29 May 2012

central & pivotal: a dead man raised


The resurrection of Christ from the dead is the reason that Christianity is in existence today. The image presented in the gospels of Jesus’ disciples at his death isn’t one of confidence and boldness. In fact it’s quite the opposite. Peter denies he ever knew Jesus and the other disciples abandon him and his cause, returning as they do to their old way of life believing that they’d ‘got it wrong’ about Jesus. Introduce the event of the resurrection and a rather unexpected weekend to the story and we discover these very same followers of Jesus are utterly transformed. They are willing to forsake every worldly pleasure and comfort for the sake of declaring the gospel. They are prepared to lay their lives down for what they’ve seen and heard, believing that Jesus Christ is king over all the Earth.

The resurrection of Jesus from the dead is a theme that starts as a faint mist on the horizon and eventually consumes the New Testament landscapes. Every preacher of the gospel in the NT is convinced that it is this that gives their message authority and it is what they appeal to as the reason for Christian confidence. Jesus mentions his death and resurrection many times in the gospels and each time he does so with greater clarity. In the book of Acts Luke describes the sermons of the early church and nearly always records his preacher’s appeals to the resurrection. Peter mentions it in his letters to the church as being the means of the Christian hope. John is convinced that in Christ is eternal life that will never end, the writer to the Hebrews likewise appeals to the resurrection and Jude describes Jesus as being the one who led Israel out of slavery in Egypt, such is his understanding about the eternal life of Christ that unveiled itself in the event of the resurrection.


In this blog I shall aim to lay out Paul’s attitude toward the resurrection as revealed in Luke’s record of his preaching in Acts and also in his letters to the churches.

In the book of Acts we have many written summaries of Paul’s preaching and in almost all of his sermons and apologies for the gospel the resurrection is mentioned:

Beginning in Jerusalem following his conversion Paul embarks upon a life devoted to outworking the results of the resurrection. In Galatians 1:23 Paul remarks that following his conversion people commented that ‘he now preaches the faith he tried to destroy.’ The faith that centred around Jesus’ resurrection. In Antioch Paul preaching to a synagogue tells them that although Jesus was laid in a tomb ‘God raised him from the dead.’  Acts13:30. In Thessalonica Paul’s sermon is about the necessity of the Jesus’ death and resurrection (Acts17:2). In Athens he argues for the authority of Christ and cites the resurrection as his proof (17:31). Before the Roman governor Felix Paul explains that it is with regard ‘his views on the resurrection’ that he is under arrest (24:21) and in Acts 25 Festus lays Paul’s case before King Agrippa and explains that the dispute is over ‘a man named Jesus who was dead but whom Paul asserts to be alive.’ In fact before King Agrippa Paul speaks for himself about the resurrection (Acts 26:23) despite opposition from Festus who tells him that he is ‘out of his mind.’ Paul is doggedly committed to proclaiming the resurrection despite all and any opposition.

In the epistles (letters) Paul is committed to reiterating the truth of the resurrection and he goes to great lengths to ensure it is mentioned in every letter he writes. In Romans 4 Paul tells the church that the promises of God were “written to those who believe in the one who raised Jesus from the dead.” In Romans 6 Paul reminds the church that baptism is a celebration and identification with Christ’s resurrection. In Romans 8 the resurrection is used as the guarantee for power in this life to overcome the power of sin. He tells the church that the same Spirit who ‘raised Christ from dead, lives in you… and that he will also give life to your mortal bodies.’ (8:11). In Romans 10 we see it as part of an early statement of salvation when Paul tells the church that ‘if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.’

In 1 Corinthians 6:14 Paul tells the church that the God who ‘raised the Lord by his power, will also raise us.’ In 2 Corinthians 5:15 Paul sums up the gospel by saying that Jesus died, one man for all, so that those who live ‘might no longer live for themselves but for him who for their sake was raised.’ In the opening verse of Galatians Paul lays claim to his apostleship as coming from Jesus Christ and ‘God the Father who raised him from the dead.’ In Ephesians, wanting to emphasise the security of believers in Christ, Paul declares that we have been raised up with him – he has been raised to life and so have we is his inference. A similar idea is found in Colossians 3:10 where again Paul makes the link between baptism and resurrection.

9 times Paul explicitly uses the word ‘resurrection’ in the epistles and 41 times the word ‘raised’ and its derivatives is used in connection with Christ. N T Wright comments that ‘so central was the resurrection to Paul’s preaching among the Gentiles that the Athenians even misheard Paul and imagined that he was preaching two new divinities, Jesus and ‘Anastasis’. The Greek word for resurrection was so frequently on his lips that they thought she was Jesus’ consort, a kind of Isis to his Osiris.’[1]

So why was it so important to Paul? Why did he mention it as often as he could and why did he build so much of his theology around it? To answer these questions I want to take an extended look at Paul’s treatment of resurrection in 1 Corinthians 15. Here Paul is writing to refute so false teaching that has crept into the church. The erroneous teaching that needs resolving is the belief that there is no resurrection from the dead and that we are hoping in Christ only for this life 1 Cor.15:12.

Firstly in answer to this teaching Paul first reminds them that he presented to them clearly the truth of Christ’s resurrection 1 Cor.15:4. His hope for the future resurrection lies in the certainty of Christ’s past resurrection. If there is no resurrection to come, he argues, then Christ has not been raised either since Paul holds that Christ’s resurrection lit the fuse for the rest of the world’s resurrection. Our resurrection is as certain as Christ’s resurrection since the two are joined together. If we are never to be raised in the future then Christ was never raised in the past and if Christ was never raised then we are still in our sins and the Christian gospel is no gospel at all 1 Cor.15:17. This is the starting point for why it is that Paul values Christ’s resurrection so supremely. It is because of Christ’s resurrection that we can have confidence that God has removed our sin from us. Romans 4:25 sums up this idea nicely where Paul writes that Jesus was ‘delivered up for our trespasses and raised for our justification.’ Our right standing before God comes from God’s raising of Christ from the dead. In so doing he assured the world that Jesus’ payment for sin had been accepted. If there is no resurrection then there is no justification.

Secondly Paul says that if Christ has not been raised from the dead then we of all people are most to be pitied. Why? Why are we to be pitied for believing in the resurrection if indeed the resurrection has not happened? Some Christians have said that if at the end of their lives they discover that there is no God and that there is nothing beyond the grave they will not feel too sorry for themselves since the teachings of Christianity have led them to live a good life, a contented life. Paul, it seems, disagrees with that sentiment. He believes that Christians are to be pitied, mocked, laughed at and need to be rescued from their delusion. He says this with one main reason in his mind. Paul lived in a culture that was very much opposed to Christianity. He experienced hardships of many kinds because of his faith: shipwrecks, beatings, stoning and imprisonments. Paul chose the way of life he did not because of some misguided belief in a saviour or because he enjoyed pain but because of his conviction that Christ was indeed raised to life. It was Paul’s encounter with the resurrected Jesus that changed his life so dramatically. If Christ has not been raised then, Paul says, he would not have chosen a life of difficulty and hardship. Or as John Piper puts it ‘Paul made choices in his life because of the gospel that deliberately put his life in danger.’[2] The Christian life is meant to be uncomfortable and we are meant to experience much hardship before we enter glory. The reason we can be confident that our difficulty is not in vain is because of the resurrection of Christ. Remove the resurrection and we are to be pitied for living such a desperate and unattractive lifestyle.

Thirdly, and finally, Paul is adamant that Christ has been raised because Christ’s resurrection is the advance party of the new creation, or as Paul puts it here in 1 Cor.15:20 the ‘firstfruits’. New creation, restoration and recreation are central aspects of Paul’s theology. The hope of new life is inaugurated by the resurrection and is the reason we endure difficulty, count all as loss compared to Christ, can be confident of real change in this present life and be confident that death is a doorway to new life rather than the dead end of life. There is much to look forward to and there is power available to endure difficulty with joy all because we know that since Christ is raised we also shall be raised.

It is for these three reasons that Paul fights for the truth of Jesus’ resurrection to be upheld in the church. Paul is desperate that the church in Corinth and indeed everywhere understands the significance of Jesus’ resurrection.

By examining this text and by considering all of the passages mentioned in this extended blog we can see just how central Jesus’ resurrection is to Paul’s life and mission. It is of the upmost importance to him and we ought to ‘keep it in our closed hand’ to borrow Mark Driscoll’s expression. For Paul belief in the resurrection of Christ is as central a doctrine as they come, lose this and we lose Christianity.






[1] NT Wright: The resurrection of the son of God p453
[2] Passion Conference 2005 main message

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