Well, I figure now that I'm out of college and have even less time on my hands now, I might as well pick up writing on this blog again. After a long hiatus and *several years to think about what else I might want to share, I've been longing to really delve into exactly what I really believe. To say the least, most of what I write is not meant to pass on insight to others but to help me affirm what I have gleaned from what little experience of life I have.
With that cryptic introduction aside, I will say that most of what I write and will write in the future is more or less geared mainly toward serious believers in Christ Jesus. I will hold back on using the word "Christian" for now until I have defined it for myself and have a baseline for which that word actually becomes meaningful to me. Reason I make this harsh assessment of the word is not to ridicule the common "Christian" but it comes from my hesitancy to use this word without a good deal of context around it, especially since it has made its way into our vernacular and carries with it two different connotations depending on the audience it is spoken to.
The main topic for my brooding though is this: Christ's death was necessary on my part BUT was not complete until His resurrection. Like Paul says, if Christ did not rise from the grave, we are (basically) screwed. No resurrection, no faith, no joy, no glory. What a sad life. 1 Corinthians 15:14.
It is only through
the death on the cross and the resurrection that we can have peace. If Christ was not crucified, we would still
be drowning in our debt if sin. There would have been no redemption. However,
the death on the cross is not enough. It would have been just another
sacrificial lamb, not a fulfillment of the prophesies or the gospel.
If death was the end
of the gospel story, we would still be facing the result of our sin. Death. If
Christ was not resurrected, we are still subject to death. And honestly, isn't
death the one thing we are actually scared of? The one thing that gives us angst?
At the end of our Christian story, isn't death what we ultimately try to avoid?
Aren't we looking to the hope of eternal life? Realize that none of this gospel
would make sense if Christ had stayed dead.
But Christ didn't
stay dead. He was resurrected. And not resurrected in the Egyptian sense where
resurrection is simply a spiritual moving but resurrection in the physical
Christian sense. That Christ walked with his disciples, had proof that he was
indeed pierced for our sins, and said, "peace be with you." It is a
complete and utter demolish meant of death. Christ defeated death and therein
lies our peace. Christ, our savior, has defeated death and therefore, by our
faith in our savior, we can have peace in knowing that death is no longer a
worry, an enemy.
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