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Copyright © 2001, TruthQuest Publishers
All Rights Reserved. No reproduction of any kind permissible without the expressed written consent of the publisher.
"Then
the Jews demanded of him, ‘What miraculous sign can you show us to
prove your authority to do all this?’ Jesus answered them, ‘Destroy
this temple, and I will raise it again in three days.’ The Jews
replied, ‘It has taken forty-six years to build this temple, and you
are going to raise it in three days?’ But the temple he had spoken of
was his body." (John 2:18-21)
When
you go around claiming to be divine, your critics are going to ask you
a question or two and want some proof. Jesus’ critics were no
different. When they asked for a sign, He responded that He would give
them one – His resurrection from the dead!
Suppose
you are on a High School football team and that you tell your teammates
that you can benchpress 400 lbs. You can expect to be challenged to do
just that as your skeptical friends watch. Go down into the heart of a
city at night and begin proclaiming that you are the toughest guy
around. It won’t be long before your claim will be put to the test. Go
into major public places and proclaim that you are uniquely divine,
that you can forgive sins resulting in a person’s salvation and that
apart from you no salvation can occur and the bees’-hive will be
stirred. People will resent you for challenging their own religious
views and demand that you back up your claims with proof. Such is a
reasonable request. When Jesus’ made His radical claims, He was asked
to provide proof – a sign. He responded that if they would kill Him, He
would raise Himself from the dead in three days.(1)
Jesus’ disciples likewise cited His resurrection from the dead as proof that Christianity is true:
"For
he has set a day when he will judge the world with justice by the man
he has appointed. He has given proof of this to all men by raising him
from the dead." (Acts 17:31)(2)
Such
is a uniqueness of Christianity: It provides a test by which it can be
known to be true or false. Anyone can claim whatever he or she wants.
Backing up that claim is another matter. Since Jesus made His
resurrection from the dead the test by which we can know whether He was
who He claimed, then it seems that if Jesus did not rise from the dead,
He is a charlatan whom no rational person should follow. On the other
hand, if He did rise from the dead, then He did so in confirmation of
His radical claims.
What an
interesting test too. Notice that Jesus did not make it easy or
nebulous as some other religions have. For example, according to Islam,
the evidence for its truthfulness is the Qur’an. In Surah 2:23 it is
written: "And if ye are in doubt As [sic and as follows] to what We
have revealed From time to time to Our servant, Then produce a Sura
Like thereunto; And call your witnesses or helpers (If there are any)
besides God, If your (doubts) are true."(3) In other words, we can know
that Islam is true, because only God could have written it. Mormonism
makes pretty much the same claim. In the Book of Mormon it is written:
"Behold, I would exhort you that when ye shall read these things, if it
be wisdom in God that ye should read them, that ye would remember how
merciful the Lord hath been unto the children of men, from the creation
of Adam even down until the time that ye shall receive these things,
and ponder it in your hearts. And when ye shall receive these things, I
would exhort you that ye would ask God, the Eternal Father, in the name
of Christ, if these things are not true; and if ye shall ask with a
sincere heart, with real intent, having faith in Christ he will
manifest the truth of it unto you, by the power of the Holy Ghost. And
by the power of the Holy Ghost ye may know the truth of all things"
(Moroni 10:3-5). If you want to know if Mormonism is true, read the
Book of Mormon and ask God to show you if it is true and He will.
While
I am impressed with such voluminous literary works as well as the
millions of lives which claim to have been positively impacted by them,
I am skeptical of such a test. For one, Islam and Mormonism are
mutually exclusive. In other words, they possess conflicting truth
claims. Both claim to be the only true way to God. Yet it cannot be
that both are the only way to God. This leaves us with the conclusion
that either the exclusivity claims of one or both of these religions
are wrong or their truth tests are.
Some
truth tests are subjective(4) in nature. While many have read the Book
of Mormon and are convinced that it is true, others have read it and
remain unpersuaded.(5) Some literary critics may also find more beauty
in the writings of Shakespeare than in the Qur’an. Jesus’ test,
however, is different. It is not a matter of reading and believing. It
is not a matter of an inward feeling or the number of impacted lives.
It is a test that involves an objective fact which would be truly
impossible for any mortal to accomplish.
You
may say, "Yes, but can you demonstrate that Jesus rose from the dead?"
I believe that we can with reasonable certainty and have written on the
subject.(6)
Footnotes. . .
1. John records Jesus claiming that He would raise Himself from the dead
(John 2:18-22). This is also somewhat of a claim to deity. Jesus’
disciples claimed that it was God who raised Jesus from the dead (e.g.,
Acts 3:15;
Romans 10:9; 1 Peter 1:21).
2. Also see Acts 17:2-3, 18; 2:22-32.
3. Cf. 10:38, 17:88.
4. Something that is subjective applies to an individual. It is his or
her opinion. Whereas something that is objective is true or false
regardless of who believes it, or even if no one does.
5. The author has read much of the Book of Mormon while sincerely
asking God to reveal whether or not it was true and remains unpersuaded
due to many problems. For a critique of Mormonism, see the author’s
book, Behold, I Stand at the Door and Knock. You may order this book
through the "Books and Tapes" section of www.truthquest.org.
6. See by this author, Cross Examined, which may be ordered through the "Books and Tapes" section of www.truthquest.org.
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