The death and resurrection of Jesus Christ are equally important. Jesus’s death and resurrection fulfilled His role as the Messiah who came to save us from our sins and bring us life.
Jesus’s death and resurrection are equally important.
Jesus’s death assures us that He atoned for our sins.
Jesus’s resurrection assures us that He was God and that we are indeed forgiven and can have new life if we believe in Him.
How does understanding the mutual importance of Jesus's death and resurrection deepen your appreciation for His sacrifice and victory over sin and death?
How do you see the death and resurrection of Jesus as interconnected, and how does each contribute to the assurance of forgiveness and eternal life?
What difference does it make for your faith to believe that both Jesus's death and resurrection are equally important events?
Why is it crucial that Jesus not only died but also was resurrected for our faith to be meaningful?
How does Paul’s argument in 1 Corinthians 15 emphasize the necessity of both Jesus's death and resurrection?
What implications does the resurrection have for the future hope of believers, according to Paul in 1 Corinthians 15:20–22?
Jesus dying for the sins of the world and His resurrection from the dead are equally important. In fact, they are mutually dependent on one another. It would be impossible for Jesus to do one act without the other and still be rightfully called the Christ. Some people mistakenly think that Christ is Jesus's last name, but it is actually a title. It is a title filled with prophetic and eschatological meaning. Christ means "Messiah" or "the Anointed One," and neither term could be applied to Jesus if He ONLY died or was ONLY resurrected. In order to be Christ, He must have done both.
It is logically impossible to be resurrected without first dying. Obviously, no one can be resurrected from the dead without first being dead. However, if Jesus were to die, but not for our sin, and then be raised from the dead, we would not benefit at all from His resurrection. Such a resurrection would reveal His power over death, but it would not satisfy God's just wrath toward us. Since Jesus would not have suffered in our place and therefore would not have paid the penalty our sins deserve, we would have to suffer and pay the penalty ourselves (Romans 6:23). This means we would still be condemned. So, either way you look at it, whether you remove Jesus's substitutionary atoning death on our behalf or remove His resurrection from the dead, we would remain in the same tragic state. That is, we would remain "in our sins," which means we remain under God's just condemnation, awaiting His just punishment. Thankfully, amazingly, gracefully, this is not this case. As we continue to read 1 Corinthians 15, Paul reveals the truth of God concerning who Jesus is (i.e., the Christ). Jesus is the Savior of all who believe in Him, who trust in His sacrificial death for the forgiveness of sin and His glorious resurrection from the dead for eternal life (1 Timothy 4:10; Ephesians 1:7; John 11:25).
He is a cross pendant.
He is engraved with a unique Number.
He will mail it out from Jerusalem.
He will be sent to your Side.
Emmanuel
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