1 Corinthians 15:12-34 · The Resurrection of the Dead
The Only Fact That Really Matters
1 Corinthians 15:12-34
Sermon
by Raymond Gibson
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Two weeks before his first heart attack in 1955, President Dwight Eisenhower summoned evangelist Billy Graham to the presidential retreat at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania. After nearly four hours of conversation, the President suddenly looked Graham squarely in the eye, and said, "Billy, I want you to tell me why you believe in heaven, and why you believe in the afterlife."

Dr. Graham declares President Eisenhower talked with him many times on the subject after that, including his last conversation with him in Walter Reed Hospital shortly before his death. "It was quite evident that he not only believed in an afterlife," said Dr. Graham in the course of a radio interview, "but he was looking forward to it. He had a growing concept which he had developed that there was a literal existence after death."

The request which President Eisenhower made of Billy Graham, the desire to know more about the why of heaven and the afterlife, concerns the most important fact of human existence, the fact of life beyond the grave. On the day which is recognized among many Christians as "The Festival of Christ the King," it is a troubling fact for many believers, a fact that many want to believe but somehow cannot quite bring themselves to accept. Long ago Job cried out from the ash heap to ask: "If a man die, shall he live again?" (Job 14:14). Plato philosophized: "Either death is a state of nothingness and utter unconsciousness, or ... there is a change and migration of the soul from this world to another." And Joseph Addison, in the eighteenth century, complimented Plato on his astute conclusion by saying:

Plato, thou reasonest well!
Else whence this pleasing hope,
This fond desire, this longing for immortality?
Or whence this secret dread and inward horror of falling into naught?
Why shrinks the soul back on herself
And startles at destruction? (Cato, act V, sc. 1)

But no one yearns for life beyond death quite as much as the contemporary person. No one spends as much on cosmetics to belie advancing age as do the people of the generations of which you and I are a part. No one pays their morticians more to disguise the actuality of death than do the citizens of twentieth century America. No other creature has such a passion for avoiding the factuality of death as does the human person. There are now several dozen bodies, scattered throughout this nation, which repose in stainless steel capsules of liquid nitrogen, quick-frozen to -320 F, because their owners devoutly hope (at the rate of $1O,OO0 per capsule) that medical science will one day be able to restore them to life.

But, in contrast to this morbid yearning and escapist fantasy and wishful thinking, the Christian faith confronts the world with a stark but glorious fact, the only fact that really matters the fact of the resurrection. In the 15th chapter of 1 Corinthians, St. Paul wrote with joyful candor: "But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of those who have fallen asleep" (1 Corinthians 15:20). Notice that Paul did not say, "in theory" or "in hope" or "in supposition," but "in fact." The Resurrection was a fact which Paul boldly and even dogmatically proclaimed, a clear, true, actual reality which was the rock-solid foundation of the gospel he preached to an incredulous world.

For Paul the Resurrection of Jesus was first of all a fact of biblical history. It was a fact of salvation history, of prophetic history. "I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received." Paul told the Corinthians that Christ died for our sins in accordance with the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures.

(1 Corinthians 15:3-4) Paul was a student and a product of the Old Testament, the Bible of his day, and he knew what that Bible taught. Not only did he know it, but he believed it. He knew that the prophet Hosea had long before prophesied, "After two days he will revive us; on the third day he will raise us up, that we may live before him" (Hosea 6:2). He knew this - and he believed it! He knew also that the psalmist had sung.

Therefore my heart is glaf, and my soul rejoiceth;
My flesh also shall dwell confidently in hope.
For thou will not leave my soul in hell:
Neither will thou suffer thine Holy One to see corruption.
(Psalm 16:10 KJV)

Paul knew this - and he believed it! He knew also the great prophecy of the Suffering Servant-Messiah in Isaiah 53 - and he believed it! Paul understood the Resurrection of Jesus from the dead and the promise of eternal life to be first and foremost a fact of Scriptural revelation - a fact which he believed with all of his being.

If Jesus is to be a risen and present reality to us, if eternal life is to have any meaning, if lite beyond the grave is to be anything other than a vague dream, then this is where you and I must start as well - with the Bible. We must re-discover the fact of the resurrection, the only fact that really matters, from the pages of the New Testament of our Lord Jesus Christ, the ruler of this life and of life after death.

The fifth Article of Religion of our church declares, "The Holy Scriptures contain all things necessary to salvation; so that whatsoever is not read therein, nor may be proved thereby, is not to be required of any man that it should be believed as an article of faith, or to be thought requisite or necessary to salvation." That statement is a foundation stone of the church of which you and I are a part. It recognizes that knowledge of the biblical revelation is absolutely fundamental for those who would live the Christian life in this world and the next. Yet, for many people today, the Bible is an almost unknown book. Almost everybody owns a Bible but very few people read the Bible. Every pastor knows the pain that strikes his own heart in a death situation when one of the survivors turns to him to ask, "Oh, pastor, do you think my husband (or wife, or mother, or father, or child) is in heaven?" If those people had been reading their Bible, they would know the answer to that question. How much more splendid is it when one of the survivors occasionally says through tears of joy, "I know my loved one is in heaven, because the Bible says so, and he lived by the Bible!"

Our problem is that we have forgotten the authority of the Bible. We have forgotten the power of the Word of God. Early in this Corinthian letter, Paul wrote, "For the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God" (1 Corinthians 1:18). What was that "word of the cross"? It was Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh, the Word risen from the grave, the Word which Paul knew "according to the Scriptures," the Word from the Bible. The Scriptures were of primary importance to Paul, even as they should be for us. On Easter Sunday several years ago, a certain pastor I know prepared 200 church bulletins for the day. In each bulletin was inserted a leaflet which contained the Resurrection account from the Gospel of Luke. At the end of the day, he was able to gather up only forty bulletins, but the number of discarded Scripture inserts amounted to almost double that number. Apparently, the words typed on a church bulletin were of more interest to many people than the Word of God.

The Bible is the revealed Word of God, a record of God’s self-giving, a statement of the actuality and factuality of his love. If we want to know more about life before death and life after death, we must become familiar with the recorded facts about the Resurrection as they are written in Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John and the other books of the New Testament. We cannot afford to be illiterate about Jesus Christ. Many of us are in the position of the farm hands invited to the farmer’s wife’s house for dinner. She offered a long prayer of grace, and then announced it was their custom for each person to quote a Bible verse before eating. One farmhand could think only of the Bible’s shortest verse, "Jesus wept." The next man followed by saying, "He sure did!"

If the fact of the Resurrection is to become the only fact that really matters to us, then we must first of all know the biblical record.

Paul was not only aware of the Resurrection as a fact from the Bible, but also as a fact in the lives of people. He reminded the Corinthians that the Resurrection of Jesus was no idle dream, that it was a fact attested by many witnesses. "He (that is, the risen Jesus) appeared to Cephas (or Peter), then to the twelve. Then he appeared to more than five hundred brethren at one time," Paul said, "then to James (his brother), then to all the apostles" (1 Corinthians 15:5-7).

The people to whom Paul was writing lived in a skeptical and sophisticated society. They were the products of a pagan culture and the roots of Christianity were not very deep in their lives as yet. They were not people who were products of the Old Testament, as was Paul. He recognized that if they were going to believe in Jesus Christ as their Lord and Savior, they would have to have something more at this point than a simple assertion that "The Scripture says ..." Paul knew that those Greeks were hardheaded, pragmatic people - and so he listed a great gallery of personal witnesses to the Resurrection.

One of my favorite phrases in the Apostles’ Creed is that one which says, "I believe ... in the communion of the saints." What a magnificent confession! I say "the communion of the saints," and I think of the ancient Christian hymn, "Te Deum Laudamus," those words which say,

The glorious company of the apostles praise thee,
The goodly fellowship of the prophets praise thee.
The noble army of martyrs praise thee.
The holy Church throughout all the world doth acknowledge thee ...

Then I remember that I, too, am a part of that mighty band. I say "the communion of the saints," and I think of Peter and James and John and Matthew and Philip and Thomas and the rest of the apostles, and I remember that they were mostly illiterate and sometimes cowardly men until they were confronted by the fact of the risen Jesus - and then they became the nucleus of the mightiest force for good the world has ever seen. I say "the communion of the saints," and I think of Polycarp and Athanasius and Augustine and Benedict. I say "the communion of the saints," and I think of Martin Luther and John Calvin and John Wesley and William Booth. I say "the communion of the saints," and I think of Dwight Moody and Tom Dooley and John XXIII and Gipsy Smith and countless millions of plain Christian people, whose memory is known only to God - and I realize that each of these was confronted by the risen Christ I say "the communion of the saints" - and the fact of the Resurrection becomes the only fact that really matters.

The roster of witnesses which Paul gave to the Corinthians and the long list which I just mentioned all have one thing in common: they were all witnesses to the living Lord, to the fact of the Resurrection. And, if we want to be a part of that goodly fellowship, "the communion of the saints," we have to be witnesses of the same fact. People have to be able to look at us and see something different. They have to be able to look at us and see people who have seen Jesus.

Two roughnecks once saw a crowd of people gathered in a slum section of London, listening to a preacher. They decided to have some fun, so they each gathered a stone and elbowed their way through the crowd to get closer to the speaker, who just happened to be John Wesley. Just as they were ready to throw their stones, they heard his words about the power of the risen Jesus to change lives. They were spellbound, and one turned to the other to say, "He ain’t a man, Bill. He ain’t a man." They dropped their stones and listened to him intently. After the sermon was over, they fell to their knees and accepted Christ as their Savior. Wesley came over and put his hands on their heads and whispered, "God bless you." Then he went on his way.

And one man turned to his friend to say: "He is a man, Bill; he is a man. He’s a man like God."

When the risen Jesus becomes primary in the lives of people - as he was in the lives of Paul and Wesley - then those lives become powerful witnesses of the factuality of the Resurrection. They become facts that cannot he denied.

"But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead ...!" So Paul proclaimed. It was a fact because he knew it to be true from the Scriptures. It was a fact because he knew it to be true from those who had seen the risen Lord during those forty days following the first Easter. But supremely it was a fact because Jesus had appeared before him. "Last of all," Paul says, "as one untimely born, he appeared also to me" (1 Corinthians 15:8).

The appearance of the risen Jesus to Paul was the greatest single event of his entire life. It was at one and the same time the turning point and the most dynamic moment of his life. It was something he never forgot and a story he told whenever he had the opportunity. The story of his conversion is told three times in the book of Acts. Paul told it in some way or the other in every letter he wrote and in every sermon he preached. The fact of the risen Jesus was the only thing that mattered to Paul. Over and over again this one fact permeates his letters. "I decided to know nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him crucified," he told his Corinthian friends (1 Corinthians 1:2). "But far be it from me to glory except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, by which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world," he said to the Galatians (6:4). "Indeed I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord," he wrote the Philippians (3:8). The most important fact of life for Paul was the reality of Christ, and the reason this was so was because Paul had recognized the Resurrection as a personal fact.

No one can ever be a complete Christian only by heresay. It is not enough to know about Jesus simply as a report from the biblical record. Neither can the testimony and faith of other Christians save us. If the Resurrection is to have any meaning for us, then it must become a fact for us. If we are to be dynamic Christians, then we must come to the place where we can say, even as did Job, "I know that my Redeemer liveth" (Job 20:25). We must confess in joy and awe, even as did Thomas, "My Lord and my God!" (John 20:28).

When Horace Bushnell, the great Christian pastor-theologian, was a student at Yale, he claimed to be an agnostic, even as do many youngsters today. Someone started a revival on the campus, and after a while, Bushnell concluded that he was the one person who was preventing a great spiritual awakening among the students.

One day, alone in his room, he began to review his own spiritual life. A voice from within him said, "Horace, you claim to be an unbeliever. But you must believe something. What, then, do you believe?"

To which Bushnell answered aloud: "I believe that there is difference between right and wrong."

The inner voice continued to question: "Have you put yourself on the side of the right?"

"I have not," the young Bushnell replied. He paused, and after a moment added: "But I will."

Horace Bushnell knelt down and prayed. When he got up, he was a new man. He had stopped quibbling and arguing and playing religious chess. He had given his life to Jesus; Christ was his personal Savior. He went on to become one of America’s most famous preachers. He served the same church in Hartford, Connecticut, for almost half a century. On his forty-seventh anniversary, he declared from his pulpit: "Better than any man in Hartford, I know Jesus Christ."

So did Paul. He knew that "in fact Christ has been raised from the dead." He knew it was a fact first because the Bible told him so. Then he knew it was a fact because of the testimony and changes in the lives of eyewitnesses. But he knew it to he supremely so because he had given his life in complete surrender to the risen Jesus. This was the only fact that really mattered to Paul.

But wait! So it’s a fact. So it’s true So Christ did rise from the dead. So what difference does it make?

"But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead," Paul says, "the first fruits of those who have fallen asleep." There is the difference it makes. In Christ’s victory over death, we see the victory that awaits all those who are in Christ Jesus - that is, all who believe in him, all who acknowledge him as Lord and confess him as Savior. In Christ’s Resurrection, we see the pattern of our own resurrection. In his victory, we have the certainty of eternal life. Because of the fact of Christ’s Resurrection, we know that all who die in him will live forever with him.

The Resurrection of Jesus is a fact. It is a biblical fact, an historical fact, a proven fact. But not until it becomes a personal fact does it make any difference in your life and mine. As Paul told the Romans, "If you confess with your lips that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved" (Romans 10:9). That is why the Resurrection ultimately is the only fact that really matters - and, of course, ultimately it is up to you and me to do something about it.

I wonder if anyone would like to do something about it this morning?

CSS Publishing Co., Inc., Forever In Debt, by Raymond Gibson