1 Corinthians 15:12-34 · The Resurrection of the Dead
Because He Lives
1 Corinthians 15:12-34
Sermon
by Bill Bouknight
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My favorite day of the entire year is Easter. To declare the Good News of resurrection is the ultimate thrill for a preacher. It's even better than being a baseball fan in Yankee Stadium or a mountain climber on Mount Everest or a blues singer on Beale Street. No news is quite so good as "He lives!"

1995 will always be a special year for me because I have had three Easters. The first one I shared with you back in April when over 5000 of us celebrated resurrection in five great services (count them, one on Saturday night and four on Sunday morning). Then one week later, on the date when Easter is celebrated in the Eastern Orthodox world, I was in Moscow, Russia. There it was my privilege to declare that same Easter Gospel through an interpreter. They even taught me how to say it in Russian-- Christos vos chris--"Christ is risen!"

Now, here I am again, a third time in the same year, declaring the Easter good news. Why today? Because one could not possibly preach a series of sermons on the essentials of the Faith without including one on resurrection.

Did you read in the newspaper back during the winter about the elderly couple whose car skidded off the road in a snowstorm in Sierra National Forest? Jean and Ken Chaney lived for the next 18 days in that car before they died. They kept a diary. What a testament of faith it is. On the 18th day Jean Chaney wrote this last entry: "Dad went to the Lord at 7:30 this evening, March 18. It was so peaceful I didn't even know he left. The last thing I heard him say was 'Thank the Lord. ' I think I'II be with him soon...So much to say and so little time. I can't see. Bye. I love you."

How can anybody face death with that kind of faith and peace? It's because of the assurance of resurrection! The Bible declares that if I repent of my sin and claim Jesus by faith as my Lord, eternal life is God's gift to me.

That dear old retired Bishop William R. Cannon is fond of declaring that our faith is based on three historical events: a manger crib, an old rugged cross, and an empty tomb. Today I declare the good news of that empty tomb.

Our scriptural text from Paul's first letter to the Corinthians is the earliest biblical reference to Jesus' resurrection. Paul wrote this letter from the Asian city of Ephesus around 54 or 55 A.D., just twenty years after Jesus arose from the dead. Paul is giving us here the straight verbal tradition of the church, taught to him by the church fathers in Jerusalem.

Let me lift up three vital truths that I find in our text:

FIRST: THE DENIAL OF RESURRECTION IS HERESY.

We don't use that word heresy anymore. It means false belief. We Protestants have so embraced tolerance of all beliefs that we can hardly recognize heresy when we see it. Too many of us agree with the old truism of our secular society---"It doesn't matter what you believe as long as you're sincere." That truism is a lie which is as dangerous to the church as cancer is to a physical body.

What do we Christians believe about resurrection? We say it every Sunday in the Apostles Creed--"...the third day he rose from the dead."

Listen to our official United Methodist view from our Book of Discipline, Article III: "Christ did truly rise again from the dead, and took again his body, with all things appertaining to the perfection of man's nature, wherewith he ascended into heaven, and there sitteth until he return to judge all men at the last day."

Go to any society on earth, however primitive, and you will find a yearning for eternal life. Surely God must have planted that hope in the hearts of people.

I like the story of the two beavers who were standing near the Hoover Dam. It was a grandfather beaver and his young grandson. The youngster, gazing at that huge dam, said, "Grandpa, did you build that thing?" "No, son," he said, "but it was based on an idea

of mine."

The worldwide yearning for eternity is based on an idea God planted deep within human minds. In verse 12 of our text, Paul asked almost with disbelief: "How can some of you say there is no resurrection of the dead?"

One can almost guess what had created a problem for the Christians in Corinth. One of them had died. A funeral was held. But remember, they had no copy of the New Testament with Jesus' comforting words as recorded in John 14..."Because I live, you also shall live. I go to prepare a place for you...In my father's house are many mansions..." None of those words was in print.

One can imagine some skeptics in the crowd grumbling after the funeral: "Aren't we just imagining things? What evidence do we have of life after death? Isn't this just a matter of wishful thinking?"

That heresy is still around. There is a group of about 70 liberal New Testament Scholars who meet several times per year to critique the New Testament. They are called "The Jesus Seminar." They decide whether particular portions of the New Testament are historically accurate. They vote by using marbles; I suspect that most of their marbles are missing. The Jesus Seminar claims that the resurrection of Jesus probably never happened. More likely, they say, Jesus' body was disposed of by his crucifiers, not his followers.

When confronted by that kind of heresy, it is vital that we stand firm for the resurrection. Without the bodily resurrection of Jesus, there would be no church, no New Testament, no hope. The linchpin of orthodoxy is to declare, "On the third day Jesus literally arose from that tomb. And because He lives, I am confident that I will live again after death." To deny that is heresy.

Here is a second truth from the scripture: IF OUR FAITH IS FOCUSED ON THIS WORLD ONLY, IT IS A PITIFUL FRAUD.

Paul writes, "If for this life only we have hoped in Christ, we are of all people most to be pitied."

If I were to plan a two-week vacation at Destin, Florida, I would be foolish indeed to make a hotel reservation for one night only. How much more foolish it is to make adequate provision for 80 or 90 years on this little planet but to ignore the next hundred million years which I am going to spend somewhere.

Why is it that most Protestant preachers say so little about eternal life, about heaven and hell? The reason is that it is currently fashionable and politically correct to focus all our attention on this world, its poverty, racism, sexism, and use of masculine pronouns.

Why is this? Part of the answer has to do with the swinging of the pendulum, trying to make up for past distortions. Earlier in this century, some religious leaders focused on heaven only, disregarding totally the conditions of this world. The church stood by in cowardly silence while labor was exploited by industry, particularly in textiles. The church did not raise a clamor of conscience during the Holocaust. The church did very little to prevent the tragedy of Vietnam. And even as late as 1963, church leaders were urging Martin Luther King, Jr. to be more patient in his demands that all Americans be equal before the law. We church people were too other-worldly then to recognize our responsibilities in the here and now.

The pendulum needed to swing, but not so far. Now it has gone to the other extreme. Now there is little or no mention of eternity. The focus is on this world only. But, you know, even after we have reconciled the races and liberated women and paid off the national debt and have seen the Braves win the World Series, people are still going to die and spend eternity somewhere. If the church cannot help people discover an eternal hope, it is not earthly good. Paul says if we have no eternal hope, we are to be more pitied than anybody else. Because in that case we have been teaching a lie and we ought to be charged with fraud.

Dr. Kenneth Chafin of the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary in Louisville recalls that when he was a teenager, he was given a pamphlet to read. It was written by Luther Burbank, a rather famous agnostic. Basically Mr. Burbank claimed that it was not necessary to believe in Jesus' divinity or in His resurrection in order to admire Him for His good life and for His teachings.

Kenneth was at that time living with his Uncle Walter and Aunt Bertie. Kenneth decided to tryout Mr. Burbank's ideas on Aunt Bertie who had little formal education. But she knew her Bible and had a profound faith in God. Kenneth approached her in the kitchen where she was cooking supper on an old wood-burning stove. After reading the pamphlet to her, he asked her what she thought of it. Without even looking up or interrupting her stirring of the gravy, she said, "Jesus was either the Son of God or one big liar. If He didn't rise from the dead, the whole thing's a hoax."

We United Methodists are not other-worldly folks. Our agenda is to make God's kingdom come on earth as it is in heaven. But nobody is any earthly good until he or she is sure of eternity.

Listen to what our founder John Wesley thought about eternity: "I have thought I am a creature of a day, passing through life as an arrow through the air. I am a spirit come from God, and returning to God: Just hovering over the great gulf; till, a few moments hence I am no more seen; I drop into an unchangeable eternity! I want to know one thing--the way to heaven; how to land safe on that happy shore."

Now comes the third truth, and this is the heart of the Gospel:

BECAUSE JESUS CHRIST CONOUERED DEATH, WE SHALL ALSO. IF WE KEEP THE FAITH.

That 20th verse of our text is a great one: "But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of those who have died..."

Paul didn't say Jesus had risen in theory or in figurative terms or in symbolic fashion; oh no, Paul said, "In fact, Christ has been raised from the dead." Paul refers to Jesus as the "first fruits of those who have died." This harks back to the Jewish harvest festivals. The first fruits of the harvest were brought as an offering to God. Those first fruits were the early returns on a harvest that would come later. Jesus is our pioneer in bursting through the prison of death into the freedom of eternal life.

Some people even have eternal hopes etched onto their tombstones, like the woman whose tombstone bore this message: "She lived 42 years with her husband, and died in hopes of a better life." I'm going to try to persuade my wife not to consider such an epitaph.

In verse 22 Paul refers to Jesus as the Second Adam. Because of the sin of the first Adam, death came into the world. Jesus Christ is the Second Adam or the New Adam. Whereas all humanity was entrapped by the heritage of sin from the First Adam, now in Christ, the New Adam, all believers share in the eternal liberation which he has won for them.

There is much about heaven I don't know. Whether the streets will be paved with gold doesn't concern me in the least. I hope that I'll be smarter there than I am here. I won't complain if my golf game is better. But things like that don't matter. I know that I will see God face to face, that I will be with loved ones who have died in the faith, that for the first time we will be utterly joyful and at peace, and that we will enjoy God and each other forever. That's all I need to know.

My friend Bill Hinson from Houston tells about a woman in Florida who had a malignant tumor in the facial area. Her physician told her that the only available treatments would cause much pain and some disfigurement. The treatments did not offer a cure, but they bought the patient more time. She listened and then said, "No thanks, I won't take the treatments." Somewhat alarmed, the doctor said, "Look, if you don't take the treatments you will die." with an angelic smile and a steady faith she replied, "I didn't come here to stay."

Nor did you and I. We are transients in this world. Home is on the other side. Why am I so sure we are bound for heaven? Because he lives!

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by Bill Bouknight