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Rev. Dr. Monte Canfield

Rev. Dr. Monte Canfield
Location
Newcomerstown, Ohio, USA
Birthday
December 28
Title
Rev. Dr. Monte Canfield
Company
Retired
Bio
Retired Protestant Pastor and Theologian, jointly credentialed in the United Church of Christ and the Moravian Church. Education: BA, MA, M.Div, Thd. Public Service: NY State Office of Executive Development, Management Intern; Federal Exec. Branch: Executive Office of the President, Budget Examiner, Bureau of the Budget; Interior, Director of Energy and Minerals, Bureau of Land Management; Non Profit: Ford Foundation, Deputy Director, Energy Policy Project; Congressional: Director, Office of Special Projects; Director, Division of Energy and Materials, General Accounting Office; Private industry: Vice President, Grow Group, Inc.; Chief Executive Officer, US Paint; Owner, the Energy Center, St. Louis. Christian service: Pastor, First Congregational UCC, Ottawa, Illinois; Pastor, St. Paul's UCC, Port Washington, Ohio; Pastor, Moravian Church, Gnadenhutten, Ohio.

Rev. Dr. Monte Canfield's Links

Memoirs and Biographical (also see Motorcycling Memories)
Musical Tribute Essays, Playlists, Videos
Motorcycling Memories
The Christian Calendar Series
Essays on the Exodus and the Ten Commandments
Reflections on Faith
APRIL 12, 2010 7:14PM

Appearances of the Risen Christ (1 of 5) for 2010

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resurrectionappearance3

 
I am a Christian theologian. A form of this essay was first published in April, 2009. It is part of my Christian Calendar Series; and I have redacted it substantially for 2010.

This series of five essays focuses on one of the key elements of Christianity: the Resurrection of Jesus, the Christ.

These essays are not short. Understanding faith is not a series of sound bites. I write them so that my readers can use them as an aid in their own spiritual reflection. Each person must make his or her own decisions about the meaning of faith, including Christianity. Hopefully, by reading these essays the fundamental claim of Christianity, the Resurrection, can be better understood.   

In this essay we will explore three things.  

First, the importance to a Christian of belief that the Resurrection is true.

Second, conclusions which I have come to after years of study of the Resurrection.  

And, third, the importance of the appearances of the Risen Lord after his Resurrection.


We begin with the importance of the Resurrection to Christian faith.

If, at some point in a Christian's life he or she cannot believe that the Resurrection of Jesus is true, then that person's faith is incomplete.  What distinguishes Christianity from all other religions is the belief in the truth of this event: the raising by God of Jesus of Nazareth from the grave.

I know something about trying to skirt around, to rationalize, this issue.  I did it for years; telling myself I really was a good Christian, going through all of the right motions.  But I doubted that a Resurrection happened. And I desperately tried to study my way to that belief; but I couldn't get there that way. Finally, after much anguish and prayer, literally for years, God gave me the faith to believe.

Having finally, after years of struggle, come to believe in the truth of the Resurrection I was able then, after God gave me the faith, to study and to better understand some of the basis of that belief. I want to share that understanding with you in this series.

I do this with two goals in mind.

Foremost, I wish to share it with those Christians who may still be struggling with the truth of the Resurrection.  I know the struggle you are going through, because I have been there.  Yet, it seems to me wholly possible that the Holy Spirit can convict you of the truth of this most important event in history, even as I was eventually convicted.

Second, I would like to share with those who believe the truth of the Resurrection some of the conclusions I have come to that shore up my own faith. I do this in the hope that your faith might also be further strengthened.

Now we look at conclusions I have come to regarding the truth of the Resurrection. And I believe that the appearances of the Risen Lord after the Resurrection provide the key to my understanding it.

I have stated many times before what I firmly believe: that belief in the Resurrection of Jesus is a primary necessity of Christianity.  With St. Paul I believe that If Christ be not raised, then we Christians are fools.

Here are my conclusions, based on decades of study.  

One: that the Risen Lord attested to in the Bible is the same Jesus of Nazareth who was crucified, dead and buried.  In other words, that the Risen Lord is not some abstraction, some hope, some ghost, some result of group hysteria, or a vision or a dream; but is, in fact, the person, Jesus of Nazareth.

Two: that there can be no Resurrection without death. That is, that Jesus of Nazareth really died, that nothing was faked, that this was not some resuscitation of a person who was in a coma or deep sleep, or other such nonsense.

Three: that death is the total and complete sundering of human relationships. That is, that Jesus' death was not different than our own, and that it was a complete, absolute, final ending to Jesus' earthly life.
 
Four: that Resurrection is a pure gift from God, a pure grace, which overcomes the finality of death. And nothing, absolutely nothing, that anyone does, beyond having faith,  modifies that grace in any way.

Five: that death has absolutely nothing to do with the freeing of an immortal soul from a finite and evil body; the concept that the soul is immortal is a Greek idea and is foreign to the Biblical idea of Resurrection.

Six: that Resurrection has to do with the raising of the entire being who has died.  That is, body and spirit, or "soul," are integrally united in what we call today, the "self" or the "person."  In other words, that an individual, identifiable, discreet, conscious person is raised, not an abstract, ethereal wisp, a mere shade or shadow of the whole person.

Seven: that the Resurrection of Jesus cannot be understood apart from the Cross. That is, that the Resurrection apart from the death of Jesus and his sacrificial (agape) love for us is at best a meaningless anomaly, a one-time-only curiosity which holds no useful insight for us.

Eight: the resurrected body is not "human" as we know it, but rather is, as St. Paul attests, in a way we cannot perceive, "glorified," all the while maintaining the same personal identity it had before death.

Nine: Resurrection in the abstract is meaningless to us.  It is meaningful only as it relates to the specific purposes of God.  Just so, Christ's Resurrection would be meaningless to us without the purposes of witnessing to the glory of God and instructing the faithful, through the statements of the resurrected Lord, on the intentions of God for the lives of the faithful.

Ten: the primary effect of Resurrection is to reestablish relationships: between God and humankind and between humans whose relationships were severed by death.  If God had no interest in reestablishing relationships with us there would have been no need for any Resurrection at all.

Eleven: that relationship with God is meaningful for Christians primarily in the context of the faith community which the Risen Lord established, the Church, and within the context of His instruction to that community to share the Word of God to the entire world.

Twelve: - and this is the most important of all, and also the most difficult to understand - that the Resurrection occurred at the intersection of time, or history, as we know it and eternity.

As an event occurring at the cusp of time, space and eternity the Resurrection falls within a group of events that the Church calls an "eschatological event;" meaning that it is an event signaling the "last days."
 
We are living in a period between the beginning of the last days, signified by the coming of God in Christ, and the culmination of the last days at the second coming of Christ.

We live in what is known in the Church as the "in-between" time; the time of "already" - meaning the breaking in of the Kingdom of God with the coming of Jesus - and "not yet" - meaning the final triumph of the Kingdom of God when Christ comes again.
 
Just as Jesus left eternity and entered the time and space of creation at his conception, so too, after his Resurrection and the appearances he left time and space as we know it and returned to eternity.

That is the main reason we can't "prove" the Resurrection.  It was an event that moved beyond history.  Certain aspects surrounding the Resurrection have been made available to our consciousness by God, in particular the appearances of the Risen Lord. Those we will look at carefully.

But, by definition, the very act of Resurrection itself lies beyond human understanding. It simply does not fit what we know about how things work.


I conclude this first essay with a brief introduction to the importance of the appearances of the Risen Lord to understanding the Resurrection.  We will discuss the appearances in detail in the following essays.   

In my Easter Reflection I told you that there were three basic reasons why people for the first 1800 years or so of Christianity believed the truth of the Resurrection.

First, they believed it because the Bible said it was true. But, since the Enlightenment and the scientific revolution that position has been challenged constantly by those who think that we either have to prove the Bible scientifically or explain a lot of it away.

You already know that I believe that we cannot "prove" almost any important aspects of the Bible scientifically and that there is no reason to try to rationalize away key aspects of the faith.

Second, they believed it because witnesses that they trusted said that they saw the Risen Lord, after his crucifixion and burial. That is, they testified that the Risen Lord, the same Jesus of Nazareth who was crucified, appeared to them after he had died.  

And, third, those same disciples and many others, even to this day, testified, and still testify, that the Risen Lord is alive and active in their own lives, even as I testify to the activity of Christ in my own life.

The Christians who make up the Church are living witnesses to the truth of the Resurrection.  As the body of Christ, Christians within the Church witness today to the truth of the living Christ working in our daily lives.

In fact, it is our witness that keeps Christianity alive, and provides the hope for generations of Christians as yet unborn.  Without the witness of his body, the Church, Resurrection faith would die within a few generations.


I will focus the rest of this series on the appearances after Jesus death by the Risen Christ to the disciples and others. The four gospels, Acts and First Corinthians all attest to these appearances, and they form the basic fabric from which the belief that the Resurrection is true is constructed.

It is these eye witness accounts recorded in the Bible  that most clearly explain the basis of the faith of the original Christian communities.

It is the trust that the communities of faith placed in these witnesses that allows us to believe the stories of these eye witnesses. In other words, for example, when the Gospel writers write what they do about the appearances, I trust that they, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit, are writing truth, not lies or fabrications.

And, likewise, when  Paul tells me that the Risen Lord appeared to Him on the road to Damascus, and when Luke, in Acts, confirms that event, I trust both Paul and Luke to tell me the truth, and not to lie about it.

And that trust is part of another trust: that the Bible is the inspired witness to the Word of God, Jesus Christ.  In other words, Christians believe that the Bible is the primary revelation of God in Jesus Christ.

The revelation of God in Christ in the Bible is the normative revelation of God to Christians. Upon its words Christians make decisions about the nature of God and of God's relationship to us.  

When Christians believe that the Bible offers such a revelation of God to us, then Christians not only trust what the witnesses to the Risen Christ say, but also trust that what they said is truthfully recorded by the biblical writers.

Rushing through complicated theological issues will likely result in little light, so we will instead walk, not run, together in this series through an overview of the appearances of the Risen Lord, and see if we can discern some fundamental aspects of these appearances. I will publish only one of the following four essays each week to give you time to read and contemplate each essay.



God bless you all.

 Monte

 



Original posting:1293 page views on 2010 04 12
This posting: 508 page views 2010 04 24

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Hello. Thank you for this. You might enjoy my new post, "The Day I Met Jesus." Sometimes I think he gets lost in all the words.
Thanks, Penrose, and I will certainly take a look at your post.

Monte
Just as Jesus left eternity and entered the time and space of creation at his conception, so too, after his Resurrection and the appearances he left time and space as we know it and returned to eternity.

What a glorious and awesome mystery this is. I was just trying to explain to my daughter, the passage, where the door was locked but Christ appeared, however he wasn't a spirit because Thomas touched his wounds.

I will be interested to read your next posts on Christ's appearances.
Thank you, Anne. I am glad you are taking this journey with us.


Monte
Hi, Bonnie. Glad you came by. I would like to witness one of those big miracles some times, but there have been so many "little" miracles in my life and in the lives of my loved ones that I will settle for those. The only time I tried to walk on water I was like Peter and sank like a rock. And I wasn't even 1/3 as heavy as I am now, since I was 10. ;-)

Monte
Monte....This was masterfully done and I am grateful for all the work you put into this piece. The Resurrection was always a sticking point for me as a Christian. I struggled with it for years until finally I just gave in and gave myself over to faith. I just believe. I know there is no scientific evidence to prove that it took place other than the witness of men who lived at the time. I know all this, but I CHOSE to believe. And that is what it all boils down to doesn't it...you either believe through faith, or you do not.
Yes, Torman. Precisely, "you either believe through faith, or you do not." You can't study your way to faith, or do all the good works in the world, or worry your way, or go through the motions of church and all of that. You must, in your heart, make a "leap of faith."

monte
Looking forward to the series, Monte. You always enlighten.
Monte, I looked over that scripture and you're right Thomas didn't actually touch Jesus. Jesus offered, but then Thomas saw it was Jesus.
Hy Monte, great post as usual.
It's always good to hear how some people have struggled to get to where they are and be at peace. I had lost all faith in anything for a while, honestly it felt intentional at times. But I got my faith back in the oddest way (I think). I was whatching the Science channel show on how the Earth was made. Some where between the 100th and 150th "coincidence" I learned that Earth had to be done with some kind of higher intellegence. I'll never buy into the idea that it's ~6000 years old, but no one can convince me that there is not a God.
Thanks, Pilgrim, much appreciated.

Anne, yes, the key to Thomas is that he finally understood who Jesus was.

Monte
Hey, TT, good to have you here. I think that, for me, science opens up to us more and more the obvious idea that it takes far too many "coincidences" piled on one another to not see purpose in the universe. And new theories in physics even open the idea of multiple universes which raises even more clearly that at least we are beginning to admit that there is more than this physical universe as we now know it.

Monte
Thanks so much for ministering to us Christians on Open Salon. R
Thanks, Diva, for reading and commenting. It is a way for me to give back to believers what I have done my best to learn and understand about faith over all these years. I am glad you enjoy reading my work.

Monte
Monte,

I'll be here reading also. The leap of faith is so often sidetracked by worldly musings. Setting aside today seems imperative to maintaining faith.
It helps to regognize that small miracles abound, and to not fall victim to thinking that proof is the key. This is not like analyzing economic statistics or chemical compounds in beakers in labs.
Thanks, AKA, I agree completely. Faith is not science. Personally, I think that they are compatible, but it will take a lot more good will on both sides than I see now for that to become a popular idea.

You could not have said this better, "It helps to recognize that small miracles abound, and to not fall victim to thinking that proof is the key. This is not like analyzing economic statistics or chemical compounds in beakers in labs."

Monte
Thank you, Monte. I have been struggling with this and feel better knowing that there is no magic bullet or group process; that we have to make our own journeys of faith.
Hi, Zuma: I still have doubts now and then. I think it is human nature to doubt. As we walk our own paths I believe that God leads us and accepts us, with all of our flaws, including doubts at time.

Monte