Non-Christian religions' reverence and appreciation of Jesus
usually stops at the threshold of the empty tomb or takes an alternate
route.Yet the Resurrection, which will be celebrated by most Christians
on Sunday, April 8, is still a topic that is addressed by most religions.
Islam says it didn't happen. Hinduism, the Baha'i Faith and many
liberal Christians offer spiritual or metaphorical interpretations.
For instance, while Islam holds Jesus in high regard as a prophet, the
Quran says neither the crucifixion nor resurrection happened, said Fayaz
Malik, spokesman for the Peoria Islamic community.
He cited Sura 4:157-158 of the Quran:
"... they killed him not, nor crucified him. Only a likeness of that
was shown to them. ... For of a surety they killed him not: - Nay, Allah
raised him up unto himself; and Allah is exalted in power, wise."
Islamic traditions, called hadith, interpret the verses as meaning that
Jesus was physically removed from Earth and that some other person,
possibly Judas, actually died on the cross, Malik said. But Jesus will
return as a sign of the end times, Muslim traditions say.
"He will come back, and he will die a natural death in the future,"
Malik said of the majority opinion of Muslim scholars.
He said Muslims accept the claim that Jesus didn't die because the
Quran says it.
"For Muslims, the only authentic word of God existing in the world
today is the Quran," Malik said.
Jacob Neusner, author of several books on Jewish-Christian relations
and a senior fellow at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, N.Y., said
Judaism has no response to claims that Jesus was raised from the dead
because "it's not relevant to Judaism."
"It (Judaism) doesn't engage the truth claims of other religions, so
it's not an issue facing Judaism," Neusner said.
Rather, classical Judaism focuses on a general resurrection - and
judgment - of the dead and not that of just one man, Neusner said, a
belief that is shared by not only Christianity but also Islam and
Zoroastrianism.
A Zen Buddhist leader was open to the idea of an historical
Resurrection, though with that tradition's flavoring.
"When Jesus worked his miracles, spoke his words of wisdom and returned
from the dead, he was utterly unconscious of being a separate, finite
personality," said Cate Pfeifer, abbot of the Peoria Zen Center in Peoria,
Ill. Citing John 10:38 ("You'll fully understand that the Father is in me
and I am in the Father"), Pfeifer said that Jesus "was connected to life
in the largest sense."
"If we find the Resurrection miraculous or unbelievable, it is only
because we are caterpillars theorizing about a butterfly," she said. "We,
who are caught in dualistic thinking, cannot mentally grasp the enormity
of what he could and did do. His emergence from the chrysalis was so
powerful that we are still talking about it over 2,000 years later."
Pfeifer, saying that "All great teachers will leave us with great
mysteries," also said, "Jesus did not simply resurrect himself, he brought
others back from the dead as well."
"Perhaps the anniversary of his death and return is an excellent time
for us to reflect on the many ways we can help ourselves and others return
to life."
Yet other religions also acknowledge claims that Jesus was raised in
some sense, but put a purely spiritual spin on it.
Hindus, for instance, understand Jesus to be one of many incarnations
of God but generally do not believe he was physically raised from the
dead, said Prakash Babu of Peoria's Hindu Heritage Center.
"In Hindu philosophy, the atman, the spirit in all of us, is considered
eternal and immortal, so in other words, even as we shed our bodies, the
spirit of the atman is there eternally," Babu said. "In the case of
Jesus's resurrection, Jesus coming back again is not a surprise.
Obviously, he was a human person, having a human body, so he was shedding
the human body, but the divine soul reappeared. That's not really a
surprise in that sense.
"In the crucifixion process, his body was destroyed. That was just
flesh and blood. In reality, nothing was damaged because the divine spirit
was eternal."
The Baha'i Faith gives the Resurrection a more metaphorical than
physical emphasis.
Abdul Baha, son of the faith's founder, Baha'u'llah, wrote in "Some
Answered Questions" that "His resurrection from the interior of the earth
is also symbolical; it is a spiritual and divine fact, and not material;
and likewise His ascension to heaven is a spiritual and not material
ascension."
Baha also said that "The Cause of Christ was like a lifeless body"
after his death.
"When after three days the disciples became assured and steadfast, and
began to serve the Cause of Christ, and resolved to spread the divine
teachings, putting His counsels into practice, and arising to serve Him,
the Reality of Christ became resplendent and His bounty appeared; His
religion found life; His teachings and His admonitions became evident and
visible."
Even some Christian scholars take a more spiritual than historical
approach to the Resurrection.
Gregory Riley, a professor at Claremont School of Theology in
Claremont, Calif., and author of "Resurrection Reconsidered" (Fortress
Press, $20), said early Christians saw the Resurrection in a variety of
ways, reflecting different views of the afterlife in the ancient world.
Gospel accounts of the resurrected Jesus are "a huge mix of traditions,"
Riley said.
"I believe he is alive somehow in a spiritual way without his body," he
said. "I don't put much store in the resurrection of the flesh."
In fact, Riley said, neither did Jesus or Paul, both of whom spoke at
length of a spiritual afterlife.
"Whatever (Jesus's) resurrected being was, it wasn't identical to our
earthly life," Riley said.
"He has changed, become somehow a spiritual or angelic type of being.
Here's the big argument: Does flesh rise from the dead or are we
transformed into spiritual beings?"
One way of explaining Resurrection accounts, Riley said, is that
Jesus's followers probably had the experience that many people do of
sensing the presence of a deceased loved one.
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