.. meta::
   :description: Licona, M. (2010). The Resurrection of Jesus: A New Historiographical Approach --- the most rigorous modern case for the historicity of the resurrection, using professional historiographical methods.
   :keywords: resurrection, Jesus, historicity, historiography, Michael Licona, evidence, miracles, hypothesis testing, bedrock facts

.. TODO AA: Page maturity --- update StayC when reviewed
   Page status: OO_open-std_v1_2026m04d01


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Licona (2010): *The Resurrection of Jesus*
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.. rubric:: Full citation

Licona, M. R. (2010). *The Resurrection of Jesus: A New
Historiographical Approach.* Downers Grove, IL: IVP Academic /
Nottingham, England: Apollos. 718 pages. ISBN 978-0-8308-2719-0.


Why this book matters
=======================

Most discussions of the resurrection of Jesus fall into one of two
camps: believers who treat it as obvious and skeptics who treat it as
absurd. Licona does neither. He treats it as a **historical
hypothesis** --- one that can be investigated using the same methods
professional historians use for any other claim about the past.

The result is arguably the most rigorous modern case for the
historicity of the resurrection. At 718 pages, it is not light
reading. But its thoroughness is precisely the point.


What the book does
====================

**Part 1: Historiography (chapters 1--3, ~200 pages)**

Before examining the resurrection itself, Licona spends a third of
the book on method. What does it mean to investigate a historical
claim? How do professional historians weigh evidence? And what
happens when the claim involves something --- like a miracle --- that
falls outside the normal framework of historical explanation?

Licona surveys the major schools of historical philosophy --- from
positivism to postmodernism --- and develops a method he calls
*"inference to the best explanation."* The historian's job is not to
declare what *must* have happened, but to determine which hypothesis
best accounts for the evidence that survives. This methodological
groundwork is valuable independently of the resurrection question: it
is a clear introduction to how professional historians actually think.

**Part 2: The evidence (chapters 4--5)**

Licona identifies what he calls **"bedrock facts"** --- historical
data points accepted by the vast majority of scholars across the
theological spectrum, including skeptics. These include:

- The death of Jesus by crucifixion under Pontius Pilate
- Very shortly after, his followers had experiences they believed
  were appearances of the risen Jesus
- The conversion of Paul, a former persecutor, based on what he
  reported as an encounter with the risen Jesus
- The conversion of James, the brother of Jesus, who was not a
  follower during Jesus' lifetime

These facts are "bedrock" because they are granted by virtually all
scholars who have studied the question --- believers, skeptics, and
agnostics alike. The debate is not over *whether* these things
occurred, but over what *explains* them.

**Part 3: Competing hypotheses (chapter 6)**

This is the core of the book. Licona systematically evaluates the
major alternative explanations:

- **Hallucination hypothesis** --- the disciples experienced
  psychological hallucinations
- **Legend hypothesis** --- the resurrection stories developed
  gradually over time
- **Apparent death hypothesis** --- Jesus survived the crucifixion
- **Conspiracy hypothesis** --- the disciples fabricated the story
- **Subjective vision hypothesis** --- the experiences were real but
  internal, not external events

Each hypothesis is assessed against the bedrock facts using the
criteria historians use: explanatory scope (does it account for all
the evidence?), explanatory power (how well?), plausibility, ad hoc
avoidance (does it require special pleading?), and illumination (does
it shed light on other evidence?).

Licona's conclusion: **the resurrection hypothesis provides the best
explanation** of the bedrock facts when evaluated by standard
historiographical criteria. This does not constitute proof in the
mathematical sense --- history does not work that way. It constitutes
a case that the resurrection is the most historically responsible
explanation of the evidence that survives.


Why this reference is cited on this site
==========================================

The :doc:`matheology framework </matheology/index>` developed on this
site takes seriously the possibility that the resurrection of Jesus
is a historical event, not merely a theological symbol. Several of
the formal models --- particularly those involving the |Resurrection|
and the self-assessment bifurcation --- depend on whether the person
described in Revelation as having fully achieved life as a
Balance-o-stat Species actually returned from death.

LLoL is not a theologian. He is a scientist who was not present at
the events in question and cannot verify them personally. What he can
do is evaluate the quality of the historical case --- and Licona's
book represents the most thorough evaluation currently available.

Anyone who wishes to challenge LLoL's trust in the historicity of the
resurrection will need to engage with Licona's arguments. The bar is
not faith. It is evidence, professionally weighed.


.. seealso::

   - :doc:`/good-news-pack/references/loewe-1935-kosmos-und-aion` ---
     Richard Löwe's 1935 dissertation on early Christian eschatology
   - :doc:`/good-news-pack/references/leonhard-2010-visions-of-apocalypse` ---
     Johns Hopkins APL monograph on how eschatological beliefs shape
     foreign policy
