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			Was Jesus Raised from 
			the Dead?  
			
			Introduction:  
			
			Christianity is based upon an objective, historical fact:  the 
			resurrection of Christ.  (Romans 
			1:3-4)  The tomb 
			was either empty on the third day or it wasn’t.  There is no middle 
			ground.  The truth is knowable.                 (I 
			John 2:21)  
			Truth is that which corresponds to reality.  Note the words of
			Acts 17:2-3.  
			So what evidence do we have that Jesus was raised from the dead?  
			
			Body: 
			
			I. The Body Couldn’t 
			Have Been Stolen  
			
				- 
				Matthew 
				27:62-66   
				How could the disciples have stolen the body with highly-trained 
				Roman soldiers there?  Rolling a huge stone and removing the 
				body would have no doubt awakened the guard.  The penalty for 
				sleeping on duty was death.  (Acts 
				16:27) 
				
 
				- 
				Matthew 
				28:11-15   
				If the guards were really asleep, how would they know what had 
				happened to the body?
 
				- 
				If the Jewish or 
				Roman authorities had moved Christ’s body, when the disciples 
				began preaching that Jesus had been resurrected, they would have 
				produced the body and Christianity would have been destroyed.
 
			 
			
			II. Jesus Was 
			Definitely Dead When Put in the Tomb  
			
				- 
				All four accounts 
				state specifically that Jesus died.                  (Matthew 
				27, 
				Mark 15,
				Luke 23,
				John 19)
 
				- 
				Pilate asked the 
				centurion if Jesus was indeed dead.                (Mark 
				15:44-45)  
				If this account wasn’t true, the centurion would have said so 
				and the Roman authorities would have had it told far and wide.
 
				- 
				Jesus’ side was 
				pierced with a spear.  (John 
				19:31-34)
 
				- 
				These things were 
				witnessed by multitudes of people, both friend and foe.  (Luke 
				23:48-49)
 
				- 
				The claim that 
				Jesus didn’t actually die but just fainted or lost consciousness 
				contradicts the evidence.
 
			 
			
			III. The Appearances 
			of Jesus  
			
				- 
				Acts 1:3   
				Mary Magdalene (John 
				20), other 
				women (Matthew 
				28),    two 
				disciples on the road to Emmaus (Luke 
				24), Peter 
				and all of the apostles (Luke 
				24), Saul of 
				Tarsus (Acts 
				9) were 
				witnesses of Jesus after the resurrection.
 
				- 
				Read 
				I Corinthians 
				15:3-8.  
				Most of these were still alive!
 
				- 
				These were willing 
				to suffer persecution and even be killed for their belief in 
				Christ’s resurrection.
 
			 
			
			IV. The Day of 
			Pentecost  
			
				- 
				Peter and the 
				apostles were preaching to people who knew about the 
				resurrection, the Jews.  Not a single person out of many 
				thousands offered a rebuttal to what was said about Jesus being 
				alive.  Three thousand people who were in a position to know the 
				facts repented and were baptized.  The significance of this 
				cannot be overstated.
 
			 
			
			Conclusion:  
			
			Professor Thomas 
			Arnold for 14 years a headmaster of Rugby, author of the famous, 
			History of Rome, and appointed to the chair of modern history at 
			Oxford, was well acquainted with the value of evidence in 
			determining historical facts.  This great scholar said:  “I have 
			been used for many years to study the histories of other times, and 
			to examine and weigh the evidence of those who have written about 
			them, and I know of no one fact in the history of mankind which is 
			proved by better and fuller evidence of every sort, to the 
			understanding of a fair inquirer, than the great sign which God hath 
			given us that Christ died and rose again from the dead.”  
			
			Invitation:  
			
			Christ’s resurrection ensures ours.  (I 
			Corinthians 15:12-20)  
			
			Also, His resurrection assures us and all people of a coming day of 
			judgment.  (Acts 
			17:30-31)  
			
			Bobby Stafford 
			
			April 15, 2012 
			  
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