Pontius Pilate was the prefect of
the Roman province of Judea AD 26-36. He is most known for the trial and crucifixion
of Christ. Pilate asked
him (Jesus), “So you are a king?”
Jesus answered, “You say that I am a king. For this I was born, and for this I
came into the world, to testify to the truth. Everyone who belongs to the truth
listens to my voice.” Pilate asked him, “What is
truth?” (John 18: 37-38). After asking that profound question,
Pilate did not wait for a reply; he simply walked away. As was true then, we
often ask “What is truth?” Like Pilate, we often consider it a rhetorical
question. We do not expect an answer. We also walk away because we believe that
truth is not the same for everyone. Yet, we seem to recognize the truth, when
we hear it. At least, we believe we can recognize it. How can we know the truth
about God? Here is an excerpt from A
Journey Toward Perfection, which addresses that question:
"The life of the
man called Jesus of Nazareth is well documented not only by Biblical sources,
but also by Jewish and Roman historians and scholars. Various ancient writings
verify that He lived 2,000 years ago and was crucified with criminals. His
brief three year ministry changed the world forever. Was He a prophet, a wise
man, a good man, or actually the Son of God as He claimed? What was it about
this man that caused so many to follow Him and even be willing to die for Him? Those
who believe Jesus was simply a good man, wise man or a prophet must still be
able to explain why He would claim to be the Son of God. This contradicts sound
judgment. Today, a man who might claim to be the Son of God would be considered
mentally unstable, at the very least, possibly even insane. Jesus is an enigma
to many, yet to Christians, He is the Son of God, part of the Godhead, part of the
Holy Trinity. This is difficult for our limited minds to fathom, yet as Christians,
this is our faith. We believe that Christ was fully God and fully man, our Creator
and our Savior.
During His
three-year ministry, the disciples traveled with Him day and night. They knew
Him intimately, and they believed His claims. They believed that Christ was God,
one person of the Trinity. The disciples believed Him so faithfully that they willingly
died horrible deaths rather than renounce their faith. They believed He rose from
the dead on the third day. They claimed to have seen Him bodily after His
resurrection, not as a spirit, and claimed to have eaten and drank with Him. If
the Roman and Jewish leaders wanted to dispel the rumors that Christ rose from
the dead, and thereby crush the Christian movement, all they had to do was to
produce His dead body, yet they never could. At first, some claimed that the
disciples stole His body, but this would have been impossible with Roman
Centurions posted to guard the tomb. Besides,
would anyone be willing to die for what they knew to be a lie? This rumor
simply faded away. Instead, the martyred disciples were the lights of the world
that ignited a fire that burns to this day.
To unbelievers, the
resurrection and Christ’s claim to be the Son of God must be the greatest lies
ever perpetrated by one man. To Christians, Jesus is the light to which we are all
drawn. He is the light that gives us hope. He is the light, which even unwittingly
draws unbelievers. That light is centered on love; “He that loveth not, knoweth not God; for God
is love” (I John 4:8). Even unbelievers acknowledge the power of love. God
is the source of love. But why would an all-knowing God descend from His throne
of glory to become a man in a world full of evil, knowing He would be rejected
and even crucified? Christ became man to save us from the curse of sin and to
offer us the gift of eternal life. He became a man to allow us to “see” God or
to know Him, to invite us into a relationship with Him, and to teach us how to
love by being a role model for us.
God dwells in a distant place, in a spiritual dimension. He is not
of this world. We cannot experience Him through our physical senses. Only
certain prophets had firsthand knowledge of God because He chose them. According
to scriptural accounts, He spoke to them, sometimes audibly, and sometimes
through angels, dreams or visions. When Christ became man, He entered our
dimension, our reality. The more we understand Christ, the better we
understand God. “Philip
saith unto him, Lord, show us the Father, and it sufficeth us. Jesus saith unto
him, Have I been so long time with you, and yet hast thou not known me, Philip?
He that hath seen me hath seen the Father” (John 14:8-9). By getting to
know Christ, we can know God!"
© 2017 Helen Kamenos
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