In their Handbook of Christian Apologetics (hereafter: HCA), the Christian philosophers Peter Kreeft and Ronald Tacelli make a case for the resurrection of Jesus.
Their case can be summarized in a brief two-premise argument:
1. IF Kreeft and Tacelli refuted the four alternative
skeptical theories, THEN Kreeft and
Tacelli have proved that the Christian Theory of the resurrection of
Jesus is true (i.e., God raised Jesus from the dead).
2. Kreeft and Tacelli refuted (in HCA) the four
alternative skeptical theories (i.e., the Swoon Theory, the Conspiracy Theory, the Hallucination Theory, and the Myth Theory).
THEREFORE:
3. Kreeft and Tacelli have proved that the Christian Theory of the resurrection of Jesus is true.
Their case for the resurrection of Jesus fails completely because both premises of this argument are false.
The first premise is false because there are at least dozens of different skeptical theories about Jesus' final fate, not just four skeptical theories and the Christian Theory[1]. The second premise is false because their objections against the Swoon Theory are all weak and defective[2], as are their objections against the Conspiracy Theory[3], the Hallucination Theory[4], and the Myth Theory[5]. They failed to refute ANY of the four skeptical theories that they criticized in HCA.
Because both premises of their argument are clearly false, the case for the resurrection of Jesus put forward by Peter Kreeft and Ronald Tacelli in HCA fails completely.
In this current post, I will summarize my criticism of four of the objections made by Kreeft and Tacelli against the Swoon Theory.
OBJECTIONS BASED ON THE GOSPEL OF JOHN
I devoted Chapter 3 of my upcoming book (Thinking Critically about the Resurrection of Jesus, Volume 1: The Failure of Peter Kreeft's Case) to an analysis and critical evaluation of four objections against the Swoon Theory from Kreeft and Tacelli in their book HCA:
Kreeft and Tacelli also raise other objections to the Swoon Theory, but these four are based on the Gospel of John, and these are the objections I will discuss in this current post.
Because I have carefully analyzed and evaluated these objections in my upcoming book, in this post, I will just summarize the problems I found with these four objections.
OBJECTION #2: BREAK THEIR LEGS
Here is how Kreeft and Tacelli state their second objection to the Swoon Theory:
The fact that the Roman soldier did not break
Jesus’ legs, as he did to the other two crucified criminals (Jn 19:31-33), means
that the soldier was sure Jesus was dead. Breaking the legs hastened the death
so that the corpse could be taken down before the sabbath (v. 31). (HCA, p.183)
It is likely that the account of Roman soldiers breaking the legs of the other crucified men and not breaking Jesus' legs is unhistorical. Thus, the "Break Their Legs" objection is based on dubious historical claims:
- The Gospel of John provides a historically unreliable account of the life and words of Jesus.[6]
- The Passion Narrative in the Gospel of John provides a historically unreliable account of the alleged arrest, trials, crucifixion, and burial of Jesus.[7]
- Chapter 19 of the Gospel of John in particular provides a historically unreliable account of Jesus' alleged trial before Pilate, Jesus' crucifixion, and the burial of Jesus.[8]
- The author of the Gospel of John believed that the decision of the soldiers to not break Jesus' legs fulfilled an O.T. messianic prophecy (John 19:36), and this casts doubt on the historicity of that alleged event, because the prophecy might well have been the basis for the alleged event, rather than eyewitness testimony.
Furthermore, the Gospel of John differs from the other three Gospels in these relevant details:
- Only the Gospel of John reports that one of Jesus' disciples was "the beloved disciple" of Jesus (John 13:21-25 and John 19:26-27).
- Only the Gospel of John reports that "the beloved disciple" was present at Jesus' crucifixion to witness these alleged events (John 19:26-27).
- Only the Gospel of John reports that Jesus spoke to his mother and to one of his disciples from the cross (John 19:25-27).
- Only the Gospel of John reports that the Jewish leadership was concerned about the crucified men being left on their crosses over the Sabbath day (John 19:31).
- Only the Gospel of John reports that the Jewish leadership asked Pilate to order his soldiers to break the legs of the crucified men (John 19:31).
- Only the Gospel of John reports that the Roman soldiers broke the legs of some of the crucified men but not the legs of Jesus (John 19:32-33).
The inference from the dubious historical claims (about the breaking of the legs of the other crucified men and the decision of the Roman soldiers to not break Jesus' legs) to the conclusion that the soldiers were "sure Jesus was dead" is a dubious inference. If the soldiers were "sure Jesus was dead," then they would not have poked or stabbed Jesus in the side with a spear to check to see if he was alive (or to make sure that he would die from that wound), as reported by the Gospel of John.
Finally, there was no modern scientific biology or scientific medicine two thousand years ago, and Roman soldiers were unaware of the basic facts of modern biology and medical science. They had no modern medical devices or equipment to check Jesus for signs of life. Thus, the inference from the claim that the soldiers were "sure Jesus was dead" to the conclusion that Jesus was in fact dead, is also a dubious inference.
The "Break Their Legs" objection by Kreeft and Tacelli against the Swoon Theory clearly fails because it is based on historical claims that are probably false, and because it is also based on at least two dubious inferences.
OBJECTION #3: BLOOD AND WATER
Here is how Kreeft and Tacelli state their third objection to the Swoon Theory:
John, an eyewitness, certified that he saw blood and water come from Jesus’ pierced heart (Jn 19:34-35). This shows that Jesus’ lungs had collapsed and he had died of asphyxiation. Any medical expert can vouch for this. (HCA, p. 183)
Like the "Break Their Legs" objection, this objection is based on historical claims that are probably false. All of the problems of historical unreliability with the Gospel of John mentioned concerning the "Break Their Legs" objection apply to this objection as well, including the fact that the author of the Gospel of John believed that the poking or stabbing of Jesus' side was predicted in an O.T. messianic prophecy (John 19:37).
Furthermore, the Gospel of John differs from the other Gospels in the previously mentioned ways, and also in these other relevant ways:
- Only the Gospel of John reports that a Roman soldier poked or stabbed Jesus in the side with a spear.
- Only the Gospel of John reports that Jesus had a wound in his side while he was on the cross.
- Only the Gospel of John reports that blood and water came from a wound in Jesus' side while he was on the cross.
- Only the Gospel of John reports that a disciple of Jesus saw a Roman soldier poke or stab Jesus' side with a spear while Jesus was on the cross.
- Only the Gospel of John reports that a disciple of Jesus saw blood and water come from a wound in Jesus' side while Jesus was on the cross.
- Only the Gospel of John reports that the risen Jesus had a wound in his side when he appeared to his disciples.
- Only the Gospel of John reports that the risen Jesus told his disciple Thomas to touch a wound in his side.
Each of these differences between the Gospel of John and the other three Gospels casts doubt on the historical claims that are the basis of the "Blood and Water" objection.
Also, it is simply false that "an eyewitness, certified that he saw blood and water come from Jesus’ pierced heart". First, whether a clear liquid is water, and whether a reddish liquid is blood, cannot be determined merely by seeing these fluids. Second, the Gospel of John says nothing about an eyewitness seeing liquids "come from Jesus' pierced heart". It only claims that a disciple of Jesus saw liquids come out of a wound in Jesus' side.
There are no details given in the Gospel of John about the precise location, width, depth, or shape of the wound in Jesus' side, so the assumption that Jesus' heart was pierced by the spear is speculation, not a fact.
Finally, it is false that "any medical expert can vouch for" the idea that blood and water flowing from a wound in Jesus' side "shows that...he [Jesus] had died of asphyxiation," because (a) one widely-read article about Jesus' death written by a medical doctor comments that this evidence shows that Jesus did NOT die of asphyxiation[9], and because (b) there are several different medical theories about what caused Jesus' death that have been put forward by different medical doctors.[10] The asphyxiation theory is just one of many medical theories about the cause of Jesus' death.
The "Blood and Water" objection to the Swoon Theory by Kreeft and Tacelli clearly fails, because the historical claims it is based upon are probably false, and because the inference from those alleged historical facts to a particular medical theory (the asphyxiation theory) about Jesus' death is clearly a controversial and dubious inference.
OBJECTION #4: WINDING SHEETS AND ENTOMBMENT
******THIS POST IS STILL IN WORK*******
END NOTES
1. See Chapter 6 of my upcoming book, Thinking Critically about the Resurrection of Jesus, Volume 1: The Failure of Peter Kreeft's Case. Here is a DRAFT version of that chapter:
CHAPTER 6: More than Five Theories
2. For full details on the failure of Kreeft and Tacelli to refute the Swoon Theory, see Chapters 3, 4, and 5 of my upcoming book, Thinking Critically about the Resurrection of Jesus, Volume 1: The Failure of Peter Kreeft's Case. Here are DRAFT versions of those chapters:
CHAPTER 3: Objections to the Swoon Theory Based on John
CHAPTER 4: Objections to the Swoon Theory Based on Other Gospels
3. See my INDEX article with links to the fourteen blog posts I wrote defending the Conspiracy Theory against seven objections by Kreeft and Tacelli:
https://secularfrontier.infidels.org/2019/06/defending-the-conspiracy-theory-index/
4. See my
INDEX article with links to the forty-five blog posts I wrote defending the Hallucination
Theory against fourteen objections by Kreeft and Tacelli:
https://tcaict.blogspot.com/2022/02/defending-hallucination-theory-summary.html
See also my INDEX article with links to
the eleven blog posts I wrote defending the Hallucination Theory against
seven objections by Josh McDowell:
https://secularfrontier.infidels.org/2021/06/did-jesus-rise-from-the-dead-index/
5. See my blog
post, “Defending the Myth Theory: COMPLETED“ at The Secular Frontier:
https://secularfrontier.infidels.org/2022/04/defending-the-myth-theory-completed/
6. See page 62 of DRAFT Chapter 3 of my upcoming book:
CHAPTER 3: Objections to the Swoon Theory Based on John
7. See these posts related to the historical unreliability of the Passion Narrative in the Gospel of John:
The Unreliability of the 4th Gospel – Part 6: One-On-One Dialogues
The Unreliability of the 4th Gospel – Part 11: Chapter 18
The Unreliability of the 4th Gospel - Part 12: Chapter 19
9. Dr. C. Truman Davis wrote this comment:
The 34th verse of the 19th chapter of the Gospel according to John: “And immediately there came out blood and water”. Thus there was an escape of watery fluid from the sac surrounding the heart and blood from the interior of the heart. We, therefore, have rather conclusive post-mortem evidence that Our Lord died, not the usual crucifixion death by suffocation, but of heart failure due to shock and constriction of the heart by fluid in the pericardium.
This quote is from “The Passion of Christ from a Medical Point of View” by Dr. C. Truman Davis, in Arizona Medicine, March 1965. Here is a copy of that article:
https://www.dtodayarchive.org/images/file/Crucifixion_Medical.pdf
10. One review of relevant medical articles on this topic found that there have been at least nine different theories as to the cause of Jesus’ death, plus one medical doctor argued that Jesus did not die on the cross. See the table of different medical theories in this article: “Medical Theories on the Cause of Death in Crucifixion” by Matthew Maslen and Piers Mitchell, in Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, Vol. 99, April 2006, p.186.


