FACTS AND
THE RESURRECTION OF CHRIST
Dr. W.
A. Criswell
Acts 25:19
3-11-79
10:50 a.m.
We welcome the thousands
uncounted, the hosts of you that share this hour on television and on
radio. You are listening to the services of the First Baptist Church in
Dallas and the pastor, bringing the message entitled Facts and the
Resurrection of Christ. Last Sunday, we left off at the twenty-fourth
chapter of the Book of Acts. And it concludes with Paul in prison in
Caesarea, the capital of the Roman province of Judea. And Porcius
[Festus] and Felix, the Roman procurator, to please the enemies of the cross,
have left Paul in prison. And for two years he languishes there a
prisoner.
Now the twenty-fifth
chapter of the Book of Acts begins with Festus, the new procurator, appointed
by the Roman Caesar over Judea; Festus. All we know about Festus is what we
read here in the Bible. He must have been a far more capable and able man
than Felix, his predecessor. So Festus comes into the province and then
from Caesarea goes up to Jerusalem. And there in Jerusalem, the chief
priests and the Sanhedrin inform him against Paul, a prisoner left by the
former procurator, Felix in Caesarea. And they desired a favor of Festus
that he would have Paul come up to Jerusalem for his trial and they would
ambush and slay him on the way. But Festus was a brilliant man and he
said, "Well, no. You come down to Caesarea and accuse him, and then we
shall try him according to your accusations." So the Sanhedrin and the
chief priests come down to Caesarea, and there they arraign Paul and accuse him
of many things. But Paul answers for himself and it is very plain that
the many and grievous complaints they lodge against Paul are fictitious.
So Festus, willing to do the enemies of Paul a pleasure says, "Now will
you go with me to Jerusalem to be tried there?" [Acts 25:1-9] And Paul, knowing it would mean the destruction of
his life says as a Roman citizen, "I appeal to Caesar" [Acts 25:11]. That was one of the
privileges of a Roman citizen throughout the Empire. He could appeal
directly his case to the Roman Caesar. So Paul appeals his case and then
Festus says, "You have appealed to Caesar? To Caesar thou shalt go!"
[Acts 25:12]
Now while Paul is waiting
in prison in Caesarea, to be sent to Rome to be tried before the Roman Caesar, there
come to visit the Roman procurator in Caesarea; there come to visit King Herod
Agrippa II and his sister Bernice—Bernice. And while they are there,
Festus says to Agrippa, "I have a most unusual prisoner here left by
Felix" [Acts 25:14]. And now
we have an interesting thing; how the Roman procurator will speak of Paul to
Herod Agrippa II. So he says of Paul that when he had his accuser come
and face him, that it was not as he supposed, not at all. But in verse 19,
"They had certain questions against him of their own." And the word
here is translated of "superstition," deisidaimonias.
Do you remember in the
seventeenth chapter of the Book of Acts? Paul begins his address to those
cultured and educated Athenians, "I see in all things you are most deisidaimon,"
translated there very superstitious, "that you are very." Oh, no! That
would have been an insult. Paul, addressing that Areopagus—the high supreme
court of the Athenians—begins by saying, "I perceive that in everything
that you are deisidaimon— you are very devout, very religious" [Acts 17:22].
So it is the same way
here: “It is not as I supposed," Festus says concerning the accusations
against the Apostle Paul, "but they had certain questions against him of
their own deisidaimonias—of their own system of religion—of their faith,
of their worship. They had certain questions of their own religious
system, and of one Jesus which was dead, whom Paul affirmed to be alive" [Acts 25:18, 19].
Now in the twenty-sixth
chapter of the Book of Acts, the next one, Agrippa having said, "I would
love to listen to this man myself" [Acts
25:22]. He appears before Agrippa and the court and when Agrippa says to
Paul, "Thou art permitted to speak for thyself" [Acts 26:1]. Then Paul speaks, and in the
eighth verse he says, "Why should it be thought a thing incredible with
you,” King Agrippa, “that God should raise the dead?" [Acts 26:8]. Then, in his message he
speaks in defense of himself—the apology for the gospel that he speaks and he
preaches is none other thing than those which the prophets and Moses did say
should come: that Christ should suffer. And that He should be the first
that should be raised from among the dead. Well, it is very apparent as
you read of this trial before Festus, and then before Agrippa, that the heart
of the gospel message that the apostle delivers concerns the resurrection of
Christ from the dead. "Not anything as I supposed for," says
Festus, "but of one Jesus who was dead, whom Paul affirm to be alive"
[Acts 25:18, 19]. That is the heart
of the message of the gospel that Paul preached. And rightly so.
The heart of the message
of the Christian faith concerns the resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is
the great central keystone, and if it is removed, if it is not true, then
Christianity crashes in rubble and debris to the ground. The heart of the
Christian message is the resurrection of Jesus from among the dead. Could
I also make an avowal? That it is the very center and circumference of our hope;
if we have any future hope. If there could have been one Man who escaped
the grave; then maybe two men could. If two men could slip out of the
grave then maybe ten could. And if ten could, maybe a multitude
could. And if a multitude could, maybe all of us can. And how much
more triumphant is that hope when it concerns Jesus Christ, who was victorious
over the grave. "O death, where now is thy sting? O grave, where now
is thy victory? Thanks be to God who gives us the victory through our Lord
Jesus Christ" [1 Corinthians 15:55-57].
The preaching of the resurrection of Christ from among the dead is the heart of
the Christian faith. And is the—and is the height and depth, breadth and
width of our hope for ourselves and for these whom we love.
So the message concerns
this text, "and of one Jesus, who was dead, whom Paul affirmed to be
alive" [Acts 25:19]; and the title, Facts
and the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. Fact number one: a
philosophical fact that Christ was raised from the dead; indisputable, indisputable,
incontrovertible, unanswerable facts of the resurrection of our Lord.
First, a philosophical fact: the life of our Lord was holy and pure, and given
to a God-like devotion to the truth. But it ended in violence and in
blood, in shame, in disgrace, and in execution. Is that the end of life—death
and shame and disgrace? If a life so beautiful, and a life so precious, a
life so godly, and one so perfect, ends in nothing but violence, and crime, and
disgrace, then we face an insoluble mystery. Death is but the end of all
life. It has no meaning. And wrong and injustice shall reign for
ever in the earth. Our hope and our promise of the triumph of
righteousness and goodness, and purity, and holiness, and godliness, lies in
the fact of the resurrection of Christ from the dead. His life, so
beautiful and pure, does not end in the violence of execution and the burial in
the grave. But His life ends in triumph and in glory in the
resurrection. Fact, number one: a philosophical fact.
Fact number two, a
pragmatic, empirical, practical fact: our Lord was surely, surely dead.
So certainly dead they brake not His bones. So certainly dead they thrust
a Roman spear into His heart and the crimson of His life poured out. And
they wrapped Him in a winding sheet and laid Him in a tomb. Over that
tomb they rolled a heavy stone. And against that stone they sealed it to
the living rock with a Roman seal that a man dare not break. And before
that sepulcher they placed a Roman guard lest anything should happen; lest His
body should be stolen away. And yet with that you—all of that security,
the third day the body was gone, and the grave clothes were in perfect array—not
a robbery. What happened to the body of our Lord? And how do you
explain that empty tomb? One of two ways: His body was taken away by
human hands, or He was raised by supernatural hands. If His body were
taken away by human hands then there are two alternatives: His friends stole
His body away, or His foes stole His body away. And of those two things,
His friends could not do it and His foes would not do it. His friends
could not do it. That heavy stone was sealed with a Roman seal. And
all of the power of the Roman Empire was back of that seal. And not only
that, but it was guarded by a contingency of Roman soldiers lest anyone say
they had taken His body away. His friends could not do it. His foes
would not do it. It would be unthinkable and unspeakable, for they were
there for just the opposite reason. They were there to see to it that no
one disturbed that sepulcher and bothered that body. Think how easy it
would have been just a few days after this Simon Peter is preaching that Jesus
is raised from the dead. How easily it would have been to contravene and
interdict and to obviate and to make ridiculous the preaching of Simon Peter if
they had the body of the Lord. Just expose it, “You say He was raised
from the dead? Here is His corrupting body.” They could not do it.
Why? Because Jesus was raised from the dead, not removed or stolen by human
hands, but by the power of Almighty God.
Fact number three, a
psychological fact: the marvelous change in the life of the disciples.
On Friday, they were plunged into abysmal despair—into indescribable grief.
Every hope they had for the kingdom of God; every dream that they had dreamed
for the Messiah Lord Jesus had been dashed to the ground. They had seen
Him die. They had seen the rupture in His side and heart. They had
seen the blood and the water spill out. They had seen Him buried in a
tomb. He was certainly dead. And with the dead Christ, there was
buried all of their dead hopes. Then on Sunday, three days later, those
same disciples are aflame and afire. They have seen the Lord. They
have talked with Him. They have walked with Him. They have even
broken bread with Him. They are aflame. He is alive! He is
alive. How do you account for the marvelous change in the disciples?
Some might say, “They stole His body away,” which they could not
do. Some might say, "They stole His body away and they are preaching
a lie. They are delivering a deception. They are misleading the
people. They know better. They know the truth." That is a
psychological impossibility—for men to give their lives for a lie. These
are the men who all of them are executed; these disciples—all of them.
The only one who lived beyond execution was John, the sainted John; and he was
placed on the Isle of Patmos to die of exposure and starvation. These men
are preaching that Jesus is raised from the dead. And on the basis of
that marvelous truth, they are laying down their lives which, I say is a
psychological impossibility—for a man to lay down his life for a lie.
These men are
changed. They have seen the Lord. And they are delivering a great
message of truth and hope and salvation. But some might say they are
hallucinatory. They have seen an hallucination. They just thought
they saw Jesus raised from the dead. My brother, there were hundreds and
hundreds and hundreds of people who saw the Lord Jesus after He was raised from
the dead. Over a period of forty days, at one time there were more than
five hundred gathered on an appointed mountain in Galilee who saw the risen
Lord. Seated there, Dr. Page Patterson said, “Pastor, how many men
do you think saw the Lord Jesus? Do you think there were a thousand?" I
replied, "I do not know. The Bible does not say. But there
were hundreds, and hundreds, and hundreds, and hundreds—five hundred at one
time who saw the risen, resurrected immortalized, transfigured, glorified,
living Lord Jesus." And wouldn't it be strange if all of those
people had hallucinations? And wouldn't it be even more strange if they
had none before and none after; but just at that one time they all fell into
hallucinatory aberrations? Psychologically; psychologically, Jesus raised
from the dead brought to those disciples in despair and despondency, a flaming
hope and a glorious message.
Fact number four, an
ecclesiastical fact: where did the church come from? Over the world
you see these churches, and they all have an Easter message: Jesus is
alive! He is raised from among the dead. "As in Adam, all die,
even so in Christ shall all be made alive. Christ the first fruits, and
then they that are His at His coming" [1
Corinthians 15:22, 23]. The whole world has seen the spread of the
gospel message in the churches. Where did the church come from? We
go back, and we go back and we go back through the years and the centuries, and
we find that the first church was entirely Jewish. There must have been
fifty thousand Jews who were members of the mother church in Jerusalem.
The Bible says not only were thousands and thousands converted to the faith,
but there were innumerable numbers of the priests who were converted to the
Christian faith. The church began in Jerusalem in the temple, in the
Jewish people, in the deisidaimonias, in the system of religion of the
Jews. In the twenty-first chapter of the Book of Deuteronomy it is
expressly written in the Law, "Cursed be every man that hangs on a
tree" [Galatians 3:13; see Deuteronomy
21:23]. The awesomeness of the execution of our Lord, as terrible
as it is to us, was a thousand times more accursed to the Jew. And yet,
it is to them—it is to them that the story of Jesus is believed and
accepted. How? There is no other explanation except the one that
Simon Peter gives in the second chapter of the Book of Acts, "by wicked
hands He was crucified [and slain]” [Acts 2:23];
but this One crucified God hath made both Lord and Christ Messiah. There is no
other explanation for the beginning of the church except in the marvelous
resurrection of Jesus from among the dead. And the same story is told as
the church confronted the Greco-Roman world. With boldness and with
courage and with fearlessness, the first Christian church faced the entire
system, the deisidaimonias of the Greeks and the Romans. Their
temples were every where. Their priests were legion. Their
ceremonies and rites and songs were the daily practice of all of the
people. And yet, the Christian church confronted it and challenged it,
and finally, subverted it. As they did so, for three centuries the cry
was, "The Christians to the lions"; or, "The Christians to the
stake." But they laid down their lives for the faith—fed to wild beasts,
burned by fire. Where does that come from? The church had its
beginning and its origin, its genesis, in a great message, "Jesus is
alive! He is raised from among the dead. He lives!" This is
the birth and the beginning of the church—an ecclesiastical fact.
Fact number five, a
soteriological fact: the conversion, the witness, the change, the
marvelous turning of Saul of Tarsus, who became Paul the Apostle. This
man is no ordinary man; this is a man of illimitable mind, understanding,
intelligence, genius. In this New Testament that I hold in my hand—in
this Bible there are twenty-seven Books in the New Testament. Thirteen of
them were written by the Apostle Paul—fourteen of them, if you count the Epistle
to the Hebrews; sixteen of them if you count the personal physician and
companion of the apostle, Dr. Luke, who wrote Luke and the Book of Acts.
Sixteen of those Books out of the twenty-seven come from the Apostle
Paul. This is a man who was persecuting the church. This is the man
who met the Lord, who was gloriously converted, and now, who preaches the faith
that he once destroyed. Just a few years after the death of Christ, he
writes the first letter to the Thessalonians and in that letter as he writes,
the heart of the gospel is the resurrection of our Lord and His promised coming
again. Just a few years after that, he wrote his first letter to the
church at Corinth—1 Corinthians. And that is the reason I had you read
out of the fifteenth chapter of the 1 Corinthian Letter. It is the great,
tall, towering, mountainous, high-water mark of all revelation—Jesus lives! He
has been raised from the dead! It is a soteriological fact, the glorious
conversion of the Apostle Paul. And read his apology and defense of the
faith for yourself. Three times in this Book of Acts, does he recount how
he met Jesus, the living Lord Jesus, on the road to Damascus.
Fact number six, a
literary fact: there is no literary critic in the world but reading the Gospels
and reading the story of our Lord, does not respond. This is the highest
of all literary achievement. There is nothing comparable to it in the
world. Even [Joseph Ernst] Renan the skeptic in France said, "The
most beautiful story in the earth is the Gospel of Luke, and the most beautiful
story in the Gospel of Luke is the twenty-fourth chapter telling the story of
the Lord Jesus as He walks with the two disciples on the way to
Emmaus." When you look at these stories, there is a literary genius
in it that humankind, human gift, human genius could never aspire to—could
never achieve, and that is; these are the stories of the converse, and the
concourse, and the intercourse, and the visiting, and the talking together of
deity and common man. How do you do that and make it seem sensible and
natural? When a man of genius tries to do that it is manifestly a
laborious imagination, it is that on the surface of it. I suppose the
greatest Greek author out of all of those incomparable galaxies of Greek
dramatists and poets and historians and authors. I suppose the greatest
of all of them is Homer. But when Homer writes of the concourse and the
visiting and the conversation of gods with men, it is plainly fictitious; it is
manifestly fictitious. I suppose the greatest of all of the literary
geniuses we produced is Shakespeare. But when Shakespeare writes of
Hamlet's ghost, it is manifestly the product of a laborious imagination.
They cannot do it, and it sound real. But these men do it, as they write
the story of this risen Deity, as He talks and walks with men. It is beautiful,
and it is natural, and it is holy, and it is heavenly. Why? Because
they are just recounting a simple truth; this happened. Jesus lives, He
was raised from the dead; He talked to Peter and to John, and the two disciples
on the way to Emmaus. He spoke to Mary Magdalene. He lives; He was
raised from the dead.
Fact number seven, an
experiential fact, a fact of our hearts, a fact of our response: it has been
almost two thousand years since Jesus was raised from the dead. And all
through those years, many have testified of an experience with Him in their
hearts, their souls, their lives. Students on the university campus,
great scientists, the greatest the world has ever known, literary figures, men
of political genius, men of world renown through the years and centuries, they
have spoken of their meeting with, relationship with, blessing by this living
Lord. How unusual is that? Alexander the Great is dead.
Nobody says he isn't. Caesar is dead. Nobody said he isn't.
Charlemagne, Richard the Lion-hearted, Washington, Lincoln, all of them are
dead. Nobody says that they aren't. But Jesus of Nazareth is alive:
ten million times ten million say, "I have met Him. I know
Him. I talk to Him. His hand of blessing is upon me."
When you go to Trinity Church, Trinity Episcopal Church in Boston, there
is that famous statue of their great preacher Phillips Brooks. He is
standing at a pulpit with the Bible in his hand. And just back of it is
the Lord Jesus with his right hand on the shoulder of God's preacher—Phillips
Brooks. He is alive. He lives.
Coming back from a
preaching mission, to a national convocation of Disciples of Christ ministers,
the Christian Church, coming back this week on a late, late plane, I sat down
on the aisle, and next to the window sat a young man. After I was seated,
he turned to me and extended his hand and he said, "Are you not W. A.
Criswell, pastor of the First Baptist Church in Dallas?"
I said, "Yes."
And he said, "Well,
my name is Charles Cox. They call me Chuck. And I'm pastor of a
little Methodist Church in Grand Prairie. I am coming back home from a
visit to Israel. And I am so delighted to so you. Because," he
said, "I listen to you preach every Sunday morning at the eight-fifteen
service." Well, I had a wonderful time visiting with the young
fellow. And here is what he told me: He said, "In the
university I was studying religion, and I was preparing myself to be a
professor of religion." And he said, "It was typical of all of
those things that you read in critical books: Christian religion decimated,
destroyed—the higher critical approach to the gospel message, and to the
documents of the Old Testament; and the lower critical approach to the texts, and
all of the things of divisiveness and doubt that go in these scholarly books;
studying deisidaimonias religion." And then he said, "I
was in a communion service, observing the Lord's Supper." And he
said, "Something happened to me, as I took the bread and as I drank the
cup, something happened to me," he said. He said, "It came to
my heart in vivid reality, this is factual. This is real; Jesus died for
my sins and Jesus was raised again for my justification. He lives!
He lives! This is real, this is not like those books. This is not
like those doubts, this is not like those cynicisms; this is real." And he
said, "I asked to be ordained and I was ordained. And they assigned
me to be assistant pastor of the Highland Park Methodist Church in
Dallas." And he said, "Just recently they have given me my
first charge. I have sixty in my little flock. And we meet in a
schoolhouse in Grand Prairie." And he says, "Every day I knock
at the door, visiting the people; witnessing to the grace of God in Christ
Jesus." And then he exclaimed, "Who would ever have thought
that I would be knocking at the door of the people? But.” he says,
"I do it now every day and I love it." What a change.
What a remarkable conversion.
I said to him, "You
remind me of John Wesley, who in failure came back to Great Britain from
Georgia—from a disastrous ministry in Georgia, taught by the Moravians.
Attending a chapel in Aldersgate, listening to a man read the introduction to
Martin Luther's Commentary on the Book of Romans. And as he writes
in his Diary, as he wrote, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I
believed. I received. And Jesus lives! And out of that humble
experience of meeting the living Lord came the great revival in England that
delivered our motherland from the horrors of the blood of the French
Revolution.
He is alive! He
lives! He is over there where that young Methodist preacher is knocking
at the door, building up a household of faith and a congregation of the Lord.
And He lives in our hearts, and we pray, and we talk to Him, and He walks by
our sides. And He comforts us in our sorrows, and He encourages us
in our trials, and He stands by us in the hour of our death, and He sends
His angels to take us up to heaven some day—He is alive; He lives.
These seven
incontrovertible, indisputable, unanswerable facts of the resurrection of Jesus
Christ; of one Jesus, who was dead whom Paul affirmed to be alive. What a
message! What a gospel! What a hope, what an assurance, what a reality;
Jesus is alive! He lives; and because He lives, we shall live also.
That is our humble and
prayerful earnest invitation to your heart today. “I believe. I accept. I
open my heart heavenward and God-ward. I ask the Lord to come into my life.
Pastor, here I stand. I am accepting Christ as my Savior. I want to be
baptized as He commands in His holy Word.” Or, “I want to join the church. I
am bringing my family and we are all coming.” Down a stairway, down one of
these aisles, from this balcony side to side, from the throng and press of
these people on the lower floor, into that aisle and down to the front, “Here I
am pastor. I have decided for God and I am on the way.” May angels attend
you. May God bless you as you answer with your life. Make the decision now in
your heart. “Now God help me, I am on the way. Open the door for me Lord. I
am coming through.” Make the decision now in your heart. When you stand up,
stand up taking that first step. It will be the greatest step you have ever
made in your life. Do it now. God bless you as you come while we stand and
while we sing.