Biblical Framework
Charles Clough
Lesson
144
Last week we finished the cross of Christ,
and the death of Christ and we reviewed the atonement. Each one of these events we have linked to
some basic ideas, and the diagrams in the notes, remember at the birth there
was the diagram of two people coming to the announcement of the virgin birth
and one accepts and one rejects; the one who accepts has a worldview that’s
Biblical, God, man and nature, so there’s not problem, the virgin birth fits
that worldview. But the person who
comes with a sort of Continuity of Being evolutionary type worldview is going
to have a problem with the virgin birth.
When we dealt with the life of Christ we said
that people come to the gospel narratives with one of two worldviews, either
prepared to see that God does reveal Himself, the Biblical God reveals Himself
and therefore it’s not strange that the things that are reported in the gospel
narratives in fact happened. On the
other hand we have the skeptics who argue that on the basis of their worldview
the reported events in the gospel narratives could never have happened; therefore
there must be spin doctors of the early church that manufactured these stories
about Jesus.
The third thing we came to the death of
Christ and we said fundamental to understanding the cross of Christ is that we
have a Biblical view of justice, of holiness, of what God is like. And if that isn’t there, then the cross of
Christ doesn’t have substantial meaning.
It’s the death of a martyr, He died for His cause, He did something
else, but whatever it is, He didn’t die for my sins. I played a section of a debate that was held somewhere in the
L.A. area with three leading spokesmen, one for Christianity, one for Islam,
one for Judaism. The Islamic expert
argued that the idea of a man becoming God, such as reported in the birth of
Christ, hypostatic union, that was just common in the pagan world and that’s
just part of the stories. Of course we
pointed out that the gospel story is not a man becoming God, it’s God becoming
man, a totally different operation.
But the thing to remember is this is how it’s
perceived by non-Christians. The gospel
is impossible to communicate apart from the Holy Spirit opening hearts. You can have all the arguments you want to,
and that’s not to say we shouldn’t have an argument, because obviously if we’re
sloppy in the presentation of the gospel, we’re projecting a false image of the
gospel too, because by having a sloppy approach that casts dispersions on the
truthfulness and the validity of the gospel.
We don’t want to be idiots when we witness.
There are two sections on this tape. The first section is the Rabbi, and prior to
this point in the discussion the person who represents the Christian position
has argued that it’s the Christian position that Jesus Christ’s atonement is
necessary in order to come to know God, that you can’t know a holy God apart
from the cross of Christ. It gets back
to “I am the way, the truth and the life, no man comes to the Father but by
Me.” The Rabbi and the Islamic
professor are responding to this. I
want you to hear their reply, just so you’ll understand why in this framework
series I go to all this labor of showing both sides; showing you the Christian
approach, showing you how it fits the system and showing you the non-Christian
and where they’re coming from. This is
not something for the classroom; here you’ve got representatives of two of the
largest religions in the world and listen to their approach. This is the Rabbi and he’s trying to respond
to what has happened previously in the debate, and he’s getting to the point in
the discussion about the law.
Obviously prior to this the Christian has
pointed out that no man can keep the law, that the lesson of the law is that
we’re sinners, “by the law is the knowledge of sin.” Law has that, that’s what the whole idea of the Torah was about. Well, the Rabbi doesn’t like that so now
he’s got to come up with a Judaistic view of their own Torah. So this is how they approach the law. What I want you to do as you listen is think
through what we’ve done previously when we’ve linked the death of Christ with
the justice and holiness of God. What
have we said? We said that if you
compromise the atonement, what in effect are you doing to the attribute of
God? You’re having to modify the being
of God Himself if you’re going to give up the cross. You can’t play games here, it’s like a puzzle, if you move a
piece here you’re going to move pieces all across the board. If you play games with the atonement and
think of it as an unnecessary event, you’ve already compromised the holiness
of God. What do the people of Judaism
and Islam say? Let’s see if we can get
this:
[debate tape—difficult to understand] …truth
as we may be categorized, it doesn’t mean that we believe others want to be
inadequate which is perhaps the kindest term I heard, but let me say the
following: one of the reasons why we
don’t accept this, and I’ll say something about Christianity and maybe say
something about Islam too. The first
thing has to do with the law, five minutes, the first thing has to do with the
law, there’s a law right in front of me. The first is the terms regarding a
central part of the Christian message, as far as I understood it today, would
have read that the law itself is inadequate.
Of course the law is inadequate; of course there are moral acts that are
inadequate. I deal every day with
people that come to me with problems of inadequacy. I deal with my own inadequacy.
My love and how I demonstrate my love for my children and for my family
is inadequate. On the other hand, it’s
not so bad, I accomplish something, I do something, I’d rather have them be my children
and I shall be their father than anyone else, and it’s worthy of value. And I believe that God considers it of
value, and I get up every day trying to figure out how can I make it better
than the day before. And I’m not so
frightened of the Lord that I have to say, ah, my world deeds are so inadequate
and in fact my very feeling that I have a moral deed is itself expressing some
sort of pride, some sort of over-reaching hubris that I shouldn’t defend
it. No I am propelled over and over
again, back into the fray, because the assumption of Judaism is that the law is
important because this world is important, because God’s will can be enacted in
this world even if not perfectly. And
we must be there to achieve the areas which I referred to.]
What he said was that he’s not so afraid of
the Lord that… in other words, it’s the hope for merit, it’s the hope for
meritorious acceptance with God, not on the basis of a blood atonement but on
the basis of somehow God is going to just bloodlessly forgive. That’s fundamental to the gospel and that is
why Paul and the apostles had a problem with Pharisaism. What was Pharisaism? The idea that I try to live my best. This obviously, as you know from your own
experience this is not limited to a Judaistic frame of reference; lots of
people believe that good works are acceptable with God and that God can forgive
apart from an atonement. I’m going to
pick this up toward the end of the tape; this is the Muslim fellow now.
[People have to work and to strive and have
faith in God. The point that Islam has
no Messiah, Islam has a Messiah and that is Jesus Christ. We do talk about Jesus as Mashiach, but that
is a very different interpretation of Mashiach in Islam than it is in
Christianity. Mashiach according to Islam
is not the one who bore the sins of the people and die on the cross because
there’s nobody done that. People have
to work and strive and have faith in God and then God will forgive them, God
will bless them, God’s grace will come upon them. There is no need to go through total process of [can’t understand
word] on the cross and going through all this mechanism.]
I don’t think you could hear it, that it’s
not necessary to go through this long mechanism, God just forgives on the basis
of repentance alone. So there you have
it. There are two learned proponents,
one of Judaism, one of Islam, and they can’t have it both ways. And we’re the stick-outs because we’re the
ones that sort of protrude in the religious discussion because the Jews and the
Muslims both kind of agree on this point.
It’s interesting, if you study the cults, like Mormonism, Jehovah’s
Witnesses, etc. you’ll find that even though they talk about the cross of
Christ and they kind of use some of that atonement language, when you get more
deeply into their theology you realize that it’s religion of works.
Let’s think about what we just heard. What is
going on here is a compromise of the nature of God. Who is it that requires blood atonement? It’s not man. Lest somebody be tempted to say that this is just a New Testament
thing, that these Christians came along and made all this blood atonement thing
up to try to embellish the disaster that befell the founder of Christianity,
that He got executed and so we’ve got to come up with a spin on the execution
story, so we’ll invent all this blood atonement thing, it sounds good.
Where do you first encounter blood atonement
in Scripture? In the Gospel of Matthew?
No, back in Genesis. Right there
in the garden. Later on in the
discussion somebody in the audience when they have question and answers of the
panel, one man astutely asked the rabbi, the Christian has mentioned that Jesus
Christ died on the cross and that blood atonement is necessary and I read in my
Old Testament, correct me if I’m wrong, but there were requirements for blood
atonement in Israel, that there were sacrifices given in Israel, that the high
priest couldn’t come into the Holy of Holies without a rope around him to pull
him out in case he died in there because he didn’t offer a sacrifice correctly,
is that true Rabbi. The rabbi had to
admit that that was true of the old Israel, but when the Jews lost their temple
then they had a new spiritual interpretation of all that Old Testament stuff, and
that was that it’s a spiritual sacrifice, almost like Romans 12:1, that your
dedication to God is a sacrifice of yourself and that’s what replaces the
atonement in the Old Testament. But
where’s the blood, where’s the death.
Well, it’s a spiritual death.
My point is we’ve spent a lot of years going
back over the framework, over and over again the events of Scripture, creation,
the fall, the flood, the covenant, the call of Abraham, the Exodus, the giving
of the Law at Sinai. Why? Because all
those fit together in a grand scheme and if you see the scheme of the
Scriptures as a coherent pedagogical series of lessons century upon century
that God the teacher is teaching us about Himself, if you see that, then when
someone like this comes along with the idea that God can forgive apart from
blood atonement, it doesn’t ring true to all the earlier pedagogical
lessons. The whole point in the Old
Testament was atonement, that sets you up so what happens when you see the
cross of Christ, when the Messiah shockingly doesn’t bring in the kingdom,
shockingly is killed by Caesar and the whole movement looks like it’s going
down the tube, and then suddenly people’s hearts are illuminated to the fact
that wait a minute, He’s the Lamb of God, He’s the Lamb, the Lamb of God!
Where are they getting this talk about the
Lamb of God business? From the Old
Testament. That’s why you hear me
sometimes so passionate about the fact that you can’t go reading the New
Testament and be a New Testament Christian without knowing the Old Testament,
because otherwise what would you do with something like this, if you were
talking to somebody like this? What
would you do with that if you didn’t have the Old Testament? Here’s this Jewish guy, he knows his Hebrew
cold, speaks it, he’s an expert in the Old Testament, and he comes along and
tells you no, it’s not a blood atonement.
If you didn’t know the Old Testament what would you do now? So these are why these events are important
to lock this whole thing together.
There are only so many answers possible out there and as you mature in
your understanding of Scripture you’ll see that there are very few
answers. At first, when you’re new at
this, it sounds like there’s a thousand different views out there. The more you study and the more the Lord
gives you insight, you really realize there are only two, salvation by works
and salvation by grace. There aren’t three, four, five, different ways, there
are only two, and we’re back to this again.
You’ve heard me say if you want to learn atheism
go to a good one, don’t go to some half-baked baptized heathen that you run
into on a Christian college campus somewhere, and I don’t mean to insult all
Christian college campuses, because
there’s some good ones but there are also some pretty crummy ones, some pretty
compromising ones that suck money away from Christian parents that think
they’re sending their sons and daughters to a great school and it turns out
that they’re learning higher criticism that’s so old that the universities
don’t teach it any more. When you want
to learn atheism go to a secular guy and learn it; go read Niche, then you get
it all out on the table. And that’s
what’s so good. If you notice, the
rabbi was kind of a positive thing, but the Muslim, because he wasn’t so close
to Christians he just let it all hang out, you know, I don’t go through all
that mechanism of dying, good night, we don’t need that, Allah forgives you if
you’re repentant enough, you hope.
Now what did I add that for? What have we studied in the death of Christ
about faith? Faith is assurance. Without blood atonement if we have a grasp
of our sin and God’s holiness where on earth do we get the nerve to say that
we’re going to stand in the presence of God?
Where do we get the nerve to say that we’ll go to heaven after we die,
if we really understand His holiness and our sin? Where do we get that nerve to say that? We get it from Him, that’s where. Why? Because He’s
revealed to us that through the atonement of Jesus Christ He has taken care of the
problem. This reaches the heart of men,
because at the heart of men is guilt and shame, all of our hearts. So instead of psychologizing the gospel and
making it some little Jesus-feel-good-thing, we don’t have to do that. We have to just pierce to the basic simple
idea behind the gospel that Jesus Christ died for sin, He is the Lamb of God
that takes away the sin of …” Not just some people, “takes away the sin of the
world.”
That’s the core of the gospel message, so
that’s why this death of Christ is important to understand and why you as a
Christian must understand that you stand out as an oddball. You are a part of a lonely group of people
on this planet. We are surrounded by
millions who reject completely the idea of someone dying for their sins
vicariously. We are surrounded by
millions of people, some ignorant, some brilliant, some educated, some not, but
from the man in the street to the man in the college classroom, who insist that
if there is a God, He will accept me because I’ve been a good little boy or a
good little girl. He’s just got to do
that because that’s the fair thing to do.
Now what is going on here, talk about manufactured theology, that’s
manufactured theology. Where do you get
that from? Did you talk to God and find
out? Call Him up on His cell phone and
ask Him? Have we had any revelation
recently that’s change? Not at all, we
go back to the revelation of the Bible, and it’s the Jewish revelation here,
going back to Abraham who was supposed to be the father of Islam, and what did
Abraham have to do? He almost killed
his son offering a sacrifice; this is the father of Islam.
So the gospel is controversial and no matter
how we… we can’t ever sugarcoat it enough to make it palatable to
unbelief. That’s a lesson I’ve had to
learn time and time again. No matter
how positive you come across, there’s always going to be the offense of the
gospel, there’s no way around it because as long as unbelief says that God is
like that and He can forgive me on my great repentance, the merit of my
repentance, then I don’t need the cross of Christ. And “there’s none other name given among men whereby we must be
saved,” it’s Christ. So that’s the
center of the death of Christ.
Now we’re going to look at the
resurrection. On page 100 of the notes
we’re going to start looking at some of the texts, but before we get to the
text I want to go through some of these quotes. This is the fourth event in the life of Christ. There’s actually five. Next year we’ll deal with the fifth one which
is His ascension and Pentecost. But
tonight we’re opening up with the resurrection. If you look at the first subtitle, “The Historical Incident of
the Resurrection,” you’ll see that: “No other religious leader or founder,”
think about this, we just got through saying Christianity and the gospel is an
odd thing in that we believe that God is so holy that we can’t self-atone, that
we do not possess the meritorious assets to commend ourselves to a holy God,
that we have to borrow those assets from the Lord Jesus Christ. We are alone here, Judaism, Islam and the
pagans all reject that tenet of our faith, so be prepared. Now we come to another one.
“No other religious or leader or founder ever
claimed to rise from the dead in an utterly new body. Moses’ body was buried
and did not rise (Deut. 34:5-6; cf. Jude 1:16). Buddha died as any other man, and so did Mohammed. Indeed, as Dr. Wilbur Smith says, ‘All the
millions and millions of Jews, Buddhists, and Mohammedans agree that their
founders have never come up out of the dust of the earth in resurrection.’”
Here again we are at another unique thing.
You want to master the things that set you apart in your faith from the
world around you, and understand that these are non-negotiable, these cannot be
compromised away, they cannot be explained away. This is where the gospel must confront unbelief.
There are two subtitles in this section. One is the affirmation of the fact of the
resurrection and on page 102 you’ll see “Affirmation of the Significance of the
Resurrection.” What I’m trying to do
here is try to lead us in our thinking about what is going on over this
resurrection claim, so that if you do get involved in a discussion over the
resurrection, you will protect your flanks over a little maneuver that’s
possible. So I’m going to cover that
flanking protection as we get into the second one. The first one that we’re talking about on page 100 is just the
fact of the resurrection, the claim that Jesus Christ rose from the dead, what
that claim is.
It has always been present from the earliest days of the Christian church. On page 101 I’m going to give you a quote
from a liberal theologian so you understand how educated apparent Christians,
because this man was a professor and (quote) “Christian thinker” (end quote),
get sharp here, just because someone is a Christian clergyman doesn’t mean
anything, they can use the buzz words just like you can, just like I can, and
mean something totally different. There are churches right around this county
that I can take you in and I guarantee, you can listen to the person preaching
and you will think you’re hearing the gospel, and I can show you, if you listen
to enough of the tapes they don’t believe it at all; not at all. It’s very deceitful. So I want to show you how the deceitfulness
works.
Here is Richard Niebuhr, Reinhold was his
brother; both these guys wrote in the 40’s and 50’s, your parents might have
some of these guys books. If they went
to college in the 30’s and 40’s they might have taken a course on comparative
religions and read either Reinhold or Richard.
“The intense analysis of the New Testament
produced by the great age of historical investigation has emphasized, among
other things, this fact that belief in Jesus as the risen Lord informs every
part of the early church’s thought.”
Circle the word “early,” the “early” church’s thought. So here is a scholar, who is a liberal, who
admits that all the records in the New Testament and early church fathers bear
witness to the fact that they believed in the resurrection, physical
resurrection. “But…”
“But the rise of historical criticism has also made it increasingly
difficult for theologians and biblical scholars to accept the New Testament
order of thought.” What does he mean by that?
Let’s unpack that sentence. This
is a very common assertion so let’s talk about it.
You’ll get this in Time Magazine, in the
newspapers, on talk shows, in interviews, it’s a common sentence; “the rise of
historical criticism has made it increasingly difficult for theologians and
biblical scholars to accept the New Testament order of thought.” Let’s start with “the New Testament order of
thought.” What do we mean by “the New
Testament order of thought?” What we
mean is a Biblical framework. Did the Apostle
Paul and Jesus believe in sin as defined by a Mosaic Law Code? Did they believe in the necessity of blood
atonement? Did they believe that there
was a sovereign God who controls history?
Did they believe that God’s Word formed history? Yes, that’s what he means, “the New
Testament order of thought.” The whole
Biblical framework. These guys know
this. What I’m teaching is not something
I invented. All I’m saying is that this
is well-known, “The New Testament order of thought.”
“But” he said “the rise of historical
criticism has also made it increasingly difficult … to accept.” So let’s go to the verb, “accept” the New
Testament order of thought. What does
that mean? Accept it as true, believe
it. Why is it difficult to believe the
New Testament order of thought? Because
of “the rise of historical criticism.”
So let’s take this one step back, “the rise of historical criticism,”
what’s historical criticism? Historical
criticism shows up in the Christian discussions here as the belief that we
can’t prima fascia accept the
text, that we have to on an empirical, historical basis… in other words,
instead of standing on the authority of Scripture and interpreting archeology,
manuscript evidence, geology, biology, and all the rest of it on the authority
of Scripture, instead of doing it this way I go over and I step on another
platform and I say on the basis of empiricism and rationalism I construct my
platform, and then after this grand construction job is finished, then I bring
over the Bible.
I bring the Bible over here and I begin to
dissect it, this fits, this doesn’t, this fits, this doesn’t. We go through the cafeteria and pick the
things that are fitting to our appetite and reject the ones that don’t. That’s what
we’re talking about here. What he means by “the rise of historical criticism”
is the complete grounding of scholarship on the unbelieving basis. That’s what
he means, and after that grand act, then we find, lo and behold, it’s difficult
to accept the Bible. No kidding! This is why, you’ve heard me again, and I
know because I’ve heard the criticism, people say why do you get into this and
why do you get into that, why do you deal with this? This is why, because as long as we permit biology, archeology,
history, science, physics, whatever, all the other things, psychology, as long
as all these things are grounded first on the position of unbelief, and we let
that happen, never can we ever after that reconcile Scripture. You set in motion something that comes and
blows up in your face. Can we convince
the world of these things? No, but at least when we think of these things we
always must say what saith the Scripture, because if we don’t ask what saith
the Scripture, then we’ve imported a Trojan horse. And the soldiers are going to come out of the Trojan horse at
night and take the city. That’s what’s
going on here. That’s what historically
happened.
This man is speaking as one of the leading
scholarly authorities of the Christian faith in the 20th
century. There’s only about five or six
guys of this stature. Guess who they’ve
influenced and educated? The guys that
have gotten their PhD’s in theology, the men who populate the seminaries, the
men who teach the preachers. This is
what’s happened; we’ve lost it because of this.
“The rise of historical criticism has also
made it increasingly difficult for theologians and biblical scholars to accept
the New Testament order of thought,” and before we leave that sentence I want
to make one concluding remark; that’s why when we attack and run our
counterattack, run our counter-play we don’t snip at symptoms. We go for the foundation and get back to
that… remember the illustration, somebody wants a redecorating job and the
redecorator shows up with a bulldozer, going to take the whole house down; we
rebuild a house, that’s how we deal with it.
And that’s what has to happen because if you don’t, you’re not going to
fight this.
“They have felt obligated to remove the
resurrection of Jesus from its central position and to place it on the
periphery of Christian teaching and proclamation, because the primitive
resurrection faith conflicts disastrously with modern canons of
historicity.” What does he mean by a “canon
of historicity?” Let’s take that term,
what is a “canon of historicity?” A
canon is used here in the sense of a law, or a principle. What is historicity? That it was historically real. So what he’s
saying is that the principles of interpreting history militate against
accepting any kind of a resurrection.
Why? Because on an empirical
basis how many resurrections have you observed? How many resurrections has anybody observed in Western
society? When did anybody ever take a
camera, when did anybody ever record anything like this before? This is a unique claim, it never happened
before. Yeah, no kidding, that’s the
point!
But once you say you want to go over to that
platform and you’ve got to build it on empiricism, what then must be the means,
must be the averages, must be the bulk data, and if you’ve accepted that as
your methodology, well then of course the canon of historicity that you’re
using militates against accepting the resurrection from the get go. You’ve excluded it from the get go. So don’t be intimidated when somebody says
well, the canon of historicity doesn’t accept that, I mean, no thinking person
accepts that. You have to correct them
at that point; no thinking person that operates on a pagan basis accepts that. Ooh, humph, why what do you mean by that,
now you’re going to call me names now?
No, I’m just labeling things for what they are, you start out with a
naturalistic presupposition and that’s paganism, and you’re saying that you’re
a smart person; I believe that, you’re rationally consistent, but you’re rationally
consistent with a pagan premise. Since
I don’t accept the pagan premise I don’t have a problem with the resurrection;
you have the problem with the resurrection, but it’s not because it’s
irrational, it’s because it’s inconsistent with your starting point. That’s why you’ve got the problem. So don’t get pushed into a corner here, use
it to come back to the other person.
They’ve got to build a position, go for it. You don’t have to be nasty about it, you can be very gracious,
just keep asking questions. What do you
believe about this then? That’s the
important thing.
The next paragraph, we’ll get into some
Scripture in a minute but I want to show you what unbelief is doing here so
when we get to the text of Scripture we’re looking for things in the text that
are going to help us. This is a little
exercise and a hint that’s helped me a lot over the years so that I’ve never
been afraid to go to the Scriptures to find answers. I’ve learned and I’ve had enough confidence, God has encouraged
me enough in the Scriptures that no matter who I run into, no matter what the
argument is, I have the courage to sit there and listen to it and try to
understand it, because if I understand what they’re saying, and it raises
questions in my mind I know where the answers are. So I come back to the Scriptures and often times it’s a blessing
because it causes me to go to the text more seriously than I ever did before to
find the answer to this point. And ask
God to illuminate that portion of Scripture, and you grow. Most of us grow by kicking the ass, that’s
how God the Holy Spirit works. That’s
how He’s worked in the Church. He
doesn’t work in the Church by blessing the sheep because we go baa, we fight
Him all the time. So He brings in the
wolves, and they bite us you know where.
And then finally we come to the Savior and we say gee, maybe He knows
right. Facing these assaults actually
inspire deeper appreciation of Scripture.
“…all
such attempts ‘to remove the resurrection of Jesus from its central position’”
I re-quoted Neibuhr in this statement; this is a cute one, “reverse the true
cause-effect of the Church’s origin.
These unbelieving attempts try to make the Church the originator of the
‘primitive resurrection faith’ instead of making the resurrection the
originating cause of the Church.” Let
me diagram this for you. Every college
campus I know today outside of a few orthodox Christian ones are teaching this. Every newspaper writer who has ever studied
in these classes thinks this way. The
deal is that you have the Church as a group of human beings and they put a spin
on history, and the spin is the New Testament, so that the New Testament text
reflects not what happened, but it reflects the spin the Christians put on it. So the reports of the resurrection are
things that the Christians thought about what happened in their lives, and it
was such a momentous thing to meet this Jewish carpenter who was executed, that
it was like living all over again, like having a new life, sort of like Shirley
MacLaine, except they offered it free and she charges money. The New Testament is a result of a Church
experience of some sort.
Whereas what we believe is that you have the
factual revelation of God, this is His story, history, and out of that because
of the resurrection you have the Church empowered to write the New
Testament. That’s the sequence of
events, and they’re exactly opposite. So remember which came first, the
revelation of God or the religious experience.
These guys are saying the religious experience came first, then came the
text, and there never was a factual experience. We believe there was a factual
experience, that inspired the Church and they wrote about it in the New
Testament. Let’s go to some of the key
texts of Scripture. Let’s go to the
classic one, 1 Cor. 15. First we’ll do
this and then we’ll touch on a number of other passages.
1 Cor. 15:3, this is Paul, who got this
message after Christ rose from the dead.
He wasn’t around the tomb when Jesus rode from the dead, so either Paul
got the doctrine of resurrection indirectly through the apostles or on the
Damascus Road when he saw the Lord. But
let’s think about this in the light of modern man who argues that this is a
spin, this is a spin story. Now if it’s
a spin story watch what happens here in the 1 Cor. 15 text. Look at verse 3, “For I delivered to you as
of first importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins
according to the Scriptures.” What
Scriptures? What are the Scriptures
here, New Testament or Old Testament?
The Old Testament. Aha! So in
what model, what categories of thinking is Paul approaching the whole thing
in? Old Testament. He says “according to the Scriptures,” we’re
not making this up, check the Scriptures.
We will later, it’s quite a challenge to see the resurrection in the Old
Testament, by the way, and it’s going to lead us to a very interesting view of
Scripture that the Lord Jesus had.
“For I delivered to you as of first
importance what I also received, that Christ died for our sins according to the
Scriptures,” of course here he’s talking about the death of Christ, and that’s
clear in the Old Testament Scripture, but the resurrection is also there, [4]
“and that He was buried, and that He was raised on the third day according to
the Scriptures.” You know, it’s
interesting in the Old Testament, why do you suppose it says there’s going to
be a resurrection the third day. If
you’ve got a study Bible you can look at the key, but it’s an interesting
passage and it’s in Hosea; it involves quite a thoughtful reflection on the
prophets and what they say.
Verse 5, “and that He appeared to Cephas,
then to the twelve. [6] After that He appeared to more than five hundred
brethren at one time, most of whom remain until now, but some have fallen
asleep.” Now if Paul said that, what
challenge do you think is imbedded in verse 6 to his audience? If they doubted Paul, and he said something
like that, what is he daring them to do?
Go talk to them, they’re still around, check it out, did I make up the
story. So it’s an interesting appeal
using evidence, go check it out for yourself, he’s saying they’re not dead, go
talk to them. There are over five
hundred of these people walking around still that saw this happen.
Verse 7, “then He appeared to James, then to
all the apostles.” Now in verse 5, 6 and 7 he’s carefully witnessed to a
sequence of appearances, so not only… is it not saying He appeared to James and
the apostles and Cephas and the twelve, he says He appeared to Cephas, then to
the twelve, then to this person, then to that person. So not only is he claiming that these people saw Jesus, but he
says I know the sequence, boom, boom, boom.
Does this sound credible? Does
this sound like a spin story? Verse 8,
“and last of all, as it were, to one untimely born, He appeared to me also. [9]
For I am the least of the apostles, who am not fit to be called an apostle,
because I persecuted the church of God.”
So now we have this resurrection, and he goes
on and gives this whole thing, and we’ll come back to this passage [blank spot]
…that’s something you want to watch carefully as we go to this text. You’ll hear it said by sloppy people, oh
well, that’s you know, in the ancient world lots of people believed in
resurrections. Excuse me! You won’t
find a true idea of the idea of the resurrection outside of the Bible. Resuscitation is not resurrection. Resuscitation you come back in your present
body to die again; resurrection your whole body disappears and is transformed
never to die again. Two different
things! And this, the resurrection, is
not common in the pagan world.
Verse 12, “Now if Christ is preached, that He
has been raised from the dead, how do some among you” by the way, that means
the Church, that’s not the people outside the Church, the people inside the
Church, how come among you in the Church you “say that there is no resurrection
of the dead?” [13] “But if there is no
resurrection of the dead,” and watch the logic, he says okay, let’s start with
your premise, there’s no resurrection of the dead, let’s see where that one
leads, “if there is no resurrection of the dead, not even Christ has been
raised,” right. You can’t have a
resurrection, and that’s a general principle, then you can’t have a specific
instance. So if there’s no
resurrection, then Jesus couldn’t have risen, [14] “and if Christ has not been
raised then our preaching is vain, and your faith also is vain.”
And now look what he says in verse 15, we
covered this when we were dealing with inerrancy, “Moreover we are even found
to be false witnesses of God, because we witnessed against God that He raised
Christ, whom He did not raise, if in fact the dead are not raised.” This should sound a death null to this
story. Let’s think about this, the
Church spinning up a story. What is one
of the Ten Commandments? “Thou shalt not
bear false witness.” Do you know the
context of that commandment? By the way, why it was used, why does a society need
that? What happens in the
courtroom? When somebody is being
convicted and accused of a crime, and the jury has to sit and figure it out,
you’ve got to have truthfulness in the courtroom, or you get false
convictions. Or said another way, you
can’t apply ethics if you do not have an atmosphere of truth because you can’t
correctly identify the situation to apply the ethic too. That’s why there’s a
false witness claim in the Ten Commandments.
People always think of “thou shalt not murder,” etc., but the whole
court system of the Old Testament was grounded on this “thou shalt not bear
false witness.” You don’t substantiate
a false accusation against your neighbor, that’s what it’s saying. Or conversely, you don’t cover up the crime
of a neighbor. That’s the original side
of it.
So what is happening here, Paul goes back to
the Ten Commandments and he says look, if this is a spin story, I am violating
the ethical commandments of Judaism.
And I believe this is why God had the Jews be the custodians of the
Bible, because the Jews had centuries of experience. Jews came through history with Torah; they came through history
with a sense of right and wrong, not like the Greeks, the Egyptians, and the
Assyrians and the hotten-tots and everybody else. The Jews had a [not sure of word] ground for century after
century, they knew what it meant to have integrity. It’s not that they all had integrity, but at least they knew the
standard of integrity. So for them to
create a spin about something that God supposedly did and He didn’t do it,
that’s bearing false witness against whom?
Against God.
So any liberal today who’s saying the Church
is spinning up the story is accusing these people against their Judaic
background of violating one of the Ten Commandments. Try that on your friends that say I believe the Bible errors and
all. It has to be all or nothing; these
guys are putting their lives on the line and here it is; this is a classic
reference. 1 Cor. 15:15 is a classic
verse to come to because it shows you the mentality of the Apostles in the
middle of the warfare of the claims of the gospel. They were willing to say that if this is not true, I am an
imposter, I’ve violated the Ten Commandments, I bear false witness against my
God.
Verse 16, “For if the dead are not raised,
not even Christ has been raised; [17] and if Christ has not been raised, your
faith is worthless; you are still in your sins. [18] Then those also who have
fallen asleep in Christ have perished. [19] If we have only hoped in Christ in
this life [only] we are of all men most to be pitied.” Why do you suppose he said that? Think about that one. Here’s the resurrection, in eternity, and
here’s time and here’s death. Why does
he say that we, of all people, are to be pitied if that part of the message is
false? Why are we to be pitied? Because
what’s happening over here? We are not participating in all the goody things
that the world offers. Frankly many
times we’re not really enjoying ourselves because of the priorities of our faith.
We’re denying ourselves temporal fulfillments, and how foolish if the whole
message is wrong. And more seriously,
what he’s also saying by implication is that this life in eternity is being
shaped by what we’re doing now. We’re setting up what our lives are going to
look like in eternity, a very sobering thought, by what we’re obeying and
disobeying now.
Then he says later on, verse 32, he goes
through this argument several times, then he comes down, and put this one down
along with verse 15, this is another classic.
“If from human motives I fought with wild beasts at Ephesus,” in other
words, if I’m just spinning up a story, “I fought with wild beasts at Ephesus”
could be the crowds, it could be literal animals, whatever it is it’s the
offense of the gospel, etc. “what does it profit me? If the dead are not raised, let us eat and drink, for tomorrow we
die.” The apostles weren’t stupid. So many people have this idea that these
guys were little kooky old men or something, wandering around in the ancient
world. They knew how to have fun; they
knew what was going on all over town.
Come on, these guys weren’t born yesterday. And they said look, if this
isn’t true, then hey, I join the crowd.
Do you know who’s to be pitied? The stupid fools who think it’s false and
like it. That’s why I’ve always said if
I wasn’t a fundamentalist Christian I’d be an atheist, I certainly wouldn’t be
a liberal, what an idiot. I like all
the good things of the Christian religion but I know it’s phony. Would you accept that in any other area of
your life? I like driving my crummy
car, I like going to my house that’s falling apart, it gives me a good
feeling. I believe in this old religion
that doesn’t make sense, but I like it.
That’s the importance of the historicity
claims of the gospel and central to that is the historicity of the
resurrection.
Now we want to go to two passages. Luke 24:31, This is the Emmaus Road, and
what you want to notice here with this Emmaus Road incident is that Luke seems
fascinated about the resurrection, just like he seems fascinated about Mary’s
pregnancy. Of all the four Gospel
writers it’s Luke that interviewed those women, and got all the details of the
pregnancy, both of Elizabeth and Mary. Why is that? Who was Luke? A medical doctor.
So he uses his natural… God had called him to be a medical doctor so he
thought gee, I like to investigate these kind of things. So he reports these neat little things. The guys are going down the road talking to
Jesus, walking, and He’s obviously conversing with them, and then all of a
sudden, “And their eyes were opened and they recognized Him; and He vanished
from their sight.” This isn’t a spirit
that they’re seeing, this isn’t something that was just an appearance, it was a
physical person walking down the road with them, and they weren’t dreaming
this.
It’s pretty awesome to think that whatever
power the resurrection body has, think about this, it has the ability to appear
and disappear. Boy, wouldn’t you have
fun to appear and disappear, and evidently this is one of the characteristics
of the resurrection body; it can go through doors without opening them. To be able to go through walls… resurrection
body. It’s something physical but
there’s something odd about the physics.
I want to go to John because John is supposed
to be the spooky Gospel writer, and in spite of all that look what he does in
John 20, this is that famous section that you sometimes hear on Easter, about
doubting Thomas. Verse 19, “When
therefore it was evening, on that day, the first day of the week,” notice the
day of the week, Sunday, “and when the doors were shut where the disciples
were, for fear of the Jews, Jesus came and stood in their midst,” how’d He get
through, it says the doors were shut.
So He appears, “and said to them, ‘Peace be with you.’” Verse 20, “And when He had said this, He
showed them both His hands and His side,” to identify Himself, [The disciples
therefore rejoiced when they saw the Lord. [21] Jesus therefore said to them
again, ‘Peace be with you; as the Father has sent Me, I also send you.’” Verse
24, “But Thomas, one of the twelve, called Didymus, was not with them when
Jesus came.”
Then verse 25, “The other disciples therefore
were saying to him, ‘We have seen the Lord!’ But Thomas said to them, ‘Unless I
shall see in His hands the imprint of the nails,” notice what Thomas wanted to
do, I want to “put my finger into the place of the nails, and [I want to] put
my hand into His side, I will not believe.”
Do you think His wounds were big enough? This shows you how big the wounds were; put your finger right in
the nail hole. I want to do that. I want to put my hand, my whole hand in His
side; these are big mortal wounds that the Lord had. But Thomas says I want to do that and if I can’t, I won’t
believe. So here’s the empiricist. But
Thomas has a good point here, and the Holy Spirit used Thomas to teach the rest
of the Church something about this resurrection body, that it was not a
disembodied spirit that appeared.
There’s something new about Jesus, He’s not a ghost. Verse 26, “And after eight days again His
disciples were inside, and Thomas with them.
Jesus came, the doors having been shut, and stood in their midst, and
said, ‘Peace be with you.’” Again notice the state of the doors, notice they’re
faithfully reported in verse 26, see these little details, the Gospel writers
put them in here. The doors were shut,
and all of a sudden He’s standing there in the middle of them.
Verse 27, “Then Jesus said to Thomas, ‘Reach
here your finger, and see My hands; and reach here your hand, and put it into
My side; and be not unbelieving, but believing.’” Now if you had been Thomas and you were sitting there, besides getting
over the shock of suddenly He was here and you didn’t believe that He did these
kind of things, what would you have thought when He turned to you and quoted
what you had said when He wasn’t around, apparently. I think that’d about spook me out as much as just seeing all of a
sudden He appears in the room, now He’s telling me what I said the other
day. Gee, I’d better watch what I say,
He’s always listening. [28, “Thomas
answered and said to Him, ‘My Lord and my God!’”] He says touch Me, and then He challenges the rest of the Church
Age in verse 29, “[Jesus said to him, ‘Because you have seen Me, have you believed?] Blessed are they who did not
see, and yet believed.” They don’t have
a chance to touch Me, but they believe, and we’re part of those that are
blessed for believing.
Next week, look on page 102 of the notes,
look at that argument in Luke 20:27, I skipped that because I want you to read
that, it’s just a small passage and try to reason out on a piece of paper the
logic that Jesus is using. It’s tough;
this is not a simple passage. Jesus is
using an argument here about proving the resurrection from Exodus 3, and I
think it’s going to challenge you.
Turn to Acts 1:3, here’s Luke again, the
historian, and he says “To these He also presented Himself alive, after His
suffering, by many convincing proofs, appearing to them over a period of forty
days, and speaking of the things concerning the kingdom of God.” But you see in verse 3, “convincing proofs,”
does this sound like these guys are putting a spin on it. They’re reporting their own errors, they’re
reporting the fact, gee, we thought He was a spirit, a lot of us didn’t
believe. They’re reporting to us that
five hundred people finally saw the guy, and He did this for forty days. So it doesn’t quite sound like a spin story. I mean if this is a spin story it’s a
ripper.
Next week we’ll go on with the argument of
the resurrection of the Lord Jesus.