Message: “The Resurrection” from Chris Cravens

Chris Cravens - April 5, 2026

The Resurrection

The Resurrection

Easter is often relegated to a single Sunday on the calendar—a day for traditions and spring celebrations. However, looking through the lens of history, the Resurrection isn't just a religious holiday; it is an unprecedented event that fundamentally altered the course of Western civilization. This lesson explores the "Why?" behind the sudden birth of the early Church. For the early followers, the Resurrection wasn't a festival to be observed; it was a reality to be lived. It turned a group of hiding, defeated disciples into a movement that "turned the world upside down." In the early Church, every Sunday (the "Lord's Day") was a celebration of the Resurrection, marking a permanent shift from the Saturday Sabbath. Perhaps the strongest evidence for the Resurrection isn't found in a tomb, but in the radical transformation of the Jewish people at the time. For a first-century Jew, claiming a crucified man was the Messiah was not just blasphemous; it meant social excommunication, loss of family, and potential death. Why would thousands of people—who were fiercely monotheistic and strictly followed the Mosaic Law—suddenly begin worshipping Jesus as God? What else could explain such a massive, sudden, and sacrificial shift in a deeply rooted belief system? If the event wasn't physical and real, the "180-degree" turn of the early Church remains a historical anomaly without a cause.

Scripture References: 1 Corinthians 15:12-20

From Series: "General Teaching"

Lessons not part of a specific series

More From "General Teaching"

Powered by Series Engine