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Answer: Paul claims that Jesus was seen, soon after
his alleged resurrection, by "the twelve" (1 Corinthians
15:5). The term, "the twelve," refers to the inner-
circle of Jesus' closest disciples. The respective later
versions of the alleged postresurrection encounter between
Jesus and his innermost circle of disciples found in
the Gospels and the Book of Acts are careful to record
that due to Judas' defection there were only eleven
disciples at that time.
Matthew alleges that "the eleven disciples went to
Galilee, to the mountain which Jesus designated. And
when they saw him, they worshipped; but doubted" (Matthew
28:17); Mark maintains that "afterward he appeared to
the eleven themselves as they were reclining" (Mark
16:14); Luke states that "they arose that very hour
and returned to Jerusalem, and found gathered together
the eleven and those who were with them" (Luke 24:33).
John, alone, does not give a precise number for those
disciples left after Judas' defection but does refer
to "Thomas, one of the twelve" (John 20:24). Here "the
twelve" simply indicates that Thomas was one of the
original twelve. Acts 1:13 lists eleven disciples to
which was added Matthias in order to make up the full
quorum (Acts 1:26). It is seen from Acts 1:12-26 that
Matthias was not appointed to be a member of the apostolic
inner-circle until sometime after their alleged group
encounter with a resurrected Jesus. Whether referred
to as "the twelve" or as the deficient "the eleven"
they are a cohesive group separate from those who were
with them. However, the term "the twelve" apparently
did not become institutionalized, so that when deficient
of that number the group did not bare that name.
Paul does not mention either the defection of Judas
or the appointment of Matthias. He does refer to the
inner-circle of "the twelve" experiencing a postresurrection
appearance at a time when the Gospels and Acts respectively
maintained there were only eleven. There is no reason
to believe that Paul institutionalized the term "the
twelve" and was actually referring to "the eleven."
In addition, it is possible that Paul never heard of
any defection by Judas or his replacement by Matthias
because these incidents never happened. They may be
legends developed within the church during the interval
between Paul's writing to the Corinthians and the authorship
of the Gospels and Acts. As it stands, Paul's use of
the term "the twelve" to describe a postresurrection
appearance to the inner-circle disciples cannot be considered
trustworthy. At a time when the inner-circle of disciples
precisely numbered eleven to call them "the twelve"
places in doubt, either the reliability of Paul's sources
concerning the disciples or the story of Judas' defection.
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