Reflection: Of First Importance
The only thing that can give confidence about an eternal future is a dead person being resurrected back to life. Nothing else will do it. No philosophy will do it. No religious ideology will do it. No personal lifestyle preference will do it. It needed a concrete event in history: the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
This means that any search for hope and meaning must involve an examination of the testimonies surrounding Jesus overcoming death. If someone has not explored this with at least some forensic diligence, they might realise that all that remains is ultimately without meaning or hope. And to be content with that would be tragic. It would be doubly tragic if the excuse for doing so was “rationalism”. Rationalism can be given as the reason for not believing in God, i.e. the belief that everything came from nothing – which is rather odd!
Some rationalists allow for the possibility of being “spiritual.” However, they usually insist that this God is unknowable, and is at heart simply a projection of themselves. Others believe in Jesus, but with the proviso that he be no bigger than their own intellect and no more supernatural than themselves – which is curiously illogical.
In reality, there are good rational reasons for believing in Jesus’ resurrection, and I invite you to chase them down. His resurrection proved to the world that our resurrection was a possibility. It was, and is, the event that gives hope. I pray that it is a hope you share. For this I promise: it will radically change your thinking about death (1 Corinthians 15:26,55).
You will smile.
Prayer: Dear Father, it is hard to comprehend the magnitude of your love and the strength of your resolve to win me back to yourself. You resurrected Jesus back to life and in doing so gave me the gift of hope. That hope is precious. Thank you so much.