New Church Life March/April 2016 | Page 7

Editorials how can we believe in the lord’s resurrection? We are told in the Heavenly Doctrine that the Lord, after dying on the cross, came back to life – not just in the spiritual world as all people do on the third day after their body dies, but with the body He had in this world. “A spirit does not have flesh and bones as you see I have.” (Luke 24:39) As Christians this is what we believe, and as New Church people this belief is bolstered by the comprehensive and rational explanation we have of the whole process of glorification the Lord went through during His life in the world. His Resurrection was the completion of that process and must be understood in that context. But still, it is mind-boggling – so what does it really mean when we say we believe in it? First of all, it is a miracle, and must be considered as such. In fact, it was the culmination of a series of miracles, beginning with the Lord’s miraculous conception and birth. If you believe in the Virgin Birth, in the miracles of healing, and the others – turning water to wine, multiplying the loaves and the fishes, walking on water, the raising of Lazarus from the tomb – then belief in the Lord’s Resurrection is not quite such a stretch. If Jesus was Divine, then miracles are to be expected. The point is: the Resurrection is an integral part of the whole view of Jesus as God. The alternative idea is that He was simply a good man, a wise teacher, a charismatic preacher, a political revolutionary or social reformer – in which case He is not worshiped as Divine, and the Resurrection is a moot point. Real Christianity, though, is the worship of the Lord Jesus Christ as God and Savior, and since miracles are what God does, they are part and parcel of the Christian religion. If we believe the Lord can save us from hell and raise us up into eternal life in heaven, then surely we can believe that He could overrule His own death. Miracles, by definition, are beyond natural “proof,” but the ability to know of things beyond the natural is an essential part of what it means to be human. Consider also that there are different kinds of belief. For example: that 109