Anonymous ID: 43c615 April 21, 2019, 8:39 a.m. No.6263167   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3827

Behold the power of God in the Psalms!

The future proves the past.

 

Psalm 1:

 

The Two Ways

1 Blessed is the man

who walks not in the counsel of the wicked,

nor stands in the way of sinners,

nor sits in the seat of scoffers;

2 but his delight is in the law of the Lord,

and on his law he meditates day and night.

3 He is like a tree

planted by streams of water,

that yields its fruit in its season,

and its leaf does not wither.

In all that he does, he prospers.

 

4 The wicked are not so,

but are like chaff which the wind drives away.

5 Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgment,

nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous;

6 for the Lord knows the way of the righteous,

but the way of the wicked will perish.

Anonymous ID: 43c615 April 21, 2019, 8:57 a.m. No.6263353   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Behold the power of God in the Psalms!

The future proves the past.

 

Psalm 104:

God the Creator and Provider

 

104 Bless the Lord, O my soul!

O Lord my God, thou art very great!

Thou art clothed with honor and majesty,

2 who coverest thyself with light as with a garment,

who hast stretched out the heavens like a tent,

3 who hast laid the beams of thy chambers on the waters,

who makest the clouds thy chariot,

who ridest on the wings of the wind,

4 who makest the winds thy messengers,

fire and flame thy ministers.

 

5 Thou didst set the earth on its foundations,

so that it should never be shaken.

6 Thou didst cover it with the deep as with a garment;

the waters stood above the mountains.

7 At thy rebuke they fled;

at the sound of thy thunder they took to flight.

8 The mountains rose, the valleys sank down

to the place which thou didst appoint for them.

9 Thou didst set a bound which they should not pass,

so that they might not again cover the earth.

 

10 Thou makest springs gush forth in the valleys;

they flow between the hills,

11 they give drink to every beast of the field;

the wild asses quench their thirst.

12 By them the birds of the air have their habitation;

they sing among the branches.

13 From thy lofty abode thou waterest the mountains;

the earth is satisfied with the fruit of thy work.

 

14 Thou dost cause the grass to grow for the cattle,

and plants for man to cultivate,

that he may bring forth food from the earth,

15 and wine to gladden the heart of man,

oil to make his face shine,

and bread to strengthen man’s heart.

16 The trees of the Lord are watered abundantly,

the cedars of Lebanon which he planted.

17 In them the birds build their nests;

the stork has her home in the fir trees.

18 The high mountains are for the wild goats;

the rocks are a refuge for the badgers.

19 Thou hast made the moon to mark the seasons;

the sun knows its time for setting.

20 Thou makest darkness, and it is night,

when all the beasts of the forest creep forth.

21 The young lions roar for their prey,

seeking their food from God.

22 When the sun rises, they get them away

and lie down in their dens.

23 Man goes forth to his work

and to his labor until the evening.

 

24 O Lord, how manifold are thy works!

In wisdom hast thou made them all;

the earth is full of thy creatures.

25 Yonder is the sea, great and wide,

which teems with things innumerable,

living things both small and great.

26 There go the ships,

and Leviathan which thou didst form to sport in it.

 

27 These all look to thee,

to give them their food in due season.

28 When thou givest to them, they gather it up;

when thou openest thy hand, they are filled with good things.

29 When thou hidest thy face, they are dismayed;

when thou takest away their breath, they die

and return to their dust.

30 When thou sendest forth thy Spirit, they are created;

and thou renewest the face of the earth.

31 May the glory of the Lord endure for ever,

may the Lord rejoice in his works,

32 who looks on the earth and it trembles,

who touches the mountains and they smoke!

33 I will sing to the Lord as long as I live;

I will sing praise to my God while I have being.

34 May my meditation be pleasing to him,

for I rejoice in the Lord.

35 Let sinners be consumed from the earth,

and let the wicked be no more!

Bless the Lord, O my soul!

Praise the Lord!

Anonymous ID: 43c615 April 21, 2019, 9 a.m. No.6263384   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3392 >>3399

10 Reasons we know Christ rose from the dead

 

Tom Hoopes | Apr 18, 2019

 

At Easter we don’t celebrate a myth or a great psychological symbol. We celebrate a historical event.

 

This Sunday is Easter Sunday, the day we celebrate the Resurrection of the Lord.

 

It’s important to understand what the Church claims. The Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson, famous on YouTube, speaks of psychological and symbolic ways he appreciates the resurrection as a great freeing principle, but he says the question of the actual rising of Jesus from the dead is “murky and complicated.”

 

He’s wrong. The question is simple: Was there a point in history in which Jesus Christ was dead and then a point at which he was alive again?

 

On that question, the evidence is very strong: Yes. Jesus literally rose from the dead.

 

1: The argument from Christ’s weakness.

 

It is important to look at the way the New Testament story is told. In several ways, this does not look like a “resurrection myth,” like the story of the Phoenix, which skeptics like Peterson point to.

 

Jesus is not presented as an all-powerful mythic figure who triumphs over foes. He looks rather weak, in fact. “Father if it is possible, let this cup pass from me,” he says. “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” he cries out.

 

After the crucifixion, the heroic figure of Jesus isn’t what loomed in his followers’ mind: His weakness did. The Apostles came back because something extraordinary happened: Their defeated leader rose from the dead.

 

2: The argument from the Apostles’ weakness.

 

If the apostles were making up a religion, they didn’t do it the way most founders of new religions have. They didn’t make themselves look great and worthy of respect. They made themselves look like a train-wreck.

 

“Far from showing us a community seized by a mystical exaltation, the Gospels present us with disciples demoralized (‘looking sad’) and frightened,” says the Catechism. “For they had not believed the holy women returning from the tomb and had regarded their words as an ‘idle tale.’ When Jesus reveals himself to the Eleven on Easter evening, he upbraided them for their unbelief and hardness of heart, because they had not believed those who saw him after he had risen.”

 

If they were making up a religion, they were doing it wrong, giving people reasons not to put faith in them.

 

3: The transformation of Saul.

 

Apart from the Twelve, we have the case of St. Paul. He went from zealous persecutor to zealous preacher after seeing Christ alive. This extraordinary transformation — from someone scandalized by the Christian message to its chief proponent — makes sense if Christ rose. But it makes no sense if he didn’t.

 

Paul returns to his personal resurrection story again and again, even when he is on trial. It fuels his faith; it makes all the difference to him. He even says “If Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is in vain and your faith is in vain” (1 Cor 15:14).

 

He bet everything on the actual Resurrection, and invited us to do the same.

 

4: No early Church debate.

 

The early Church debated many fundamentals, even the nature of the Resurrection, but not the fact of the Resurrection. That was a given.

 

In John’s account, when Peter and he enter the empty tomb they “saw the burial cloths there, and the cloth that had covered his head, not with the burial cloths but rolled up in a separate place.” For John, the sight shows that Jesus wasn’t taken away, and that he didn’t rise like Lazaraus did. Something new had happened. Says the Gospel: “he saw and believed.”

 

5: The faith of the martyrs.

 

Christians, from the Church’s first days to our own day, have been willing to die for their conviction that Christ rose from the dead. For them, the Resurrection isn’t a sweet dream that they indulge in, but a hard reality they suffer and die for.

 

“He was also truly raised from the dead, his Father quickening him, even as after the same manner his Father will so raise up us who believe in him by Christ Jesus,” said the martyr Ignatius. He was torn apart by lions in the year 108 for believing that.

 

“He who raised him up from the dead will raise up us also, if we do his will, and walk in his commandments, and love what he loved,” wrote the martyr Polycarp. He was burned at the stake in 155 for his beliefs.

 

(cont.)

Anonymous ID: 43c615 April 21, 2019, 9:01 a.m. No.6263391   🗄️.is 🔗kun

(cont.)

 

6: The “inconsistent” accounts.

 

Gospel writers included different details and material from different sources — all of which mention the fact of the Resurrection. We have the story of Emmaus, the story of the breakfast by the sea, Thomas helpfully establishing that Jesus still had wounds, the story of Mary Magdalene, and more. These many stories all attest to the same fact of the Resurrection.

 

Bible skeptics point out the discrepancies between the various accounts, while Bible defenders show how they can coexist.

 

The larger point is often lost: They read like different peoples’ experience of the same event, not like a conscious effort by a group to make something up.

 

7: The eyewitnesses.

 

In his letter to the Corinthians, which many scholars date at around A.D. 53, St. Paul spoke of how Christ appeared, alive, to 500 at once. If it weren’t true, it would be impossible to make that claim so soon after the event occurred.

 

When Paul talks about the Resurrection again and again, there are two facts that are important to him: That the tomb is empty, and Jesus has appeared to many. They are both compelling pieces of evidence because they would be relatively easy for his audiences to disprove.

 

8: Non-Christian historical accounts.

 

There is actually quite a bit of evidence about the existence of Jesus in such ancient sources as Tacitus, Pliny the Younger, Josephus, the Babylonian Talmud, and the Greek satirist Lucian of Samosata. They all mention various aspects of Jesus’ life.

 

Josephus, the Jewish historian, wrote a history in the year 93 that mentions that Jesus was crucified and appeared alive afterwards to his followers. Though the text is questioned by some scholars, there are multiple versions that retain the essential fact of Jesus dying and then somehow resurfacing, alive.

Read more: Josephus, the first-century Jewish historian who wrote about Jesus

 

Tacitus mentions Jesus also, citing his crucifixion as having proved unable to stop the “superstition” of Christianity.

 

However the debate about the various texts turns out, Tacitus’ point is a good one. Why wouldn’t Jesus’ crucifixion end his religious movement? Because he rose from the dead.

 

9: Jesus didn’t die again.

 

Not only does the evidence support Jesus’ Resurrection — it supports his ultimate claim, that he is divine.

 

Others have returned from brief death in our own time, and from longer death in New Testament stories. “Christ’s Resurrection is essentially different,” says the Catechism. “In his risen body he passes from the state of death to another life beyond time and space. At Jesus’ Resurrection his body is filled with the power of the Holy Spirit: he shares the divine life in his glorious state, so that St. Paul can say that Christ is “the man of heaven.”

 

Jesus rose never to die again. Because of that, we see …

 

10: The rise of a historical religion.

 

Christianity spread and grew despite persecution not because of the power of the Apostles’ personalities or the perks of the faith — the Apostles were weak and there were penalties, not perks — but because of the Resurrection experience of the early Christians.

 

The historical fact of the Resurrection of Christ, in his glorified body, is the building block for every dimension of the Catholic faith.

 

At Easter we don’t celebrate a myth or a great psychological symbol. We celebrate the historical event that is the foundation of all of our hope and joy and happiness.

 

He is truly risen. Our faith is not in vain.