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Week Eleven: 1 Corinthians 15: 1-34

March 31, 2022 • Jaime Carnaggio • 1 Corinthians 15:1–34

• Paul reminds us we’re being saved by the gospel. Our salvation isn't just a past reality, accomplished on the cross, once-for-all. It has present significance, the gospel saves and sanctifies us, transforms us and guides us every day.
• The eyewitnesses of Jesus’ resurrection validated that it really happened, it wasn't just an allusion or an urban legend. It was a real, unmistakable event that happened in history. He really is who he said he is.
• "God’s moment-by-moment, ever-arriving grace fueled Paul’s obedience. God’s unmerited, transforming GRACE is the decisive doer in ALL of Paul’s work.” John Piper
• We have faith in the gospel both with our left-brain and right brain – we believe because it’s a historical reality, we trust that these things truly occurred, but we also believe because we EXPERIENCE it . . . because God burns the gospel deep into our hearts, changing us forever. We CANNOT encounter God’s grace and remain unchanged. We are who we are because of God’s grace.
• Paul makes it clear that, without the resurrection, the gospel completely falls apart. Without the resurrection, there is no gospel at all. Tim Keller says, "The gospel can’t survive a dead Savior. Everything hangs on whether or not Christ came out of the tomb.”
• The reality of Christ’s resurrection means that we, too, will be resurrected. We can be certain of our salvation, of our future victory over death . . . even though we’re still waiting for all things to be put under Christ’s feet. John Piper says, “we can sleep the sleep of the saved and thankful.”
• “If Jesus rose from the dead, then you have to accept all that he said: if he didn’t rise from the dead, then why worry about any of what he said? If Jesus didn’t defeat death, every claim he ever made is proven false. If Christ is risen, then nothing else matters. And if Christ isn’t risen – then nothing else matters. The resurrection is the hinge upon which the story of the world pivots.” Tim Keller