
Skeptics Turned Believers
The resurrection of Jesus Christ stands as a pivotal claim of Christianity, and its credibility is bolstered by the transformations of skeptics like Simon Greenleaf and Frank Morison, who, through rigorous examination of evidence, became convinced of its truth. These non-biblical figures—initially doubters—offer compelling, logical arguments rooted in historical and legal scrutiny, making their conclusions a powerful case for the resurrection.
Simon Greenleaf, a 19th-century Harvard law professor and co-founder of its law school, was a skeptic of Christianity. Known for his work A Treatise on the Law of Evidence, Greenleaf applied legal standards to the Gospel accounts. He argued that the testimonies of Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John (e.g., Matthew 28:1-10, John 20:1-18) hold up as credible eyewitness reports. In his book The Testimony of the Evangelists (1874), Greenleaf noted the consistency of the resurrection narratives despite minor variations, a hallmark of authentic, uncoached testimony. He emphasized that the disciples’ willingness to die for their claims, as tradition records (e.g., Peter’s crucifixion), defies the behavior of liars protecting a hoax. Greenleaf concluded that the resurrection met the burden of proof beyond reasonable doubt, converting him from skeptic to believer.
Similarly, Frank Morison, a 20th-century British journalist, set out to disprove the resurrection in his book Who Moved the Stone? (1930). Initially viewing the story as myth, Morison approached it with a detective’s mindset, analyzing historical context and psychological plausibility. He found the empty tomb (Matthew 28:11-15) particularly persuasive—Roman and Jewish authorities, with every incentive to produce Jesus’ body, failed to do so. Morison also grappled with the transformation of the disciples, from despairing cowards (John 20:19) to bold proclaimers (Acts 2:14-36), a shift he deemed inexplicable without a real event. The sudden conversion of Paul, a former persecutor (Acts 9:1-19), further convinced Morison that only a tangible encounter with the risen Christ could account for such a reversal. His investigation led him to faith.
Both men highlight the resurrection’s evidential strength outside biblical bias. Greenleaf’s legal lens underscores the reliability of the Gospel witnesses, while Morison’s historical probe reveals the improbability of alternative explanations (like theft or hallucination) given the cultural and political pressures of the time. The rapid spread of Christianity, despite persecution, aligns with their findings: a fabricated tale wouldn’t inspire such conviction. Paul’s own testimony in 1 Corinthians 15:3-8, listing over 500 witnesses, adds weight, as Greenleaf and Morison noted its early circulation, too soon for legend to distort fact.
These skeptics-turned-believers demonstrate that the resurrection withstands intellectual scrutiny. Their journeys from doubt to conviction rest on evidence (eyewitness accounts, an empty tomb, and transformed lives) that defies dismissal.
Agape
spencer
