M58 Q&A
What
does “resurrection” mean? How did Jesus resurrect?
While the exact nature of
resurrection remains a mystery to us, we know very simply that Jesus’ body “got
up” and was transformed into a spiritual
body; thus, He was able to appear to the believers even though the doors to
where they were gathered were locked.
Jesus was not, however, a ghost
(i.e. a spirit without a body) because He could be touched, and He ate with
them. He was not merely “revived” as Lazarus was, for while Lazarus walked out of
the tomb with his grave clothes, Jesus’ grave linens lay in the tomb; Lazarus
would suffer physical death again, whereas Jesus was clothed in an immortal
body.
Jesus’ resurrection is not the
same as reincarnation, either, because His body was immortal, even as it still
bore the scars and resemblance to His old self.
Finally, Jesus’ resurrection
was not assumption—He was not taken up directly into heaven as Enoch and Elijah
were. Rather, He came from the dead, having suffered the torments of Hades for
our sins, back to earth to reinforce the message of His resurrection. As Paul
explained, “The body is sown in corruption, it is raised in incorruption. It is
sown in dishonor, it is raised in glory. It is sown in weakness, it is raised
in power. It is sown a natural body, it is raised a spiritual body” (1 Cor 15:42-44).
How
do we know Jesus’ resurrection really happened? Does it even matter?
Paul wrote that “if Christ is
not risen, then our preaching is vain and your faith is also vain” (1 Cor 15:14). Thus, it is crucial that we understand and
believe in the truth of the resurrection.
Jesus’ death is confirmed. The
Roman soldiers saw that He had died, and it is impossible He could have
survived the final stab in His side. His body was buried behind a stone and
guarded by Roman soldiers, and yet on the third day the tomb was discovered empty.
Either Jesus resurrected or His body was stolen. But who, other than the
disciples, would want to steal the body? Those who were against Jesus could
have proven that the resurrection was a hoax simply by trotting out His body
from the tomb. They did not, because they could not.
Jesus’ resurrection is a fact
established by Paul’s own testimony, the witness of the other apostles, as well
as the witness of over 500 other believers. It is incomprehensible that they
would suffer and die for a lie that they had created. They had neither the means
to pull the fraud nor the motive to promote it, given the immense hostility
they faced.
We know He resurrected and
lives today through tangible evidence: 1) we receive the Holy Spirit, just as
the apostles did in Acts, and 2) because He answers our prayers, even in
miraculous ways.