Ed. note: This article is based upon the transcript from programs
produced by the John Ankerberg Show. Additional material has
been added for this print version.
The Evidence for
the Resurrection of Jesus Christ
Part 2: Could the
Evidence Stand Cross-Examination in a Modern Court of Law?
In Part 1, we
indicated that the historical evidence for the Resurrection of Christ was
sufficient to convert even skeptics. In Part 2, we will examine what
leading lawyers have concluded about the evidence for Christ’s
Resurrection.
In Acts 1:3, the
historian Luke tells us that Jesus Christ was resurrected from the dead by
"many infallible proofs." The Greek en pollois tekmariois is an
expression which is defined in the lexicons as "decisive proof" and
indicates the strongest type of legal evidence.1
Lawyers, of
course, are expertly trained to deal in the matter of evidence. Skeptics
can, if they wish, maintain that only the weak-minded would believe in the
literal, physical Resurrection of Christ, but perhaps this only reveals
their own weak-mindedness when it comes to taking the evidence at face
value.
Lawyers are not
weak-minded. Hundreds of lawyers are represented by The National Christian
Legal Society, The Rutherford Institute, Lawyers Christian Fellowship,
Simon Greenleaf University, and other Christian law organizations, schools
and societies. Among their number are some of the most respected lawyers
in the country, men who have graduated from our leading law schools and
gone on to prominence in the world of law. The law schools of Cornell,
Harvard, Yale, Boston, New York University, University of Southern
California, Georgetown, University of Michigan, Northwestern, Hastings
College of Law at U. C. Berkeley, Loyola, and many others are all
represented.2
Among the Board
of Reference or distinguished lectureships given at Dr. Weldon’s alma
mater, Simon Greenleaf University, we could cite Samuel Ericsson, J.D.,
Harvard Law School, Renatus J. Chytil, formerly a lecturer at Cornell and
an expert on Czechoslovakian law, Dr. John W. Brabner-Smith, Dean Emeritus
of the International School of Law, Washington, D.C., and Richard Colby,
J.D., Yale Law School, with Twentieth Century Fox.3
All are Christians who accept the Resurrection of
Christ as a historical fact. In actuality, the truth of the Resurrection
can be determined by the very reasoning used in law to determine questions
of fact. (This procedure is also true for establishing the historical
reliability and accuracy of the New Testament documents.)
So let us
proceed with specific examples of noted legal testimony concerning the
Resurrection.
Lord Darling,
a former Lord Chief Justice in England, asserts: "In its favor as a living
truth there exists such overwhelming evidence, positive and negative,
factual and circumstantial, that no intelligent jury in the world could
fail to bring in a verdict that the resurrection story is true."4
John Singleton
Copley (Lord Lyndhurst, 1772–1863) is recognized
as one of the greatest legal minds in British history. He was Solicitor
General of the British government, Attorney General of Great Britain,
three times the High Chancellor of England and elected High Steward of the
University of Cambridge. He challenges, "I know pretty well what evidence
is; and I tell you, such evidence as that for the Resurrection has never
broken down yet."5
Hugo Grotius
was a noted "jurist and scholar whose works are
of fundamental importance in international law," according to the
Encyclopedia Britannica. He wrote Latin elegies at the age of eight
and entered Leiden University at eleven.6
Considered "the father of international law," he
wrote The Truth of the Christian Religion (1627) in which he
legally defended the historical fact of the Resurrection.
J. N. D.
Anderson, in the words of Armand Nicholi of the
Harvard Medical School (Christianity Today, March 29, 1968), is a
scholar of international repute, eminently qualified to deal with the
subject of evidence. He is one of the world’s leading authorities on
Muslim law, Dean of the Faculty of Law at the University of London,
Chairman of the Department of Oriental Law at the School of Oriental and
African Studies, and Director of the Institute of Advanced Legal Studies
at the University of London.7 In Anderson’s text,
Christianity: The Witness of History, he supplies the standard
evidences for the Resurrection and asks, "How, then, can the fact of the
resurrection be denied?"8 Anderson further emphasizes, "Lastly,
it can be asserted with confidence that men and women disbelieve the
Easter story not because of the evidence but in spite of it."9
Sir Edward
Clark, K. C., observes:
As a lawyer, I have made a
prolonged study of the evidences for the events of the first Easter day.
To me the evidence is conclusive, and over and over again in the High
Court I have secured the verdict on evidence not nearly so compelling.
Inference follows on evidence, and a truthful witness is always artless
and disdains effect. The gospel evidence for the resurrection is of this
class, and as a lawyer I accept it unreservedly as a testimony of
truthful men to facts they were able to substantiate.10
Irwin H. Linton
was a Washington, D.C. lawyer who argued cases
before the U.S. Supreme Court. In A Lawyer Examines the Bible, he
challenges his fellow lawyers "by every acid test known to the law…to
examine the case for the Bible just as they would any important matter
submitted to their professional attention by a client…."11
He believes that the evidence for Christianity is "overwhelming" and that
at least "three independent and converging lines of proof," each of which
"is conclusive in itself," establish the truth of the Christian faith.12
Linton observed that "the logical, historical…proofs of…Christianity are
so indisputable that I have found them to arrest the surprised attention
of just about every man to whom I have presented them…."13
He further argues the Resurrection "is not only so established that the
greatest lawyers have declared it to be the best proved fact of all
history, but it is so supported that it is difficult to conceive of any
method or line of proof that it lacks which would make [it] more certain."14
And that, even among lawyers, "he who does not accept wholeheartedly the
evangelical, conservative belief in Christ and the Scriptures has never
read, has forgotten, or never been able to weigh—and certainly is utterly
unable to refute—the irresistible force of the cumulative evidence upon
which such faith rests…."15
He concluded the
claims of Christian faith are so well established by such a variety of
independent and converging proofs that "it has been said again and again
by great lawyers that they cannot but be regarded as proved under the
strictest rules of evidence used in the highest American and English
courts."16
Simon Greenleaf
was the author of the classic three-volume text,
A Treatise on the Law of Evidence (1842), which, according to Dr.
Wilbur Smith "is still considered the greatest single authority on
evidence in the entire literature on legal procedure."17
Greenleaf himself is considered one of the greatest authorities on
common-law evidence in Western history. The London Law Journal
wrote of him in 1874,
It is no mean honor to
America that her schools of jurisprudence have produced two of the
finest writers and best esteemed legal authorities in this century—the
great and good man, Judge Story, and his eminent and worthy associate
Professor Greenleaf. Upon the existing law of evidence (by Greenleaf)
more light has shown from the New World than from all the lawyers who
adorn the courts of Europe.18
Further,
Dr. Simon Greenleaf was one
of the greatest legal minds we have had in this country. He was the
famous Royal Professor of Law at Harvard University, and succeeded
Justice Joseph Story as the Dane Professor of Law in the same
university. H. W. H. Knotts in the Dictionary of American Biography
says of him: "To the efforts of Story and Greenleaf is ascribed the
rise of the Harvard Law School to its eminent position among the legal
schools of the United States."… Greenleaf concluded that the
Resurrection of Christ was one of the best supported events in history,
according to the laws of legal evidence administered in courts of
justice.19
In his book
Testimony of the Evangelists Examined by the Rules of Evidence
Administered in Courts of Justice, Greenleaf writes:
All that Christianity asks of
men…is, that they would be consistent with themselves; that they would
treat its evidences as they treat the evidence of other things; and that
they would try and judge its actors and witnesses, as they deal with
their fellow men, when testifying to human affairs and actions, in human
tribunals. Let the witnesses [to the Resurrection] be compared with
themselves, with each other, and with surrounding facts and
circumstances; and let their testimony be sifted, as if it were given in
a court of justice, on the side of the adverse party, the witness being
subjected to a rigorous cross-examination. The result, it is confidently
believed, will be an undoubting conviction of their integrity, ability
and truth.20
Lord Caldecote,
Lord Chief Justice of England, observed that an "overwhelming case for the
Resurrection could be made merely as a matter of strict evidence"21
and that "His Resurrection has led me as often as I have tried to examine
the evidence to believe it as a fact beyond dispute…."22 (cf.,
Thomas Sherlock’s Trial of the Witnesses of the Resurrection of Jesus
Christ, which places the Resurrection in a legally argued forum and in
the words of lawyer Irwin Linton, "will give anyone so reading it the
comfortable assurance that he knows the utmost that can be said against
the proof of the central fact of our faith and also how utterly every such
attack can be met and answered."23 At the end of the legal
battle one understands why, "The jury returned a verdict in favor of the
testimony establishing the fact of Christ’s resurrection."24)
But lawyers
familiar with the evidence could do the same today either for themselves
or an impartial jury. Although admissibility rules vary by state and no
lawyer can guarantee the decision of any jury (no matter how persuasive
the evidence), an abundance of lawyers will testify today that the
Resurrection would stand in the vast majority of law courts.
In conclusion,
in these two installments, we have shown that both those who were
committed skeptics and those who are expertly trained to sift evidence
have declared, on the basis of the evidence, that the Resurrection of
Jesus Christ is a historical fact. Those who ignore the evidence do so at
their own risk.
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