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If someone could have produced Jesus’ body, the Christian movement dies instantly. That simple reality is why we spend Easter doing more than celebrating a holiday. We follow the evidence trail and ask the question that won’t leave us alone: what do we do with the historical claims that Jesus died and rose again?
We talk through why the crucifixion is widely accepted by historians, including details like Roman execution practices and references from sources such as Josephus and Tacitus. Then we move to what happened next: the empty tomb, the earliest resurrection proclamation in 1 Corinthians 15, and the uncomfortable weight of eyewitness claims, including the report of more than 500 people who said they saw Jesus alive. We also test the most common alternative explanations, from stolen-body theories to hallucinations to legend development, and why none of them fully accounts for the facts on the table.
But we do not stop at history. If the resurrection of Jesus is true, it becomes personal. We explore what it means for forgiveness, guilt, present-day power through the Spirit of God, and hope beyond death that changes how we suffer now. We also offer a direct 30-day challenge for skeptics who want evidence and for believers who know the truth but have not fully surrendered.
Subscribe for more messages like this, share this with a friend who has real questions, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation. What is the biggest question you want answered about the resurrection?
Thanks for listening! Follow us on Facebook or YouTube.
By Life Community Church5
2323 ratings
If someone could have produced Jesus’ body, the Christian movement dies instantly. That simple reality is why we spend Easter doing more than celebrating a holiday. We follow the evidence trail and ask the question that won’t leave us alone: what do we do with the historical claims that Jesus died and rose again?
We talk through why the crucifixion is widely accepted by historians, including details like Roman execution practices and references from sources such as Josephus and Tacitus. Then we move to what happened next: the empty tomb, the earliest resurrection proclamation in 1 Corinthians 15, and the uncomfortable weight of eyewitness claims, including the report of more than 500 people who said they saw Jesus alive. We also test the most common alternative explanations, from stolen-body theories to hallucinations to legend development, and why none of them fully accounts for the facts on the table.
But we do not stop at history. If the resurrection of Jesus is true, it becomes personal. We explore what it means for forgiveness, guilt, present-day power through the Spirit of God, and hope beyond death that changes how we suffer now. We also offer a direct 30-day challenge for skeptics who want evidence and for believers who know the truth but have not fully surrendered.
Subscribe for more messages like this, share this with a friend who has real questions, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation. What is the biggest question you want answered about the resurrection?
Thanks for listening! Follow us on Facebook or YouTube.

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