![]() The visions of Peter and Cornelius in Acts, and even the appearances of Paul on the road to Damascus, are distinctly different from these encounters. And then suddenly, the hallucinations stopped. Lastly, these very detailed, parallel, integrated hallucinations had to be experienced repeatedly across 40 days during which the disciples were convinced they repeatedly interacted with Jesus here on earth. It’s hard to believe that their parallel multisensory hallucinations were smoothly integrated. In contexts like these, the disciples were interacting not only with Jesus but also with each other, both physically and verbally. According to the gospels, the risen Jesus interacted with his disciples in a number of ways, including eating food they gave him (Luke 24:41- 43) and Jesus cooking fish for them on the shore of the lake (John 21:1-14). Given the level of multisensory details reported in cases like the one in Luke 24, the probability of mere coincidence that they all saw the same thing is ridiculously low.Īnother reason complicates this problem: the hallucinations would have to be not only parallel but also integrated. The plausibility of a collective hallucination is obviously inversely proportional to its level of detail. To explain the facts, the hallucination theory would have to be applied to more than a dozen people at once (Luke 24:36-43). (Luke 24:11)īut things get even worse for the hallucination hypothesis. (Daniel 12:2-3, Isaiah 26:19) Because of this, the disciples were initially also skeptical of others’ accounts of the empty tomb or of encounters with Jesus. Messianic expectations in Judaism in the 1st-century didn’t include the resurrection of the messiah except in the general resurrection at the final judgment. Rather than anticipating the resurrection, they were grief-filled and afraid. To their embarrassment, the gospels make it clear that the disciples didn’t understand Jesus' somewhat puzzling predictions of his own death and return to life as one of impending bodily resurrection until after the event. They didn’t expect a miracle at all, let alone resurrection. The apostles weren't like eager religious pilgrims who flock to holy sites hoping to see visions. In addition, the disciples were probably not in a state of mind that made them prone to hallucinations. Luke reports that at least five women were involved, and we know that group hallucinations are extremely unlikely. At first, she mistook him to be a gardener. ![]() (Luke 24:4) Mary Magdalene wasn't expecting to see Jesus. Luke interviewed at least some of the women and reported that they were confused to find the tomb empty. Their entire reason for visiting Jesus' tomb early in the morning was to anoint his dead body. For one thing, the women didn't expect the resurrection. The hallucination hypothesis is plagued with problems. ![]()
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