What Does Jesusβ Death Have to Do with Easter?
Is Easter an outdated religious holiday, or is it something more? Why is Jesus’ death such a big deal?
Bunny suitβcheck. Basket of candyβcheck. Egg huntβcheck. Elegant dress or fancy suitβcheck. Reservations at favorite brunch spotβcheck.
Sounds like Easter, doesnβt it?
But while all these traditions might be fun, do they really tell us what Easter is all about? Is it more than a work holiday or an excuse to gather family for an annual picture? Is it just an outdated religious holiday? Or is there more to it?
The History of Easter
Christians believe that Easter is central to their faith. In fact, one of the earliest followers of Jesus declared that without Easter there is no Christianity.1Β So what exactly does Easter celebrate thatβs so important?
Simply put, Easter is the day when Christians commemorate Jesusβ resurrection. Resurrection, as you may know, is the name given to the process by which one who is dead comes back to life.2Β On Easter, Christians remember that Jesus, who they believe died some two thousand years ago, rose from the grave and lived again.
The Significance of Easter
Well, thatβs fascinating, for sure. Someone dying and coming back to life is certainly noteworthyβeven unbelievable. Butβand I mean no disrespectβso what?
Other than being a stunning display of magic or even a miracle, whatβs the big deal about it? Why is Jesusβ resurrection so widely celebrated that it has become a national holiday in many cultures around the world?
Christians believe that Jesusβ death and resurrection are not only important but are central events in all of history. Letβs examine why they think this.
A Broken World
If you look around today, itβs not difficult to see brokenness in the world. But according to both Jewish and Christian tradition, it wasnβt always this way.
When GodΒ created the world, it was good.3Β God and humanity dwelt in perfect harmony, enjoying one anotherβs intimate company. However, in giving humanity the freedom to choose his will or their own, God took a great risk.4
In the end, we chose our own path, turning away from his in the process.5 In doing so, our relationship with God was broken, and weβve been reaping the consequences ever since. The world is not as it should be, as evidenced by theΒ strife, disappointment, and discontent in our lives.
The Story of Godβs Restoration
OK, so the worldβs not the way itβs supposed to be. What does that have to do with Jesus dying?
Well, according toΒ Christian theology, since God is holy, he cannot be in the presence of unholiness; the two cannot mix, much like oil and water. Consequently, humanityβs broken relationship with God has caused lasting alienation from him. And the only way to overcome that alienation is for humanity to choose Godβs perfect wayβto live the way we were meant to in the beginning.
Unfortunately, because weβre infected with a terminal disease called sin, weβre incapable of living in perfection.6
So if weβre alienated from God and cannot live the way weβre supposed to, how can we overcome this brokenness? Put plainly, we canβt.
Because weβre infected to the core, no amount of human effort can reconcile our broken relationship. Remember, oil and waterβperfection and imperfectionβcannot mix. In fact, because of our inability, only God himselfβwho is ableβcan overcome our alienation. God must initiate reconciliation because we cannot.
Jesusβ Role in Godβs Plan
Enter Jesus. TheΒ BibleΒ suggests that Jesus was one with God.7Β And though he was God, he wore human flesh and experienced what we experience. But there was one major exception: Jesus lived a completely holy and sinless life.
Therefore, when Jesus died, he satisfied Godβs requirement of perfection. By living a holy life and dying on our behalf, Jesus reversed the consequences of death.
In a childrenβs parable written as a metaphor for Godβs grand plan of restoration, C. S. Lewis suggested, βWhen a willing victim who had committed no [sin] was killed in [someoneβs] stead . . . Death itself would start working backwards.β8
Through this act, Jesus gave humanity a supreme gift. Sent by God, his father, he lived the perfect life that we humans could not live. Then he died on our behalf. In so doing, he gave his perfect life to us, so that we could be reconciled to God and experience life as it was meant to be.9
The Logic of Jesusβ Death
Thatβs a lengthy narrative to consider. So, at the risk of oversimplification, hereβs an abbreviated, logical explanation for Jesusβ death:
- God is holy; humanity is not.10
- Holiness and unholiness cannot coexist.
- This opposition causes infinite brokenness in humanityβs relationship with God.11
- Because weβre incapable of holy living as a result of sin, God must satisfy that requirement on our behalf.
- Jesusβwho is one with Godβlived a holy, sinless life.
- Jesus died on our behalf, and by satisfying the requirement of holiness, he reversed the effects of our broken relationship with God, making reconciliation and connection with him possible forever.12
Debt-Free Living
This is the beauty of Christianityβhumanity does not have to pay the debt for its sin because God himself has done it through Jesus. This is what Christians mean when they say that Jesus paid it all for their sins.
Observance of the Easter holiday is done in recognition and celebration of the fact that God himselfβthrough the person of Christβloved us enough to enable humanity to experience restored relationship with its creator, now and forever.
Naar het orginele artikel van exploregod.com.