I recently had a medical issue – possibly lymphoma. So, the doctor performed a biopsy. My family prayed for me. In fact, I understand that my grandson asked Jesus that I might get a good report on my autopsy.
Ironically, Jesus actually received a great report on His autopsy. “He’s alive!” the angel told the women who arrived at His tomb – Luke 24:23.
Jesus was crucified, died and was buried, and rose again on the third day. He is alive! And the destinies of His disciples were dramatically changed because of it.
There was certainly proof that He had died. John stood at the foot of the cross. He saw the nails that stabbed his hands and feet and the blood that flowed from His side. He was there to hear Him say, “It is finished” and watched as Jesus exhaled his last breath. His heart fell when Jesus’ head dropped.
When Christ was removed from His cross, I imagine John looked for any shred of evidence that He was still alive – a pulse or a shallow breath – but he found none. No heroic medical efforts were made to revive Him.
His body was then embalmed and left unattended in a dirty stone tomb which was sealed with a massive piece of stone. Three days later the tomb was gloriously found empty. And yet, the disciples were exceptionally skeptical.
Mark 16:11 says, “And when they heard that he was alive and had been seen…they did not believe.” Jesus then appeared to two men on the Emmaus Road. Those guys “went back and told the rest, but they did not believe them” (16:13).
“Then He appeared to the Eleven themselves, while they were eating, and he rebuked them for their unbelief and hardness of heart because they did not believe those who had seen him resurrected” (16:14).
There was less than zero inclination on the part of Jesus’ disciples to believe that He had risen.
But, in that room, they interacted with Him, face to face. They could see and hear Him and touch Him. They even watched Him eat (Luke 24:42-43). That is when Jesus told them to, “Go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature – Mark 16:15.
The skepticism was gone and the conviction of a risen Savior gripped their souls.
So, James the apostle proclaimed the risen Christ to all Jerusalem. But that’s as far as he got. He was the first of the apostles to suffer martyrdom, being slain with a sword at the command of Herod in 44 A.D. (Acts 12:1-2).
Thomas was once a doubter, and yet he preached the risen Christ in Persia and India. He was rewarded with a lance through heart by the order of the King of India
Bartholomew preached in Armenia and India. Because he did, he was stripped of his skin and crucified upside down. Andrew took the message to Greece where he was crucified on an X-shaped cross.
James, the half-brother to Christ, proclaimed the Lord in Jerusalem which provoked the leaders of Israel to take him up to the pinnacle of the temple and push him off.
Peter was afraid of the authorities which is why he denied Christ 3 times. After meeting the resurrected Christ, he fearlessly confronted the authorities that had crucified Christ (Acts 4:10). But his message eventually offended the emperor. Nero had him crucified in an upside-down position.
Why did these men choose to face persecution and death? It wasn’t to get rich, and certainly not to become popular. They did it because the One who overcame the power of death and the grave asked them to do so.
People will die for something if they believe it is true – even if it is not. But they will not die for what they know to be a lie.
Those men were uniquely permitted to do an autopsy of sorts on their Messiah who was once verifiably dead. And the consensus was, “He’s alive!”
A PRAYER: Lord over life and death – we worship You!
This has been Jim Johnson and pickleheavenpress.com
May the grace of our Lord Jesus be with you
Scripture references are from the NETBible®
