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The Roman method was brutal and efficient.
The Journal of the American Medical Association published a medical study affirming death by crucifixion.
Eyewitness accounts, including Roman historians like Tacitus, confirm it.
Jesus wasn’t resuscitated. He was dead. The resurrection wasn’t a near-death experience — it was a reversal of death.
Jewish leaders never produced the body. Instead, they said, “His disciples stole the body” — confirming the tomb was empty.
Even critics like atheist historian Bart Ehrman admit the tomb was likely empty — the question is why.
After Jesus’ death, they were in hiding.
Then they claimed to have seen, touched, and eaten with the risen Jesus.
Many of them were martyred — not for what they believed, but for what they claimed to have seen.
People don’t generally die for a lie they made up, especially when they get nothing in return but beatings and exile.
No political power. No money. No military. Just the message: He is risen.
Within weeks, thousands of Jews — fiercely monotheistic — believed Jesus was Lord and worshipped Him as God.
That doesn’t happen unless something earth-shaking occurred.
James, Jesus’ own skeptical brother, didn’t believe in Him during His ministry. After the resurrection, James becomes a leader of the Jerusalem church and is martyred.
Paul was a violent persecutor of Christians. He had every reason to stop this movement — until he says he saw the risen Jesus himself.
Enemies don’t convert unless they believe something really happened.
If the story were fabricated, the writers would’ve said Peter or John found the tomb.
The only reason to include women is because that’s how it happened.
This is what scholars call the criterion of embarrassment — details that are awkward but truthful.
This shows belief in the resurrection wasn’t a legend that developed decades later — it was immediate.
He names witnesses: “He appeared to Peter… the twelve… over 500 at once… James… and last of all to me.”
Paul is essentially saying: Go ask them yourself.
James: Certainly Beheaded in Jerusalem.
Paul: Likely Beheaded in Rome.
Peter: Likely crucified (allegedly upside down)
Thomas: Allegedly Speared in India.
Tens of thousands of Christian martyrdoms witnessed privately by millions of average people over the past 2,0000 years, (God knows and will bring the record on Judgment Day)
They didn’t die for abstract beliefs — they died for claiming they saw or believed in the risen Jesus. Liars make poor martyrs.
He lost status, privilege, safety.
He was beaten, imprisoned, and eventually executed.
And he writes about meeting the risen Christ with personal conviction and detail.
What changes a man like that? Something real. Something undeniable.
The Swoon theory? Jesus didn’t just faint — He was executed and His heart pierced.
The Hallucination theory? Hallucinations are individual — not shared by 500 people.
The Stolen body? The disciples would’ve had no motive and no success against the Roman guards, (who witnessed the theft while asleep)?
The Legend theory? Legends take generations. Christ's Resurrection was being preached and believed among hundreds in just days and weeks.
The resurrection isn’t just plausible — it’s the only rational explanation regarding the earthly life, death ministry and legacy of Jesus Christ. The Bible teaches us that the bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ was essential for the salvation of the world and the reconciliation of all things in Heaven and Earth back to God. So any other theory is to be dismissed.
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The Roman method was brutal and efficient.
The Journal of the American Medical Association published a medical study affirming death by crucifixion.
Eyewitness accounts, including Roman historians like Tacitus, confirm it.
Jesus wasn’t resuscitated. He was dead. The resurrection wasn’t a near-death experience — it was a reversal of death.
Jewish leaders never produced the body. Instead, they said, “His disciples stole the body” — confirming the tomb was empty.
Even critics like atheist historian Bart Ehrman admit the tomb was likely empty — the question is why.
After Jesus’ death, they were in hiding.
Then they claimed to have seen, touched, and eaten with the risen Jesus.
Many of them were martyred — not for what they believed, but for what they claimed to have seen.
People don’t generally die for a lie they made up, especially when they get nothing in return but beatings and exile.
No political power. No money. No military. Just the message: He is risen.
Within weeks, thousands of Jews — fiercely monotheistic — believed Jesus was Lord and worshipped Him as God.
That doesn’t happen unless something earth-shaking occurred.
James, Jesus’ own skeptical brother, didn’t believe in Him during His ministry. After the resurrection, James becomes a leader of the Jerusalem church and is martyred.
Paul was a violent persecutor of Christians. He had every reason to stop this movement — until he says he saw the risen Jesus himself.
Enemies don’t convert unless they believe something really happened.
If the story were fabricated, the writers would’ve said Peter or John found the tomb.
The only reason to include women is because that’s how it happened.
This is what scholars call the criterion of embarrassment — details that are awkward but truthful.
This shows belief in the resurrection wasn’t a legend that developed decades later — it was immediate.
He names witnesses: “He appeared to Peter… the twelve… over 500 at once… James… and last of all to me.”
Paul is essentially saying: Go ask them yourself.
James: Certainly Beheaded in Jerusalem.
Paul: Likely Beheaded in Rome.
Peter: Likely crucified (allegedly upside down)
Thomas: Allegedly Speared in India.
Tens of thousands of Christian martyrdoms witnessed privately by millions of average people over the past 2,0000 years, (God knows and will bring the record on Judgment Day)
They didn’t die for abstract beliefs — they died for claiming they saw or believed in the risen Jesus. Liars make poor martyrs.
He lost status, privilege, safety.
He was beaten, imprisoned, and eventually executed.
And he writes about meeting the risen Christ with personal conviction and detail.
What changes a man like that? Something real. Something undeniable.
The Swoon theory? Jesus didn’t just faint — He was executed and His heart pierced.
The Hallucination theory? Hallucinations are individual — not shared by 500 people.
The Stolen body? The disciples would’ve had no motive and no success against the Roman guards, (who witnessed the theft while asleep)?
The Legend theory? Legends take generations. Christ's Resurrection was being preached and believed among hundreds in just days and weeks.
The resurrection isn’t just plausible — it’s the only rational explanation regarding the earthly life, death ministry and legacy of Jesus Christ. The Bible teaches us that the bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ was essential for the salvation of the world and the reconciliation of all things in Heaven and Earth back to God. So any other theory is to be dismissed.
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