How do we know that the Gospel of Christ is true?
1. Jesus Christ, as he is
presented to us in the New Testament, and as he stands forth from all its
writings, is too single and too great to have been invented so uniformly by all
these writers. The force of Jesus Christ unleashed these writings; the writings
did not create the force. Jesus is far bigger and more compelling than any of
his witnesses. His reality stands behind these writings as a great, global
event stands behind a thousand newscasters. Something stupendous unleashed
these diverse witnesses to tell these stunning and varied, yet unified, stories
of Jesus Christ.
2.
Nobody has ever explained the empty tomb of Jesus in the hostile environment of
Jerusalem where the enemies of Jesus would have given anything to produce the
corpse, but could not. The earliest attempts to cover the scandal of
resurrection were manifestly contradictory to all human experience - disciples
do not steal a body (Matthew 28:13) and then sacrifice their lives to preach a
glorious gospel of grace on the basis of the deception. Modern theories that
Jesus didn't die but swooned, and then awoke in the tomb and moved the stone
and tricked his skeptical disciples into believing he was risen as the Lord of
the universe don't persuade.
3.
Cynical opponents of Christianity abounded where claims were made that many
eyewitnesses were available to consult concerning the resurrection of Jesus
from the dead. "After that He appeared to more than five hundred brethren
at one time, most of whom remain until now, but some have fallen asleep" (1 Corinthians
15:6). Such claims would be exposed as immediate falsehood if they
could. But we know of no exposure. Eyewitnesses of the risen Lord abounded when
the crucial claims were being made.
4. The early church was
an indomitable force of faith and love and sacrifice on the basis of the
reality of Jesus Christ. The character of this church, and the nature of the
gospel of grace and forgiveness, and the undaunted courage of men and women -
even unto death - do not fit the hypothesis of mass hysteria. They simply were
not like that. Something utterly real and magnificent had happened in the world
and they were close enough to know it, and be assured of it, and be gripped by
its power. That something was Jesus Christ, as all of them testified, even as
they died singing.
5. The prophesies of the
Old Testament find stunning fulfillment in the history of Jesus Christ. The
witness to these fulfillments are too many, too diverse, too subtle and too
interwoven into the history of the New Testament church and its many writings
to be fabricated by some great conspiracy. Down to the details, Jesus Christ
fulfilled dozens of Old Testament prophecies that vindicate his truth.
6. The witnesses to Jesus
Christ who wrote the New Testament gospels and letters are not gullible or
deceitful or demented. This is manifest from the writings themselves. The books
bear the marks of intelligence and clear-headedness and maturity and a moral
vision that is compelling. They win our trust as witnesses, especially when all
taken together with one great unifying, but distinctively told, message about
Jesus Christ.
7. The worldview that
emerges from the writings of the New Testament makes more sense out of more
reality than any other worldview. It not only fits the human heart, but also
the cosmos and history and God as he reveals himself in nature and conscience.
Some may come to this conclusion after much reflection, others may arrive at
this conviction by a pre-reflective, intuitive sense of the deep suitability of
Christ and his message to the world that they know.
8. When
one sees Christ as he is portrayed truly in the gospel, there shines forth a
spiritual light that is a self-authenticating. This is "the light of the
knowledge of the glory of God" (2 Corinthians
4:6), and it is as immediately perceived by the Spirit-awakened
heart as light is perceived by the open eye. The eye does not argue that there
is light. It sees light.
9. When
we see and believe the glory of God in the gospel, the Holy Spirit is given to
us so that the love of God might be "poured out in our hearts" (Romans 5:5).
This experience of the love of God known in the heart through the gospel of Him
who died for us while we were yet ungodly assures us that the hope awakened by
all the evidences we have seen will not disappoint us.
Loving the truth of
Christ with you this Advent,
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