Jesus Stood Here
‘Jesus Stood Here’
The Land of Israel
and our Historical Faith
JOHN STONESTREET
WITH ROBERTO RIVERA
In his album, “Resurrection Letters,” Andrew
Peterson describes, in a song called “Maybe Next Year,” how a visit to Jerusalem made his faith
real like never before. “This is the place where Abraham/cut loose the boy and
he killed the ram instead/And this is the place where Jesus said/you could tear
down the temple and He’d raise it from the dead.”
This song is in my mind because I’m currently
with my wife and ministry colleagues on a tour of Israel. Actually, “tour” is too
weak of a word. Any Christian who’s been to the Holy Land
will attest that coming here is more of a pilgrimage.
We’re hitting all of the major sites—Caesarea,
the Sea of Galilee, the Mount of Olives, Gethsemane, Jerusalem, and of course,
the traditional locations of Jesus’ crucifixion, burial, and resurrection.
Seeing these places, where the events of the
Bible actually took place—not in some dream-time or fictional world, but right
here, on this very soil—well, it’s incredible.
There is actually a place where Jericho once stood. The bluff where King
David built his palace is a real bluff. The mountain where Elijah called down
fire from heaven exists.
And, as we continue to talk about time after
time on BreakPoint, archaeology
continues to validate these accounts. These discoveries not only verify the
truthfulness of the Bible, they remind us how thoroughly grounded the Christian
faith is in actual history.
In just the last year, the existence of the
biblical Philistines and Edomites has been confirmed by new discoveries, as has
the Babylonian conquest of Jerusalem,
and even an obscure official in the court of King Josiah.
But walking where we can prove patriarchs and
prophets walked pales in comparison with walking where Jesus walked. That’s what makes a visit
to Israel
feel most like a pilgrimage. And it’s not just me.
One member of our editorial team tells of how,
during his own visit to Israel
years ago, he went to the synagogue in Capernaum
–which almost certainly stands on the site where Jesus preached and cast out a
demon, as is recorded in Mark 1 and Luke 4. Because of the synagogue’s layout
and size, archaeologists can say, to within a few feet, that “Jesus stood
here.”
Think about that for a second. The God of the
universe in human form, the Word who became flesh, stood here. What a mind-boggling concept! And
what a reminder that Christianity isn’t some subjective religious experience,or
a mere expression of personal piety, as we too often seem to imply.
Many believers, when asked why they accept the Gospel, talk about an
experience or a “personal testimony.” The “I know that Jesus lives because He
lives in my heart” sort of thing, as goes the song.
Now, don’t misunderstand me. I hope God has
captured your heart in such a way that you overflow with personal testimonies
and experiences with God. But pointing to these as the main reasons to believe
in Christianity misses a crucial point: Our faith is true in an objective, historical, and universal sense.
When Christians say the Bible is true, and that
our faith is true, we don’t mean it’s true for
us. We mean it’s true.
We don’t mean it’s true if you accept it. It’s true whether you choose to
accept or reject it. It’s true because two-thousand years ago, the Lord of life
really did walk the soil of this land called Israel, rewriting history and
eternity on behalf of His people everywhere.
That God entered history is verified in the
public, historical, verifiable events recorded in the gospels and professed in
the creeds.
Knowing that our God really did come to dwell
among us should light a fire under our faith. Unfortunately, that cosmos-shaking
detail loses its revolutionary essence far too often. Sometimes it takes
pointing to where He stood on a map, or standing where He did in a synagogue,
for that fire to light us up like it should.
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