The Significance of the Resurrection

He is risen!  I hope you all are having a marvelous Resurrection Day, as we remember our risen Savior.  This day, we remember the single greatest, most important event in the history of the world: the resurrection of the King of Kings, Jesus Christ.  Death could not hold our Lord and Savior.

Today we wrap up the “Jesus Died” series with the resurrection.  You see, Jesus did die, and that’s what this series has been about.  But the good news is that He did not stay in the grave.  He rose again.  So today, I’ll be looking at three truths and conclusions from the resurrection.  This is by no means exhaustive, as the implications of the resurrection and the bearing it has on our lives are infinite, but hopefully you take truth from this and we can more clearly see what happened when that tomb was rolled away and our Savior rose.

1) The Gospel, and Jesus, is true!

If the resurrection had not happened, Jesus would have been a liar, and our faith would be in vain, and there would be absolutely no reason to live.  Thank goodness the resurrection is true, and that grave is empty.

Jesus prophesied in John 2:19, after cleansing the temple, that He would rise again: “Jesus answered them, ‘Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.’ The Jews then said, ‘it has taken forty-six years to build this temple, and will you raise it up in three days?’  But he was speaking about the temple of his body.  When therefore he was raised from the dead, his disciples remembered that he had said this, and they believed the Scripture and the word that Jesus had spoken.”

If this had not come true, if Jesus was not raised, then it would stand to call Jesus a liar.  If He was a liar, He was not perfect.  If He was not perfect, He cannot take away our sin, and death would have won, and we would have no hope.  However, we know that Jesus was raised.  In fact, we see that Jesus had a role in His resurrection.  He said “I will raise it up.”

John 11:25: “Jesus said to her, ‘I am the resurrection and the life.  Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die.  Do you believe this?'”

Do you believe this?  That’s the question we must all ask ourselves.  If we have only head knowledge, we have nothing.  We must place all of our faith, hope, and our very lives on the risen Savior.  Jesus asked this to Martha, and her response was to call Jesus the “Christ, the Son of God, who is coming into the world.”  Are we willing to lay down our lives to the one who gave it all up for us?

Since the gospel is true, we also know our sins are forgiven.  Look back on the most famous verse in Scripture: “For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.  For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but in order that the world might be saved through him.”–John 3:16-17

Romans 8:1–“There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”

2 Corinthians 5:21–“For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him, we might become the righteousness of God.”

We are free, Christians.

2) Jesus lives as our High Priest

Reflecting on what God has done should not stop at salvation, for God’s love did not stop at the cross.  It did not end at conversion.  The truth of the gospel, and the blessings of grace, continue throughout our lives.  God has saved us and justified us in Christ, but there is still work to be done in this life, not for salvation, but as a result of it.  Those whom come to know Christ, God has ordained that they will become like Him.  That’s exciting to me.  We are being transformed.  This does not come easy though.  Christians, can we be honest and say we’re quick to mess up the new life we have in Christ?  Can we be honest with ourselves and say we still make mistakes?  And then, would you look with me in Scripture and see the Savior who was perfect for us, and whose love never leaves us?

Hebrews 7:23-28: “The former priests were many in number, because they were prevented by death from continuing in office, but he holds his priesthood permanently, because he continues forever.  Consequently, he is able to save to the uttermost those who draw near to God through him, since he always lives to make intercession for them.  For it was indeed fitting that we should have such a high priest, holy, innocent, unstained, separated from sinners, and exalted above the heavens.  He has no need, like those high priests, to offer sacrifices daily, first for his own sins and then for those of the people since he did this once for all when he offered up himself.  For the law appoints men in their weakness as high priests, but the word of the oath, which came later than the law, appoints a Son who has been made perfect forever.”

Eat this up.  Savor it.  Jesus is our high priest.  We need no earthly priest to take away our sin, and we have no need for a mediator.  The Bible is clear that Jesus is our mediator.  All of our efforts to absolve ourselves of sin fall short.  Jesus alone can take our sins away and forgive us.  And He does so perfectly and permanently.

Look at 1 John 1:8: “If we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.”  Jesus said the same when He said He’s come to save “not the righteous, but the sick.”  Those who are self-righteous, and see themselves as having no sin, will not enter the kingdom of heaven.  The gospel must first be the bad news that we are all sinners and unworthy of God before it can be the good news of salvation for those sinners.  In order to be saved, to trust in Christ, we must recognize our sin, and repent.  But repentance brings a firm promise: Jesus will forgive if we confess and repent of our sin.  Look at verse 9, one of my favorite verses in the Bible: “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”

All unrighteousness.  All of it.  Jesus paid it all.  And He is making all things new.  When we come to know Jesus, we have all of our sins washed away: past, present, and future.  Jesus’ grace is strong enough to cover all of our sin.  Do we seriously believe that Jesus is unable to cover sin we commit after coming to know Him?  Because if He’s not….not many people are Christians.  God’s love doesn’t just save us…it sustains us.  It convicts us.  It leads us back to repentance, so we may receive grace to walk in Christ again.

However, the Bible is also clear (1 John 3:4-6) that those who continue in unrepentant, persistent, habitual sin with no regard for Christ and holiness are not true believers.  We all will struggle and stray off the path.  God knows this, and is perfectly prepared to bring us back by His grace.  But for those who think that going to church, doing religious things, and being moral make them perfect and right before God, the bad news is is that those things do not take away sin.  They smell to God.  And the smell isn’t pretty.  Put your faith in Jesus, throw all of your hope, and your soul itself, on Jesus and His work, and be saved.

1 John 2:1-3: “My little children, I am writing these things to you so that you may not sin.  But if anyone does sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous.  He is the propitiation for our sins, and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole world.  And by this we know that we have come to know him, if we keep his commandments.”

If we sin, does God stop loving us?  It’s a question on the back of Christian’s minds everywhere: If I sin, and struggle with sin, even severely, after coming to know Jesus…does God still love me?

If we love God, it is because He has first loved us (1 John 4:19).  Perfect love does not let go.  Romans 8:31-35 says “What then shall we say to these things?  If God is for us, who can be against us?  He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him graciously give us all things?  Who shall bring any charge against God’s elect?  It is God who justifies.  Who is to condemn?  Christ Jesus is the one who died–more than that, who was raised–who is at the right hand of God, who indeed is interceding for us.  Who shall separate us from the love of Christ?  Shall tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword?”

For those whom God has called, those whom He has loved through Jesus Christ, His love is permanent, unchanging, and faithful.  This does not mean we can’t displease Him, for we can.  But if we hold fast to Christ, and we have given our lives to Him in salvation, then throughout our lives what I’m convinced will happen is this: The same love which saved us and gave us new life will sanctify us in our failures by leading us to repent, and to receive grace and forgiveness, and to lead us back to Christ.  That same love will teach us, lead us, and guide us, and eventually, one day, that grace, that love, so marvelously shown at Calvary, will bring us home.

For the Christian, the desire to sin, in an enslaving, dominant way, has been killed.  Sin seemed to have a grip on me, for years, but because I knew Christ, it could not hold me down, and by God’s good and perfect grace, He has led me to repentance, and is teaching me what it means to follow Jesus as Lord.  God’s love never leaves us.  If you’re a Christian, and you’re struggling with sin…welcome to the club.  You’re not alone.  Paul’s letters to churches show that every Christian from every generation has struggled with sin in one way or another.  But our nature, our desires, have changed, and this leads to repentance, which leads us back to grace.  God’s discipline is love.  He disciplines us and convicts us, so that we will repent and find our joy in Jesus.

Jesus is the high priest that intercedes for His people constantly.  While we are still here on Earth, Jesus promises to guide us, to sanctify us, and to lead us back to Him.  His grace is good, and is always stronger than our sin.  Repent, be restored, and abide in Christ.  In doing this, you will die to yourself and begin to obey Christ more and more.  In this death, you shall truly live.  We die to sin every day, as we rise with Christ to walk by the Spirit which is ours.  Christian, do not desire sin.  Pray constantly.  Rest in what Jesus has done, repent, be filled, and obey the Lord by trusting in Him.

3) Jesus is coming back.

This is great news.  Not only did Jesus die to take away our sins, not only does He now live to be our great high priest who forgives His sheep, but our risen and reigning Savior is coming back to rule for all eternity.

1 Peter 1:3-5: “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ!  According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, to an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you, who by God’s power are being guarded through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed in the last time.”

We have hope, a great inheritance, that is awaiting us when we obtain our eternal salvation, kept for us by Jesus through our faith.  That’s pretty cool…our faith is being guarded by the God of all creation who gave it to us to begin with.  I think that’s awesome.  You won’t find this security in anything or anyone else.  Man, Jesus is good!

How can one be saved?  I hope that pastors and ministers around the country hear this every day, especially today.  Put your faith in Jesus, acknowledge your sin and repent, turn away from it, and lay it on Jesus.  Trust in Him for salvation, and give your life to Him as Lord.  The Bible does not promise health and wealth.  The prosperity gospel is a lie from hell.  What the Bible does promise is that Jesus will never leave you and He will never forsake you, no matter what you do, no matter what happens.  He leads us to Himself, to be saved, to be renewed, to repent, to receive grace, and the great hope for believers…to lead us home.

The Christian life is hard.  It’s not easy, it’s messy.  We’re not perfect, we trust in the Lamb who was and is and is to come.  I don’t have it all together, and I’m a work in progress.  But my boss, my potter, and my Lord is the God of the universe, and He is alive, and working, not just in my life, but in the world around me.  That’s reason to rejoice.

Yet, as we rejoice today, remember that we have brothers and sisters around the world who risk their lives to celebrate the risen King.  Pray for the persecuted, that they would continue to shine the light of Christ in the darkest night.  And may we go and give our lives to spread the gospel.  Fulfill the Great Commission.  We are saved from God’s wrath to God’s purpose, to go and declare His glory to the ends of the earth.  Do it.

And one day, peoples from every tribe, tongue, and nation, will fill the heavens, and shout “Worthy is the lamb who was slain, to receive power and wealth and wisdom and might and honor and glory and blessing!”  With one voice, we will shout “To him who sits on the throne and to the Lamb be blessing and honor and glory and might forever and ever!”  For all eternity, we will worship the King: “Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord God Almighty, who was and is and is to come!”

May you be encouraged by the truth of the resurrection this Easter Sunday.  May this be a time to reflect on the faithfulness of our God, who is quick to save those who call on Him, and quick to restore those in hurt, those in sin, those who long for Him.  May we rest and rejoice in the amazing fact that God loved us before we even thought of Him.  May you know Jesus, love Jesus, and obey Jesus.

He is risen indeed.

God bless,

Neal E.

Freedom Week–Original Story & My Thoughts

The following is a story that I wrote for a magazine writing class.  I am hoping to get this story published in Collegiate magazine, a Christian magazine run by LifeWay Christian Resources.  I will also add to this story by inserting my thoughts into the week and will add my thoughts/opinions/biblical insight/whatever you want to call it into this post.  Everything in italics comes from the original story.  All else is non-story material.  This story, this post, the video story I’ve done on this, and all that was done March 5th-9th at the University of Montevallo is for the 27 million people that are enslaved around the world.  May Christ break every chain with the power of the gospel.  Enjoy.

The mood in Palmer auditorium changes as she takes the stage at “Freedom Night.”  There is no more chatter, no more laughing.  Every pair of eyes are watching her intently as she tells her story:

“There is a circuit from Atlanta to Birmingham to Nashville to Memphis to Chattanooga, and you’re trafficked quite often.  But it’s not about transportation,” she says calmly.  Looking into the crowd of college students, she continues her story:

“I have been raped more times than I can count.  I stopped counting at 21.  My throat has been cut, and a gun has been placed at my head and the trigger pulled.  By man’s law I should not be here.”

Tajuan Lewis became a victim of sex trafficking at age 15.  She was prostituted, beaten, and raped.  It took her more than 25 years to understand what had happened to her.  She was in and out of prison until one day, her eyes were opened to the gospel, and she received Jesus as Lord and Savior.  She met her husband Kelly, and soon after, she was called to open the Well House, located in Birmingham, which serves the needs of victims of sex trafficking, caring for and helping women who have been abused.

I had the great honor of interviewing Ms. Lewis and her husband Kelly.  These people love the Lord.  At the end of the interview, I told them how refreshing it was to interview someone and talk with people who unashamedly talk about Jesus.  So many people focus on being politically correct, thus compromising the message.  Mr. and Ms. Lewis, thank you for your honesty and boldness for the name of Jesus.

Her story is just one of millions.  27 million, to be exact.  According to the U.S. State Department, there are more slaves now than in any other period of history.  The International Labor Organization reported that human trafficking generates more than $32 billion annually.

I chose not to publish more statistics here, because eventually, statistics do one of two things: They make us numb to the information, thus turning us off, or we get overloaded, and we become emotional over numbers and not over the people involved.  More statistics on human trafficking can be found by searching for the U.S. Department of State’s 2007 report on international human trafficking, or by going to ILO (International Labour Organization) website and looking up similar statistics.

Jeremy Springer of She Dances told the story of Sophia, a girl born in Honduras, who was sold by her own parents into prostitution.  She was raped, beaten, gagged, and trafficked as a child.  A child, just like your own.  She, he said, had dreams, plans, she had desires…and all of that was stripped away by the evils of human trafficking.  While I firmly believe and assert that our ultimate treasure is in heaven, and that our hope should be there….no child deserves this.  No one deserves to have a life filled with rape, torture, abuse, and slavery, for themselves or their children.  If we simply stand by and let this happen, we are the idle, the lazy, the sinful, disobedient, unfaithful, unloving people Paul, Peter, and James warn us of.  James tells us to look after orphans and widows “in their affliction.”  This is the affliction of our time.  Human trafficking seems to be the great evil of our time that we are standing up against.  More on that to come.

At the University of Montevallo, located in Montevallo, Alabama, students stepped up to make a difference during Freedom Week, held March 5-9, 2012.  The event raised money and awareness for modern day slavery and human trafficking.  A campus ministry, Ecclesia, led by Brian Fulton, sponsored the event as a result of hearing about trafficking at Passion Conference in Atlanta.

“We took a group to Passion Conference, and God had already been giving us a heart to help students find a way to be involved in providing and taking care of the poor and the oppressed.  It just made sense to do this and get involved,” Fulton said.

The goals of Freedom Week were to raise $5,000 to go toward three different organizations: The International Justice Mission, The Well House, and She Dances.

Fulton quoted Isaiah 58:6-7, which says “Is not this the fast that I choose: to loose the bonds of wickedness, to undo the straps of the yoke, to let the oppressed go free, and to break every yoke?  Is it not to share your bread with the hungry and bring the homeless poor into your house; when you see the naked, to cover him, and not to hide yourself from your own flesh?”

The phrase “flesh of my flesh” actually comes from Genesis, as Adam says this of Eve.  Yet, the phrase fits in with slavery.  Whether they are our earthly family or not, we should strive to show justice here in this life.  God’s justice as far as our eternal fate goes is that we all go to hell because of sin.  Jesus’ grace and salvation means we don’t have to if we trust in Him as Lord and Savior.  Now, for us, God’s justice means He was satisfied to look on Christ instead of us.  Therefore, as Christians, if we believe that humans are made in the image of God, and we believe, as Paul says, that we have been given the ministry of reconciliation, and we believe in a God of justice, we seek to show justice, not for this life only, but for eternity.  We work for eternity.  We desire that no one face the wrath of God that leads to hell due to their sin.  So we work for justice here on Earth that they may see the glorious grace of God in Christ Jesus.

Let me make that clear: We do not deserve good things on Earth, we deserve hell.  No one, however, deserves to be mistreated by their fellow man.  To mistreat your fellow human is to promote yourself to the position of God, and it is sin.  Keep reading.

“My hope is that people would begin to see that we are responsible, that we owe people justice.  Humans are made with rights, and I believe, as a Christian, made in the image of God.  Therefore, we owe justice.  Justice isn’t a suggestion,” he said.

I believe two things about earthly justice, and the Christian role in regards to it.  Feel free to give me your thoughts on this: 1) While we may not deserve “good things” on Earth, no one deserves to be in bondage to someone else.  Why?  Because they are not just a victim of slavery, they’re a victim of someone else’s sin.  Only God knows why He’s allowed these evils to continue for so long, and certainly God is sovereign over it.  This, at a basic level, is a result of sin in the world.  And again, while I want to be careful saying what we do and do not deserve, I do assert this: While we may not deserve anything here….we have no right to strip whatever we, as humans, do have so that we can lord over each other.  2) I believe in a God of justice, as we stated earlier.  I also believe in God as Creator, and God who wants people to come to Him and worship Him.  How will they do that if they are in bondage to someone else?  It’s not a matter of us deserving good things, it’s a matter of freeing them from their earthly chains so that they may see Jesus, who frees them from the deep chains of sin.  That’s the beauty and the simplicity of our message.  It’s not about us, it’s about Him.  Our goal is to free them so they may see Jesus, who will truly free them.

The average age of entry into prostitution is 12 to 14.  Almost half of all forced labor victims are under the age of 18, and more than one million children are trafficked every year.  Sexual exploitation drives almost 80 percent of all human trafficking.  The Lewis’ believe that the best thing people can do to fight these evils is to talk about it, confront it, and take the chance to be wrong.

“If you’re not willing to take a chance on being wrong, you’re not taking a chance on pulling someone out of the situation that they’re in, and they might be in bondage.  You can’t see the chains, but the bondage can be there,” Kelly Lewis said.

There are people all over the world that are dying each and every second as a result of someone else’s sin in trafficking and forced labor.  Micah calls us to do justice and walk humbly before God.  Are we doing that?  I believe if we take this to heart, we will do what Kelly Lewis calls us to do.  Take a chance to be wrong.  Ask questions.  You don’t have to probe deep, just ask what’s going on!

On the night of March 6, more than 250 students attended Freedom Night, the headline event for the week.  The event featured Jeremy Springer from She Dances, Tajuan Lewis, and Olivia Terry, a Montevallo graduate working with Make Way Partners.  After the week was over, $5,700 had been raised.

“God blew our expectations for Freedom Week out of the water. The entire campus became aware that trafficking is rampant today,” Fulton said.

Brett Roney, a member of Ecclesia, added that the week was not simply for money, but for future efforts to help those in need.

“My hope is that through Freedom Week, one student will take the week’s heart-felt purpose, duplicate it in their lives outside of school, and carry it with them into their futures so that others will also come to stand for something bigger than themselves,” Roney said.

As the students continue to listen, Tajuan, becoming emotional, continues to speak.  She explains how trafficking works, and that most victims that enter the Well House come from the state of Alabama.  She says trafficking and prostitution can happen anywhere, and is not just limited to big towns like Los Angeles or New York City.

“In March of last year, there were 40 people arrested in Fort Payne, Alabama.  Fort Payne is rolling green countryside.  It doesn’t happen there.  Or that’s what we think.”

Fort Payne, Alabama is where Tajuan was once abused.

“What’s sad, and what breaks my heart, is that 26 years later, we’re going back to the same house…in the same town,” she cries.

I wish there was a way to put her tone into this quote.  That was such a raw, emotional moment.  As I stood there, recording this, trying to put together a broadcast story, it hit me: This is so much bigger than me.  This is real.  This isn’t just another story.  And I knew that, but in that moment, it hit my heart.  Her tears became mine.  And as she boldly professed that Jesus saved her, I couldn’t help but say amen.  Under my breath of course, so you don’t hear me interfering with a poignant moment.

This night, filled with other speakers, guests, musicians, etc. was emotional, but it provided hope as Tajuan wrapped up.  Keep reading.

As she finishes her story, she ends on a positive note:

“I’m no longer a victim, and I’m no longer a survivor.  I’m an overcomer!”  She boldly proclaims that she knows Jesus saved her.

Tajuan’s story brings hope.  Hope can be such a fragile thing.  If not for the stories like Tajuan’s, the 27 million slaves around the world might not have any hope.  If not for people like her and other organizations like The Well House, hope would seem like a laughable joke, an object of wishful thinking, not a tangible reality.  This week, this event, and these students, weren’t just raising money or awareness.  They raised something else, something more powerful.  They raised hope.

That’s it.  For this part of the story.  There are still 27 million slaves around the world.  There is still work to be done.  In recent weeks, the campaign Kony2012 has picked up steam.  Despite what’s going on with Invisible Children management/finances and the disputes over Kony’s actual location, the fact remains: There are people, especially children, all over the world, being tortured, mutilated, abused, murdered, raped, and forced to kill in the case of the LRA (Lord’s Resistance Army), and we must step up to do something. (For more information about Joseph Koney, Uganda, and Invisible Children, search for Kony 2012 on YouTube. There is a 30 min informational video).

Christians: This is a call to step up.  Not so that we can outdo the non-believers, but that we may set an example.  Oh that we would relish this opportunity to shed the stigma of hypocrisy and actually do something that matters!  The world doesn’t care about whether or not you have contemporary, super-contemporary, or old-school Baptist worship services.  Are you serving God in your community, in your country, and around the world?  Or are we content with settling on and centering our Christian lives on issues in the church that, while important, have no bearing on how the world sees Jesus.

If Jesus isn’t about it, we don’t want to be about it.  That’s what someone told me one time about a homeless shelter in Louisville.  A homeless shelter in the middle of a nice, urban city where it would be easy to fit the mold and conform.  It’s easy for us to get in our bubbles.  Break your bubble.  Stand out, stand up, and be a voice for those who don’t have one.  This is our time, our fight, not our children or our children’s children.  We can make a difference if we would only let God move through us.

May the freedom and justice we proclaim to those in bondage point to the life-changing, chain-breaking power of the gospel of Jesus Christ.  May we give all that we have to this gospel.  May we sacrificially love those who cannot help themselves.  May God bless you as you go to proclaim freedom to those enslaved, both to others and to sin.  Jesus, You are the Great Redeemer, the Great Liberator.  Free us, Lord.

God bless,

Neal E

If you have any questions about Jesus, the gospel, or anything you’ve read here or in other posts, please feel free to email me, message me on Facebook, or comment here.  Feel free to share this with your friends and family.