As I walked through my local shops the other day, gazing
upon the great array of Easter delicacies and pondering the unusual bunny
posters splashed over every square centimetre of merchandising space I began to
wonder, what do people really think about Easter??
You could be forgiven for thinking that Easter is largely about gorging ourselves on chocolate and taking an annual pilgrimage to the delights of the Royal Easter Show. No doubt there would be a huge number of children who perceive Easter as one huge chocolatey feast interluded by a trip to the Showgrounds. There’s just nothing like a fun day out at the Show returning home with a fistful of show bags and parents who are poorer for the experience. The Royal Agricultural Society sure know how to keep this iconic Easter tradition alive!
I’m willing to bet that most new migrants arriving from
countries where Easter is unheard of would come to a similar conclusion. Easter
is when Aussies give chocolates to one another and enjoy a four day weekend!
But surely Easter is about more than just lifting the profit
margins of Lindt and Cadbury??
You will be interested to know that Christians don’t have the
monopoly on this festival. Its earliest origins lie with the Jewish festival of
Passover and pagan festivals held to honour the goddess Eostre in the month of
April.
For the Jews, Passover is a celebration of how God delivered His
people from slavery in Egypt. He did it by sending a destroying angel who wiped out a bucketload of the Egyptians. Before the event occured, the Jews were instructed by Moses to sacrifice a lamb and paint the blood of
the lamb over the doorways to their houses. In so doing, the destroying angel
would recognise their houses and ‘Passover’
them, sparing the lives of those living inside. The ensuing bloodshed of the
Egyptians led to the Jews being set free from slavery. And thus Passover became
an annual reminder of what God had done.
The occasion would mark the very first ‘Good Friday’ which certainly wasn’t good for Jesus but meant good news for humanity. Jesus’ death is understood to be similiar to that of the lamb that was sacrificed at Passover. Christians believe that He sacrificed His own body so that His people could be set free from slavery to sin and death. Not good for Jesus but good for anyone who receives the forgiveness on offer.
But the Easter story doesn’t end there. If that was the end
of the story, then Jesus is just another dead dude.
The real lynch-pin of Christianity, the hinge on which the
whole church swings is the bodily resurrection of Jesus three days after His
death. Christianity lives or dies on that one fact. Debunk, disprove or discredit
the resurrection and the Christian faith is futile.
Lee
Strobel is one such atheist who saw the Achilles heel of Christianity.
After his beloved wife converted to the Christian faith he was determined to
convince her that it was all one big fairy tale. So he set about using his
legal and journalism investigative skills to debunk, disprove and discredit the
resurrection. But the more he sifted through the historical evidence, the more alarmed
he became at the weight of proof that supported the claim that Jesus did in
fact die and then rise back to life.
Lee was compelled by the explosion of Christianity in the
very city that Jesus died in. I mean, if
Jesus was still dead, the authorities could easily have just produced His body
and told everyone to calm down! In fact, anyone who opposed the followers of Jesus
could have marched down to the tomb and produced tangible evidence that Jesus was
still dead. The problem was, the tomb was vacant, empty and unoccupied!
Much weight is put on the evidence from the eyewitnesses who testified to seeing Jesus alive again. Multiple people claimed to have had a visit from the Risen Jesus. There were several occasions where Jesus rocked up unannounced, sharing a meal and even having physical contact with his followers.
At one point 500 people witnessed Jesus alive at the same time. It could hardly
have been hallucinations with so many involved!
But even more convincing is the lives that were changed in
the process. Eleven out of twelve of Jesus’ closest followers were martyred.
Killed for speaking up about the resurrected Jesus. This begs the question, why
would they die for a lie?? Why would they be willing to be martyred for
something they knew to be false?
What else but tangible evidence would convince both Jesus’
best friend (John), his brother (James) and his worst enemy (Paul) to all come
to the same conclusion and end up worshipping Him as God?
Richard Dawkins was mistaken when he wrote in The God Delusion that the ‘evidence for
the resurrection doesn’t engage with the real evidence.’ What more evidence do
you need then the eyewitness testimony of both His closest allies and worst
enemy?
The mountain of written evidence has led some academics to
claim that the events of Easter are some of the best documented from ancient
history:
“I claim to be an historian. My approach to Classics is
historical. And I tell you that the evidence for the life, the death, and the
resurrection of Christ is better authenticated than most of the facts of
ancient history...” – E. M. Blaiklock, Professor of Classics at Auckland
University
The Easter story is the historical basis for the faith of
millions.
So while you are chowing down on your Chocolate bunnies this weekend,
be challenged to consider and investigate the One who made Easter famous.
Happy Easter!
Ben W
Ben W

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