appeared to the disciples they were all touching him. Luke also tells us that Jesus appeared to the disicples in various settings accross the span of 40 days. Paul tells us in First Corinthians that Jesus appeared to over 500 people at once. Therfore, "the ascension" as Luke relates it is simply his way of telling us that Jesus was physically leaving for the last time (at least till his second coming, which then the angels also explained in Acts 1).
    Thirdly, your concepts of the three tiers of creation is not "unscientific" as you seem to insinuate. The "three tiers" were always to be understood SPIRITUALLY. That is to say that Heaven (not on this planet) and Hell (within this planet) are SPIRITUAL places; not physical ones. The Bible explains how Satan and his demons had fallen from Heaven to this earth long before the six days of creation (Ezekiel 28:12-19 & Is 14:12ff among others). Therfore Hell was part of the earth long before God brought the planet into orbit around the sun and recreated the surface in Genesis 1. And since that creation was upon the surface of the earth, Hell (Sheol, Hades, however you would like to refer to the underworld) remained below it. When angels "descend from Heaven" onto the earth it is simply because they are coming from a spiritual place outside our atmosphere (perhpas even outside our galaxy) - from a spiritual dimension that we cannot sense with our physical senses - ie. "Heaven.". So then yes, Heaven is "above" and Hell is "beneath." This isn't mythology.
    Fourthly, your dating of Luke to "over 50 years after Jesus" (to account for your supposed "myth" of the ascension), is absolutly false. It makes no sense whatsoever that so many secular scholars want to date the writtings of the Gospels to such late dates. There is way more evidence within the Gospels themselves that they were written much earlier (like within 30 years at the latest). First, it's quite obvious that Jerusalem hadn't been destroyed by the Romans when the Gospel accounts were written or else comments would have been made pointing to the fullfimment of Jesus prophecies about Jerusalem. From a simply cursory reading of the Gospels it is evident that Jerusalem was still intact at the time of the writtings. Secondly, Luke was the last of the synoptic Gospels. We know from the book of Acts that Paul had not been martyred by the time Luke was wrapping up his account to Theophilus. And we know that Paul was Martyred under Nero in 64 AD. Therefore, Luke had to have FINISHED the book of Acts within 30 years after Jesus' crucifixion. And according to Luke's opening in acts chapter 1, the Gospel account was "the former account." SO, if we have Acts written within 30 years, Luke written before Acts, Matthew written before Luke, and Mark being the first Gospel written before either Matthew or Luke..... that makes the early WRITTEN accounts of these eye witnesses most probably within the first 20 years of the occurences. That is NOT enough time for myths to evolve. The hundreds of eye witnesses would have debunked any myth trying to rear it's head.
    We also know that Mark's greatest source of reference (if not the only one) was Jesus' disciple Peter. It is likely that Peter dictated in Aramaic while Marik translated into written Greek. We also know that Matthew and Luke already had written copies of Mark in their possession because of the various quotes lifted straight out of Mark. And that is something which would make a lot of sense since most people, when trying to recall events "for the record" which had transpired some 10-20 years ago, even though they were eye witnesses, they will most probably collaborate in writting their accounts in order to remind each other, etc. Therefore, it makes perfect sense that if Mark had already been written, Matthew and Luke would have wanted to make use of it so as to get Peter's take on the events being written. ALhtough MAtthew was also an eye witness he would have most probably asked the other disciples for their input, INCLUDING the previously written account of Peter/Mark. (So if there ever was a Q source, that Q would have been Peter/Mark's account.)
    The fact that certain "scholars" try and pin the Gospel accounts to later dates of authorship is a testimony to thier biases which are not founded neither in history or science. They "assume" that the stories of resurerctions and healings have to be myths and THERFORE try and pin the dates of writting to be as late as possible. But there is no evidence for such dates; certainly none that can ask us to question the evidence that I've stated above.
    Fifthly, the issue of Jesus being "received by a cloud" (Acts 1:9) falls in line with a lot of "cloud sightings" whenever spiritual forces are being transported all throughout scripture. When Jesus returns it will be "on the clouds." God went before the Israelites in the dessert "in a pillar of cloud." Elijah was taken up in a fiery chariot by a "whirlwind cloud." Daniel saw the "son of Man coming on the clouds." God's presence on Mt Sinai, in the Temple, both going and coming, etc., etc., is always hidden by a cloud. We could go on and on. Why so much about clouds? Because the clouds are a physical manifestation of the spiritual transportation device. When JEsus was "recieved by a cloud" he was simply getting on the "spiritual UFO" so to say. It's as simple as that. You don't have to go and try to make every story that Jesus' disciples gave into some kind of "myth" simply because you don't WANT to believe. Please, next itme do a little more research before making such outlandish assertions.

    • @rejoyy
      @rejoyy Před 2 lety +2

      "please next time do a little more research before making such outlandish assertions"
      You a believer in non-,existent beings are asking that of others? Hilarious!

  • @talktothehand1212
    @talktothehand1212 Před 2 lety +3

    What's wild is being raised in a non-evangenical Christian setting, I notice the stark differences in the worldview that I was taught. Integral to that was an emphasis on the trinity mythology, specifically a mythology that would have explained the ascension immediately with Pentacost, and that what descended after Pentacost was both father and son, and was given onto the disciples, and that christ lives on through the actions that we pass on to each other.
    This interpretation has a big issue though to evangelicals, it posits Revelation as the ramblings of a crazy old man facing persecution. Without Revelation, what could you lord over people's heads in a predatory fire and brimstone manner? I'm a fan of this mythology, because when I came to the age where it was obvious that this was a mythology, I didn't feel like I had been duped or taken advantage of in any way, just told stories to encourage me to be good.
    I'm not coming in with this to defend Christianity, but having a biblically consistent narrative to counter the rapture-obsessed dogma that permeates modern Christianity is really helpful to engage with people married to the mythology. Instead of putting them on the defensive by attacking their beliefs, engaging with them in a way that breaks down the abusive narrative they've been taught is a really effective way to get those "questioning balls" rolling. My goal isn't to convince people that God/Jesus aren't real, but instead that I read the same book, and the things they're saying sound different from what I read.

  • @jimdee9801
    @jimdee9801 Před 8 měsíci

    Curious about your choice of shirt for this one

  • @imagomonkei
    @imagomonkei Před rokem

    Three years now an atheist. I'm glad CZcams sent me to your channel!

  • @alanw505
    @alanw505 Před 2 lety +9

    Because Jesus physically ascensing into heaven on a cloud is about as believable as a talking donkey.

    • @signposts6189
      @signposts6189 Před 2 lety

      Yet there they are, documented as having taken place.

  • @MrKneeV
    @MrKneeV Před 2 lety +4

    I think that the answer is far simpler.
    The Resurrection *barely* factors into Evangelical theology at all. For nearly all Evangelicals, the Resurrection isn't soteriologically necessary, and servas only as a means to prove that everything else He did was legitimate.
    The Ascension doesn't factor into their theology at all except as a point of technical fact.
    Evangelical apologists - and frankly nearly all non-Catholic and non-Orthodox apologists - refrain from discussing it because it is not part of their paradigm and is largely irrelevant to them.

    • @wolfumz
      @wolfumz Před 2 lety +1

      Isn't the resurrection a core tenant of Christianity? I Corinthians 15, possibly the oldest legit Christian creed on record, includes the resurrection as one of the basic components of the faith. How is it that evangelicals only believe the resurrection incidentally? Are you saying that because of evangelicals focus on charismatic preachers, miracles, and apocalypticism?

  • @33roses
    @33roses Před 2 lety +1

    The ascension is important due to scriptures that He says He is leaving His Holy Spirit to live in us and a reminder of him returning.

  • @locutusdborg126
    @locutusdborg126 Před 2 lety

    Liked and subbed. And I am, ironically, an ascended being.