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Answer: Some Christians maintain that hallucinations
or visions cannot explain the supposed post-resurrection
appearances of Jesus. They claim that some five hundred
people, at one time, cannot be deluded with the same
vision. It is true that it is unlikely that two or more
people would have the same hallucination, not to mention
eleven or even five hundred. The question is, however,
if the claims made are true to begin with.
Paul, writing about twenty-five years after the crucifixion
contends, without giving a geographic location, that
"upwards of five hundred brethren" had simultaneously
seen the resurrected Jesus and that many of them were
still alive at the time of his writing (1Corinthians
15:6). No information is provided to indicate whether
this experience was a visionary revelation or an actual
appearance in the flesh. Moreover, Paul does not tell
us whether he was among the five hundred, or whether
he had heard the story from one of them, or whether
it was merely a story that was circulating among certain
Christians. This alleged postresurrection appearance
is conspicuously omitted in both the Gospels and the
Book of Acts.
Had the Corinthians wanted to verify Paul's statement,
it would have been, as Paul must have known, virtually
impossible for them to do so, considering the primitive
means of communication available in those days. Neither
did he mention by name any of the five hundred for possible
contact by the Corinthians, had they wanted to seek
verification. Who experienced this alleged postresurrection
appearance, and when and where this supposedly took
place is not stated. The whole incident was either an
unverifiable rumor utilized by Paul or simply the result
of his overzealous missionary activity.
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