Psalm 16:5,6,11

"The Lord is my chosen portion and my cup; you hold my lot. The lines have fallen for me in pleasant places; indeed, I have a beautiful inheritance. You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy." Psalm 16:5,6,11

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Please Call the First Witness

Walk with me. We are headed to my research advisor’s office at Western Carolina University. We are in the graduate program, about to meet with my advisor to get an introduction to the project that we are starting this week. (Don’t worry, there won’t be a test) He says, “Come in. Have a seat! How are you?” and general small talk about the semester and how graduate school is treating me goes on for a minute or two. He then begins to talk about the project *insert cool science-y conversation about stem cells and protein biomarkers*. On the outside I’m like, “Yea, that sounds great! Really interesting.” The meeting draws to a close and he assigns some related papers that I can search to familiarize myself with the project, terminology, lab procedures, etc. In science that translates into looking up what they call “scholarly articles” that report about other projects that are similar to yours. So I start the search. Looking up evidence for how well the laboratory process works. Can we can use this old procedure but update it and apply it to a different research goal to make “new” science that is worthy of publication? Different papers say different things. All the procedures are a little different. I’m confused. But I make notes and return a few days later to see my advisor. He has his own past research and papers to draw from, we go through the process we will actually be using and he explains everything. Then we go to the lab and actually walk through the process together. It makes sense! Hey, this could work, this actually makes sense!

What does this have to do with Jesus? Well, Lee Strobel’s first chapter* talks about eyewitness evidence. My first thought was, what do you mean, there isn’t eyewitness evidence for Jesus. You can’t go talk to someone about what they saw Jesus do. Then I realized, um, what about the Bible! Duhh. The gospels (Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John) are (at least claim to be) eyewitness accounts about Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection. We can read and glean information, but sometimes they leave us confused, sometimes they seem to say different things. So do they line up? Are they trustworthy (as they call it in science, peer-reviewed)? Like with my research, Strobel went to an advisor (Craig Blomberg) so that he could ask questions and get help understanding the facts. He wanted to find out, what are the practical use for the gospels? Is it just a confusing mess, or is there an underlying truth and message found within the four books? I didn’t see it in my research without the help of my advisor. I was even doubting that the method and the project as a whole was possible. Then I found out that there was truth, accuracy, honesty in how things did or didn’t work for the other scientists who wrote papers. I realized that even with what seemed like inconsistencies, the papers all stood behind the method and survived scrutiny of other scientists. The gospels are like that.

Without going into too much detail, here’s what is said about the Gospels in Strobel’s first chapter. The authors are believed to be who they say they are. The writing lines up with what a biography genre in the ancient world would have required. There is underlying uniformity concerning the kind of person Jesus was, who He claimed to be, and of what He was capable. One can be confident that the history is not skewed but emphasized by the theological agenda the authors had because the truth of Jesus’ saving power relies on His life, death, and resurrection being real, confirmable, events (In the book an analogy is cited about how the Jewish people most accurately report and preserve the memory of the Holocaust because they know that prevention of future horrors requires a truthful memory of the event.). It can be asserted confidently that the gospels were written sixty or thirty years after Jesus – Alexander the Great’s biography, for example, was recorded no earlier than 400 years after his death and still historians trust their accuracy.


*Strobel, Lee. The Case for Christ. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1998.
        See also, My Beautiful Inheritance previous blog entry Taking Jesus to Court
Want to know more?(Works Cited by Strobel)
Barnett, Paul. Is the New Testament History? Ann Arbor, Mich.: Vine, 1986.
__________. Jesus and the Logic of History. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1997.
Blomberg, Craig.  The Historical Reliability of the Gospels. Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 1987.
Bruce, F. F.  The New Testament Documents. Are they Reliable? Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1960.
France, R. T. The Evidence for Jesus. Downers Grove, Ill.: InterVarsity Press, 1986.

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Taking Jesus to Court

What questions do you ask about what you believe? Is there any evidence for Christianity? Do I really believe in Jesus, what does that even mean? What exactly is my faith, who was Jesus? Can the Bible be trusted? I mean, all of this stuff happened 2,000 years ago. Does it matter? Can it make a difference in my life, my world?

You’re not alone. Often, when I start asking it seems like there is no end. To me, one of the most exciting things about growing up and living life is asking those questions, the ones that make my head spin. What does frustrate me sometimes is not knowing how or what to ask. I have come to be comfortable with Jesus. I enjoy asking Him my questions because I know who He is just as I know a dear friend or a sibling. I’ve lived life with Him. That’s my own definition of faith. Trusting that who I perceive in joys and crises and everyday events is a constant, real Being. I love Him who I have witnessed love me, discipline me, save me. I know His love is even greater that what I can perceive now on earth. That’s my interpretation of Hebrews 11:1.

So, what about those questions? Well, I’m a scientist; I’m a bit inquisitive and analytical. If you’ve read any of my other blog entries, you know I love finding out about things like archaeological evidence of what’s recorded in the Bible and digging into why a Christ follower should or shouldn’t agree with any given current topic/public issue. The Lord has given us active minds for a reason and I love to watch Him work through the most mind boggling of questions. When I heard about Lee Strobel’s The Case for Christ I was immediately determined to get myself a copy and dig in! I’ve only just finished chapter 2. What I am loving so far is how he not only presents his interviews and findings, but he teaches the reader how to ask their own questions. Like I mentioned before, sometimes I don’t know what I want to ask. This book is helping me to not only find answers, but also a voice for my questions. I highly recommend it. It is especially interesting that Strobel began his quest as a skeptic of Christianity. I am hoping to write my next few entries based off of what I am reading and the questions and resources at the end of his chapters. I’ll leave you with a quote from his introduction.


“Ultimately it’s the responsibility of jurors to reach a verdict. That doesn’t mean they have a one-hundred-percent certainty, because we can’t have absolute proof about anything in life. In a trial jurors are asked to weigh the evidence and come to the best possible conclusion. … That's your task. I hope you take it seriously, because there may be more than just idle curiosity hanging in the balance. If Jesus is to be believed – and I realize that may be a big if for you at this point – then nothing is more important than how you respond to him.“1

Cited
1. Strobel, Lee. The Case for Christ. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan, 1998.