Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life

Clothed With Power (Easter)

31 min
Apr 3, 202626 days ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

Tim Keller examines the resurrection of Jesus as a paradigm-shattering historical event that serves as the key to understanding all of Scripture and offers the strongest possible message of hope. Through Luke's Gospel account, Keller argues the resurrection is not symbolic but a literal, verifiable fact that fundamentally reframes how we understand salvation, the future, and the deepest longings of the human heart.

Insights
  • The resurrection functions as interpretive lens for all Scripture—without understanding Christ's resurrection, the Old Testament's seemingly contradictory messages about a suffering servant and kingly Messiah remain incomprehensible
  • Historical verification matters theologically—details like Jesus eating fish and women as first witnesses are not symbolic flourishes but evidence of literal bodily resurrection that cannot be dismissed as legend
  • The resurrection offers restoration, not mere consolation—Christianity promises not just spiritual comfort but the restoration of lost life and the life one always wanted, addressing the deepest human fear of irretrievable loss
  • Belief in resurrection directly challenges competing worldviews—it shatters paradigms of materialism, religious pluralism, and impersonal continuation, making it inconvenient but unavoidable for those who accept it as historical fact
  • Personal identity and relational continuity are central to Christian hope—the promise is not absorption into an impersonal force but the preservation of personhood and the ability to love and be loved eternally
Trends
Growing tension between symbolic/metaphorical and literal interpretations of religious texts in contemporary theologyShift in apologetic strategy from philosophical arguments to historical evidential claims about resurrection accountsIncreasing emphasis on embodied, material eschatology rather than purely spiritual afterlife concepts in Christian teachingRecognition that competing worldviews (materialism, pantheism, pluralism) leave fundamental human longings for love and continuity unaddressedIntegration of personal narrative and existential philosophy into theological discourse to address modern skepticismReframing of historical reliability of Gospel accounts as central to theological authority rather than peripheral concern
Topics
Resurrection of Jesus Christ as historical eventHermeneutics of Gospel accounts and literal vs. symbolic interpretationMessianic prophecy and Old Testament fulfillmentSubstitutionary atonement theologyEschatology and the future resurrection bodyProblem of suffering and theodicyReligious pluralism vs. Christian exclusivityMaterialism and secular worldview critiquePersonal identity and continuity after deathWomen as witnesses in Gospel accountsSacrificial system and Temple theologyNew covenant theologyHope as theological categoryDeath and human finitudeLove and relational personhood
Companies
Costco
Used as illustrative example of receipt verification system to explain how resurrection proves Christ's payment for sin
People
Timothy Keller
Primary speaker delivering Easter sermon on the resurrection and its theological implications
Paul
Case study used to demonstrate how resurrection understanding reinterprets entire Old Testament Scripture
Epicurus
Ancient Greek philosopher cited as representative of materialist worldview denying future beyond death
Kathy
Personal anecdote about Lake Erie cottage memories used to illustrate human experience of irretrievable loss
Quotes
"The resurrection of Jesus Christ is not a symbol. It is a paradigm shattering historic fact."
Timothy KellerEarly in sermon
"If Jesus was raised from the dead, your feelings about those parts of the Bible are not relevant. Historical facts are often inconvenient, but you can't dismiss them."
Timothy KellerMid-sermon
"The deepest desire of your heart is not just to continue. It's to love and to be loved. Only persons can love."
Timothy KellerLate in sermon
"The resurrection means not just the consolation, but the restoration. And not just the restoration of what you had, but the life you always wanted but never did have."
Timothy KellerConclusion section
"Jesus Christ is risen indeed. Hallelujah."
Timothy KellerFinal statement
Full Transcript
Welcome to Gospel and Life. Is there a hope strong enough to face our biggest fears? Luke's Gospel presents the resurrection of Jesus as a historical fact that has the power to transform our lives. In today's sermon, Tim Keller invites us to consider how the resurrection reframes the entire story of the Bible and offers a hope that's greater than our deepest fears and longings. The reading is taken from Luke 24 verses 36 through 49. While they were still talking about this, Jesus himself stood among them and said to them, Peace be with you. They were startled and frightened, thinking they saw a ghost. He said to them, Why are you troubled and why do doubts rise in your minds? Look at my hands and my feet. It is I myself. Touch me and see. Ghost does not have flesh and bones, as you see I have. When he had said this, he showed them his hands and feet. And while they still did not believe it because of joy and amazement, he asked them, Do you have anything here to eat? They gave him a piece of broad fish and he took it and ate it in their presence. He said to them, This is what I told you while I was still with you. Everything must be fulfilled that is written about me and the law of Moses, the prophets and the Psalms. Then he opened their minds so they could understand the scriptures. He told them, This is what is written. The Messiah will suffer and rise from the dead on a third day and repentance for the forgiveness of sins will be preached in his name to all nations beginning in Jerusalem. You are witnesses of these things. I am going to send you what my father has promised, but stay in the city until you have been clothed with power from on high. The word of the Lord. Now Easter is too marvelous for words, but we are going to have to take a crack at it. Luke chapter 24 is one of the four accounts of the resurrection in the four gospels in the New Testament. And Luke 24 covers the entire day, the first verses talk about what happened in the morning when the empty tomb was being discovered. The middle of the chapter talks about Jesus appearing after his resurrection to two disciples on the road to Emmaus. That happened in the middle of the day. It is in the middle of the chapter. But the last part of the chapter, the part that you just had read to you, talks about what happened that evening when Jesus appeared to his disciples. In that meeting he said a number of things and let's draw them out. Here are three things we can learn about the resurrection of Jesus Christ from what happened that night. First of all, we learn here that the resurrection of Jesus Christ is a paradigm shattering historical event. It is a paradigm shattering historical event. Now it is very common today to say, well, the stories of Jesus resurrection are wonderful stories, but they didn't really happen. They didn't literally happen. We shouldn't try to read these passages. Literally, they were written to symbolize the kind of life we should live. They were written to symbolize that even though as dark as things get, there's always a dawn. As bad as things get, we must always live in hope. So there's one minister, by the way, who when he preached at Easter, he entitled it, Emmaus never happened. Emmaus always happens. See that? What he's saying is, well, the resurrection on the road to Emmaus and these stories didn't actually happen, but they symbolize a way to live that we can live now. We can live with hope. Okay, so let's take that theory and say, so that's the reason why Luke wrote this. What was Luke trying to tell us about how to live by this incident? Jesus said, do you have anything here to eat? And they gave him a piece of broiled fish and he took it and ate it in their presence. Okay, so what are we supposed to learn about how to live from that? Avoid fatty foods. What could that possibly symbolize? What lesson in how to live life could that possibly symbolize? The answer is it doesn't symbolize anything. It couldn't symbolize anything like that. Why did Luke write it? It's evidence. It's evidence. Look, Jesus wasn't hungry, verse 41, and they didn't believe. He appeared to them and they didn't believe, which makes perfect sense. If this happened, of course, he appears, they don't believe, and he says, all right, do you have anything here to eat? And they gave him a piece of broiled fish and he took it and he ate it in their presence. You know what he's trying to do? Anywhat Luke, why Luke is telling us this? This part of what happened and you know what Jesus is trying to do? He's trying to say, I am not a symbol. I am not a phantom. I have flesh and bones. Look at me, I'm eating. This is really happening, people. That's what he's saying. It's a historical event. Now we don't have the time, I don't have the time, actually, to show you all the reasons why you cannot read these accounts as symbolic representations of principles of living, but rather you have to take them as they are, which are what they are. Is there historic accounts, historical accounts in full cry claiming that Jesus Christ was raised from the dead in time and space and history? I mean, there's a whole lot of things about the passages that tell you they were not written as legends. They can't be taken as legends in the one we often mention, which I think is fair to mention. If you notice that if you read every single one of the accounts in the Gospels, women are the first eyewitnesses. We know that the ancient readers would have been very prejudiced against women as first eyewitnesses because they had such low status and therefore there's no plausible reason why these accounts would have the women as the witnesses unless they were. There's no plausible reason why they would have been included if you were making them up. And there's many, many, many other examples of why you have to take these things as historic records, historic accounts, not as symbols. What does that mean? Just this. This is a paradigm shattering historical event. Why? Because historic events, facts are always paradigm shattering. We want to believe this. We want to believe this. But here's the fact. It's very inconvenient. We wish it wasn't there. But there it is. And it shatters our paradigms. What do I mean? Well, for example, is your paradigm that this life is all there is? When you die, that's it. So you better just live your life the best you can. But when you die, that's it. This life is all there is. This shatters that paradigm. It says, no, that's not true. Or is your paradigm, well, I don't know if there is a God or not, but if there is a God, he or it is remote and I don't have to deal with them, no. If Jesus was raised from the dead, that shatters that paradigm. He's come to you and he wants you to deal with him. Or if your paradigm is, well, all religions are basically alike. They're all alike. They basically all teach that you should live a good life and love people. But this shatters that paradigm. It says, no, if Jesus Christ is the resurrected Son of God, then salvation comes through him. See people are always saying to me, probably to you, people are always saying, well, there's parts of the Bible I just don't accept. There's parts of the Bible I just struggle with. I feel like they're regressive and I just can't be a Christian because there's many things in the Bible I don't like. Well, if Jesus was raised from the dead, your feelings about those parts of the Bible are not relevant. See historical facts are often inconvenient, often discourage, but you can't dismiss them. And so if Jesus was raised from the dead, then you're just going to have to deal with the things the Bible says that you don't like. The resurrection of Jesus Christ is not a symbol. It is a paradigm shattering historic fact, point one. We learn that from the very beginning where he's eating the fish and he's saying a spirit doesn't have flesh and bones. Second thing though he does is he shows us that the resurrection of Jesus Christ is the key to understand the message of the entire Bible. See in the beginning, in the middle he says, the law of Moses, the prophets and the Psalms are all about me. And then it says, then he opened their minds so they could understand the Scriptures, verse 45. What do you mean? He opened their mind to understand the Scriptures. He'd been with them for years. Why didn't he teach them this before? And the answer is not until they saw him risen from the dead could they understand the message of the whole Bible. You say why is that? Well, let me show you. And let me give you a case study, the apostle Paul. Now Paul, before he became named Paul, was Saul. He was a Jewish theologian. He was a religious leader. He knew what we would call today the Old Testament. He knew the Hebrew Scriptures inside and out. He knew the law. He knew the of Moses, the prophets and the Psalms inside out. And when he heard that the claim that Jesus was the Messiah, he thought it was crazy. And most Jews thought it was crazy. Why? Well, it's understandable. The Hebrew Scriptures are all about a Messiah coming, but the word Messiah means anointed one, means chosen in love by God. So whoever the Messiah was, that Messiah would be blessed by God. God would support him. God would be with him. But this Jesus Christ was crucified. He was hung on a tree. Wasn't he hung on a tree? The Romans and the Jews both said that only the lowest of the lower hung on a tree. The book of Deuteronomy, the Old Testament says, cursed it is he who is hung on a tree. And when Jesus was dying, didn't he cry out, my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Didn't he cry out that God had abandoned him? How could he be with a Messiah? The Messiah, God would not abandon the Messiah. God wouldn't curse the Messiah. He would bless the Messiah. He'd be with the Messiah. So what kind of fools do you take us for, the Jews said? The idea that Jesus Christ could be the Messiah, he couldn't be the Messiah. He was cursed. He was abandoned. What kind of salvation could he bring? And then on the road to Damascus, Paul met the risen Christ. The divine glory flashed around him. He heard the great voice. And he said, who are you, Lord? And to his absolute astonishment, his eternal astonishment, the voice said, I am Jesus. And he was struck blind, if you remember the story. And he struck blind and he ended up spending several days in Damascus just thinking about what had happened until he was healed and he became a great preacher of the gospel. And he began to immediately preach that all of the law of Moses and the prophets and Psalms all pointed to Jesus Christ, which means when he was blind and he had that time to think, he was thinking. And you know what he was thinking? This is a little speculative, but it must have been something like that, like what I'm about to tell you. Because we know it because of the way in which he preached the rest of the New Testament. He's sitting there saying, wait a minute, Jesus has risen from the dead. I saw him. So God vindicated Jesus. He blessed Jesus. God was with Jesus. He is the Messiah, but wait a minute, then what was he doing dying on the cross? And what was he doing being cursed and abandoned on the cross? He couldn't have been being cursed and abandoned for his sins. He must have been for someone else's sins. And then suddenly, probably, Paul started thinking through everything else in the Bible that he knew. Look at the book of Isaiah. The Bible, the book of Isaiah is all about the Messiah, but the first half of Isaiah is about a strong, kingly Messiah. But the second half of Isaiah is about this suffering servant figure who suffers for the sins of his people. Wait a minute, how could they both be the same person? Oh, wait a minute. In Jesus, who was a suffering servant died for the sins of his people and then resurrected Lord. And what about all the Old Testament sacrificial system of the Tabernacle and the Temple and all the sacrifices? How could the blood of bulls and goats and animals and lambs atone for sin? Well, they really couldn't unless they were pointing to something. Oh, to this. And what about Jeremiah and Ezekiel? They prophesied for a new covenant that someday God would make a new covenant with his people. And the Spirit of God would be put right into us. And we would know him personally. We wouldn't seem to need high priests anymore or sacrifice their temples anymore. How could that be? Oh, oh, Jesus. And then what about the promise to Abraham in the Old Testament? Well, God comes and says, Abraham, I'm not just going to bless you and give you descendants, but through your descendants, all the nations of the earth will be blessed. How could that be? Through Jesus. Paul expected a strong Messiah for the strong. He expected a Messiah to come and get it together in army and to, you know, break skulls and do things. And the strong who followed him and were faithful and were good and virtuous, they would be rewarded with salvation. He expected a strong Messiah for this song, strong. But when he saw that Jesus was risen from the dead and from the vantage point of the resurrection, rethought everything else in the Bible, the whole Bible started to hang together and make sense. It was a weak Messiah who was going to come in weakness and go to the cross and die as our substitute, die in our place, take our sins upon him and die in our place so that the weak, those who admit their weak, those who admit their sinners, that they need to be saved by sheer grace can receive that salvation. What is my purpose in life? What is a good life? And why does the world feel so broken? In the Gospels, Jesus meets people who are asking these very questions. And when Jesus responds, their lives are changed in unexpected ways. In his book, Encounters with Jesus, Tim Keller explores several of these conversations. Looking at Jesus' interactions with everyone from a skeptical student to a religious insider to a social outcast, Dr. Keller shows how these encounters with Jesus can uniquely address the big questions and doubts we still face today. Encounters with Jesus is our thank you for your gift this month to help Gospel and Life share the hope of the Gospel with more people. Request your copy today when you make a gift at gospelandlife.com. That's gospelandlife.com. Now here's Tim Keller with the remainder of today's teaching. You see, only when you understand the resurrection does all of that make sense. That's the reason why he says, then he opened their minds so they could understand the scriptures. That's when he taught them. Do you understand this? Have you learned this? Do you see that the resurrection is the key to understanding all of the scripture? All of it. Okay, last. See, the resurrection is a paradigm-shattering historical event, and it's the key to understanding all the scriptures. But lastly, it's the strongest message of hope possible. It's the strongest message of hope for the world possible. Because the last part of the passage, we see Jesus saying, now I'm going to send you into the world with what? Here's the message. The Messiah will suffer and rise from the dead on the third day. Repentance and forgiveness is what will be preached in his name to all nations, and you are witnesses and I'm sending you out. This is the great message that he's sending people out with, and it's a message of hope. Now why do I call it a message of hope? Let me show you. First of all, hope has to do with the future, right? That's what hope's about, the future. And here's why this is the strongest possible message of hope. First of all, Jesus' resurrection shows us that the future is there, that it's personal, that it's certain, and that it's unimaginably wonderful. First of all, that the future is there. What do I mean? Well, even back in those days, there was one of the great Greek philosophers named Epicurus who said, when you die, that's it. There's no future beyond this life. And of course today, many people say that. That when you die, it's it. It's over. It's like clicking off the off, you know, on switch, off switch. You're just not there. Nothing to be afraid of. There's no pain. It's just gone. There's nothing. In other words, there's no future beyond this dark, difficult life. You know, our life is nasty, brutish, and short. Is there any future beyond the darkness, the fragility of this life? And Epicurus and many people today say, no, there is no future. There's no future. But if you believe the eyewitnesses to the resurrection, if you believe that Jesus Christ was risen from the dead, then you know that you are not just dust in the wind. And you know that you're not just a stone that's fallen to the bottom, never to be seen again. That the future is there. That's the first thing. But not all. The second part of this message is not just that the future is there. The resurrection doesn't just tell you the future is there, but secondly, that the future is personal. See, back in those days and today, there are many people who say, well, well, well, when you die, you continue. Of course you continue. But you live on in the earth, or you live on in the all soul. I mean, one version of saying, well, you do continue is Lion King. Don't you remember Lion King? All right? It says, well, yes, you die, but then you become part of the circle of life because you become part of the soil, which fertilizes the soil so that the plants can grow and then the animals meet the plants and then we eat the animals and we die and we become part of the circle of life. So when you die, you continue. You continue. You're part of the circle of life. Eastern religions put a little differently. When you die, you become part of the all soul. Other people say you're stardust. We're just become part of the dust, you know, and we're stardust. That's what we're all made of. All right. Generally when people say, oh, you continue, you become part of the great circle of life. There's nothing to be afraid of. Generally, let's be honest. The deepest desire of your heart is not just to continue. It's to love and to be loved. The deepest desire of your heart is to love and be loved and that can only happen if you're a person. Persons can love. Only persons can love. And therefore to say, well, when you die, that's it. Or when you die, you know, you become part of things but you're not personal. You know, when you die, you become part of the circle of life. You think that's any kind of solace? Listen, if that's true, if there is no future or there is no personal future for you, then here's what death is doing. Death is taking, if you live long enough, almost every person that you care about, every loved one away from you. And then when you die, it strips you of your ability to love and be loved. In other words, death has the ability to strip you of everything that matters to you. And we're not supposed to be afraid of it? There's no solace in saying, well, we continue. Or when you die, that's it. There's really nothing, you know, there's nothing to be afraid of. You don't feel anything. Nothing to be afraid of? There's no solace in that unless Jesus Christ was risen from the dead and He was. Because notice what He says? He says, it's I myself. See that in verse 39? It is me. I'm not just part of the life force. I still have my personal identity. It's the identity. It's still me. It's the one that you knew before. And now we know, I know you now. The one thing you want more than anything, the thing your heart wants more than anything is to love and be loved and to know that you're going to love and be loved in the future, forever. And the thing that you most want will never be taken away from you. That's the deepest need of your heart. Unless you believe in the resurrection of Jesus Christ, that need goes unfulfilled. Well, we're not done. It's one thing to say, the future is certain. Excuse me, the future is there and the future is personal. But the resurrection also tells me this future is certain. See there are religions that say, well yes, you can live in heaven personally, but you've got to be good. You've got to be virtuous. You better live a good life and see that. Oh my goodness, oh my goodness. What about that? I mean, who's living a good enough life? But the resurrection is proof that when Jesus Christ died to pay the penalty for our sin, that He did it. He did it. If you go into prison for, you know, if you have, if there's a law that says, if you break this law, you must go to prison for five years. When you're done with the five years, they let you out. Why? Because you've fulfilled, you've paid it. And when Jesus Christ went into death and then He was raised, what does that mean? He paid it. It's like a receipt. Kathy and I love to go to Costco in Queens. On the East River in Queens, sort of where Long Island City and Astoria come together, I'm not sure which it is. This is a great little place and it's a great spot. We go to Costco. And when you go toward the door with a merchandise, there are a couple of staff people who say, stop. And then you have to say, here's my receipt. Let me through. And then they look at the receipt and they say, all right, you may go through. Now, actually, reality, it's more cordial than that really. You know, it's really, you just hand in the receipt. But here's the point. They want proof that you've paid it all. And of course, what the resurrection is, is a gigantic receipt, that there's no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus, that it's all been paid. And the future is not just there and it's not just personal, but it's certain. And lastly, it's unimaginably wonderful. See, this is where the resurrection of Jesus Christ, like I said, it's the greatest possible message of hope. It's not just saying that there is a future and not just saying that the future is personal. We don't just continue. And not just even to say that it's certain, but it's not just a spiritual future, actually. See other religions will say, well, you go and you live in heaven forever and you have this bliss. And this bliss is a consolation for all the suffering you've had and a consolation for the life that you've lost. But the resurrection is about bodies. Jesus says, it's really me. I've got flesh and blood. Look, give me a fish. I can eat. And that's the future. See, the future that Christianity offers, the end result of Jesus' salvation is a new heavens and new earth, a renewed material creation. And what this means is, the resurrection means not just that you get some kind of spiritual consolation for the life that you've lost, but you get the restoration of the life you've lost. In fact, you get the restoration of the life you never even had, but wanted. Jesus just didn't get his old body back. He got a new body. He got a body. You don't just get a new, your old body back in the resurrection. You get the body you always wanted and you get the life you always wanted. Edgar Allan Poe's poem, The Raven, is about this raven that keeps just saying over and over again, never more. And you know, people debate about what it means, but it's a dark poem, obviously. Edgar Allan Poe, but the idea behind never more is that that is in, that is in a nutshell, the tragedy of life. There's a kind of death in the midst of life that you, you experience more and more as time goes on. And that is when you lose something in this life, it seems irretrievably lost. The irretrievability of life is a kind of death in the midst of life. And as the years go by, it just crushes you. You lose it, you've lost it, we'll never come back. You have opportunities that you missed, you'll never get them again. You have, you lose your youth, it'll never come back to you. You lose a relationship, it'll never come back to you. Kathy and I, Kathy knows that probably the time in her life in which she was happiest was two weeks a year she went with her family to a little cottage on the shores of Lake Erie. And all through her childhood and inter-arrival lessons and beyond that, the two weeks of the year when she was the happiest, the happiest times of her life were at that cottage. And not some years ago, Kathy and I went by to see, you know, the site. And not only are the cottages gone, but the beach is gone. That part of the beach is eroded. And there's this sense of irretrievability. But listen, not if the resurrection is true. The resurrection means not just the consolation, but the restoration. And not just the restoration of what you had, but the life you always wanted but never did have. Listen, some of you are saying things like this, well, I always wished I were married, but now I'm not going to be married. I've never was, I'm never going to have the happiness and the bliss that other people I've seen had. So it's gone. It's over. It's never going to happen to me. If the resurrection of Jesus Christ is true and you believe in Him, you are not going to miss out on anything because the future is unimaginably wonderful. Do you believe Jesus Christ was raised from the dead? If you don't, and yet you see, I hope right now, there is no greater hope possible. The human heart wants this and there is nothing that can answer the deepest needs of the human heart other than the resurrection of Jesus Christ. And even if you don't believe that Jesus was raised from the dead, you should wish He were raised from the dead. You should want that He was raised from the dead. And if you don't want it, I don't think you are in touch with your own heart. This is the hope that your heart needs and wants. And the hope will not disappoint you because Jesus Christ is risen indeed. Hallelujah. Let us pray. Our Father, thank you for giving us this wonderful hope, the hope of the resurrection of Jesus. Make us able to bask in it today, to soak in it today, let it sink down into our hearts so that we have a poise and a joy that just doesn't go out. Change us with the hope that's the purpose of it until we experience it in its fullness and we see you face to face. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen. Thanks for listening to today's teaching. It's our prayer that you are encouraged by it and that it helps you apply the gospel to your life and share it with others. For more gospel-centered resources from Tim Keller, visit Gospelandlife.com. There you can subscribe to the Life in the Gospel Quarterly Journal. When you do, you will also receive free articles, sermons, devotionals, and other helpful resources. Again, it's all at Gospelandlife.com. You can also stay connected with us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and X. Today's sermon was recorded in 2014. The sermons and talks you hear on the Gospel and Life Podcast were recorded between 1989 and 2017, while Dr. Keller was Senior Pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.