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Lesson 9: The Resurrection of Jesus Christ

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Lesson 9: The Resurrection of Jesus Christ Resurrection is consistent with the life of Jesus. The resurrection bonds remarkably well with all of Jesus life. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Lesson 9: The Resurrection of Jesus Christ


1
Lesson 9The Resurrection of Jesus Christ
2
I. The Resurrection At the HEART of the Gospel
3
  • Horrible Death
  • Empty Tomb
  • Appearances of Jesus After His Burial
  • Record of Women as First Witnesses
  • Transformation of Disciples

4
Horrible Death
  1. Heavy loss of blood.
  2. When His side was pierced, blood and water flowed
    out.

5
Figure 9-1
Figure 9-1
6
Horrible Death
  1. Heavy loss of blood.
  2. When His side was pierced, blood and water flowed
    out.
  3. Soldiers didnt break His legs.

7
Horrible Death
  1. Pilate asked for assurance(from the centurion)
    that Jesus was dead.
  2. He was wrapped completely in bandages and laid in
    a tomb.

8
Figure 9-2
Figure 9-2
9
Horrible Death
  1. Pilate asked for assurance(from the centurion)
    that Jesus was dead.
  2. He was wrapped completely in bandages and laid in
    a tomb.
  3. Non-Christian sources confirm the Crucifixion of
    Jesus.

10
Empty Tomb
  • The Jews through history have admitted that the
    tomb was empty. They only give reason for the
    tombs vacancybelief in the empty tomb is
    assumed.
  • Trypho, a Jew, said in the second century
  • One Jesus, a Galilean deceiver, we crucified,
    but his disciples stole him by night from the
    tomb, where he laid when unfastened from the
    cross, and now deceive men by asserting that he
    has risen from the dead and ascended into
    heaven. (Dialogue with Trypho, by Justin Martyr)

11
Empty Tomb
  • Christianity could not have originated in
    Jerusalem within a few weeks of the supposed
    Resurrection if there were no empty tomb.
  • Why not? No one would have believed the
    resurrection if there were no empty tomb, seeing
    the resurrection was first preached in Jerusalem
    (the very city in which the body had lain) within
    a few weeks of the Crucifixion and burial.

12
Empty Tomb
  • Other explanations for the empty tomb are not
    reasonable.
  • The disciples stole the body.
  • Butthe disciples would have had to sneak by
    or overpower the Roman guard outside the tomb.

13
  • And if the disciples stole the body, they died
    for what they knew was a lie.

14
Can we trust the apostles to have told the truth?
  • Peter, crucified
  • Andrew, crucified
  • Matthew, by the sword
  • James, son of Alpheus, crucified
  • Philip, crucified
  • Simon, crucified

15
  • Thaddaeus, killed by arrows
  • James, brother of Jesus, stoned
  • Thomas, spear thrust
  • Bartholomew, crucified
  • James, son of Zebedee, the sword

16
  • Nothing in law so convinces courts and juries of
    the truthfulness of a story as the fact that a
    mans life has been consistent with such story.
  • Henry Barnett, attorney.

17
Empty Tomb
  • Maybe the Jewish or Roman authorities removed
    the body.
  • But if they had removed it, they would have
    produced it for everyone to see. Why?
  • Swoon Theory
  • More incredible than a resurrection

18
Figure 9-3
Figure 9-3
19
Appearances after the Resurrection
  1. In 1 Corinthians 1538, Paul gives a list of
    some of those who saw Christ

Peter The Twelve 500 brethren at once, most still
alive when Paul wrote this
James Paul himself
20
Figure 9-4
Figure 9-4
21
Appearances after the Resurrection
  • The Gospels also record the testimony of others
    who saw Christ after He had been crucified.
  • Why should we believe the testimony of these
    early Christians who said they saw Christ?

22
  • Record of Women as the First Witnesses

23
Transformation of Disciples
  • Peter
  • Paul
  • James, Jesus brother

24
  • Horrible Death
  • Empty Tomb
  • Appearances of Jesus After His Burial
  • Record of Women as First Witnesses
  • Transformation of Disciples

25
Figure 9-5
Figure 9-5
26
  • H
  • E
  • A
  • R
  • T

27
II. What Happens When One Examines the Evidence
Objectively?
28
A. Simon Greenleafprofessor of law at Harvard in
the 1800s
  • His three-volume work A Treatise on the Law of
    Evidence has been considered by the Supreme Court
    to be the greatest single authority on legal
    evidence.
  • He said, If the evidence for the resurrection
    was set before any unbiased courtroom in the
    world it would be judged to be an historical
    factJesus Christ rose from the dead!

29
B. Lord Lyttleton and Gilbert West, friends at
Oxford
  • Lyttleton tried to prove Saul was never
    converted.
  • West tried to prove Christ never rose from the
    dead.
  • What happened after each independently looked at
    the evidence and then came back together?

30
III. Other Evidence for the Resurrection
31
  • Worship on Sunday by the early Christian Jews
  • Easter
  • Art of the early Christians

32
Figure 9-9
Figure 9-9
33
Figure 9-8
Figure 9-8
34
  • Resurrection is consistent with the life of
    Jesus.
  • The resurrection bonds remarkably well with all
    of Jesus life.

35
Gospel Creed of 1 Cor. 15 dates very early
  • The first few verses of 1 Cor. 15 are a creed
    that was given to Paul in the mid-thirties, just
    a few years after the resurrection. This creed
    presents the basic facts of the death and
    resurrection of Christ, with a list of people who
    saw Him resurrected.

36
Figure 9-6
Figure 9-6
37
Unique exaltation of Jesus after the resurrection.
  • Immediately after the resurrection, Jesus was
    worshipped as Lord of Life.

38
  • Existence of the Christian Church

39
Figure 9-7
Figure 9-7
40
IV. What Does the Resurrection Prove?
41
  • That Jesus is who He claimed to bethe Son of
    God, God in the flesh.
  • It also confirms the Atonement.
  • It shows that He can overcome death.

42
V. Application of Lesson
43
  • Prepare for the trial next session.
  • Share the HEART and WE ARGUE acrostics with
    someone.
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