The author's primary goal is not to prove his theory is historically true but to demonstrate that it is logically possible. Christian apologists often argue that because no mundane theory fits all the fact of the Resurrection, a miracle is the only reasonable inference. Veklych aims to turn this argument into dead wood by creating a narrative that satisfies 11 specific historical constraints without invoking the supernatural.
The theory accepts these as historical data points that any mundane explanation must satisfy:
0) The Character: Jesus, his family, and his disciples were honest people of perfectly normal intelligence and mental faculties (not prone to mass delusion or simple lying).
1) The Healings: Many people witnessed astonishing acts of faith healing; specifically, the resurrection of Lazarus is treated as an eyewitness narrative.
2) The Miracles: Strong rumors of non-healing deeds (walking on water, virgin birth, feeding the 5,000) circulated with a speed that exceeds legendary accretion.
3) The Transfiguration: Three Apostles (including Peter) heard a voice they identified as God the Father praising Jesus during the Transfiguration.
4) The Execution: Jesus died on the cross, and his body was physically pierced by a Roman soldier's spear.
5) The Guarded Tomb: Guards and priests saw the body inside and "felt it up" to confirm death before sealing the tomb, which was in solid rock with no other exits.
6) The Physical Identity: The resurrected Jesus was physically identical in features, voice, and height. Crucially, his biological mother, Mary, knew for certain there was no other person (like a secret twin) besides Jesus.
7) The Non-Recognition: Despite the identity, he was occasionally not recognized initially (Road to Emmaus, Mary Magdalene, and the Lake of Gennesaret).
8) The Teleportation: He could instantly disappear (Emmaus) and appear inside locked rooms, as well as make 153 fish appear in a net.
9) The Thomas Test: The skeptic Thomas physically shoved his fingers into the deep crucifixion wounds to verify the body's reality.
10) The Ascension: Jesus bodily ascended into the sky, outdoors, in sunny conditions, with no nearby tall objects (trees/rocks) that could hide a mechanism, witnessed by multiple people.
The Double nature of the theory comes from combining two existing secular frameworks:
1) The Eskovian Framework (The Roman Plot)Referencing Kirill Eskov’s The Gospel of Afranius, this component suggests that the "resurrection" was a high-level psychological operation managed by the Roman secret service (specifically under Pontius Pilate).
Purpose: To create a peaceful, pro-Roman Jewish sect to stabilize the region.
Mechanism: Using stage magic techniques of the era to simulate miracles, ensuring the"new religion would be under Roman influence.
Referencing Robert Gregory Cavin, this adds the how of the physical appearances. This often involves the use of a double or highly sophisticated deception regarding the body.
The Identical Jesus: The theory posits that the person appearing after the death was a lookalike (or twin) so perfect that even the mother and the skeptic Thomas were fooled.
Teleportation/Locked Rooms: These are explained as clever tricks involving hidden entrances or misdirection, akin to modern stage magic (citing David Blaine or David Copperfield as examples of how humans can be fooled by the impossible).
Intellectual Rigor: Unlike many skeptics who simply dismiss the New Testament as myth, Veklych takes the apologists' own minimal facts seriously and tries to play by their rules.
Philosophical Grounding: He effectively uses Sherlock Holmes' maxim: "When you have eliminated the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." By defining miracles as the impossible, he forces the reader to consider his highly improbable conspiracy as the more rational choice.
Complexity (Occam's Razor): The theory requires a staggering number of coincidences: a perfect lookalike, a Roman governor willing to risk a massive conspiracy for a fringe sect, and stage magic so advanced it fooled witnesses in outdoor, non-controlled environments.
Motivation Gap: While it explains the mechanics of the appearances, it struggles to explain why a Roman secret service would maintain such an elaborate ruse for decades, especially as the sect began to cause more trouble for the empire than it solved.
The Soviet Engineer Bias: The author admits his background as a Soviet-trained engineer (Buran space project) makes him inherently biased against anything popping out of nowhere. This provides transparency but also shows he is working backward from a conclusion (materialism).
Veklych’s paper is essentially a proof of concept. It succeeds in its narrow goal: showing that if you are a committed materialist, you can always construct a conspiracy theory, no matter how convoluted, that is still more likely than a dead man coming back to life. It shifts the debate from historical evidence to worldview. If you believe miracles are possible, the Resurrection is the best explanation; if you believe they are impossible, Veklych's "Double Conspiracy" becomes the default truth.
The Refutation
Refuting a theory designed specifically to be logically possible (rather than historically probable) requires moving beyond that’s unlikely to showing where the internal logic breaks down or where the complexity penalty becomes so high that the theory ceases to be a functional explanation.
The Honesty Contradiction (Constraints 0, 6, & 9)Veklych assumes all parties were honest and of normal intelligence. This creates a major logical bottleneck:
The Mother’s Knowledge: Constraint 6 says Mary knew "for sure" there was no lookalike. If a twin or double existed, a mother (especially in a small village like Nazareth) would know. For her to be honest yet not reveal this fact during the crucifixion or the subsequent 40 days requires her to be either part of the conspiracy (violating Constraint 0) or suffering from a specific, localized delusion.
The Thomas Test: In Constraint 9, Thomas shoves his fingers into the wounds. To fool an unusually rational skeptic through touch, the double would need not just a resemblance, but identical surgical scarring or fresh, open trauma in the exact same anatomical locations. Simulating this with stage magic that survives a physical shove is beyond the medical or magical capabilities of the 1st century.
The theory relies heavily on the "David Blaine" defense, that if it looks like magic today, it could be a trick then. However, this fails on environmental control:
The Transfiguration & Ascension: These occurred outdoors (Constraints 3 & 10). Modern stage magic relies on "the box," "the lighting," and "the angle." Performing a flight into the clouds (Ascension) in broad daylight, in an open field, with no tall object for wires or mirrors, is a feat that even 21st-century magicians like Copperfield cannot perform without a television audience and controlled camera angles.
The Locked Room Problem: For the Romans to rig a secret entrance into the Apostles' upper room (Constraint 8), they would have needed prior access to a private, secure hiding spot used by a group of outlaws. It assumes the Roman Secret Service had "Home Alone" style control over every building in Jerusalem.
The theory posits that Pontius Pilate and the Roman Secret Service (Afranius) created Christianity to stabilize the region. Historically, this had the opposite effect:
Strategic Failure: If the goal was a peaceful, pro-Roman sect, the plan failed spectacularly. Within decades, Christians were being executed for refusing to worship the Emperor, causing massive civil unrest and eventually contributing to the ideological destabilization of the Empire.
The Martyrdom Problem: For a conspiracy to work, the agents (the double/twin and the handlers) must be willing to die for a lie. While the Apostles' honesty is granted, the "Double" himself would have to live a life of total 24/7 performance, eventually ascending (disappearing/dying) just to satisfy a Roman psychological op. No intelligence agency in history has ever successfully maintained a deep-cover operation of this scale without a single defector or leak.
Constraint 5 states that Jewish priests and guards "felt the body up" inside a solid rock tomb with no secret exits.
The Impassable Barrier: If the tomb was truly sealed and guarded, and the body was "felt" to be dead by skeptics {Roman and Jewish guards, as well as some Jewish priests}, the only way for a body-double to appear later is if the original body was moved.
The Contradiction: If the guards were honest and competent, they wouldn't lose the body. If they were bribed or part of the Roman Plot, then the Minimal Facts regarding the Guarded Tomb are no longer facts; they are part of the lie. The theory tries to have it both ways: keeping the Guarded Tomb as a historical fact while using Conspiracy to bypass the very security that makes the tomb a fact.
Philosophically, Veklych argues that "Improbable > Impossible." However, in Bayesian terms, the likelihood of a theory decreases with every "and" you add:
A perfect twin AND a Roman Governor staging a fake religion AND 1st-century holographic-level stage magic AND the mother not noticing AND the double willing to disappear forever.
Each of these "ands" carries a massive probability penalty. At a certain point, the "Double Conspiracy" becomes more statistically untenable (requiring a perfect alignment of a thousand low-probability variables) than the single supernatural event it seeks to replace.
All of this assumes that the materialist worldview is correct.
The most significant issue is circular reasoning. If a researcher assumes at the outset that the supernatural is impossible, any investigation into an event that looks supernatural (like the Resurrection or the origins of the universe) will automatically be forced into a materialist mold.
The Result: You aren't discovering the truth based on where the evidence leads; you are simply confirming your own starting assumption. The conclusion is baked into the premise.
As seen in theories like the
The Logic: A single miracle might be impossible in a materialist worldview, but a chain of ten highly improbable coincidences (secret twins, Roman plots, stage magic) is possible.
The Problem: At a certain point, the possible conspiracy becomes so complex and unlikely that it violates Occam's Razor, the principle that the simplest explanation is usually the correct one.
This is frequently called the Evolutionary Argument Against Naturalism. If materialism is true, then human thoughts are simply the byproduct of chemical reactions and evolutionary pressures designed for survival, not necessarily for truth.
The Paradox: If our cognitive faculties are merely meat computers optimized to keep us alive, we have no objective reason to trust that our logic, including the logic used to argue for materialism, is actually accurate. It creates a loop where the materialist's own brain becomes an unreliable witness to its own theories.
Materialism attempts to use empirical tools (measurement, observation) to disprove things that are, by definition, non-empirical (spirit, consciousness, God).
The Analogy: It is like using a metal detector to find a wooden box and concluding the box doesn't exist because the detector didn't beep. The problem is not the absence of the box, but the limitation of the tool.
The Double Conspiracy Theory is a masterclass in what happens when intellectual rigor meets a rigid philosophical boundary. Bogdan Veklych succeeds in creating a logically consistent loophole, but in doing so, he demonstrates the staggering complexity penalty required to maintain a strictly materialist worldview in the face of the Resurrection data.
By the time one accounts for 1) perfect twins, 2) Roman secret service plots, 3) 1st-century "stage magic" that works in broad daylight, and 4)_a mother who doesn't recognize her own son. The explanation becomes far more miraculous in its coincidences than the event it seeks to replace. It doesn't even try to be an Inference to the Best Explanation; it's merely a "just-so" story - an unverifiable, speculative, or imaginative explanation for how a phenomenon came to be, often reverse-engineered to fit a desired outcome, designed to protect a premise rather than discover a truth.