Jesus' Tomb – Who Really Rolled the Stone Away? Christian Apologist Lee Strobel Answers (Interview)
Have you ever really sat down and thought through who rolled away the
large stone sealing the tomb of Jesus? Christian apologist Lee Strobel, whose
newly-revised New York Times bestseller The
Case for Christ was released
recently, walks readers through his investigation about this
question.
Strobel, who was a former legal editor with the Chicago Tribune and an
atheist-turned-Christian, recalled in his years-long quest to "follow the
evidence wherever it took [him]" about the Bible and Jesus in gathering
information for his book, that he went to meet renowned Christian apologist
William Lane Craig, PhD, DTh, in his Atlanta office, one day to ask him about
Jesus' tomb.
He wanted to ask Craig "how secure his (Christ's) grave was from outside
influences?" "The tighter the security, the less likely the body could have been
tampered with. 'How protected was Jesus' tomb?'" Strobel inquired.
First, Dr. Craig found it necessary to describe how first century tombs
looked and worked based on archaeologists' determinations from excavations of
such sites.
"There was a slanted groove that led down to a low entrance, and a large
disk-shaped stone was rolled down this groove and lodged into place across the
door. A smaller stone was then used to secure the disk."
Craig said that while it would be easy to roll the large disk down the
groove, it would require "several men" to roll the stone back up in order to
reopen the tomb. "In that sense it was quite secure."
That explanation, however, did not satisfy Strobel, a so-called "document
rat" who sniffed out every possibility during his days as a journalist. He
probed further with a question that has been bandied about by skeptics and
leading experts alike: "was Jesus' tomb guarded?"
The widely-held theories are that Roman soldiers kept watch over Christ's
tomb and faced death if they failed to complete their assignment. Also, should
the guards fail and the body be stolen from the tomb, it could perpetuate the
belief of a risen Savior among followers of Christ.
Strobel asked Craig, "'Are you convinced there were Roman
guards?'"
He was surprised by what the expert had to say. "'Only Matthew reports
that guards were placed around the tomb ... I don't think the guard story is an
important facet of the evidence for the Resurrection. For one thing, it's too
disputed by contemporary scholarship. I find it's prudent to base my arguments
on evidence that's most widely accepted by the majority of scholars, so the
guard story is better left aside.
"'The idea that the empty tomb is the result of some hoax, conspiracy or
theft is simply dismissed today. So the guard story has become sort of
incidental.'"
Regarding guards, Strobel says there are several viewpoints documented in
the Bible. Boston University's Dr. Michael Martin points out that in the Gospel
of Matthew when Mary Magdalene and the other Mary arrived at the tomb at dawn
there was a rock in front of it, but after an earthquake an angel descended and
rolled back the stone.
In the Gospel of Mark the two women arrive at the tomb at sunrise to find
that the stone had been rolled back, while in Luke, when the two arrive at dawn,
they find the stone already rolled back and two men are inside.
The Gospels vary in their perspectives on exactly how Jesus' tomb was
opened. Matthew and Luke, however, both agree that Mary Magdalene and the other
Mary were both onsite and likely shared news of the Resurrection with the other
disciples.
Dr. Craig said, "'The core of the story is the same: Joseph of Arimathea
takes the body of Jesus, puts it in a tomb, the tomb is visited by a small group
of women followers of Jesus early on the Sunday morning following His
crucifixion, and they find that the tomb is empty. They see a vision of angels
saying that Jesus is risen.'"
After Strobel applied his investigatory skills, what does Strobel believe
for sure?
His opinion on the stone and the tomb seems to somewhat lean towards one
theory — perhaps one of the few times that Strobel has not arrived at a decisive
answer.
He tells The Christian Post, "I think the example of the angel at the
tomb is a good one. I don't think we have good evidence in terms of who it was
who actually rolled the stone away."
The former journalist concludes that the Bible is a mystery that may
never be fully understood.
"We look through a glass dimly in this world, the Bible says. We don't
have all the answers, but I believe we have enough evidence to draw conclusions
from and to trust that one day we'll get the remainder."