Preaching
If we
believe in the resurrection of Jesus, we will preach it world-wide. He
died and rose as the representative of all men; and therefore this good
news should be preached to all kinds and all races of people. Men from
all nations were in prospect sprinkled by His blood (Is. 52:15); and
therefore we must extend the knowledge of this to all men, both in our
collective and personal witness. Lk. 24:48 simply comments that the
disciples were witnesses to the resurrection and the fact that
forgiveness and salvation was therefore potentially available to all
men. The parallel records in Mt. and Mk. say that they were told to go
out and witness to the resurrection world-wide. Putting them together
it is apparent that if we are truly witnesses of the resurrection in
our own faith, then part and parcel of this is to take this witness out
into our own little worlds.
Christ's resurrection is
an imperative to preach. When Peter is asked why he continues preaching
when it is forbidden, he responds by saying that he is obeying God's
command, in that Christ had been raised (Acts 5:29-32). There was no
specific command from God to witness (although there was from Christ);
from the structure of Peter's argument he is surely saying that the
fact God raised Christ is de facto a command from God to
witness to it which must be obeyed. The resurrection of Jesus is itself
the command to preach. Yet reading carefully, Peter says that he is a
witness not only of the resurrection, but of the fact that Jesus is now
at God's right hand and from that position of power has enabled
forgiveness. How could Peter be a witness to that? For he
hadn't been up to Heaven to check. Quite simply, he knew the extent of
his own forgiveness. And so he therefore knew that truly, Jesus had
ascended and was there in a position of influence upon Almighty God, to
enable forgiveness. His own cleansed conscience was the proof that his
belief in the Lord's ascension was belief in something true. And yet we
ask: does our belief that Christ ascended really have this effect upon
us?
Because the Lord's resurrection enabled forgiveness
of sins (1 Cor. 15:17), Peter therefore on this basis makes an appeal
for repentance and appropriation of the Lord's work for men through
baptism into His death and resurrection (Acts 2:31-38; 3:15,19 "
therefore" ). And Paul likewise: " He, whom God raised again...through
[on account of] this man [and His resurrection] is preached unto you
the forgiveness of sins" (Acts 13:37,38). Because of the Name the Lord
has been given, salvation has been enabled (Acts 4:12 cp. Phil. 2:9). "
God, having raised up his Son Jesus, sent Him to bless you, in turning
away every one of you from his iniquities" (Acts 3:26); " the God of
our fathers raised up Jesus…exalted with his right hand to be a Prince
and a Saviour, for to give (i.e. inspire) repentance to Israel, and
forgiveness" (Acts 5:30,31). The fact of the Lord's resurrection has
assured forgiveness of sins for all who will identify themselves with
it through baptism into Him; and this is why it is thereby an
imperative to preach it, if we believe in it. The disciples were told
to go and preach of the resurrection of Christ, and therefore of
the required responses this entails: repentance, acceptance of
forgiveness and baptism (Lk. 24:46). Preaching is motivated by His
resurrection (1 Cor. 15:14). Baptism saves us " by the resurrection of
Jesus Christ" (1 Pet. 3:21 cp. Rom. 4:25; Col. 2:13).
Confession Of Sin
We
who were dead in sins were " made alive together with Christ" (Eph.
2:5). If we believe in Christ Jesus' resurrection, we will therefore
repent, confess our sins and know His forgiveness. Thus believing in
His raising and making confession of sin are bracketed together in Rom.
10:9,10, as both being essential in gaining salvation. Because He rose,
therefore we stop committing sin (1 Cor. 6:14). We can't
willfully sin if we believe in the forgiveness His resurrection has
enabled. Men should repent not only because judgment day is coming, but
because God has commended repentance to us, He has offered / inspired
faith in His forgiveness by the resurrection of Christ (Acts
17:30,31 AV mg.). The empty tomb and all the Lord's glorification means
for us should therefore inspire personal repentance; as well as of
itself being an imperative to go and share this good news with a sinful
world, appealing for them to repent and be baptized so that they too
might share in the forgiveness enabled for them by the resurrection.
Because the Lord was our representative, in His resurrection we see our
own. We are therefore born again unto a living and abounding hope, by
our identification with the resurrection of Jesus Christ (1 Pet. 1:3).
The Ethiopian eunuch read of his representative Saviour as also being
childless, and being as he was, in the midst of a wilderness; and
realizing this, he desired to be baptized into Him. Grasping the
representational nature of the Lord's death inspires response in
baptism, and yet the motivational power of this fact continues
afterwards.
Peter knew Jesus had risen, and he had met
him and been " glad" when he saw the Lord, and in some form had
joyfully proclaimed the news to the others. But " when Simon Peter
heard that it was the Lord, he girt his fisher's coat unto him (for he
was naked) and did cast himself into the sea" (Jn. 21:7), and then
meets the Lord and as it were they settle the score relating to his
denials. Again by a fire, the three fold " lovest thou me?" probed
Peter's denials, and the threefold commission to " feed my sheep"
confirmed his total re-instatement to grace. The whole flavour of this
record would make it seem that this was the first time Peter had met
the risen Lord. But it clearly wasn't. Surely the point is that like
us, we can know theoretically that Christ rose; we can be sure of it.
But the personal implications in terms of confession of sin and service
to that risen Lord can be lost on us, to the point that we don't really accept that Christ is risen, even if in theory we do know and confess it.
Labour For Him
Because
Christ rose, we have not believed and preached " in vain" (1 Cor.
15:14). Because He rose, therefore " awake to righteousness and sin
not" (15:34)- for He is our representative. We labour for Him because
our faith in His resurrection is not " in vain" . Our faith in His
resurrection is not in vain (:2,14), and our labour is therefore not in
vain (:58) because it is motivated by His rising again. The grace of
being able to believe in the resurrection of Jesus meant that Paul "
laboured abundantly" (:10). And he can therefore bid us follow his
example- of labouring abundantly motivated by the same belief that the
Lord rose (:58). Paul exhorts that prayers be made " for all men" ,
just because " Christ Jesus gave himself a ransom for all" , and He
thereby is the one and only mediator between God and man (1 Tim.
2:1-6). Because of what He enabled for all, we should pray for all,
that somehow circumstances might be allowed which enable all men's
salvation in Jesus to indeed spread to all men.
Forgiving Others
Atonement
means 'covering'. Because God covers our sins, we ought to cover those
of others. The simple statement " love covers all sins" (Prov. 10:12)
comes in the context of appealing for God's people not to gossip about
each others' failures. And the passage is most definitely applied to us
in the NT (1 Pet. 4:8; James 5:20; 1 Cor. 13:7RVmg. " love covereth all
things" ). " He that goes about as a talebearer reveals secrets; but he
that is of a faithful spirit conceals the matter" (Prov. 11:13). Our
natural delight in telling or brooding on the moral failures of others,
as if life is one long soap opera, will be overcome if we have
personally felt the atonement; the covering of our sins. " He that
covers his [own] sins shall not prosper: but whoever confesses and
forsakes them shall have mercy" (Prov. 28:13). The opposition is
between owning up to our sins, and trying to cover them for ourselves.
If we believe in the covering work of God in Christ, then we will own
up to our sins the more easily, confident in His atonement.
Use Our Bodies Properly
The
classic chapter about the resurrection of body, 1 Cor. 15, is also
about the resurrection of Jesus. And it is not just a doctrinal
treatise which Paul throws in to his letter to the Corinthians. It must
be viewed in the context of the entire letter. He has been talking
about the correct use of the body- not abusing it, defiling it, in
whatever way. And he has spoken specifically about sexual issues. And
then in summary, at the end of his letter, he speaks at such length
about the resurrection of the body. Seeing that God intends
resurrecting our body, our body means so much to Him that Christ died
and rose again to enable our bodily resurrection, therefore it matters
a lot what we do with our body right now!