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We have arrived again at the anniversary of the greatest event in history. Around 1,987 years ago, in a rather routine and inconsequential act for that time, Roman authorities nailed a man to a cross. What happened next is subject to dispute. But since then, most of the world has believed that on the third day, after his execution, the man named Jesus came back to physical life.
Whether one believes it happened or not, indisputably the first Holy Week fundamentally transformed civilization. Today, several billion people globally will celebrate Holy Week. They believe Jesus died for them, rose again from the dead, stayed on the earth for forty days, then ascended to Heaven “from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead,” as the Apostles’ Creed proclaims.
Christians are prone to look at the number of people executed in the last two thousand years for accepting Christ and think no one would die for a lie. That is simply not true. Nineteen men flew planes into tall buildings, the Pentagon, and a field for a lie. People will die for a lie.
The people who will not die for a lie, however, are the liar’s family and friends. They will call the whole thing a farce. In fact, the historic record shows that the brothers and mother of the man called Jesus tried to stage an intervention. They thought he was nuts. Christians believe Jesus’s mother saw the angel Gabriel who told Mary she would be with child, though she was a virgin. She knew she carried the Messiah in her womb.
Despite that, the Gospel of Mark reports that when Jesus’s family heard him preaching “they went out to seize him, for they were saying, ‘He is out of his mind.’ … And his mother and his brothers came, and standing outside they sent to him and called him.” His own mother who Christians believe had an angel show up to tell her she was carrying a child who would “be called holy — the Son of God” tried to stage an intervention for that very child.
The historic record also notes that at Jesus’s execution his own family would not show up, except for his mother. Mothers are always the last to give up on a child. His brothers, some Christians believe they were really his closest first cousins, were not there. In fact, John, an eyewitness and Jesus’s best friend, wrote that from the cross Jesus told John to take care of Mary. Her family was not there.
A family would not die for the lie of a liar, particularly a liar the family thought was “out of his mind.” A family would not die for a liar when they would not even show up at his own execution. So something must have happened.
The historic record, both Biblical and extra-Biblical, shows that Jesus’s brothers did accept him as the Christ after Jesus’s death. Paul, writing in 1 Corinthians 15, reports that after his resurrection Christ “appeared to more than five hundred brothers at one time …. Then he appeared to James, then to all the apostles.” That would be Jesus’s brother James -- the brother who tried to stage an intervention and would not even show up at Jesus’s execution.
James became a pillar of the early church. Early church historians record that years after the resurrection, when local public officials asked James to tell others Jesus was not the Christ, James proclaimed that his brother was the Lord. The local leaders then threw James off the Temple wall in Jerusalem and stoned him to death. James and Jesus’s brother Simeon then took up James’ place. Their brother Jude too proclaimed Christ as the Messiah. He too was executed.
Jude, Jesus’s brother, wrote a remarkable letter that is part of the New Testament. The historic, extra-Biblical evidence identifies the author as Jesus’s brother. Jude says something amazing about his brother. He wrote, “Now I want to remind you, although you once fully knew it, that Jesus, who saved a people out of the land of Egypt, afterward destroyed those who did not believe.” He wrote that his brother was actually Yahweh — the pillar of cloud and fire, the God who “saved a people out of the land of Egypt.” The Roman Emperor ultimately executed Jude for that.
Would your brother, your sister, or your parents tell others that you were Yahweh? Would they be willing to die for that claim? Roman authorities exterminated Jesus’s entire earthly bloodline and all of them, including his brothers who had rejected him before his death, went to their graves proclaiming him not a god, but the God — Yahweh.
Many people reject these things as myth. The historic record shows that, regardless, the crucifixion of Jesus this week roughly 1,987 years ago fundamentally reshaped the world. More likely than not, the words “We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights” would not have happened, but for Jesus first proclaiming himself “the way, and the truth, and the life.”
Here’s the most important thing though. If I am wrong, it is no big deal except it upended human history and that is something. If I am right, however, my words do not matter. I can convince you Jesus was a real historic person. But only Jesus can convince you he is God. And, again, if I’m right, don’t take my word for it. You can ask him for yourself and he will answer.
Can you post a link to the playlist Erick? Couldn’t catch it when you mentioned it earlier on the show
Excellent writing of the transition to believing of those 1st hand witness accounts. Amazing that today people believe through the written accounts of the time and faith. Consider yourself in those times, as James or Jude, you had not seen the angel, but did witness miracles. Still questioning whether the amazing things you had seen and claims were true, until you see your brother walking and talking with you and others, bearing the wounds of his death, after witnessing his dead body in a tomb. Enough to convince the hardest of hearts, and most stubborn. Saul, himself, became a hardened believer, not by the miracles performed, but by the first hand meeting of the dead man. Changing from persecutor to persecuted. The story and logical method of presentation that you use in this writing is really well done. JESUS is our Lord, and today is the symbolic celebration of the beginning of the 3 days of ultimate proof that HE IS who HE SAYS HE IS. (present tense and emphasis intentional).
Thanks Erick, for your continuous dedication to disseminating the truth, both in the telling of JESUS's story and the politics of today.