by Skip Heitzig
Did you ever wonder about that stone at the tomb of Jesus? Why was it
moved? It wasn’t to let Jesus out; Jesus could get out of the tomb as
easily as He entered the Upper Room later, without using the door. No,
the reason the stone was rolled away was not to let Jesus out, but to
let the disciples in so they could see!
And what did they see there? They saw that the body of Jesus was gone,
but the grave clothes were still there, lying undisturbed. In John 20:1-8
there are different Greek words used for "saw." When it says Mary and
Peter saw, it means they noted. When it says that John saw, it means
that he saw with understanding, with comprehension.
Peter entered the tomb. "Then the other disciple, who came to the tomb
first, went in also; and he saw and believed" (John 20:8). When John
saw the grave clothes, he thought, "I get it!" He believed that Jesus
was alive, based on what he saw.
Then John adds something that seems puzzling at first. Verse 9 says,
“For as yet they did not know the Scripture, that He must rise again
from the dead.” They saw an empty tomb and empty grave clothes, and they
formed their beliefs based on that. They knew what they saw.
But by the time John wrote his gospel, they knew the theology
of Christ’s resurrection. Their faith, once based on physical
evidence—the open tomb, the body gone, the clothes intact (as good as
that was to convince John at that moment)—wasn’t enough to sustain a
person through life. “This is what we saw, but we didn’t know the
scripture yet” points to the fact that there’s something even better to
base your belief and knowledge upon, and that’s the objective, inerrant
prophecy in the Word of God.
Observation and personal experience aren’t enough! The Bible predicted that Christ would rise from the dead. What Peter called “a more sure word of prophecy” (2 Peter 1:19, KJV) is a more sure foundation.
So how do you know that you know? You could say, “I know because I saw
or I heard.” But here’s something better: “What I saw and what I heard
was predicted long ago in the prophets.” So now the subjective
experience is bolstered by the objective prophecy of the Bible—and
that’s unshakeable.
That’s what I want you to see here—the fundamental importance of the
Word of God. Jesus said in Matthew 24:35, “Heaven and earth will pass
away, but My words will by no means pass away.”
The experience which we have with Christ is valid only as it is tied
to something that is outside of our experience, something that is
objective—the inerrant Word of God. With that, we can face anything.
If you just have the inerrant Word of Scripture but you don’t have an
experience with God yourself, then it’s not personal. If you have your
personal experience but it doesn’t match what the scripture says, then
it’s not reasonable. Put them both together, it’s powerful. It’s
unshakeable.
That’s my prayer for you at this Easter season, that you will have an
unshakeable faith, based on the sure word of prophecy and a personal,
vital relationship with Jesus Christ, the risen Redeemer!
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