I once had a lot of hatred, mainly toward my father, an alcoholic.
Where I once constantly lost my temper, I found myself arriving at a crisis and experiencing peace.
The New Testament witnesses were fully aware of the background against which the resurrection took place.
The first thing that stuck in the minds of the disciples was not the empty tomb, but rather the empty grave clothes - undisturbed in form and position.
Prayer is talking with God. God knows your heart and is not so concerned with your words as He is with the attitude of your heart.
Paul the apostle recounted that Jesus appeared to more than 500 of His followers at one time, the majority of whom were still alive and who could confirm what Paul wrote.
On that Sunday morning the first thing that impressed the people who approached the tomb was the unusual position of the one and a half to two ton stone that had been lodged in front of the doorway.
Now, whenever you read any historical document, you always evaluate it in light of the historical context.
Jesus claimed He had the power to raise himself from the dead and His followers would be raised from the dead. That's a unique claim in the literature of religion.
If Jesus Christ was who He claimed to be, and He did die on a cross at a point of time in history, then, for all history past and all history future it is relevant because that is the very focal point for forgiveness and redemption.
Why don't the names of Buddha, Mohammed, Confucius offend people? The reason is that these others didn't claim to be God, but Jesus did.
I am not a Christian because God changed my life; I am a Christian because of my convictions about who Jesus Christ is.
Here's the simplest answer: Within weeks, the disciples proclaimed the resurrection of Jesus Christ, that He had been bodily raised from the dead and appeared to them.
For centuries many of the world's distinguished philosophers have assaulted Christianity as being irrational, superstitious and absurd.
Christ appeared alive on several occasions after the cataclysmic events of that first Easter.