{"id":36643,"date":"2018-10-27T06:31:26","date_gmt":"2018-10-27T06:31:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/karyncanteesstagg.com\/?p=36643"},"modified":"2023-09-04T17:21:21","modified_gmt":"2023-09-04T17:21:21","slug":"the-jesus-mystery-fact-or-fiction","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/karyncanteesstagg.com\/2018\/10\/27\/the-jesus-mystery-fact-or-fiction\/","title":{"rendered":"The Jesus Mystery"},"content":{"rendered":"
Sometimes I do the dumbest things.<\/p>\n
The last time I was in Florida, I was sitting in the shallow part of the ocean atop a ceramic plate from the bathroom of our hotel, praying it wouldn\u2019t break as delicate waves broke over my legs and passed me. I was trying to protect my bathing suit from the onslaught of sand that had slammed me the previous day.<\/p>\n
You\u2019d think I\u2019d never been to the ocean.<\/p>\n
I chronicle this crazy story as a reminder of the way God sometimes works. Because sitting in those cascading waves, reverential to the mysteries of God, awed by an expanse of water sustaining creatures and oddities that leave even scientists baffled, a thought came to me. It seemed crazy even to me. And my imagination makes vivid seem dull.<\/p>\n
Metaphorically, the ceramic plate represented the Ten Commandments, the only thing in the Bible written by God\u2019s hand. And I imagined them, not on a slab of stone, but on that plate! Like the Israelites obedience to the Commandments, the plate was supposed to protect me from the sand, or rather, the metaphor the sand now represented\u2014sin! Certainly, these aren\u2019t original or brilliant metaphors and I wondered what this had to do with anything I hoped to convey.<\/p>\n
Avoiding sin, of course, is as difficult as leaving the beach in a bathing suit free of sand. Yet, while a beach could represent a minefield from Satan for those who believe, there is good news from God. No, that plate of Commandments doesn\u2019t protect us, however, that sinful sand . . . it just vanishes!<\/p>\n
Finally, I had found my story.<\/p>\n
The Bible, with its sixty-six books, was written in two or three languages, had forty authors from at least three continents, and spanned a few thousand years. Extraordinarily, it has one unifying theme: the Christ. The metaphors, poetry and prose beautifully written by Old Testament prophets depict the Messiah as being born of a virgin in the town of Bethlehem of Judea. Someone who would establish King David\u2019s throne forever.<\/p>\n
The prophets portray a miracle-performing Messiah who would live a sinless and humble life, who would teach his followers through parables. They show His triumphant entry into Jerusalem on a donkey, His betrayal for thirty pieces of silver, and His further betrayal by friends. For His kindness, healing power, and love, they show us how He was ultimately despised, scorned, mocked, and tortured to death: His hands and feet pierced, His thirst quenched with vinegar, His side pierced as blood and water flowed. Unlike the two thieves on either side of Him, but like the Jewish Passover Lamb, His bones were unbroken. We see from these prophets that the Messiah\u2019s accusers cast lots for his clothing, and as He died impaled on that stick, He cried out to God, \u201cInto your hands I commit my spirit.\u201d Amazingly, the Psalmist and the prophet Isaiah describe crucifixion hundreds of years before it was ever a means of torture.<\/p>\n
Old Testament prophecies also support the good tidings of the New Testament. The Messiah, who Christians know as Jesus Christ, conquers death, pours out His Holy Spirit, ushers in a new covenant, is a light to the Gentiles, that is, His blood redeems all who believe, everyone not a Jew, but also the Jews.<\/p>\n
Over 300 Messianic prophecies, many depicting a suffering Messiah, are woven throughout the Old Testament, much like a puzzle. Yet, astoundingly, Jesus Christ fulfilled them all! It\u2019s titillating to find them and compare them to New Testament writings, these events that scribes hundreds of years earlier divined. How could the light and life of Jesus be predicted so perfectly unless Jesus is God\u2019s Son, the Christ?<\/p>\n
<\/a>Mathematically, the odds of one person fulfilling even 48 prophecies are one chance in 10 to the 157th power. \u00a0Consider that these Old Testament mysteries, shadowing the Messiah, were more enigmatic than the sea Jesus walked on. Also consider\u2014these mysteries have a path.<\/p>\n God had to lead us through sin and the Ten Commandments and through stunning prophetic anonymities in order to magnify His Son and His divine plan for mankind. From Genesis to Malachi, God carefully uncovered the dignity of Christ\u2019s lowliness, the glory of His majesty, the wonder of His holiness, the depth of His love. And those who, through Holy Spirit, have decrypted these shadows, parables, metaphors, and poetry, know, KNOW, that Jesus is God\u2019s Son.<\/p>\n Once, an atheist friend told me he thought Jesus was a hoax. That the weaving of a Messiah throughout the Old Testament and His resurrection in the New Testament was manufactured. A lie schemed up by men. I replied that if that were true, it would be the most magnificent lie ever conceived. It would involve multitudes of people playing into it over a span of several millennia. It would require men to not only be shunned and maligned, but also tortured and suffering death so they could what? Play this game?<\/p>\n We weren\u2019t led to this point in our lives by a God who isn\u2019t real. He made a path for us. And it isn\u2019t always easy. He implores us to \u201cEnter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the way that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.\u201d His path wasn\u2019t easy either.<\/p>\n