|
Open A Print Ready Copy
What Does Christ's Resurrection Teach
Us?
“I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in
Me, though he may die, he shall live” (John 11:25).
The apostle Paul tells us that “flesh and
blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God” (1 Corinthians 15:50). So Christ’s
resurrection to eternal life was to a glorified spirit body (Philippians
3:21), of the same divine essence as the Father. Yet Christ’s resurrection
appearances took a wonderful variety of forms. The Gospel accounts show us
that no one recognized Him unless He wanted them to.
Mary of Magdala was the first person to see Jesus after His resurrection.
John records that she went to Jesus’ tomb while it was still dark and
realized that it was empty (John 20:1-2). She immediately became anxious and
despaired because she believed Christ’s body had been stolen.
Mary Magdalene’s remarkable experience
Mary went to tell Peter and John, who then rushed to the tomb. But the
only things they found there were Christ’s grave clothes. When God
resurrected Jesus to spirit life, He apparently passed right through them as
though they were not there.
We pick up the account in verse 14: “. . . She turned around and saw
Jesus standing there, and did not know that it was Jesus.” Mary Magdalene
did not recognize someone she knew well. She assumed He was the gardener.
What followed next was a startling recognition.
“Jesus said to her, ‘Mary!’ She turned and said to Him, ‘Rabboni!’ (which
is to say, Teacher)” (verse 16). The impossible dream came true—the
unbelievable had happened!
This particular moment of recognition is perhaps unsurpassed in all of
history. A weeping, distraught woman who thinks everything is lost suddenly
realizes Her Savior is alive and well and standing before her! The wave of
emotion that swept over her must have been indescribable. Jesus simply
addressed her in the same way He had so many times before while He was still
a human being.
Most of us have had the experience of unexpectedly seeing someone we know
well whom we have not seen for a long time. The emotion we experience is
difficult to adequately describe.
But, much more than that, this woman—out of whom Jesus had cast seven
demons—was the first human being in history to see the resurrected Christ in
person and recognize who He was. What an honor!
But why her? Perhaps it was because she trusted in and was devoted to
Jesus in a way that few human beings have ever been. She was also always
demonstrably grateful for what Christ had done. Before her incredible
healing, her life must have been one of sheer torment.
Christ’s resurrection body
The resurrected Jesus passed right through thick walls and could suddenly
appear and then vanish at will (Luke 24:31; Mark 16:12). Some argue that
Christ’s resurrected body was the same physical body that had died, equating
these abilities with His miraculously walking on water while human. The
Bible, however, assures us that Jesus was now again spirit, as He had been
before in heaven with the Father (John 17:5)—unhindered by the laws of
physics that limit us physical human beings.
Paul explicitly states that, although “the first man Adam became a living
being . . . made of dust” (1 Corinthians 15:47), “. . . the last Adam
[Jesus] became a life-giving spirit” (verse 45).
Indeed, He was once again “the High and Lofty One who inhabits eternity”
with the Father (Isaiah 57:15). So how do we explain the variety of
humanlike postresurrection appearances recorded in the Scriptures? Let’s
read and study a few.
Later in Christ’s conversation with Mary Magdalene in John 20:17, Jesus
said, “Do not cling to Me [‘Touch me not,’ KJV], for I have not yet ascended
to My Father . . .” Apparently Mary could have touched Jesus Christ as
though He were any normal man. Obviously, here Jesus appeared in the form
and shape of a normal human being.
That evening Christ appeared to a group of the original apostles. “He
showed them His hands and His side. Then the disciples were glad when they
saw the Lord” (verse 20). But Thomas was not there on that occasion, and he
would not accept the word of the others.
When Jesus next appeared to them eight days later (verse 26), Thomas was
present. “Then He [Christ] said to Thomas, ‘Reach your finger here, and look
at My hands; and reach your hand here, and put it into My side. Do not be
unbelieving, but believing.’” Thomas’s reaction? “And Thomas answered and
said to Him, ‘My Lord and my God’” (verses 27-28). Thomas now knew beyond a
doubt that Jesus Christ was God!
It may have been these incredible occasions (and others like them) that
prompted the apostle John to write in the opening words of his first letter:
“That which was from the beginning, which we have heard, which we have seen
with our eyes, which we have looked at and our hands have touched—this we
proclaim concerning the Word of life” (1 John 1:1, NIV).
Remember, the Word became Christ (John 1:14). Again, it may be that, in
the verse just quoted, John had the resurrected Christ even more in mind
than the human Jesus.
Appearing in physical form
Later Christ appeared to them again. “After these things Jesus showed
Himself again to the disciples at the Sea of Tiberias, and in this way He
showed Himself” (John 21:1). On this particular occasion He cooked breakfast
for them (verse 9), and afterwards told Peter three times to “feed My sheep”
(verse 17).
This chapter does not say whether Jesus ate breakfast with them, but
other Gospel accounts show that He did eat after His resurrection. “They
gave Him a piece of a broiled fish and some honeycomb. And He took it and
ate in their presence” (Luke 24:42-43). Peter later affirmed Christ’s
appearances to the apostles, “who ate and drank with Him after He arose from
the dead” (Acts 10:41). And He will yet eat and drink with His newly born
family at the great marriage supper after the resurrection of the faithful
at His return (Matthew 26:29).
Such passages have convinced many that Christ must still have His
physical body. Yet it should be pointed out that in the Old Testament, long
before the Word came in the flesh as Jesus, He, “the LORD,” appeared to
Abraham in physical form and ate a meal with him (Genesis 18). It is obvious
from these narratives, then, that God can manifest Himself in physical,
tangible form. It is also clear that He can eat for celebration and
enjoyment, yet He does not need food and drink to sustain His eternal spirit
life (John 5:26).
On the occasion when the risen Jesus ate with His disciples, He had stood
in the midst of them and they were frightened because they “supposed they
had seen a spirit” (Luke 24:37). Christ then said: “Behold My hands and My
feet, that it is I Myself. Handle Me and see, for a spirit does not have
flesh and bones as you see Me have. When He had said this, He showed them
His hands and His feet” (verses 39-40).
Yet again, many contend that this proves Christ’s risen body was
physical. But we’ve already seen from 1 Corinthians 15:45 that He was and is
now spirit. The apparent contradiction is easily resolved when we consider
why Jesus’ disciples were frightened. Perhaps it was because they initially
thought He was an evil spirit, or demon. Christ, however, proved by His
appearance in fleshly form that He was not a demon.
The apostles were to be witnesses of the resurrection and give proof of
Jesus’ messiahship. Jesus made doubly sure they knew He had been resurrected
to eternal life—and that it was truly He, the same person they had been with
for the last 31/2 years.
We cannot casually dismiss all these passages as having no significance
in terms of the nature of God. We may not fully understand them, but these
events occurred (John 20:30-31; 21:24). We dare not limit God or what He can
do. Again, we understand His nature and being through the Holy
Scriptures—not through ancient philosophical concepts
|