Freshwater

Located in the wilds of Wyoming, the name Freshwater was chosen as a Western analogy to Christ. Just as He is the Living Water, and we must have Him to have eternal life, any desert dweller knows the importance of fresh water to life, both for self, and the nourishment of crops or livestock. By taking nourishment in God and His word, we strengthen our own relationship with Him, our faith, and the quality and abundance of our fruitfulness.

Our keystone verse is from Jeremiah, Chapter 17, Verse 8: "For he shall be as a tree planted by the waters, and that spreadeth out her roots by the river, and shall not see whenSave heat cometh, but her leaf shall be green; and shall not be careful in the year of drought, neither shall cease from yielding fruit."

The fruit that we speak of is mentioned in Galatians 5:22
"22But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, 23Meekness, temperance: against such there is no law."

And the heat could be anything we experience that might test our faith in God; trials and tribulations, relationships, anything that focuses our love and attention anywhere but on Him...

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

The Case for Christ by Lee Strobel

I read this for extra credit in my Intermediate Christian Theology class, and I was absolutely blown away. This is my favorite one of our textbooks or extra credit reads so far. The evidence and clarity of the message are just phenomenal, especially in the conclusion. I am pasting my paper here so that you can read the highlights for yourself, and then GO READ THE BOOK!



I am going to start out by saying “Wow.” What an incredibly compelling and moving testimony. I honestly don’t know how anyone who took the time to sit and read the whole book could possibly argue against the existence, the veracity, the authenticity of Christ, his life, death, and resurrection. I mean this author was a dyed in the wool atheist who thought Jesus was a hoax and set out to prove that.

By the end of the book, not only had all the historical evidence and testimony he’d heard convinced him otherwise, he realized that it was more than an intellectual decision, that it wasn’t enough to just know Jesus was real. He knew he needed to experience Christ, to take that personal step. And he reached for a Bible.  John 1:12 “Yet to all who received him, to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God.” That is the NIV, because it’s what he quotes from in the book, but the meaning is the same in any translation.

1But as many as received him, to them gave he power
to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name: KJV

12 But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name,
he gave the right to become children of God, ESV

12 But as many as received Him, to them
He gave the right to become children of God,
even to those who believe in His name, NASB

Lee Strobel points out that the verse gives you very clear direction of what it takes to go beyond just accepting Jesus is God, and entering into an ongoing relationship with him by being adopted into God’s family: “believe + receive = become.”

He stated that “the data demonstrated convincingly that Jesus is the Son of God who died as his substitute to pay the penalty he deserved for the wrongdoing he had committed. His testimony is just so powerful to me. He states “When I read in the Bible that these sins separated me from God, who is holy and morally pure, this resonated as being true. Certainly God, whose existence I had denied for years, seemed extremely distant, and it became obvious to me that I needed the cross of Jesus to bridge that gulf. Said the apostle Peter, ‘For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God’ (1 Peter 3:18). All this I now believed. The evidence of history and of my own experience was too strong to ignore.”

Lee Strobel had investigated other faiths, but every single one of them was based on people doing something to earn their way to God. And despite their best efforts, they just couldn’t do it. Christianity is different. Jesus already did for us what we could never do for ourselves. He paid the penalty, died, for all that we deserve, and our price has been paid. We are already redeemed. Our job is to take that step of faith and accept Him. It’s not our job to be good enough, or clean enough, to earn his love. We just need to receive the gift he’s given us.

I also absolutely love how he discusses the new man. It’s not about earning our way to Christ, but once we have accepted him, we become something different, “a child of God, forever adopted into his family through the historical, risen Jesus.” “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, the new creation has come: The old has gone, the new is here!” (2 Corinthians 5:17). And he talks about how his values and his character have been and continue to be changed and molded by following Jesus. My favorite illustration is the story he tells where a few months after he accepted Christ, his five-year-old daughter told his wife, “Mommy, I want God to do for me what he’s done for Daddy.” This is the absolute personification of what it means to be a light, to follow Christ, to shine before the world…she saw how different a relationship with Jesus made him, and she wanted that for herself. And that’s what we all should be living like as Christians…someone so different that others see Christ in us and want him for themselves.

I got a little off track from my five things from the book, but that part really hit me because you hear it in so many sermons, but that’s a great story of what it actually looks like to be that light.
He went on this journey of exploration thoroughly and methodically. The thesis, the questions, the interviews were phenomenal to read. He gave the background and authority of each interviewee, establishing credibility before even launching into the discussion. It was pointed out that historically, the gospels and Paul’s letters were written closely enough to the time of Jesus’ death that there would have been no possibility for mythological corruption or embellishment. There were still hostile witnesses at the time of their authorship, which would have torn to shreds any inaccuracies and discredited everything in the process.

I loved Chapter 10 and the discussion of fingerprint evidence. “Each individual has unique ridges on his or her fingers. When a print found on an object matches the pattern of ridges on a person’s finger, investigators can conclude with scientific certainty that this specific individual has touched that object…There is another kind of evidence that is analogous to fingerprints and establishes to an astounding degree of certainty that Jesus is indeed the Messiah of Israel and the world…In the Old Testament there are several dozen major prophecies about the coming of the Messiah, who would be sent by God to redeem his people. In effect, these predictions formed a figurative fingerprint that only the Anointed One would be able to match. This way, the Israelites could rule out any imposters and validate the credentials of the authentic Messiah.” And then he went through and showed how several of those prophecies were met very specifically.

In Chapter 11 he discussed the physical effects of the beating and the crucifixion. He even explains when Jesus was in the Garden and sweating blood. Hematidrosis is uncommon, but a known medical condition associated with a high degree of psychological stress. I mean Jesus knew what was going to happen the next day. How could he not have been distressed? There are a lot more gory details about the beating and the crucifixion itself, but suffice to say, there was certainly enough evidence that Jesus died.

Chapter 14 talked about Circumstantial Evidence to support the historical and physical evidence. On page 266 he states, “I knew that if an event as extraordinary as the resurrection of Jesus had really occurred, history would be littered with indirect evidence backing it up.” And he found it. He interviewed J.P. Moreland for this one and asked him for 5 pieces of circumstantial evidence that convinced him that Jesus rose from the dead. Dr. Moreland gave him five things that are not disputed by anyone and asked him if he wanted more. Exhibit 1 – The disciples died for their beliefs, because they were convinced beyond a shadow of a doubt that they had seen Jesus alive from the dead. Exhibit 2 – There were hardened skeptics who didn’t believe in Jesus before his crucifixion and were dead set against Christianity – who turned around and adopted the Christian faith after Jesus death. There is no good reason for this apart from them having experienced the resurrected Christ. Exhibit 3 – There were changes to the key social structure. Exhibit 4 – Communion and Baptism – Communion is a remembrance of what Christ did for us. They knew that his death was a necessary step to a much greater victory, that it wasn’t the last word, that he had conquered death for all of us by rising. They celebrated his execution because they had seen him alive. Exhibit 5 – The emergence of the church.
I would definitely urge people to read this book. It is fascinating and holds a lot of effective arguments.




No comments:

Post a Comment