Wall Street Journal

The Easter Effect and How It Changed the World
The first Christians were baffled by what they called ‘the Resurrection.’ Their 
struggle to understand it brought about astonishing success for their faith


[‘Resurrection of Christ’ by Sodoma (Giovanni Antonio Bazzi).]
‘Resurrection of Christ’ by Sodoma (Giovanni Antonio Bazzi). PHOTO: BRIDGEMAN 
IMAGES

By
George Weigel
March 30, 2018 10:05 a.m. ET
578 
COMMENTS<https://www.wsj.com/articles/the-easter-effect-and-how-it-changed-the-world-1522418701?mod=trending_now_1#comments_sector>

In the year 312, just before his victory at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge 
won him the undisputed leadership of the Roman Empire, Constantine the Great 
had a heavenly vision of Christian symbols. That augury led him, a year later, 
to end all legal sanctions on the public profession of Christianity.
Or so a pious tradition has it.

But there’s a more mundane explanation for Constantine’s decision: He was a 
politician who had shrewdly decided to join the winning side. By the early 4th 
century, Christians likely counted for between a quarter and a half of the 
population of the Roman Empire, and their exponential growth seemed likely to 
continue.
How did this happen? How did a ragtag band of nobodies from the far edges of 
the Mediterranean world become such a dominant force in just two and a half 
centuries? The historical sociology of this extraordinary phenomenon has been 
explored by Rodney Stark of Baylor University, who argues that Christianity 
modeled a nobler way of life than what was on offer elsewhere in the rather 
brutal society of the day. In Christianity, women were respected as they 
weren’t in classical culture and played a critical role in bringing men to the 
faith and attracting converts. In an age of plagues, the readiness of 
Christians to care for all the sick, not just their own, was a factor, as was 
the impressive witness to faith of countless martyrs. Christianity also grew 
from within because Christians had larger families, a byproduct of their 
faith’s prohibition of contraception, abortion and infanticide.

For theologians who like to think that arguments won the day for the Christian 
faith, this sort of historical reconstruction is not particularly gratifying, 
but it makes a lot of human sense. Prof. Stark’s analysis still leaves us with 
a question, though: How did all that modeling of a compelling, alternative way 
of life get started? And that, in turn, brings us back to that gaggle of 
nobodies in the early first century A.D. and what happened to them.

What happened to them was the Easter Effect.

There is no accounting for the rise of Christianity without weighing the 
revolutionary effect on those nobodies of what they called “the Resurrection”: 
their encounter with the one whom they embraced as the Risen Lord, whom they 
first knew as the itinerant Jewish rabbi, Jesus of Nazareth, and who died an 
agonizing and shameful death on a Roman cross outside Jerusalem. As N.T. 
Wright, one of the Anglosphere’s pre-eminent biblical scholars, makes clear, 
that first generation answered the question of why they were Christians with a 
straightforward answer: because Jesus was raised from the dead.

Now that, as some disgruntled listeners once complained about Jesus’ preaching, 
is “a hard saying.” It was no less challenging two millennia ago than it is 
today. And one of the most striking things about the New Testament accounts of 
Easter, and what followed in the days immediately after Easter, is that the 
Gospel writers and editors carefully preserved the memory of the first 
Christians’ bafflement, skepticism and even fright about what had happened to 
their former teacher and what was happening to them.

[‘The Incredulity of St. Thomas’ by Caravaggio.]
‘The Incredulity of St. Thomas’ by Caravaggio. PHOTO: BRIDGEMAN IMAGES

In Mark’s gospel, Mary Magdalene and other women in Jesus’ entourage find his 
tomb empty and a young man sitting nearby telling them that “Jesus of Nazareth, 
who was crucified…has risen; he is not here.” But they had no idea what that 
was all about, “and went out and fled from the tomb…[and] said nothing to 
anyone, for they were afraid.”

Two disciples walking to Emmaus from Jerusalem on Easter afternoon haven’t a 
clue as to who’s talking with them along their way, interpreting the scriptures 
and explaining Jesus’ suffering as part of his messianic mission. They don’t 
even recognize who it is that sits down to supper with them until he breaks 
bread and asks a blessing: “…and their eyes were opened and they recognized 
him.” They high-tail it back to Jerusalem to tell the other friends of Jesus, 
who report that Peter has had a similarly strange experience, but when “Jesus 
himself stood among them…they were startled and frightened, and supposed that 
they saw a ghost.”
Some time later, Peter, John and others in Jesus’ core group are fishing on the 
Sea of Tiberias. “Jesus stood on the beach,” we are told, “yet the disciples 
did not know that it was Jesus.” At the very end of these post-Easter accounts, 
those whom we might expect to have been the first to grasp what was afoot are 
still skeptical. When that core group of Jesus’ followers goes back to Galilee, 
they see him, “but some doubted.”

This remarkable and deliberate recording of the first Christians’ 
incomprehension of what they insisted was the irreducible bottom line of their 
faith teaches us two things. First, it tells us that the early Christians were 
confident enough about what they called the Resurrection that (to borrow from 
Prof. Wright) they were prepared to say something like, “I know this sounds 
ridiculous, but it’s what happened.” And the second thing it tells us is that 
it took time for the first Christians to figure out what the events of Easter 
meant
—not only for Jesus but for themselves. As they worked that out, their thinking 
about a lot of things changed profoundly, as Prof. Wright and Pope Emeritus 
Benedict XVI help us to understand in their biblical commentaries.
‘The Easter Effect impelled them to bring a new standard of equality into the 
world.’
The way they thought about time and history changed. During Jesus’ public 
ministry, many of his followers shared in the Jewish messianic expectations of 
the time: God would soon work something grand for his people in Israel, 
liberating them from their oppressors and bringing about a new age in which (as 
Isaiah had prophesied) the nations would stream to the mountain of the Lord and 
history would end. The early Christians came to understand that the 
cataclysmic, world-redeeming act that God had promised had taken place at 
Easter. God’s Kingdom had come not at the end of time but within time—and that 
had changed the texture of both time and history. History continued, but those 
shaped by the Easter Effect became the people who knew how history was going to 
turn out. Because of that, they could live differently. The Easter Effect 
impelled them to bring a new standard of equality into the world and to embrace 
death as martyrs if necessary—because they knew, now, that death did not have 
the final word in the human story.

The way they thought about “resurrection” changed. Pious Jews taught by the 
reforming Pharisees of Jesus’ time believed in the resurrection of the dead. 
Easter taught the first Christians, who were all pious Jews, that this 
resurrection was not the resuscitation of a corpse, nor did it involve the 
decomposition of a corpse. Jesus’ tomb was empty, but the Risen Lord appeared 
to his disciples in a transformed body. Those who first experienced the Easter 
Effect would not have put it in these terms, but as their understanding of what 
had happened to Jesus and to themselves grew, they grasped that (as Benedict 
XVI put it in “Jesus of Nazareth–Holy Week”) there had been an “evolutionary 
leap” in the human condition. A new way of being had been encountered in the 
manifestly human but utterly different life of the one they met as the Risen 
Lord. That insight radically changed all those who embraced it.

Which brings us to the next manifestation of the Easter Effect among the first 
Christians: The way they thought about their responsibilities changed. What had 
happened to Jesus, they slowly began to grasp, was not just about their former 
teacher and friend; it was about all of them. His destiny was their destiny. So 
not only could they face opposition, scorn and even death with confidence; they 
could offer to others the truth and the fellowship they had been given. Indeed, 
they had to do so, to be faithful to what they had experienced. Christian 
mission is inconceivable without Easter. And that mission would eventually lead 
these sons and daughters of Abraham to the conviction that the promise that God 
had made to the People of Israel had been extended to those who were not sons 
and daughters of Abraham. Because of Easter, the gentiles, too, could be 
embraced in a relationship—a covenant—with the one God, which was embodied in 
righteous living.

[Pakistani Christian worshipers during an Easter Mass in Lahore, 2015.]
Pakistani Christian worshipers during an Easter Mass in Lahore, 2015. 
PHOTO:LIGHTROCKET/GETTY IMAGES

The way they thought about worship and its temporal rhythms changed. For the 
Jews who were the first members of the Jesus movement, nothing was more 
sacrosanct than the Sabbath, the seventh day of rest and worship. The Sabbath 
was enshrined in creation, for God himself had rested on the seventh day. The 
Sabbath’s importance as a key behavioral marker of the People of God had been 
reaffirmed in the Ten Commandments. Yet these first Christians, all Jews, 
quickly fixed Sunday as the “Lord’s Day,” because Easter had been a Sunday. 
Benedict XVI draws out the crucial point here:
“Only an event that marked souls indelibly could bring about such a profound 
realignment of the religious culture of the week. Mere theological speculations 
could not have achieved this... [The] celebration of the Lord’s day, which was 
characteristic of the Christian community from the outset, is one of the most 
convincing proofs that something extraordinary happened [at Easter]—the 
discovery of the empty tomb and the encounter with the Risen Lord.”

Without the Easter Effect, there is really no explaining why there was a 
winning side—the Christian side—for Constantine the Great to choose. That 
effect, as Prof. Wright puts it, begins with, and is incomprehensible without, 
the first Christians’ conviction that “Jesus of Nazareth was raised bodily to a 
new sort of life, three days after his execution.” Recognizing that does not, 
of course, convince everyone. Nor does it end the mystery of Easter. The first 
Christians, like Christians today, cannot fully comprehend resurrected life: 
the life depicted in the Gospels of a transphysical body that can eat, drink 
and be touched but that also appears and disappears, unbothered by obstacles 
like doors and distance.

Nor does Easter mean that everything is always going to turn out just fine, for 
there is still work to be done in history. As Benedict XVI put it in his 2010 
Easter message: “Easter does not work magic. Just as the Israelites found the 
desert awaiting them on the far side of the Red Sea, so the Church, after the 
Resurrection, always finds history filled with joy and hope, grief and anguish. 
And yet this history is changed…it is truly open to the future.”
Which perhaps offers one final insight into the question with which we began: 
How did the Jesus movement, beginning on the margins of civilization and led by 
people of seeming inconsequence, end up being what Constantine regarded as the 
winning side? However important the role of sociological factors in explaining 
why Christianity carried the day, there also was that curious and inexplicable 
joy that marked the early Christians, even as they were being marched off to 
execution. Was that joy simply delusion? Denial?
Perhaps it was the Easter Effect: the joy of people who had become convinced 
that they were witnesses to something inexplicable but nonetheless true. 
Something that gave a superabundance of meaning to life and that erased the 
fear of death. Something that had to be shared. Something with which to change 
the world.

Mr. Weigel is distinguished senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy 
Center, where he holds the William E. Simon Chair in Catholic Studies.

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