THE
RESURRECTED CHRIST
Mark
16:9-20. “When Jesus rose early on the
first day of the week, he appeared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom he had
driven seven demons. She went and told those who had been with him and who were
mourning and weeping. When they heard that Jesus was alive and that she had seen
him, they did not believe it. Afterwards Jesus appeared in a different form to
two of them while they were walking in the country. These returned and reported
it to the rest; but they did not believe them either. Later Jesus appeared to
the Eleven as they were eating; he rebuked them for their lack of faith and
their stubborn refusal to believe those who had seen him after he had risen. He
said to them, ‘Go into all the world and preach the good news to all creation.
Whoever believes and is baptised will be saved, but whoever does not believe
will be condemned. And these signs will accompany those who believe: In my name
they will drive out demons; they will speak in new tongues; they will pick up
snakes with their hands; and when they drink deadly poison, it will not hurt
them at all; they will place their hands on sick people, and they will get
well.’ After the Lord Jesus had spoken to them, he was taken up into heaven
and he sat at the right hand of God. Then the disciples went out and preached
everywhere, and the Lord worked with them and confirmed his word by the signs
that accompanied it.”
The
oldest and most reliable manuscripts of the New Testament don’t contain this
ending to Mark’s gospel. For fifteen hundred years people were copying these
gospels by hand, and making copies of copies, and then copies of copies of
copies, so that little mistakes inevitably crept in. God made no promise in the
Bible that he would supervise all the activities of churches in their decisions,
decrees, encyclicals, pronouncements and confessions of faith. He did not say
that whatever a church did would certainly be infallible, rather even the most
holy of their actions would be mixed with sin. What all Christians must accept
is this that the process of the initial writing of the gospel of Mark – and
the other gospels and letters – was supervised by God so that what the
apostles wrote down was exactly what God wanted them to say.
None
of those manuscripts – the autographa - survive, and again you must remember
that God made no promise that they would. Moth and rust corrupt, and thieves
break through and steal the most precious objects in the world. We do not even
have the original ten commandments written on tablets of stone by the finger of
God, but we do know exactly what God wrote at Sinai. We also know with certainty
over 99 percent of what the prophets and apostles initially wrote. When men
discovered the Dead Sea Scrolls over half a century ago there they found a
scroll of Isaiah the prophet which is a thousand years older than any other copy
of Isaiah extant. What did that ancient scroll reveal? How carefully the ancient
scribes had copied the Scriptures. What the Dead Sea Scroll of Isaiah displayed
was the same text of Isaiah that we already had.
Men
say to us, “What’s the use of saying that the Scriptures as originally
written are infallible when we no longer possess those Scriptures?” The answer
is that we know what the prophets and apostles wrote, and when there are
variants in a verse the decision as to what is the correct choice is usually
very clear. Though occasionally there is some uncertainty about words and
accents the general sense of the passage is not in doubt, and never is any trunk
and branch teaching of Scripture challenged by any variant readings. You will
see occasionally at the bottom of the pages of your Bibles a reference to the
fact that “some early manuscripts do not have so and so” or that they have
this alternative reading. Those readings are about trivia so that our eyes
barely drop down to consider those footnotes. What Scripture says so
unmistakably is our priority. I say that in 99 per cent of the Scriptures we
know precisely what the gospel writers and apostles first wrote down. Sinners’
problems are not with the uncertainties of the original text but with what is
only too certainly given to mankind in the Bible. You hold the Word of God in
your hand today, just as Mark and Peter and Moses and Jeremiah were inspired at
that time to write it down. There have been mistakes made in the transcription
of the text of Scripture during the history of the church, and these are the
mistakes of men, but there were no mistakes in the original manuscripts.
Now
when you come to chapter sixteen of Mark you have this extra ending. As Sinclair
Ferguson writes, “It is not difficult to see how, for example, some verses
might be added to Mark’s Gospel. If someone had copied out the text, and
realised that it had (as Mark’s Gospel does) a rather sudden ending, they
might well add an appendix, summarizing some of the relevant teaching of the
other Gospels, or the different traditions of the church. It seems likely that
this happened in the case of Mark, since the two most reliable early manuscripts
of the end of Mark’s Gospel conclude at verse 8 with the words, ‘because
they were afraid’. They do not include verses 9-20.” (Sinclair Ferguson,
Let’s Study Mark, Banner of Truth,
Edinburgh, 1999, p.274). What can we say about the truths taught in the extra
ending?
1.
THE FACT OF THE RESURRECTION APPEARANCES.
One
of the interesting features of verses 9-20 is the repetition of the phrase ‘he
appeared.’ You meet it in verse 9, “he
appeared first to Mary Magdalene”, and then in verse 12, “he
appeared in a different form to two of them,” and then verse 14, “Later
Jesus appeared to the Eleven.” The
appearances of Jesus were the grounds for believing in his resurrection. Now
this ending was written a century or even two centuries after Mark had written
the gospel but we can go back to testimonies much nearer the very resurrection
itself. Turn to I Corinthians 15, and verse 3-8; “For
what I received I passed on to you as of first importance: that Christ died for
our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on
the third day according to the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Peter, and
then to the Twelve. After that, he appeared to more than five hundred of the
brothers at the same time, most of whom are still living, though some have
fallen asleep. Then he appeared to James, then to all the apostles, and last of
all he appeared to me also, as to one abnormally born.” You notice how the
word ‘appeared’ is there again on four occasions. Paul wrote these words
twenty years or so after the resurrection. Many of those who met the risen Jesus
Christ were still living. Paul gives us a list of the appearances of Christ and
this list would go back to Paul’s conversations with Peter and James in
The
evidence for the resurrection is utterly overwhelming. The Lord Jesus Christ
rose from the dead on the third day. It is prejudice that makes men reject it.
All the gospels tell us of his appearances. He was in the garden when Mary met
him, but then he left her; he was no longer in the garden he had moved on and
was on the road to Emmaus; then he was no longer in Emmaus he was in the Upper
Room; then he was no longer there he was at the side of the lake; then he was no
longer there he was in Galilee. Have you ever pondered that? He was in one place
at one time; he was not everywhere at the same time; the God-man wasn’t
existing ubiquitously in the hearts and minds of all his disciples. That is not
resurrection. He existed objectively in a certain place at a certain time, and
today it is exactly the same. The risen Jesus Christ exists this moment at the
right hand of the majesty on high. We know where he is today, and he is as real
as you or me, not existing as a disembodied spirit, but as a risen and embodied
Saviour. He has a physical form and he is in a place where there are other
people who have been brought there and they are seeing him, just as once long
ago five hundred people on a mountain in
Think
how that is presented to us, how Mary saw him and heard his voice speak her name
as he’d called to her many times; then the disciples saw him and Thomas was
invited to touch him and put his finger in the holes left by the nails. A ghost
doesn’t have a body you can touch. Then Cleopas and his friend in Emmaus
talked for a long time to him as they walked down a normal highway with other
people overtaking the three of them or approaching them. All the time they were
talking and finally they stop for a bite to eat. Then they saw him picking up a
loaf of bread and breaking it – just as really as you have seen me break the
loaf of bread at the communion table again and again. It is all very physical.
Then the apostles ate with him by the seaside after Christ caught and killed a
quantity of fish, gutting and preparing them for cooking on a fire he’d made
on the
Let
me press this physical resurrection further. If you want to hear how Peter spoke
about this event when he went evangelizing all over the Mediterranean basin for
fifty years or so then we have a summary of one of his sermons preserved for us
in Acts chapter 10. Peter is in the home of a Roman soldier and his friends and
servants have all been invited in to hear the Christian message. This is what
Peter says, “We are witnesses of
everything he did in the country of the Jews and in
We
ate with him, like we will eat with some of you after the service today. He
talked to them, as we will talk to some of you today. He talks to us about our
sins needing to be forgiven. Do you see how our Christian message of the risen
Christ is very relevant to you because of your sin? If you have sinned you are
guilty, not just in your own eyes but in the sight of our holy Creator. You have
an enormous problem and it is this, how can your sins be forgiven? The Bible’s
answer is that it is through the name of Jesus. In other words it is not through
any other name whatsoever, of any god, or especially of your own name. I cannot
go to God and say, “I stand before you in the name of Geoff Thomas; I have
lived a decent life and tried my best and helped my neighbour, so forgive my
sins.” No. My name doesn’t carry any weight before God because it is the
weight of an old sinner, but Jesus’ name carries a great deal before God. It
is the name of the Son whom God loves. It is the name of the only sinless man
who has walked this earth. It is the name of the blameless Son who became the
Lamb of God to take away our sins and obtain for us forgiveness of sins. That is
why he came, not to be served but to serve, and this was the pinnacle of his
service, to give his own life a ransom for many others. Peter told his first
century hearers, “everyone who believes
in him receives forgiveness of sins through his name” (Acts 10:41). You
say, “That’s what you Christians are always talking about, our sins, and our
need of forgiveness, and that this comes through believing in Jesus Christ. How
does anybody know?” Because of the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead;
that tangible fact has changed history. It confirms our preaching, the message
we tell people, and we tell the whole creation this message all the time, not
just preachers, but every one of us, that the Lord Jesus Christ died for our
sins according to the Scriptures and that he was buried and that he rose again
the third day according to the Scriptures.
Let
me share with you a letter I got last week from a friend in
“I
am reminded of the time, approximately two and a half years ago, when we were in
“I
asked about his family and he told me a little about his mother and brothers and
father. I told him about my family. I then asked if he was a
believer in Allah and in doing good works so that he could go to heaven.
He confirmed that and I said that I believed in God. ‘Just like me,’
he said. But I said, No, that I believed in a triune God, Father, Son and
Holy Spirit - and that I also believed in good works, but good works done
out of thankfulness to God that our sins have been forgiven by the death of God
the Son. He was quite interested and began asking questions - questions
about how I could believe that Jesus was God if He actually had died on the
cross. I answered him by saying that Jesus had not just become the Son of
God when he was born in
Why
was Christine compelled to talk about this fact to this Muslim? If you go back
far enough it is because of the risen Jesus Christ giving the church the great
commission. Do you see from what I have said that belief in the resurrection of
Christ though it is supernatural is not irrational, that it is based on those
sensible eye-witnesses, hundreds of them, who had seen him alive from the dead
over a period of almost six weeks? They all insist it was a physical
resurrection; he had a proper body which ate food. Listen to Luke’s
introduction to the book of the Acts of the Apostles, “After
[Jesus’] suffering, he showed himself to these men and gave many convincing
proofs that he was alive. He appeared to them over a period of forty days and
spoke about the
The
resurrection appearances are proof that Jesus Christ is the Son of God; there is
this scientific evidence that he is the Lamb of God – documents reporting what
eye-witnesses saw and heard and touched; there is this foundation that our sins
can be forgiven, that I need not go on through life bearing this growing burden
of guilt which in the end will crush me in death and judgment. Through
Christ’s name there is forgiveness, and so a Christian lady is sitting in the
entrance to a university in
2.
WHAT DOES THE RESURRECTION MEAN TO US TODAY?
i] The resurrection reminds us we have an evangelistic duty to perform.
For
almost six weeks the Lord Jesus Christ was with the disciples and then he gave
them a great commission; “He said to
them, ‘Go into all the world and preach the good news to all creation. Whoever
believes and is baptized will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be
condemned’” (vv. 15&16). This is the writer’s version of
Christ’s great commission which is found at the end of Matthew’s gospel.
They were to leave
ii]
The resurrection says that we live in a supernatural universe.
Unbelieving people say, “People stay dead. No one comes back.” We see the great uniformity and predictability of the world in which we live, the way that every event follows another with the most unfailing regularity. Men forget that all such regularity is the constancy of the operations of God. The world moves in God. It is a humbling exercise to ponder in the light of 20th century physics that when the world moves what that actually means. I think I have some faint glimpse of that. We ourselves as human beings are great bundles of restless atoms, neutrons and electrons, constantly on the move. There is such immensity and complexity of movement even in this building at this moment such as no finite mind could compute, and it is all moving in God.
Then you see there are those special moments when the finger of God intrudes in a miraculous way. There are occasions when God makes known to us that at his will he can erupt into the process. God can disturb; God can disorder; God can reverse things because it is his world. It happened at the incarnation which was the greatest of all supernatural intrusions. It happened in all of our Lord’s miracles, and it happened at the resurrection of Christ. There was the putting forth of God’s power, and there was nothing in the universe - or the whole complexity of natural law that we so often personalize as ‘nature’ – that can say to God, “Don’t you dare interfere!” It cannot do that. At will God interferes; at will God raises the dead; at will God opens the hearts of men and they give attention to the gospel; at will, at his own chosen will, he’ll one day close down the whole vast universe in which we find ourselves; he will cause its every element to melt with fervent heat. This whole world, created, and sustained, and guided by God will be brought to its close, at that moment of his choosing. That is what the resurrection means. We live in a world open to the intrusion of God.
iii] The resurrection says that we shall live also.
As certainly as there was a tomb for the Son of God so there is certainly a tomb for you and me. There is a moment when we too will breathe our last and give up the spirit. That is a great solemnity, as we look at this most certain of predictions anyone can make about his future. I heard recently of an Irish preacher telling his congregation that he was going to give them the devil’s text today. The text was, “Ye shall not surely die.” Those were the devil’s words at the beginning and they are still the devil’s words today. Let me ask you if you have hope at the end. What lies after death? Mankind is divided; a little minority say you are snuffed out like a candle, non-existence is our destiny. The great consensus of human longing and aspiration say that there is life beyond.
Yes, says the word of God. Beyond the grave there is life, but there is more than consciousness and it spells out the nature of that life. It is not an attenuated life; it is not diluted, ghostly, vague and insubstantial. The resurrection of Jesus of Nazareth casts its own bright light on life after death. We shall live also, and according to the measure of this living hope, our souls immortal, and our bodies raised by the power of God. In that great eternal order which has a permanence – which our own lacks – in that place we shall exist not as human spirits alone for there in our midst will be the risen Lamb; there is the redemption of the body. What a tremendous consolation it is; our dead shall rise. It is a great thing to stand before the elemental and simple words of this gospel of Mark written by an almost illiterate man, and read the words of its climax, “he is not here; he is risen.”
That will be true of every grave and every tomb and all the dust of the cremated body. The earth shall give up the dead that are in it, and the sea shall give up the dead that are in it. Your dead men shall rise and in my flesh shall I see God. “Sown in dishonour . . . raised in glory.” There is before us the reconstitution of our personalities and we shall become whole men in Christ. There will be the reconstruction of severed relationship as we stand for ever with the Lord, for he is not here, he is risen. This resurrection of Christ speaks of our evangelistic task, and the universe open to the intervention of God, and the certainty of immortality and eternal life. One more thing;
iv]
The resurrection speaks of the glory of Jesus of
How so? It tells us this, that this man whose life we have been considering for the past few years is alive. There is nothing more glorious than that. You will hear many things less familiar to us, and less novel, and many things that are less astounding, but you will hear nothing more glorious than this. “Christ is risen indeed!” The Lord Jesus is alive! It is not a memory that lives on, not a force, not an influence, but a person of consummate power who is upholding all things, in whose hands is our breath, who’s got the whole world in his hands. He is alive; he is really alive! He is alive as Jesus Christ the Son of God. What Mark first wrote in the words of his opening sentence he confirms throughout the gospel and consummates in the resurrection of our Lord, the Son of God. What marvellous strength was his, what integrity and loveliness of character, everything bears it out.
There came into his holy life the appalling contradiction of that long chapter 15, the scourging and the crucifixion. He was killed and the church was left with just a pathetic regret . . . “we thought . . . we had thought . . .” Then you see it all reversed; he is declared the Son of God with power by the resurrection from the dead. God cancels the great word which that cross had declared. The cross said that this man was a liar, and he was a failure, and a blasphemer. The resurrection said, “He is the Son of God with almighty power.”
How do we respond to that? The early disciples responded by worshipping him. They fell spontaneously at his feet as if they were dead. We remember the great moving words of doubting Thomas, “My Lord and my God!” Now that is great theology; he is Lord and God. It is great Christology too, but that is not the ultimate thing; it is great personal religion. “My God!” He is certainly Lord and God beyond question, beyond vision and beyond modification. That what he is to you? Is he my Lord? Is he my God? Is he your Lord and God? Have your knees bent? That is the great thing. Is every head bowing before Christ? Is there a single soul in this congregation whose knee has not bent? Is there one who would dare to stand and disprove these resurrection appearances, and would go on to deny that Jesus is risen indeed?
If he is risen why are your knees not bending before him? Why are you not saying, “My Lord and my God?” Do we know the glory of that? Let us all know the glory of worshipping the Son of God, Jesus of Nazareth.
26th
February 2006