Why do you seek the living among the dead? He is not here, but has risen. Luke 24:5-6
When we consider Jesus as Messiah, most of us think immediately in personal terms: Jesus is my Messiah. He forgives my sins. He lives in me. All of which, of course, is true. But 1st-century Jewish expectations concerning the messiahship of Jesus were far broader than that. If we had talked with a 1st-century Jew about his or her messianic expectations, we would have discovered hopes that were, in a sense, far grander in scope.
The Jews anticipated that their long-awaited Messiah would come to defeat the pagans who held sway over them, to rebuild the temple, and to establish God’s just rule upon the earth. Theirs was a nationalistic hope—a hope that the Messiah would come and vindicate the nation of Israel. Jesus’ arrival, together with the miracles He performed, the stories He told, and the prophecies He fulfilled, built to a great crescendo of expectation among His followers. But just when they began to think that He really would be the one to politically redeem the people of Israel, at Calvary they saw all their messianic hopes hanging up on a Roman gibbet. And when Jesus cried out, “It is finished” (John 19:30), many of them must have agreed.
How, then, did this group of believers, whose messianic hopes had been buried in a Palestinian tomb, not only continue to believe that Jesus was the Messiah but stand in the streets near where He had been executed and make an unashamed declaration of His messiahship? The answer which comes reverberating through the pages of the New Testament is found in the bodily resurrection of Jesus. The angelic announcement to the women who had brought spices to embalm a corpse provoked a radical reassessment of what the believers had witnessed on the Friday and a complete change in their view of their lives and futures. When the Messiah reappeared among them, as alive as ever, these previously sad, sorrowful, defeated, and brokenhearted disciples were transformed into bold, joyful witnesses. They now bore testimony to the reality of Christ resurrected with a body that could be seen, handled, and touched, and yet possessing capacities to do what His pre-resurrection body had not done. His work of salvation was finished; His life and His reign were most certainly not!
Only in the disciples’ recognition of His risen presence did Christ’s messiahship finally make sense. Indeed, what the early Jewish believers discovered when they “found the stone rolled away from the tomb” (Luke 24:2) and saw that “Jesus himself stood among them” (v 36) was that an eternal hope, joy, and power ignited within their hearts. And these remain available to all who put their trust in Jesus, the resurrected Messiah. It is the resurrection, and only the resurrection, that changes sadness, sorrow, and defeat into hope, joy, and power. It is the resurrection, and only the resurrection, that declares that our Messiah will defeat His enemies, will restore His people, and will rule from sea to sea. The resurrection of Jesus will change everything about how you go about your day today.
Resurrection life for the believer means that we live united to the resurrected Son, in the power of the Holy Spirit, before the loving face of the Father.
Eyewitness testimonies, the empty tomb, the striking change in the disciples ... the New Testament provides fact-based evidence that Jesus rose from the dead. In this message, Alistair Begg encourages us to a thoughtful consideration of this central Christian truth, emphasizing the need to trust in Christ for our salvation. Through His Word, Jesus calls each one to faith in the Gospel, and those who believe are called to share His story with a broken world.
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