Tuesday, July 1, 2014

HOW WAS LIFE CREATED?



By Ada Brownell

Excerpt from Swallowed by Life:

Mysteries of Death, Resurrection and the Eternal






Josh McDowell, author of Evidence that Demands a Verdict, points out the lives of the apostles were transformed after the Resurrection. According to scripture and biblical historians, every one of the apostles, with the exception of John, who died as a prisoner on Patmos, and Judas, who killed himself, gave their lives because they preached that Jesus rose from the dead. McDowell adds people often become martyrs because of their beliefs—but no one would give his life for something he knew was a lie. If Jesus had not risen from the dead, the disciples would have known it.
          The disciples knew the earthly body of Jesus was dead and His body was changed and came out of the tomb alive forevermore. Despite being thrown in prison and threats against their lives if they didn’t quit telling everyone about the Jesus rising from the dead, the disciples kept on preaching the truth so others could be saved from eternal death and live. They believed, spread the news, and died for it.
Although I knew all these things, no one was going to show me God, prove I will live forever, or take me on an advance tour of heaven. The requirement for salvation is faith, and if we could prove heaven exists, there would be no reason for faith.
Now, did I have this faith?
          I knew any question about the hereafter is settled by faith. The atheist who believes there is nothing after death has only his faith—no proof. Without faith there is no answer to how we got here, why we are here, or where we are going.
          I was already convinced the person who believes in reincarnation has only his faith. My study led me to conclude that men devise reincarnation to give them hope beyond the grave. People who reject Christianity often take to believing in reincarnation, which is the belief in a chain of rebirths in which each soul, through virtuous living, can rise to a higher state. People who subscribe to this belief, based in Hinduism, believe they keep coming back until they reach nirvana, the final stage, where there is emancipation for the soul. The soul then is taken from the chain of rebirths into nothingness. I couldn’t understand why anyone would want to believe that because when you reach the highest plane you cease to exist. Why would I want to disappear for all eternity? And why would it happen then?
          I discovered many people are attracted to belief in reincarnation because in Hinduism there is no sin against a holy God. Even though Hindus are encouraged to be peacemakers, there is no reason to repent of your sins. Reincarnation doesn’t require you to change your sinful way of living if you don’t want to.
          My study of the Bible showed me that right after Adam and Eve sinned in the garden, God promised a Redeemer. At the moment of Adam and Eve’s sin, the exact opposite of resurrection took place. Before they ate of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, they were not mortals. One of the lies Satan told Eve was she would not die as God warned.
          Yet after they sinned, suddenly the man and woman became naked, flesh-and-blood creatures who suffered from heat and cold, fatigue, pain, sickness, and, eventually, death.
In the pristine environment of the newly created earth, Adam lived to be nine hundred thirty years old. But it wasn’t long after their sin that the first couple understood God’s warning about what sin would do. Their guts ripped with anguish when death invaded their family and became an enemy of all humankind. Their son, Cain, murdered his brother, Abel. No pastor read comforting scriptures. No funeral director took care of arrangements. They had to dig the grave, lift Abel’s body into the hole, throw dirt over him, and live with the hole in their hearts.
          But Adam and Eve weren’t without hope. Way back in those times, in Genesis 3:15, God promised to send someone who would redeem from sin. But it wasn’t until two thousand years ago that He sent His Son for our redemption. The sins of Old Testament prophets and saints were forgiven by the blood of goats and other sacrifices only because those offerings on the altar and faith in God blotted out the sins temporarily until the Redeemer came.[1]
 The scripture passage most children learn, John 3:16, sums up what happened: “For God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.”
          Many of these thoughts, lessons, and God’s Word comforted my grieving heart, but I continued to search and delve into everything that had to do with eternal life.
The Bible says Jesus was and is man’s only hope.
God requires blood for redemption because sin is so serious. I know breaking any of the commandments hurts me or someone else. All I need to do to realize the seriousness of sin is to remember the bloody young lamb dying on an altar, or look at the cross with the Son of God’s blood flowing down the wood and pooling on the ground.
          I learned Jesus was God in the flesh, whom John said was there at creation (John 1:1), claimed Himself to be God, and said He existed before Abraham (John 8:58).
          He also claimed to be the Resurrection and the life (John 11:25), and He demonstrated His power over death. In the city of Nain, Jesus interrupted a youth’s funeral procession by touching the bier, the frame for carrying the dead. The pallbearers stopped, and Jesus said, “Young man, arise!”
          The youth sat up, spoke to those around him, and went home with his widowed mother (Luke 7:11–16).
          Jesus took Jarius’ twelve-year-old daughter by the hand after she died, and she rose from the dead.
          The raising of Lazarus from the tomb was, perhaps, the most spectacular—Lazarus had been buried four days (John 11:6–46). But all it took was Jesus’s shout, “Lazarus, come forth!”
          Lazarus came forth, bound hand and foot with grave clothes, with a napkin over his face.
          I noticed that those who witnessed the event had to unwrap Lazarus and let him go. But when Jesus came forth from the tomb, He didn’t need help. He even had power over the grave clothes!
          Although I put no faith in the Shroud of Turin and would not put any spiritual significance on it if it were proved to be the burial garment of Christ, I imagine Christ’s Resurrection to be such an energized event that it could leave an imprint on cloth. I would imagine the molecules and energy changing a mortal body into immortal would put off a fireworks show greater than any lightning event we’ve ever witnessed. But that’s my imagination.
          It could happen with no more outward notice than when our lives begin as a human egg, a tiny speck the human eye can barely see, but suddenly, when fertilized with sperm, bursts to life, into a beautiful baby to be born, grow, walk on the earth, die, and pass into eternity.
          I began to grasp that eternal life is no more perplexing than mortal life. Our society has made sex so dirty and disgusting, we often forget the mystery and miracle of life.
          In the Garden of Eden it was Adam and Eve formed at God’s fingertips from the dust of the earth. Today, we know the process involves sperm and eggs, but if you think of it, the process is the same. We are nothing but dust, or soil, with the exception of the spark of life God gives.
     
-- Copyright Ada Brownell 2002     


[1] See Hebrews 11

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