The Resurrection isn't a private religious experience; it is a public, historical revolution.
In this episode of Ascension on Air, Ben Berger explores the core foundation of the early Christian message: an astounding claim that refused to be relegated to the realm of myth or metaphor. We move past "fuzzy spirituality" to examine the rigorous, technical transmission of the Gospel as recorded in 1 Corinthians 15.
The early Christians didn’t spread a feeling; they documented an event. We look at the "Chain of Custody"—the formal process of receiving and passing on a message where integrity was paramount and facts were verifiable. In a world that often prefers to swap the biological for the digital or the physical for the "spiritual," we defend the radical claim that Jesus Christ truly, bodily rose from the grave.
Key points in this episode:
The Formal Transmission: How the earliest Christian message was handled like a legal record—received, guarded, and passed on as a matter of first importance.
Public Truth vs. Private Feeling: Why the eyewitness nature of the early movement made the Resurrection a testable claim rather than a "game of telephone."
The Philosophical Conflict: How the reality of a risen body challenged the Greek ideas of the past and challenges the digital "afterlife" of our present.
The Inescapable Reality: Why the transformation of the early church—and the transformation of the apostle Paul—serves as a permanent witness to an event that happened in history, not in a corner.
This is the central confession of the Christian faith. It is anchored in history, substantiated by testimony, and remains the most astounding truth in existence: He died. He was buried. He rose.
1 Corinthians 15:1-11
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