from the site :   Patheos
 
 
 
The Resurrection of Jesus:  Physical/Bodily or Spiritual/Mystical?

 
What would it mean to say that the  risen Jesus is a physical/bodily 
reality? That he continues to be a molecular,  protoplasmic, corpuscular being 
existing somewhere? Does that make any  sense?

By _Marcus Borg_ (#author-short) , April 18, 2011



The choice between understanding  the resurrection of Jesus as 
"physical/bodily" or as "spiritual/mystical" was  included in the invitation to 
write 
this essay. The distinction is helpful; it  makes clear that Christians have 
understood the meanings of Easter in different  ways. But for more than one 
reason, including the common meanings of these words  in modern English, I 
don't like either option.  
I begin with the positive, with what  we can say with certainty about the 
meaning of Easter in the gospels and the New  Testament. It is twofold: Jesus 
lives and Jesus is Lord.
 
Both convictions are grounded in  experience. Some of Jesus' followers 
experienced him after his death as a figure  of the present, not just of the 
past. And they experienced him as a divine  reality, now "one with God" and "at 
the right hand of God." 
Many of these experiences were  visions. Paul's experience of the risen 
Jesus on the road to Damascus, described  three times in Acts 9, 22, and 26, 
and referred to by Paul in Galatians 1, was  clearly a vision. It happened a 
few years—three to five—after the death of  Jesus.
 
In 1 Corinthians 15, Paul refers to  his experience as belonging in a list 
of other visions of Jesus—to Peter, the  twelve disciples (though obviously 
not to Judas), James, and five hundred people  at the same time. 
Visions are about "seeing," as the  word implies. Often visions involve 
seeing and hearing a person in bodily form  and can even include tactility, a 
sense of touching or being  embraced. 
But visions do not always include  seeing a bodily form. As Acts describes 
Paul's vision of the risen Christ, Paul  saw a brilliant light, but not a 
bodily form. Then a voice identified the  brilliant light as Jesus. Yet Paul 
can say, as he does 1 Corinthians 9:1, "I  have seen the Lord." 
In addition to visions of Jesus, I  think there were non-visionary 
experiences of the same presence and power that  his followers had known in 
Jesus 
during his historical life. "The Spirit of the  Lord" was upon him, as the 
gospels put it, and his followers continued to  experience the same Spirit 
after his death. 
And there was something about these  experiences that led to the second 
meaning of Easter in the gospels and the New  Testament. Not only that Jesus 
lives, that he is a figure of the present and not  just of the past, but that 
he is "Lord"—a divine reality, one with God and  having the qualities of 
God, at "the right hand of God." 
So Paul refers to the risen Jesus in  Acts and his letters: Jesus is Lord. 
So also in the story of Thomas in John 20.  When Jesus appears to him, 
Thomas exclaims, "My Lord and my God!" In both  Matthew 28 and Luke 24, we are 
told that his followers "worshipped" the risen  Jesus. 
This second meaning of Easter  distinguishes experiences of Jesus from 
other experiences of somebody who has  died. Studies suggest that about half of 
surviving spouses will have at least  one vivid experience of their deceased 
spouse. But if they do, they do not  exclaim "My Lord and my God," as if 
their spouse is now Lord and one with God.  But there was something about the 
experiences of Jesus after his death that led  to this exclamation. They 
were "numinous" experiences—experiences of the  sacred—and not just "ghostly" 
experiences of a dead person. 
A Physical/Bodily  Resurrection? 
Because of the common meaning of "physical/bodily" in  modern English, I do 
not think the resurrection of Jesus means this.  Physical/bodily means 
fleshly, molecular, protoplasmic, corpuscular  existence.
 
But the risen Jesus is not in this  sense a physical/bodily reality. The 
resurrection stories in the New Testament  make that clear. The risen Jesus 
appears in a locked room (Jn. 20). He journeys  with two of his followers for 
a couple of hours and is not recognized, and when  he is recognized, he 
vanishes (Lk. 24). He appears in both Jerusalem (Luke and  John) and Galilee 
(Matthew and John). He appears to Stephen in his dying moments  (Acts 7). He 
appears to Paul in or near Damascus as a brilliant light (Acts 9).  He appears 
to the author of Revelation on an island off the coast of Turkey in  the 
late 90s of the first century (Rev. 1). 
These texts are not about Jesus being  restored to his previous life as a 
physical being. If such events happen, they  are resuscitations: resuscitated 
persons resume the finite physical life they  had before, and will die 
again someday. Whatever affirming the resurrection of  Jesus means, it does not 
mean this. 
Moreover, what would it mean to say  that the risen Jesus is a 
physical/bodily reality? That he continues to be a  molecular, protoplasmic, 
corpuscular 
being existing somewhere? Does that make  any sense? How can the risen and 
living Jesus be all around us and with us,  present everywhere, if he is 
bodily and physical? 
A Mystical/Spiritual  Resurrection? 
I also decline this option because of the widespread  associations of these 
words in modern English. To call something "mystical" or  to say "sounds 
like mysticism" commonly means that you don't need to take it  seriously. 
And given the modern world-view in  which the physical and material are 
assigned a greater reality than "the  spiritual," to speak of the resurrection 
of Jesus as "spiritual" assigns it a  lesser and commonly unimportant 
significance. It's "just spiritual," not really  real. 
This is unfortunate, for the ancient  meanings of "mystical" and 
"spiritual" suggest a reality that is more important,  more significant, than 
the 
space-time world of our ordinary everyday experience.  In the pre-modern 
meanings of "spiritual" and "mystical," the resurrection of  Jesus was both: 
the 
spiritual is about "the really real" and the mystical is  about knowing, 
experiencing, "the really real." 
The central meaning of Easter is not  about whether something happened to 
the corpse of Jesus. Its central meanings  are that Jesus continues to be 
known and that he is Lord. The tomb couldn't hold  him. He's loose in the 
world. He's still here. He's still recruiting for the  kingdom of God. 
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Marcus J. Borg is professor emeritus  in the philosophy department at 
Oregon State University, where he held the  Hundere Chair in Religion and 
Culture, and author of the New York Times  bestselling _Meeting Jesus Again for 
the 
First  Time_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0060609176/ref=as_li_tf_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=patheoscom04-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=
0060609176) , _The Heart of  Christianity_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0060730684/ref=as_li_tf_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=patheoscom04-20&linkCode=as2&camp=17
89&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0060730684) , _The Last Week_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0060845392/ref=as_li_tf_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=patheoscom04-20&lin
kCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0060845392) ,  and _Jesus_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0061434345/ref=as_li_tf_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=pathe
oscom04-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=9325&creativeASIN=0061434345) . 
His new  book, _Speaking  Christian_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0061976555/ref=as_li_tf_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=patheoscom04-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&crea
tive=9325&creativeASIN=0061976555) , has just been released by HarperOne. 
Borg was an active member of the  Jesus Seminar when it focused on the 
historical Jesus and he has been chair of  the historical Jesus section of the 
Society of Biblical Literature. 

-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
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