EVIDENCES OF JESUS CHRIST'S RESURRECTION
By: Josh McDowell
I claim to be a historian. My approach to Classics is
historical. And I tell you that the evidence for the life, the death, and the
resurrection of Christ is better authenticated than most of the facts of ancient
history ..."E. M. Blaiklock - Professor of Classics, Auckland University
The Resurrection of Christ is the most powerful event in
history. It has affected the last 2000 years of history and politics, from
peasants to kings to nations. Christianity has spread across the entire world,
into every country and into a vast number of ethnic groups and languages.
Billions of people have experienced the life-giving, healing, forgiveness and
freedom offered by God because Jesus Christ conquered death and rose again from
the grave.
The apostle Paul wrote in 1 Corinthians 15:12-22 that
without the resurrection of Christ, the Christian faith is useless. "And if
Christ be not raised," Paul wrote to the Corinthians, "your faith is vain; ye
are yet in your sins. Then they also which are fallen asleep in Christ are
perished. If in this life only we have hope in Christ, we are of all men most
miserable." There are many skeptics who disregard the resurrection of Jesus
Christ of Nazareth as a fable. However, the evidence for Jesus' resurrection is
extremely strong, even to the point of converting some who sought to disprove
it:
The Empty Tomb:
Though well-trained Roman soldiers guarded the tomb of Jesus
Christ, it was empty 3 days after Jesus' death as Jesus had repeatedly foretold
(Matt 12:40, Mark 8:31). The guards had fled (a death penalty offense). The
massive stone had been rolled away, and the body was gone - and was never
produced by the enemies of the Christians. The linen grave clothes in which the
Jews bury their dead were still in the tomb, undisturbed. From the Jewish
historian Josephus to a compilation of 5th-century Jewish writings called the "Toledoth
Jeshu," even Jewish sources and traditions admit that the tomb was empty. The
body was never found.
Living Witnesses:
There were a multitude of witnesses who saw Jesus Christ
alive after his death. The disciples, the travelers on the road to Emmaus and a
number of women all spoke to Jesus alive. Thomas doubted until he was able to
put his fingers into Jesus' wounds (John 20:26-27). He later spread the Gospel
all the way to India. The apostle Paul tells of 500 people to whom Jesus
appeared at one time, most of whom were still alive and available for
questioning when Paul wrote his letter (1 Corinthians 15:6). When several
people testify in a courtroom that they witnessed an event, and their accounts
are found consistent with each other, their testimony is considered factual
information. Jesus Christ was seen alive many times by hundreds of different
people over the course of forty days after his death (John 20-21, Acts 1:3).
The Disciples:
Christ's followers, who had been fearful and who had run away
when Jesus was arrested, were completely changed after the Resurrection and
became courageous witnesses. Peter, who had denied knowing Christ when
recognized by a simple servant girl, became the powerfully bold leader of those
who had seen Christ alive, speaking to the thousands gathered in Jerusalem for
the Feast of Shavuot - Pentecost. A person may die for a lie if they do not know
it is a lie. But people do not give their lives up and face severe persecution
to spread a lie they themselves invented. The fact that the disciples willingly
suffered beatings and persecution and death is strong evidence that they had
actually witnessed the resurrection they refused to stop telling people about.
Saul of Tarsus:
A devoutly religious Pharisee, who persecuted the Church and
had Christ's followers thrown in prison, Paul had his life absolutely changed by
his encounter with Christ. He became a devoted follower of Christ himself,
spreading the Gospel throughout Turkey and Greece in the face of beatings and
shipwrecks and imprisonment and, finally, execution. "If the New Testament were
a collection of secular writings, their authenticity would generally be regarded
as beyond all doubt." - F. F. Bruce, Manchester University
Skeptics' Arguments Against the Resurrection:
The Hallucination Theory claims that the witnesses who
met the resurrected Jesus were all "seeing things" - they were hallucinating.
However, this goes against common sense as well as psychological principles.
Five hundred people do not all hallucinate the same thing. Jesus appeared to
many people at many different times. Also, the body was never produced.
The Swoon Theory argues that Jesus did not die, that he
simply fainted from loss of blood and exhaustion. However, this also goes
against common sense. The Romans were professionals who severely whipped Jesus,
hung him on a cross, and then stabbed him in the side with a spear to make sure
he was dead. He was in the grave for three days, wrapped head to foot in a
burial cloth, without food or water or medical treatment. When he appeared to
his disciples he was completely whole and healthy and his appearance inspired
awe and worship that lasted throughout the rest of the disciples' lives.
The Disciples Faked the Resurrection:
Discouraged, fearful fishermen and former tax collectors,
whose teacher had been viciously murdered, were in little position to take on a
detachment of trained Roman soldiers guarding the tomb. They would have had to
create a fantastic plan in order to fight off or bribe the professional
soldiers, raid the tomb, unbind the grave clothes from Christ's body, take the
body away, and hide it where nobody would ever find it. The Roman soldiers faced
death if they failed in their guard duty, and the disciples had little money for
bribing anybody. Many people would have had to be involved in the conspiracy,
and all those involved would not only have known the truth, but would know that
they were risking meeting the same fate as their recently crucified leader. And
what purpose could it possibly serve, if Jesus were dead? They would have had
nothing to gain. Their leader was gone and they would have only faced
persecution and death for their invented resurrection story.
And again, the disciples' attitudes completely changed after
the Resurrection and especially after Pentecost. They became bold and courageous
in spreading their message, fearless of beatings or imprisonment. They never
sought to fight Rome or to establish any position or kingdom or authority for
themselves. They had nothing to gain, physically speaking. They simply went
about the known world, telling their story in spite of persecution and
suffering, poverty and ridicule. Their message quickly spread across the Middle
East and Europe and even into Asia without any military conquest or political
support involved, and in spite of strong opposition. Only belief and hope based
in the reality of their experiences would have produced such dedication in the
lives of Christ's followers.
Perhaps the greatest evidence today of Christ's resurrection
is the work that he is still doing in the lives of every day people. In the name
of Jesus, people are still being healed emotionally and physically and
spiritually by the same power that raised Jesus Christ from the dead. Sinners
are being freed from the burden and pain and shame of sin, sometimes
immediately, sometimes after long years of steady work by the Holy Spirit in
their lives. Hearts are being mended and lives are being turned around. The best
evidence today is the faithful follower of Christ who can say, "He saved me, and
I am not the person I used to be" just as the apostles testified 2000 years ago.