“Now if we have died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with him. We know that Christ, being raised from the dead, will never die again; death no longer has dominion over him.” (Romans 6:8-9)
From death to life. The reversal of the natural order takes a supernatural effort that can only come through the grace of the Father by the power of the Holy Spirit for the glory of the Son, Jesus Christ. As a result, we can know with full assurance that because Jesus has died once for us all, He will never die again as He has defeated the very power of death.
There have been other stories of resurrection throughout Scripture. The first was the son of the widow of Zaraphath in 1 Kings 17. This was soon followed by Elisha’s raising of the Shunnamite woman’s son in 2 Kings 4 and the mugging victim that was killed and thrown into Elisha’s grave in 2 Kings 13. But these three isolated events are the only Old Testament mentions of bodily resurrection. In the New Testament, there are 7 other incidents:
- The widow of Nain’s son (Luke 7)
- Jarius’ Daughter (Mark 5)
- Lazarus (John 11)
- Many deceased “saints” or believers at the moment of Jesus’ death on Calvary (Matthew 27)
- Jesus Himself (all four gospels and even testified to by Paul in 1 Corinthians 15)
- Tabitha, or Dorcas, who died and Peter raised up. (Acts 9:40)
- Eutychus – who fell out of a window and was raised by Paul (Acts 20:9-10)
What is common to all of these resurrection events except for one is that the person who was resurrected later died again, this time forever. There has been suggestions made that the multitude that was raised at Jesus’ death have not died but are possibly still alive in the world today, yet in secret. I’m not sure I believe this one. I’m more inclined to believe that God took them up in a manner similar to the translation of Enoch.
But Jesus died, and was resurrected only to never die again. Forty days after His resurrection, He ascended to the Father so that ten days later on Pentacost, the Holy Spirit would descend and empower the apostles to spread the gospel to every corner of the globe. In most of the cases of resurrection, the scene is coupled with the order for the witnesses to serve the one who was resurrected.
For the widow’s son and the Shunammite woman’s son, the mothers were told to provide food to the raised child. When Jesus raised Jarius daughter, He ordered her to be fed. When Lazarus was raised, Jesus ordered the onlookers to unbind Him. As there was a group in the home with Peter as he raised Tabitha, it is reasonable to assume that he had them help her regain her strength. Paul fed Eutychus after raising Him up.
In each case, there is something to be said for being a servant to those who have freshly experienced new life. It is for this reason, that we are charged to “tend the lambs” and strengthen new believers in their faith so that they can learn to live the example of Christ so that “death no longer has dominion” over them. Yes, we will all die one day. It is the natural order of things and the natural consequence of our sinful nature.
But the supernatural consequence of a newly resurrected life in Christ is an existence that is no longer marked by death, but one destined for life eternal. It is the great spiritual paradox of our faith – that we must die to ourselves so that we might have life in Him. Only then in the end, can we echo the cry of Jesus from the cross: “It is finished!”
They mocked Him
Beat Him
Stripped Him bare
Paraded Him through the streets
Without a worldly care
His disciples cowered
As they denied His very name
Blood stained streets
Would bear His shame
They lifted Him up for the world to see
An example of what happens when you defy
The cultural and religious
The politically ambitious
That reign on high
As He cried “TETELESTAI!”
“It is FINISHED!”
The price was paid!
The debt redeemed!
As His blood was spilt
In a sight unseen
“It is FINISHED!” He cried
As the veil was torn
As He bowed His head
As He bore our scorn
“It is FINISHED!” He cried
As He hung there and died
Soldiers gambling for His clothes
What they truly did they did not know
Except His mother
As she slowly turned to go
“It is finished” she whispered
Through her tears
Remembering her baby’s years
How He grew to be a fearsome man
A faithful man
A loving man
A man for all time
Living Truth sublime
“It is finished” John breathlessly said
After running to the garden tomb
Rejoicing as he glanced
Into the empty happenstance
Seeing the King of grace
Was no longer in this fearful place
“It is finished” I will say
When I end this final race
And I look upon my Savior’s face
When His blood red wine I finally taste
And His Life bread upon my plate
I will feast with Him in glory
As we laugh and tell the story
Of how life is but a vapor
But grace brings life that is greater
And we will all stand together as one
For the glory of the Son
Who gave His blood so He could win us
And we could all cry together
“IT IS FINISHED!”