Hey, parents.
former relationships with Christ. Now the animated adventures in Odyssey film journey into
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the film and launch it in theaters. Your gift will be matched dollar for dollar before May 1st. See the trailer and donate today at focusonthefamily.com/impossible. That's focusonthefamily.com/impossible. Now because I had no belief in God, I really lacked a moral framework for my life. So I lived a very immoral and drunken and profane and narcissistic self-absorbed, really in a lot of ways self-destructive kind of like that was my life.
As we commemorate good Friday today, Lee's trouble explains how he went from being an unhappy atheist to becoming an ardent believer in Jesus Christ, when he examined the evidence of the resurrection, historical evidence that might surprise you. Welcome to focusonthefamily with Jim Daley. I'm John Fuller. As many of you know, Lee's trouble was an award-winning investigative journalist when his wife Leslie
became a Christian and he applied his skills as a journalist to try to disprove
her newfound Christianity, but ultimately Lee had to admit that the evidence of Jesus Christ's
birth death and resurrection couldn't be denied and he'll detail some of those facts today. Lee's the author of over 40 books including the best selling case for Christ series. Let me just say Lee is a good friend of mine. He is a good guy. I can just see in it when we're together at a restaurant or anything that I've seen him in, he is just the genuine deal and believe me. You can trust the words that Lee's trouble expresses. Yeah, we'll hear he is now
speaking to our staff on focusonthefamily with Jim Daley and we're jumping in as he gets really to the heart of his message. Why is the resurrection foundation? Because Jesus in a variety of different ways may transcend and messianic and divine claims about himself. He claimed to be the son of God. But so what I could claim to be the son of God? Jim Daley, well maybe not Jim. Anybody could claim to be the son of God. But if Jesus claimed to be the son of God,
died and then three days later rose from the dead, that's pretty good evidence. He's telling the
“truth, right? That's why, you know, the apostle Paul says in 1 Corinthians 15 verse 17,”
if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile, you're still in your sins, right? That's the ball game. So I thought about the fact that Easter is coming up when we remember the resurrection of Jesus. So I'm going to give you four words to begin with, Lee, now I want you to remember that when I was a skeptic, when I was an atheist, I did not consider the New Testament to be inspired and errand, the Word of God. I do now, but I was a skeptic then. But I had to accept
if what it undeniably is, which is a set of ancient historical writings. And so I knew just as you can investigate any ancient writing, whether it's right serotonous or tassadists or the matter, you can take those same investigative techniques and apply them to the pages of the New
“Testament to try to determine, is it telling me the truth? So that's what I set out to do.”
So what are the four words begin with the letter E that summarise the evidence for the rest because Easter begins with E, right? So what are the four words begin with E that summarise
the evidence? The first E stands for the word execution. You have to have a death first, right,
before you can have a resurrection. And what I learned is there's virtually no dispute among scholars in the world about the fact that Jesus was truly dead after being crucified. Why? Well, first of all, we have no evidence anywhere in history of anyone ever surviving a full Roman crucifixion. In fact, no less of a source than the Journal of the American Medical Association, a secular, scientific, peer-reviewed medical journal carried in investigation into the death of Jesus. And I'll
recite to you one sentence they wrote that summarize their conclusion. They said, "Clearly, the weight of the historical and medical evidence indicates that Jesus was dead, even before the wound to his side was inflicted." I mean, this is so well-established of an historical fact that Jesus was truly dead. You would get laughed out of a major academic institution if you came in and said, "No, no, no, I think you somehow survived the crucifixion." Because most of the facts that we accept
This being true from the ancient world are based on one source, or maybe two ...
for the conviction that Jesus was dead after being crucified, we not only have multiple first-century sources in the documents of the New Testament. We've also got five ancient sources outside the Bible, confirming and corroborating his death. We have Josephus, a first-century Jewish historian, worked for the Romans. Tassett is another early historian. Maribar and Serapian, Blueci, and even the Jewish Talmud admits that Jesus was dead. How strong is this? Let's go to
an atheist New Testament scholar, like Gary Ludeman, a Vanderbilt University, and he'll tell you this. "Jesus, death as a consequence of crucifixion is indisputable." Now, I don't know how much you said
in ancient history, but there are very few facts of ancient history that a skeptical, critical,
atheist historian, like a Gary Ludeman, we'll say, is indisputable. One of those facts is the death of Jesus and the cross, the first-seous for execution, Jesus was dead. The second-eism was fascinating, thanks for the word early. We have early accounts, or early reports, that Jesus rose to the dead.
“In other words, reports that come virtually immediately after his death. Why is it important?”
Because I used to think like a lot of skeptics that the resurrection was a legend. And I knew it took time for legend to develop in the ancient world, so I figured 150 years after the death of Jesus. Stories were invented. Mythologies were spun legends were invented, and that's where the idea of the resurrection came from. But what I learned, death summates the claim that the resurrection is merely a legend. Follow me on this. I think this is fascinating.
We have preserved for us a creed of the earliest church. The very first Christians right there in the
very first century used to rally around this creedal statement based on facts that they knew to be true. Now this creed contains the essence of Christianity, says Jesus died. Why for our sins? He was buried. On the third day, he rose from the dead, and then it mentions the specific names of eyewitnesses and groups of eyewitnesses to whom he appeared, including 500 people at once.
“Now what's important about this, eyewitness-based creed of the church, with named eyewitnesses,”
named group of eyewitnesses, is how immediately it developed in the ancient world. Because remember, we said takes time for legend to develop, we can date this creed. How? Because the apostle Paul
preserved it for us. He wrote a letter to the church in Corinth. We call it first Corinthians.
And in that letter, which he wrote about 22 to 25 years after the death of Jesus, he includes this creed. We find it in 1 Corinthians 15, starting at 1st 3. And so he includes it, but he includes it in a way to suggest, by the way, I've already given you this on a previous visit. I'm just reminding you of this, which means that sometime within, say 20 years of the death of Jesus, this creed was already existence, and he had given it to the
church in Corinth. But we can go back even earlier. How? Well, we know that Paul used to be Saul of Tyresus, a persecutor of Christians. One to three years after the death of Jesus, he signed the road to Damascus, whom he has this encounter with the risen Christ,
“he becomes the apostle Paul. Immediately he goes into Damascus, and what does he do?”
He meets with some apostles. There are many scholars who are convinced this is when those apostles gave him this creed that he later wrote in the letter. But others are more skeptical. They say maybe it was three years later. Three years later, Paul goes to Jerusalem and he meets for 15 days with two eyewitnesses to the resurrection who are named in the creed, Peter and James. Their name is eyewitnesses in the creed. They get together and Paul describes this meeting
in Galatians. He uses a Greek word, um, historio, which suggests that this is a investigative meeting that they had. They were talking about the Super Bowl. They weren't talking about the weather. They were, they were talking about how do you know what you know? What do you see? What do you experience? Many scholars believe this is maybe when Paul was given the creed by the two people named in the creed. But either way, this means one to six years after the death of Jesus,
this creed is already in existence. Therefore the beliefs that make up that creed go back even earlier, virtually to the cross itself. There is no huge time gap between the death of Jesus and the later development of a legend that he rose from the dead. We got a new flash that goes right back to the beginning. In fact, one of the greatest scholars in this area is James
D.
as a creed within months of the death of Jesus, within months." This is a stark gold. A story is
“drool over this. So it's formulated within months. That he means a belief to make up the creed”
go back even earlier. It's incredible. So we don't have some huge time gap. In fact, one of the
greatest historians who ever lived was A.N. Sherwin White of Oxford. He studied the rate at which legend developed in the ancient world. And he determined that the passage of two generations of time is not even enough for legend to grow up and wipe out a solid core of a historical truth. And that's not the only early report we've got. We've got others in Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, the Book of Acts, all of which stayed back so early. They were circulating during the lifetimes of Jesus' contemporaries
who would have been all too happy to point out the errors if they were making this stuff up. Friends, we got an execution. Jesus was dead. We have a report of his resurrection that so early, so immediate, it can't write it off as being a legend. But that's not all we've got. We've got a third word that begins with the letter E. And that is the word empty. We have an empty tomb. The historical record tells us that Jesus' body was placed in a tomb along with Joseph Vermathia,
member of the Jewish Council. It's sealed. Matthew tells us it's guarded. And yet, it's discovered empty that first Easter morning. Now I used to think I was smarter than all that. I used to think, well, well, well, wait a minute. I'll tell you why the tomb was empty. The body was
never in it in the first place. Don't you know that part of the horror of crucifixion is,
they would throw your body to the dogs? It was illegal under Roman law to very execution victims.
“That's what I thought. Until I got disproven by a little thing called archaeology.”
And guess what archaeologists discovered, the bodies of a couple of crucifixion victims from the first century, who were buried. In fact, one of them named Johann still had the spike driven through his heel bone and a piece of the olive wood of the cross still attached. So we know that there was some burial of crucifixion victims. In fact, I interviewed a great scholar in this area, Dr. Craig Evans. And Dr. Evans said to me, quote, "I conclude that the burial
of the body of Jesus in a known tomb, according to Jewish law and custom, is a highly probable."
So there went my idea that the tomb was never occupied. Roman law did allow for the burial
of certain execution victims. But the tomb is discovered empty. How did it get empty? That's the interesting question. You know, when the disciples began proclaiming that Jesus had risen, what the opponents of Jesus never said was, "Beloney, go open the tomb, you'll find the body." What did they say instead? Disciples. Jesus is a drison. Enemies of Jesus. Oh, well, um, the disciple stole the body. Now think about that. That's a cover story.
They're admitting the tomb is empty. They're trying to explain how it got empty. You see what I'm saying? It's like if your teacher and a student comes up to you and says, "The dog ate my homework." That student said, "Mitting, look, I don't have my homework, but I can explain what happened to it, the dog ate it." It's the same thing. So everybody in the first century is conceding the tomb is empty. The real question is, "How did it get empty?" And you go through the usual,
"This is suspects." The Romans weren't about to steal the body. They wanted Jesus dead. The Jewish leaders of the day went about to steal the body. They wanted Jesus to stay dead. The disciples weren't about to steal the body. Why? So they could live lives of deprivation and suffering as a result of their proclamation. We have seven ancient sources, six of them, outside the Bible that confirm that the disciples live lives of deprivation and suffering is
“result of their proclamation that Jesus had risen. Why were they willing to do that?”
Nobody knowingly and willingly dies for a lie. Why were they willing? You know why? Because of the fourth word that begins with the letter E, which is the word "I witnesses." Not only was Jesus too many discovered empty, but over a period of time, Jesus appears alive in a dozen different instances to more than five hundred and fifteen people, the skeptics and doubters, as well as the believers, to men, to women, indoors, outdoors, daytime, nighttime, people talk with them,
and they touch them. They ate with them. Think of this. Remember we said earlier, we're lucky in ancient history if we have one source to confirm a fact, or maybe if we're lucky we get two
Sources to confirm a fact.
the resurrected Jesus, we have no fewer than nine ancient sources, inside and outside the new
“Testament, confirming and corroborating in the conviction of the disciples that they encountered”
the risen Jesus. Friends, that is no less than an avalanche of historical data.
First source is the creed that I mentioned. A creed, by the way, who's historical credentials are so
strong that one of the few Jewish New Testament scholars, Pinchus Lapid said, "It may be taken as a statement of eyewitnesses." The second source is the Apostle Paul. Paul, after he became a Christian, got to know some of the disciples. He knew Peter, he knew James, and he knew John. And Paul says, in 1 Corinthians 15, verse 11, regarding the resurrection, whether it is eye or day, this is what we preach. Now, there's we're saying the same thing that Jesus has come back
from the dead. That's the second source. The third source is the Book of Acts. Now, even skeptical
“atheist scholars will admit that the Book of Acts contains summaries of the preaching of the earliest”
church. And guess what the topic was of the preaching of the earliest church, it was the resurrection of Jesus. In Acts chapter 2, Peter gets up before a group and he says, "Men of Israel, listen to these words. This Jesus, a man, attested you by miracles and wonders and signs which he did in your midst." You know that he did. He appealed to their common knowledge. And then he said, "This Jesus got his race from the dead to which we're all witnesses. We're all witnesses to the resurrected
Jesus. And how did they respond? Did they say Peter, you're drunk? You don't know what you're talking about? No. 3,000 people said, Peter, we know that's the truth. What do we do? They repented
and the church was born." So first source, the creed, second, false testimony, third,
the Book of Acts and Peter saying, "We're all witnesses." And then the next four sources are Matthew Mark Luke and John, the Gospels. And in the Gospels, we find no fewer than nine appearances by the resurrected Jesus. The Gospels are classified by scholars as being ancient biographies intended to report what actually took place. Let me read to you the conclusion of Dr. Craig Evans, who was written like 40 books on the historical evidence for the resurrection and other topics,
a professor at the Houston Christian University. This is what he said. He told me, he said, "Leigh, there's every recent it conclude that the Gospels have fairly and accurately
reported the essential elements in Jesus' teachings, life, death and resurrection. They're early
enough. They're rooted into the right streams. They go back to Jesus and the original people. There's continuity. There's proximity. There's verification of certain distinct points with archaeology and other documents. And then he said, "There's a inner logic." So there, we have seven total sources, but there's two more outside the Bible. Let me ask you a question. If you were to come to work here, folks on the family and work here for say three years, do you think you'd have a
“pretty good idea of what Jim Daley believes? Yeah, I think you would. Well, we have writings”
preserved from people who sat under the teachings of the very disciples themselves. The eyewitnesses to the resurrection. Some of them wrote letters and reported what they were told by these eyewitnesses. So two of those sources, one of them is Clement. Clement was ordained by Peter himself. And he actually wrote a letter to the church in Corinth. Again, in the first century, where he said the apostles had, quote, "complete certainty caused by the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ."
So he's confirming that their eyewitnesses to the resurrection. And then polycard. He was appointed by John to be the bishop at Smerna. He wrote a letter to the Philippians. He mentions the resurrection no fewer than five times. And in this letter he said referring to Paul and the other apostles, he said, quote, "For they did not love this present age, but him who died for our benefit and for our sake was raised by God." So here are nine ancient sources. Inside and out
in the New Testament, confirming and corroborating the conviction of the disciples that they encountered the resurrected Jesus. Now, is that just convincing to an evangelical Christian?
Let's go back to the atheist New Testament scholar, geared aluminum in a Vand...
Based on this kind of evidence, this is what he was compelled to concede, quote.
“It may be taken as historically certain, not a possibility, not a likelihood. It may be taken”
as a historically certain that Peter and the disciples had experiences after Jesus' death in which Jesus appeared to them as the risen Christ. I couldn't have said it better myself. So don't you wonder why he's still an atheist? You know why? He found the loophole. There's a loophole that explains all this away. You know what it is? The disciples didn't really encounter the resurrected Jesus. They merely had hallucinations. There you go. That kind
of explains it all away. Right? We're way to man. I'm a journalist. I checked things out.
So I sought out one of the leading psychologists in the world in expert on the human mind.
Someone who had written 40 books on psychology. Someone who was a professor of psychology for 20 years at a major Midwestern university. Somebody who was the president of a national association of psychologists. And I sat in a chair and I said, "Now, Dr. Collins, would you not admit to me?" These disciples didn't encounter the resurrected Jesus. They merely had hallucinations. And he looked at me and he said, "That is not possible." I said, "What do you mean?"
“You see, pretty sure yourself. He said, "I am." I said, "Why?" He said, "Leave. You have to understand”
something about the nature of hallucinations." hallucinations happen in individual minds or like dreams.
They don't spread like the common coal. You can't wake up your spouse in the middle of the night and
say, "Honey, honey, wake up, wake up. I'm having a great dream about a vacation in Maui. Let's both go back to sleep. We have the same dream. We'll save all the airfare. We'll save all the hotel costs. Wouldn't you like to be able to do that?" Here's a question. Why can't you do that? Because dreams happen in individual minds just like hallucinations. And then you looked at me and said, "Leave, you said that the earliest report, the most reliable historical report you have,
tells you that Jesus has risen Christ, appeared to 500 people at once." I said, "That's right." He said, "Leave, 500 people have in the same hallucination at the same time, will be a bigger miracle than the resurrection itself." And then he added this. He said, "By the way, if this were just hallucinations, the body would still be in the tomb, right? Oops, the body's gone." Friends, these were not hallucinations. It wasn't something more subtle like a vision where
“they missed Jesus so much that they imagined Peter. Don't you see him there in the shadows?”
You know, they talked themselves into seeing something. It wasn't there. I don't think so. Not when Saul of Tarsus was a persecutor of Christians. He was not psychologically primed. Have a vision of the resurrected Jesus. James, a half-brother of Jesus, who did not believe in Jesus during his lifetime, who was all taught his entire life. There's one resurrection at the end of time. No, he's coming back in the interim. And yet, he died as a martyr of the church. Why?
Because Jesus appeared to him. Friends, he weren't hallucinations. They weren't visions. They weren't mythology or legend or make believe. These were actual encounters that the disciples had with the resurrected Jesus that transformed their lives. Friends, I spent two years in my life. Investigating in this kind of evidence. And it all came down to a Sunday afternoon. And I went alone in my room and I sat down with all the documents and books and evidence
I accumulated over these two years. And I said to myself, you know, a good juror reaches a verdict. So I reviewed it all one more time and then I stepped back and I said, "Wait a minute." In the light of this avalanche of evidence, it points so powerfully toward the truth of Christianity, I realized it would take more faith to maintain my atheism than to become a Christian. Like the scales went like that. And that's when I reached my verdict in the case for Christ.
That based on the historical data I was convinced that Jesus didn't just claim that he was a son of God. He backed it up by returning from the dead. And then I thought, "Am I done?" Is that it? Or I just go back to my life? Is that, what do you do? And then my wife pointed out a verse to me, John 12, says, "But as many as received him to them, he gave the right to become
Children of God, even to those who believe in his name.
forms an equation of what it means to become a child of God. Believe plus receive equals become.
“So I said, "Okay, I get, I believe based on the data of history. Jesus is the unique son of God.”
He proved it by returning from the dead, but that's not enough. I had to receive receive what. We see the free gift of forgiveness and eternal life that Jesus purchased for me in the cross when he died as my substitute to pay for all of my sin. And when I would receive this free gift of his grace, then I would become a child of God. So I got on my knees. And I poured out a confession of a lifetime of immorality that would absolutely curl your hair. And at that moment, I received
complete and total forgiveness through Jesus Christ. And I became a child of God. And that's where we're going to have to end Lee Strobel's powerful message on today's episode
of Focus on the Family with Jim Daley." Wow, John, I always love it when Biblical accounts are
backed up by non-religious sources and Lee Strobel did a great job sharing some of those today. And if you're wishing you could explain this content to a friend, the way Lee just did, don't worry, it's all in his little book, the case for Easter. And we'll send that out for you for a donation of any amount as you support the ministry of Focus on the Family. You might not know this,
but in the past year, almost 800 people a day have made that commitment to Christ or rededicated their
lives to Jesus through Focus on the Family. That is good news, everybody. That's the most
“important thing we can do here. So please donate if you can so that we can continue to reach even”
more families for Christ. Yeah, follow the link in the show notes to donate and get your copy of the case for Easter. And when you get the book from us, we'll include a free audio download of this entire presentation with extra content. Thanks for listening to Focus on the Family with Jim Daley, take a moment please and leave a rating for us in your podcast app and then share this episode with the friend who might be on the fence about the faith and could use maybe a nudge toward Jesus.
I'm John Fuller and Vinnie back as we once again help you and your family thrive in Christ. Live your truth. A lot of people say that, don't they? But truth isn't something we decide. God has decided it for us. And it's our job as believers to share his truth with a world in need. I'll encourage you to do that through my podcast Refocus with Jim Daley.
“I visit with fascinating guests about important topics like gender confusion,”
cancel culture and more while helping you share God's love with others. Listen at refocus with Jimdaley.com

