A conversation about what God is doing in all of us at Christ's Church. This blog serves the purpose of answering questions asked through emails, text messages and comments on The Flap.

Monday, April 26, 2010

Those Who Don't Know

Q:  I am ten and I would like to know this question:  When Jesus comes back to earth, what will happen to the people who don't know about Jesus? Will they go to heaven or be left on earth? I would like to know. 

A:  That's a very good question...the Bible says the saved will greet Jesus and welcome him to earth and those that are lost because they don't have Jesus will be cast away with Satan to the place of punishment. I hope this helps you understand. If not, then please let me know.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Murder or Duty?

Q:  When you kill someone while fighting in the Marines etc, how does God look upon that? I know it's against the 10 commandments but it is also serving our country.

A:  Your question on killing in war as a duty for your country is complicated. Some who are pacifists say any retaliation is wrong, others think fighting for freedom/country is reasonable. I think, like everything else, it depends on your heart and the reason you do so. Nationalism, however, is not Biblical. We are citizens of Heaven who honor God by His will over national concern.

 Answered by Mark Christian


Sunday, April 25, 2010

Time of Death

Q:  Will I know when I'm going to die? Does God give us a sign that others won't know but me?

A:  There is no biblical evidence of such knowledge, but there are some who have a sense of their pending departure or reveal they are aware they don't have long.

 Answered by Mark Christian
 

Is Hell A Threat?

Q:  If God loves us so much, why does He threaten us with hell if we don't choose Him?

A:  He is not threatening us, He is keeping His word that those who sin against him and want to live without his reign in their lives choose hell. Our sin's income is death and punishment, he is only giving us what we deserve. His love is what sent Jesus to take that all away.

 Answered by Mark Christian

My Age in Heaven?

Q:  How old will everybody be in heaven? Will we age in heaven?

A:  I tend to believe that age (its effects as seen by aging) is a result, for the most part, of the fall sin brought about. So there will be no aging. But what age is a great question that is not revealed in scripture...but you have me thinking.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Left Behind?

Q:  What is your view of the rapture? if it's true will those remaining have a "second chance", like in the Left Behind series?

A:   I tend not to subscribe to the rapture as taught by Tim LaHaye. We are seeking to possibly hold a forum in the future of subjects related to the end times and the positions taken by various camps.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Limited Atonement?

Q:  What is your view on "limited atonement"? Is it true?

A:  Simply, we believe in free will and not in limited atonement. The principle is clarified by saying "we get to vote in our own election" and God desires that no men should perish but all come to repentance.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Jesus' Tattoo

Q:  A friend of mine says that in the book of Revelation, it says that Jesus has writing on his leg. They called it a tattoo. We can't find it? Do you know what they are talking about? Thanks!


A:  Revelation 19:16 and most likely not a tattoo.  It is figurative language which would have made sense to John's audience and identifies Jesus, rather than is a tattoo.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Change God's Mind?

Q:  If God knows what is going to happen in the future, why should we pray for people who are sick or dying? Are we going to change his mind?

A:  If you believe that it is fixed by God regardless of our faith then there is no need to pray, but if you believe that we have free will (there is evidence in Scripture to suggest that God has changed His plans based on our prayers) then prayer is working our faith out with God and His faithfulness toward us.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Monday, April 19, 2010

Do we go to Paradaise?

Q:  When we die and do not yet have our immortal bodies do we go to a place called paradise then when we get our body is it called new Jerusalem?

A:  I believe we go to paradise/presence of Jesus, some teach that paradise ended at Calvary and became heaven. I do think the New Jerusalem terminology is post-judgment.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Wanting To Die?

Q:  What is the difference between wanting to die and actually performing the act, such as what happened to Jeremiah?

A:  Your question is insightful.  Desiring to hurt yourself or to die can be a natural emotional decision that does make us vulnerable but does not condemn us.  What is required under any temptation is the faith to trust God's way over the "natural" response. So what we do is more important that what we considered doing.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Why the names?

Q:  If Luke 16:19-31 is a parable, why are specific names used?

A:  It is most likely a parable and the name Lazarus means God Delivers so there is some significance to that as well. That questions was also answered by our guest scholars in last night's forum, you will be able to download the evening on the website or iTunes and they answered the question well.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Friday, April 16, 2010

Every Step?

Q:   Does God predetermine every step in our lives?

A:   This is a very prominent question in today’s world of preaching and teaching. I am going to assume you choose the word direct intentionally. I do not believe that God has “caused” every choice or every step that we make. I do think we can be lead and guided, but not forced.

I believe there is free will of the individual to not only respond to God’s offer of salvation but to also be able to reject God’s offer. Some will teach that God has chosen a select group and the rest are lost because they have not been chosen. I disagree with that teaching. There are several scriptures, most prominently 2 Peter 3:9 which says,
“The Lord is not slow about His promise, as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not wishing for any to but for all to come to repentance.”
The logically those who are not chosen can repent but what good is it, they are lost by the lottery, if you will.

So based on this core belief that mankind can choose how or if he/she honors God and a belief in free will to make our own choices and then to be held responsible for them, I think God does guide and direct us, but never forces us.

I can pray for direction and He responds to my faith in who He is and what His will is. I can also reject His presence and grieve His Holy Spirit. That doesn’t seem logical that I could do that if God is controlling my every move and makes me do all He desires of me.

So there are choices we seek God’s leading on and He responds. I also think that there are things God does around us, in us and through us to accomplish His purposes. He challenged Pharoah with His authority and Pharoah became prideful and God used that to free His people. So God is not restricted in His power, but He limits His power in some areas to allow us to enter into a relationship with Him by our choice and through love for Him.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Death is a Gift?

Q:  If death is a gift why is there life?

A:  Death is a gift because sin has ruined this life and death brings the work of Jesus into play by letting us escape this life and find new life.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Good Thursday or Friday?

Q:  Good Friday? 3 days & 3 nights? Shouldn't it be Good Thursday? Who decided Friday? Just wondering.

A:  The Jewish way of counting a day begins the night before at sundown so you can find three days in the tomb by their measure. Dead by 3 pm on Friday, day 1, then Saturday and Sunday...three days...hope this helps.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Baptism?

Q:  What do I have to do to get baptized?

A:  Baptism is identifying with Christ in His death, burial, and resurrection (Romans 6:1-14).  When we sin, our sin separates us from God.  Jesus died, was buried, and was raised back to life by God on the third day.  When Jesus rose again He conquered death and sin.  The only way to restore relationship with God is through Jesus (John 14:6; II Corinthians 5:17-21).  In order to have a relationship with God we must hear the Gospel - the good news about Jesus (Romans 10:14), we must believe the Gospel (Romans 10:9), we must understand, acknowledge, and repent (turn away from sin and toward God) our sin (Acts 2:38; 17:30), and we must confess Jesus is who He says He is and place our faith in Him (Romans 10:10).  Baptism by immersion symbolizes Jesus’ death – immersion into water is a picture of death, burial – submerged under the water is a picture of burial, and resurrection – rising up from the “watery grave” is a picture of resurrection.  Baptism is an act of obedience to God, and is a sign of surrender to His Lordship of our life.  When we receive the free gift of salvation (Ephesians 2:8-9), we are indwelt by the Holy Spirit (II Corinthians 1:21-22).  In this relationship we are blessed with an abundant life and grow in the character of Jesus (John 10:10; Galatians 5:22-25).  In the act of baptism the one performing the baptism will usually ask some questions.  These questions are to confirm that the one being baptized has a clear understanding to what they are committing themselves.  The questions are usually questions to verify the person’s faith in Jesus as Lord and Savior as they are to be baptized.

 Answered by Adam Scutti

If Jesus is God...?

Q:   If Jesus is God, then why does he pray to God?


A:  Your question is interesting and requires a clarification of prayer as something that is part of our growing relationship with God, rather than an obligation.  For many of us we see prayer as what to do when all else fails.  For Jesus, prayer was a means of connecting with God, communicating and receiving daily sustenance to exist by faith in God’s will (John 4:32-34). It was relational, rather than religious. It also was not a sign of weakness but of focusing on the things of God’s Kingdom rather than noise and distractions of this present and dark kingdom of earth.  As a God incarnate (fully man and fully God) Jesus was tempted and was living in the world with its influences and prayer focused him on what was eternal rather than what was temporal.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Prove it

Q:  How do you prove the resurrection?

A:  I have attached an article that was helpful in my studies to summarize the arguments against the resurrection and the answers of the scriptures and reason.
###
Evidence for the Resurrection by Josh McDowell
For centuries many of the world's distinguished philosophers have assaulted Christianity as being irrational, superstitious and absurd. Many have chosen simply to ignore the central issue of the resurrection. Others have tried to explain it away through various theories. But the historical evidence just can't be discounted.
How can we explain the empty tomb? Can it possibly be accounted for by any natural cause?

A QUESTION OF HISTORY 
After more than 700 hours of studying this subject, I have come to the conclusion that the resurrection of Jesus Christ is either one of the most wicked, vicious, heartless hoaxes ever foisted on the minds of human beings--or it is the most remarkable fact of history.
Here are some of the facts relevant to the resurrection: Jesus of Nazareth, a Jewish prophet who claimed to be the Christ prophesied in the Jewish Scriptures, was arrested, was judged a political criminal, and was crucified. Three days after His death and burial, some women who went to His tomb found the body gone. In subsequent weeks, His disciples claimed that God had raised Him from the dead and that He appeared to them various times before ascending into heaven.
From that foundation, Christianity spread throughout the Roman Empire and has continued to exert great influence down through the centuries.

LIVING WITNESSES 
The New Testament accounts of the resurrection were being circulated within the lifetimes of men and women alive at the time of the resurrection. Those people could certainly have confirmed or denied the accuracy of such accounts.
The writers of the four Gospels either had themselves been witnesses or else were relating the accounts of eyewitnesses of the actual events. In advocating their case for the gospel, a word that means "good news," the apostles appealed (even when confronting their most severe opponents) to common knowledge concerning the facts of the resurrection.
F. F. Bruce, Rylands professor of biblical criticism and exegesis at the University of Manchester, says concerning the value of the New Testament records as primary sources: "Had there been any tendency to depart from the facts in any material respect, the possible presence of hostile witnesses in the audience would have served as a further corrective."

IS THE NEW TESTAMENT RELIABLE? 
Because the New Testament provides the primary historical source for information on the resurrection, many critics during the 19th century attacked the reliability of these biblical documents.
By the end of the 1 9th century, however, archaeological discoveries had confirmed the accuracy of the New Testament manuscripts. Discoveries of early papyri bridged the gap between the time of Christ and existing manuscripts from a later date.
Those findings increased scholarly confidence in the reliability of the Bible. William F. Albright, who in his day was the world's foremost biblical archaeologist, said: "We can already say emphatically that there is no longer any solid basis for dating any book of the New Testament after about A.D. 80, two full generations before the date between 130 and 150 given by the more radical New Testament critics of today."
Coinciding with the papyri discoveries, an abundance of other manuscripts came to light (over 24,000 copies of early New Testament manuscripts are known to be in existence today). The historian Luke wrote of "authentic evidence" concerning the resurrection. Sir William Ramsay, who spent 15 years attempting to undermine Luke credentials as a historian, and to refute the reliability of the New Testament, finally concluded: "Luke is a historian of the first rank . . . This author should be placed along with the very greatest of historians. "

BACKGROUND 
The New Testament witnesses were fully aware of the background against which the resurrection took place. The body of Jesus, in accordance with Jewish burial custom, was wrapped in a linen cloth. About 100 pounds of aromatic spices, mixed together to form a gummy substance, were applied to the wrappings of cloth about the body. After the body was placed in a solid rock tomb, an extremely large stone was rolled against the entrance of the tomb. Large stones weighing approximately two tons were normally rolled (by means of levers) against a tomb entrance.
A Roman guard of strictly disciplined fighting men was stationed to guard the tomb. This guard affixed on the tomb the Roman seal, which was meant to "prevent any attempt at vandalizing the sepulcher. Anyone trying to move the stone from the tomb's entrance would have broken the seal and thus incurred the wrath of Roman law.
But three days later the tomb was empty. The followers of Jesus said He had risen from the dead. They reported that He appeared to them during a period of 40 days, showing Himself to them by many "infallible proofs." Paul the apostle recounted that Jesus appeared to more than 500 of His followers at one time, the majority of whom were still alive and who could confirm what Paul wrote. So many security precautions were taken with the trial, crucifixion, burial, entombment, sealing, and guarding of Christ's tomb that it becomes very difficult for critics to defend their position that Christ did not rise from the dead. Consider these facts:
FACT #1: BROKEN ROMAN SEAL 
As we have said, the first obvious fact was the breaking of the seal that stood for the power and authority of the Roman Empire. The consequences of breaking the seal were extremely severe. The FBI and CIA of the Roman Empire were called into action to find the man or men who were responsible. If they were apprehended, it meant automatic execution by crucifixion upside down. People feared the breaking of the seal. Jesus' disciples displayed signs of cowardice when they hid themselves. Peter, one of these disciples, went out and denied Christ three times.

FACT #2: EMPTY TOMB 
As we have already discussed, another obvious fact after the resurrection was the empty tomb. The disciples of Christ did not go off to Athens or Rome to preach that Christ was raised from the dead. Rather, they went right back to the city of Jerusalem, where, if what they were teaching was false, the falsity would be evident. The empty tomb was "too notorious to be denied." Paul Althaus states that the resurrection "could have not been maintained in Jerusalem for a single day, for a single hour, if the emptiness of the tomb had not been established as a fact for all concerned.” Both Jewish and Roman sources and traditions admit an empty tomb. Those resources range from Josephus to a compilation of fifth-century Jewish writings called the "Toledoth Jeshu." Dr. Paul Maier calls this "positive evidence from a hostile source, which is the strongest kind of historical evidence. In essence, this means that if a source admits a fact decidedly not in its favor, then that fact is genuine."
Gamaliel, who was a member of the Jewish high court, the Sanhedrin, put forth the suggestion that the rise of the Christian movement was God's doing; he could not have done that if the tomb were still occupied, or if the Sanhedrin knew the whereabouts of Christ's body. Paul Maier observes that " . . . if all the evidence is weighed carefully and fairly, it is indeed justifiable, according to the canons of historical research, to conclude that the sepulcher of Joseph of Arimathea, in which Jesus was buried, was actually empty on the morning of the first Easter. And no shred of evidence has yet been discovered in literary sources, epigraphy, or archaeology that would disprove this statement."


FACT #3: LARGE STONE MOVED 
On that Sunday morning the first thing that impressed the people who approached the tomb was the unusual position of the one and a half to two ton stone that had been lodged in front of the doorway. All the Gospel writers mention it.
There exists no document from the ancient world, witnessed by so excellent a set of textual and historical testimonies . . . Skepticism regarding the historical credentials of Christianity is based upon an irrational bias.

Clark Pinnock 
Mcmaster University




Those who observed the stone after the resurrection describe its position as having been rolled up a slope away not just from the entrance of the tomb, but from the entire massive sepulcher. It was in such a position that it looked as if it had been picked up and carried away. Now, I ask you, if the disciples had wanted to come in, tiptoe around the sleeping guards, and then roll the stone over and steal Jesus' body, how could they have done that without the guards' awareness?


FACT #4: ROMAN GUARD GOES AWOL 
The Roman guards fled. They left their place of responsibility. How can their attrition he explained, when Roman military discipline was so exceptional? Justin, in Digest #49, mentions all the offenses that required the death penalty. The fear of their superiors' wrath and the possibility of death meant that they paid close attention to the minutest details of their jobs. One way a guard was put to death was by being stripped of his clothes and then burned alive in a fire started with his garments. If it was not apparent which soldier had failed in his duty, then lots were drawn to see which one would be punished with death for the guard unit's failure. Certainly the entire unit would not have fallen asleep with that kind of threat over their heads. Dr. George Currie, a student of Roman military discipline, wrote that fear of punishment "produced flawless attention to duty, especially in the night watches."


FACT #5: GRAVECLOTHES TELL A TALE 
In a literal sense, against all statements to the contrary, the tomb was not totally empty--because of an amazing phenomenon. John, a disciple of Jesus, looked over to the place where the body of Jesus had lain, and there were the grave clothes, in the form of the body, slightly caved in and empty--like the empty chrysalis of a caterpillar's cocoon. That's enough to make a believer out of anybody. John never did get over it. The first thing that stuck in the minds of the disciples was not the empty tomb, but rather the empty grave clothes--undisturbed in form and position.


FACT #6: JESUS' APPEARANCES CONFIRMED 
Christ appeared alive on several occasions after the cataclysmic events of that first Easter . When studying an event in history, it is important to know whether enough people who were participants or eyewitnesses to the event were alive when the facts about the event were published. To know this is obviously helpful in ascertaining the accuracy of the published report. If the number of eyewitnesses is substantial, the event can he regarded as fairly well established. For instance, if we all witness a murder, and a later police report turns out to he a fabrication of lies, we as eyewitnesses can refute it.

OVER 500 WITNESSES 
Several very important factors arc often overlooked when considering Christ's post-resurrection appearances to individuals. The first is the large number of witnesses of Christ after that resurrection morning. One of the earliest records of Christ's appearing after the resurrection is by Paul. The apostle appealed to his audience's knowledge of the fact that Christ had been seen by more than 500 people at one time. Paul reminded them that the majority of those people were still alive and could be questioned. Dr. Edwin M. Yamauchi, associate professor of history at Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, emphasizes: "What gives a special authority to the list (of witnesses) as historical evidence is the reference to most of the five hundred brethren being still alive. St. Paul says in effect, 'If you do not believe me, you can ask them.' Such a statement in an admittedly genuine letter written within thirty years of the event is almost as strong evidence as one could hope to get for something that happened nearly two thousand years ago." Let's take the more than 500 witnesses who saw Jesus alive after His death and burial, and place them in a courtroom. Do you realize that if each of those 500 people were to testify for only six minutes, including cross-examination, you would have an amazing 50 hours of firsthand testimony? Add to this the testimony of many other eyewitnesses and you would well have the largest and most lopsided trial in history.
HOSTILE WITNESSES 
Another factor crucial to interpreting Christ's appearances is that He also appeared to those who were hostile or unconvinced.
Over and over again, I have read or heard people comment that Jesus was seen alive after His death and burial only by His friends and followers. Using that argument, they attempt to water down the overwhelming impact of the multiple eyewitness accounts. But that line of reasoning is so pathetic it hardly deserves comment. No author or informed individual would regard Saul of Tarsus as being a follower of Christ. The facts show the exact opposite. Saul despised Christ and persecuted Christ's followers. It was a life-shattering experience when Christ appeared to him. Although he was at the time not a disciple, he later became the apostle Paul, one of the greatest witnesses for the truth of the resurrection.
The argument that Christ's appearances were only to followers is an argument for the most part from silence, and arguments from silence can be dangerous. It is equally possible that all to whom Jesus appeared became followers. No one acquainted with the facts can accurately say that Jesus appeared to just "an insignificant few."
Christians believe that Jesus was bodily resurrected in time and space by the supernatural power of God. The difficulties of belief may be great, but the problems inherent in unbelief present even greater difficulties.
The theories advanced to explain the resurrection by "natural causes" are weak; they actually help to build confidence in the truth of the resurrection.
THE WRONG TOMB? 
A theory propounded by Kirsopp Lake assumes that the women who reported that the body was missing had mistakenly gone to the wrong tomb. If so, then the disciples who went to check up on the women's statement must have also gone to the wrong tomb. We may be certain, however, that Jewish authorities, who asked for a Roman guard to be stationed at the tomb to prevent Jesus' body from being stolen, would not have been mistaken about the location. Nor would the Roman guards, for they were there!
If the resurrection-claim was merely because of a geographical mistake, the Jewish authorities would have lost no time in producing the body from the proper tomb, thus effectively quenching for all time any rumor resurrection.
HALLUCINATIONS? 
Another attempted explanation claims that the appearances of Jesus after the resurrection were either illusions or hallucinations. Unsupported by the psychological principles governing the appearances of hallucinations, this theory also does not coincide with the historical situation. Again, where was the actual body, and why wasn't it produced?

DID JESUS SWOON? 
Another theory, popularized by Venturini several centuries ago, is often quoted today. This is the swoon theory, which says that Jesus didn't die; he merely fainted from exhaustion and loss of blood. Everyone thought Him dead, but later He resuscitated and the disciples thought it to be a resurrection. Skeptic David Friedrich Strauss--certainly no believer in the resurrection--gave the deathblow to any thought that Jesus revived from a swoon: "It is impossible that a being who had stolen half-dead out of the sepulchre, who crept about weak and ill, wanting medical treatment, who required bandaging, strengthening and indulgence, and who still at last yielded to His sufferings, could have given to the disciples the impression that He was a Conqueror over death and the grave, the Prince of Life, an impression which lay at the bottom of their future ministry. Such a resuscitation could only have weakened the impression which He had made upon them in life and in death, at the most could only have given it an elegiac voice, but could by no possibility have changed their sorrow into enthusiasm, have elevated their reverence into worship."
THE BODY STOLEN? 
Then consider the theory that the body was stolen by the disciples while the guards slept. The depression and cowardice of the disciples provide a hard-hitting argument against their suddenly becoming so brave and daring as to face a detachment of soldiers at the tomb and steal the body. They were in no mood to attempt anything like that.
The theory that the Jewish or Roman authorities moved Christ's body is no more reasonable an explanation for the empty tomb than theft by the disciples. If the authorities had the body in their possession or knew where it was, why, when the disciples were preaching the resurrection in Jerusalem, didn't they explain: "Wait! We moved the body, see, He didn't rise from the grave"?
And if such a rebuttal failed, why didn't they explain exactly where Jesus' body lay? If this failed, why didn't they recover the corpse, put it on a cart, and wheel it through the center of Jerusalem? Such an action would have destroyed Christianity--not in the cradle, but in the womb!
THE RESURRECTION IS A FACT 
Professor Thomas Arnold, for 14 years a headmaster of Rugby, author of the famous, History of Rome, and appointed to the chair of modern history at Oxford, was well acquainted with the value of evidence in determining historical facts. This great scholar said: "I have been used for many years to study the histories of other times, and to examine and weigh the evidence of those who have written about them, and I know of no one fact in the history of mankind which is proved by better and fuller evidence of every sort, to the understanding of a fair inquirer, than the great sign which God hath given us that Christ died and rose again from the dead." Brooke Foss Westcott, an English scholar, said: "raking all the evidence together, it is not too much to say that there is no historic incident better or more variously supported than the resurrection of Christ. Nothing but the antecedent assumption that it must be false could have suggested the idea of deficiency in the proof of it."
REAL PROOF: THE DISCIPLES' LIVES 
But the most telling testimony of all must be the lives of those early Christians. We must ask ourselves: What caused them to go everywhere telling the message of the risen Christ?
Had there been any visible benefits accrued to them from their efforts--prestige, wealth, increased social status or material benefits--we might logically attempt to account for their actions, for their whole-hearted and total allegiance to this "risen Christ ."
As a reward for their efforts, however, those early Christians were beaten, stoned to death, thrown to the lions, tortured and crucified. Every conceivable method was used to stop them from talking.
Yet, they laid down their lives as the ultimate proof of their complete confidence in the truth of their message.

WHERE DO YOU STAND? 
How do you evaluate this overwhelming historical evidence? What is your decision about the fact of Christ's empty tomb? What do you think of Christ?
When I was confronted with the overwhelming evidence for Christ's resurrection, I had to ask the logical question: "What difference does all this evidence make to me? What difference does it make whether or not I believe Christ rose again and died on the cross for my sins!' The answer is put best by something Jesus said to a man who doubted--Thomas. Jesus told him: "I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but through Me" (John 14:6).
On the basis of all the evidence for Christ's resurrection, and considering the fact that Jesus offers forgiveness of sin and an eternal relationship with God, who would be so foolhardy as to reject Him? Christ is alive! He is living today.
Josh McDowell, according to a recent survey, is one of the most popular speakers among university students today. He has spoken on more than 650 university and college campuses to more than seven million people in 74 countries during the last 21 years.  ©1992 Josh McDowell Ministry

 Answered by Mark Christian

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Cremation

Q:  Will it make any difference if a person is cremated at death rather than buried when it comes to being raised to eternal life?

A:  There is no Biblical answer to that except to say that the body will return to dust, so the body is irrelevant to our resurrection.

 Answered by Mark Christian

Sunday, April 4, 2010

Easter Sunday?

Q:  Did Jesus rise on a Sunday exactly?

A:  Yes, he rose from the dead on a Sunday which is why the early church began to worship on the first day of the week...in honor of his Resurrection.

 Answered by Mark Christian