Every Easter season, the same question is raised—
Did Jesus truly rise from the dead or is the resurrection simply a meaningful story meant to inspire hope?
This is not a small question. It is everything.
As Tim Keller once said,
“If Jesus rose from the dead, then you have to accept all that he said; if he didn’t rise from the dead, then why worry about any of what he said?”
There is no middle ground.
What I find so compelling is that the resurrection is not presented as a vague spiritual idea. It is a historical claim, anchored in a real city, at a real point in history.
At the center of that claim is this:
A publicly executed man—whose life, death, and resurrection fulfilled dozens of specific Old Testament prophecies written centuries before He was born.
One example is Isaiah 53, which tells us that the Messiah would be rejected, suffer in our place, be pierced for our transgressions, remain silent before His accusers, be unjustly condemned and killed, and be buried in a way no one would expect. And yet, He would live again, be vindicated, and bring righteousness to many.
In fact Psalm 22 depicts a description of crucifixion centuries before it was even practiced! Even when Jesus cried out while on the cross-—
“My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”
He was drawing attention to the whole Psalm—one that begins in suffering but ends in victory.
These are not vague impressions. They are specific threads woven together long before Jesus was born now seen clearly in His life, death, and resurrection. This is not a disconnected event. It is the culmination of a story God had been writing for generations.
In a recent conversation, Wesley Huff pointed out something simple, yet profound—
The resurrection was proclaimed in Jerusalem, the very place where Jesus had been crucified.
Within weeks, His followers stood in that same city and declared,
“God has raised this Jesus to life, and we are all witnesses of it.” (Acts 2:32)
Not in secret. Not at a distance.
But in the very place where it could have been most easily refuted and yet, no one was able to disprove the testimony of those who claimed to have seen Him alive..
From Rome’s perspective, crucifixion was designed not only to execute—but to silence. To end movements and erase threats.
And so, when Jesus was crucified, the expectation would have been clear:
This movement is over.
But the opposite happened.
Instead of fading, it grew.
Instead of scattering permanently, His followers regrouped with boldness.
Instead of silence, there was proclamation.
And this pattern continued.
As the early church faced increasing persecution, the message did not disappear—it spread.
One of the early church fathers, Tertullian, observed this very reality when he wrote:
“The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church.”
What Rome intended to suppress became the very thing that strengthened and multiplied the movement. This is not how fabricated stories behave.
This is how truth, anchored in reality, endures.
What Rome intended to suppress became the very thing that accelerated the movement. This is not how fabricated stories behave.
This is how truth, anchored in reality, endures.
There is another piece of this story that adds to its credibility.
The Gospel accounts were written within the lifetime of those who had witnessed these events. These were not distant legends formed generations later. They were recorded while people were still alive who could have challenged or refuted them.
And yet, the message endured.
When we compare the Gospel accounts to other ancient writings, whether the histories of Julius Caesar or Tacitus, or even the philosophical works of Plato and Aristotle, which are widely accepted despite being preserved in far fewer and much later copies, we begin to see just how uniquely well attested the New Testament is.
In other words, what we read today is not a distorted version of a long-lost story. It is a faithful transmission of what was witnessed and proclaimed from the beginning.
An Unexpected Detail That Gets Our Attention
There is another detail in the Gospel accounts that is incredibly significant, although easy to miss.
All four Gospels record that women were the first witnesses to discover the empty tomb.
In our modern world, that may not seem surprising. But in the first century, a woman’s testimony was often not given the same weight as a man’s in legal settings.
If the resurrection accounts were fabricated, this would be a strange and counterproductive detail to include.
As N. T. Wright and others have noted, this is the kind of detail you would not invent if you were trying to make your story more credible.
And yet, Scripture preserves it—quietly, honestly, without apology.
It reads not like propaganda, but like truth.
Even outside of Scripture, we find confirmation of these events.
Historians like Tacitus and Josephus, who were not followers of Jesus, record that He lived, was crucified, and that His followers claimed He had risen.
These are not voices trying to defend Christianity, yet they point to the same reality. Something happened that changed everything
Christianity does not ask us to check our minds at the door.
It invites us to consider:
And yet, even with all the evidence, many of us can relate to Thomas, one of the disciples, often remembered as “doubting Thomas.”
Thomas had walked with Jesus.
He had seen the miracles.
He had heard the teaching.
And still, when told that Jesus had risen, he said:
“Unless I see… I will not believe.” (John 20:25)
There is something deeply honest about that. Because many of us live in a similar tension. We have seen God’s faithfulness.
We have experienced His provision. And yet, at times, we still wrestle with doubt.
But notice how Jesus responds to Thomas.
Not with rejection. Not with shame. But with invitation.
“Put your finger here… Stop doubting and believe.” (John 20:27)
Jesus meets Thomas in his doubt and reveals Himself.
And Thomas responds:
“My Lord and my God.”
And then Jesus speaks words that reach far beyond that moment. It’s a message for us.
“Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.” (John 20:29)
Despite all the evidence, Jesus acknowledges that faith is still required to believe.
The resurrection is not just something to examine. It is something to respond to. Because if Jesus truly rose from the dead, then:
His claims are true
His authority is real
And our identity is no longer defined by sin, loss, or striving—but by redemption
This is where it becomes personal.
Not just: Did it happen?
But: What does it mean for me that it did?
They did not go to a distant land to tell this story.
They stood in the very city where Jesus was crucified and said,
“He is risen.”
And no one could silence them—not because it was convenient,
but because something had happened that could not be undone.
The same God who worked quietly in Bethlehem…
the same God who worked silently in the tomb—is still at work today.
And He is still calling us—not just to believe the story,
but to trust the Savior who stands at the center of it all.
Reflection:
1. Despite all the evidence, do you still doubt the resurrection of Christ?
2. If the resurrection is true, what does that mean for how you view God and your identity today?
© donna aust ministries 2023 | designed by ale merino branding co.
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