Certainty about the Resurrection
The empty tomb may be the
strongest proof Jesus Christ rose from the dead. Two major theories have been
advanced by unbelievers: someone stole Jesus' body or the women and disciples
went to the wrong tomb. The Jews and Romans had no motive to steal the body.
Christ's apostles were too cowardly
and would have had to overcome the Roman guards. The women who found the tomb
empty had earlier watched Jesus being laid away; they knew where the correct
tomb was. Even if they had gone to the wrong tomb, the Sanhedrin could have
produced the body from the right tomb to stop the resurrection stories. Jesus' burial cloths were left
neatly folded inside, hardly the act of hurrying grave robbers. Angels said Jesus had
risen from the dead.
The holy women eyewitnesses are further proof that the
Gospels are accurate historical records. If the accounts had been made up, no
ancient author would have used women for witnesses to Christ's resurrection.
Women were second class citizens in Bible times; their testimony was not even
allowed in court. Yet the Bible says the risen Christ first appeared to Mary Magdalene and other holy
women. Even the apostles did not believe Mary when she told them the tomb was
empty. Jesus, who always had special respect for these women, honoured them as
the first eyewitnesses to his resurrection. The male Gospel writers had no
choice but to report this embarrassing act of God's favour, because that was
how it happened.
After the crucifixion, Jesus' apostles
hid behind locked doors, terrified they would be executed next. But something
changed them from cowards to bold preachers. Anyone who understands human character
knows people do not change that much without some major influence. That
influence was seeing their Master, bodily risen from the dead. Christ appeared
to them in the locked room, on the shore of the Sea
of Galilee, and on the Mount of Olives. After seeing Jesus alive, Peter and the others left the locked room
and preached the risen Christ, unafraid of what would happen to them. They quit
hiding because they knew the truth.
Changed lives are yet another proof of the
resurrection. James, the brother of
Jesus, was openly sceptical that Jesus was the Messiah. Later James became a
courageous leader of the Jerusalem church, even being stoned to death for his
faith. With such zealous eyewitnesses, the early church exploded in growth,
spreading west from Jerusalem to Rome and beyond. For 2,000 years, encounters
with the resurrected Jesus have changed lives.
A large crowd of more than 500 eyewitnesses saw the
risen Jesus Christ at the same time. The Apostle Paul records this event in 1 Corinthians 15:6. He states that most of these men and women were still alive when he
wrote this letter, about 55 A.D. Today,
psychologists say it would be impossible for a large crowd of people to have
had the same hallucination at once.
Smaller groups also saw the risen Christ, such as the apostles. The
hallucination theory is further debunked because after the Ascension of Jesus into heaven, sightings of him
stopped.
When the
risen Christ appeared to Paul on the
Damascus Road, Paul became Christianity's most determined missionary. What
could make a person willingly accept—even welcome—such hardships? Christians
believe the conversion of Paul came about because he encountered Jesus Christ
who had risen from the dead.
Countless people have died for Jesus, absolutely
certain that the resurrection of Christ is an historical fact. Down through the centuries, thousands more
have died for Jesus because they believed the resurrection is true. Even today,
people suffer persecution because
they have faith that Christ rose from the dead. An isolated group may give up
their lives for a cult leader, but Christian martyrs have died in many lands,
for nearly 2,000 years, believing Jesus conquered death to give them eternal
life.
No comments:
Post a Comment