Jesus II: After the Ressurection?

Here’s my question: what happened to J.C. after he rose from the dead?

Isn’t that covered in Acts of the Apostles?

All four Gospels cover the post-Resurrection Jesus. Jesus makes his last personal appearance in the Bible in Acts, when he ascends into heaven, forty days after his resurrection.

The ressurected Jesus is seen by Mary Magdalene, some disciples from Emmaus, and with the Apostles several times.

Jesus is reported as being what some think is the example of the resurrected body of the believer. He is walking through doors, disappearing, etc, yet making physical contact with people and eating fish. As a finale, he rose into heaven.

The topic sounds like the title for an action movie.

Jesus II: the Ressurrection.

“He’s back, and he’s pissed.”


“East is east and west is west and if you take cranberries and stew them like applesauce they taste much more like prunes than rhubarb does.” – Marx

Read “Sundials” in the new issue of Aboriginal Science Fiction. www.sff.net/people/rothman

“He ascended into heaven; he sitteth at the right hand of God the Father Almighty; from thence ye shall come to judge the quick and the dead.” Or something along those lines.

Mainly he seems to have spent his time sitting next to himself waiting for an appropriate time to do the Second Coming schtick.

Hmm…do believers in the Second Coming believe in reincarnation?


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The resurection of the personal self in Christianity seems a little narrowminded and “grasping” in the Buddhist sense.

To wit - the desire for rebirth is a major hang-up preventing enlightenment in Buddhism.

Like the woman who asked Dear Abby “I understand that I will be reunited with my first love - but that’s not my husband, who will it be?”. Carrying these personal trifles into the promised land is a sad, primitive concern yet consistent with the obsession with indivuality and a historical timeline that are centerpieces of Greek-thought-influenced Christianity.

I’d rather melt into the great unknown.

I once subbed for a 7th grade History teacher. One of his classes had a Jesus I a Jesus II, a Jesus III and a Jesus IV. His seating chart actually used Roman numerals. There were only two Juans.

Funny you should use this example…

Seems to answer the Budhist challenge, as well as the Sadducee.


And on to the OP:

Peace.