Today you sit in the judgement seat. You must make a decision concerning
Jesus Christ. Is He the Son of God, or is He a shrewd charlatan? As a judge, you must
carefully weigh all of the evidence presented.
Often, an eyewitness report is the most powerful testimony. Peter
declared he was an eyewitness of Jesus Christ:
"For we have not followed cunningly devised fables, when we
made known unto you the power and the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were
eyewitnesses of His majesty. For He received from God the Father, honor and glory, when
there came such a voice to Him from the excellent glory, "This is my beloved Son, in
whom I am well-pleased." And this voice which came from heaven we heard, when we were
with Him on the Holy mount. We have also a more sure word of prophecy, whereunto ye do
well that ye take heed, as unto a light that shineth in a dark place, until the day dawn,
and the day star arises in your hearts. Knowing this first, that no prophecy of the
scripture is of any private interpretation. For the prophecy came not in old time by the
will of man, but holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy Ghost."
(II Peter 1:16-21)
The New Testament, for the most part, was written by eyewitnesses of
Jesus Christ's healing power. They wrote of the works He did: healing the lame, the deaf
and the dumb, opening the eyes of the blind, straightening crooked backs and even bringing
the dead back to life. They also witnessed His power over nature. They watched as He
turned water into wine, walked on water, and controlled the elements with just His word,
calming raging winds and the waves of the sea with a command. They bore witness to His
death and resurrection from the dead; and wrote of how He visited with them for some 40
days after His resurrection, teaching them about the power and the glory of God.
They Bore Witness
Peter wrote of actually hearing the voice of God from heaven, declaring
"This is my beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased." Peter and the other writers
of the New Testament were eyewitnesses. They wrote of what they saw and heard. As a judge,
you must determine whether Peter and the others are competent witnesses. Are their
statements reliable? Someone said: "You can't really believe their witness, most of
them were fishermen, and you know what liars fishermen are!" However, it is
interesting that one of these fishermen recorded his own account of how he and the others
fished all night but caught nothing. He didn't even try to tell about "the one that
got away," but frankly confesses the futility of their efforts.
Perhaps the whole thing was a big scheme. Suppose they got together, sat
down and carefully rehearsed their story. They could have repeated it over and over again
to one another and questioned and examined each other until they were sure they all had
the same story. Then they could have gone out and told their carefully concocted tale. But
Peter said, "We have not followed cunningly devised fables when we made known unto
you the power and the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ, but were eyewitnesses of His
majesty." He denied any hint of collusion and declared that their story was true. He
made it known that he was an eyewitness; that he heard God's voice confirming what they
had come to believe: that Jesus was indeed the Messiah, the Savior of the world, the Son
of the living God.
Now if all of this was just an elaborately concocted fable, would all of
them died defending its truth? At least one of them would have broken under the strain of
the threat of death. In fact, even Satan declared: "Skin for skin, yea all that a man
hath will he give for his life" (Job 2:4). His philosophy was that a man would give
everything he had to protect his life, because life itself was the most important thing.
If this is really true, then one of the "eyewitnesses" would have cracked under
the strain, confessed the hoax and saved himself from tortures such as being crucified
upside-down or being dragged through the streets or being stoned or beaten. One of them,
at least, would have tried to save himself. But all of them (with the exception of John,
who died a natural death) were killed for the story they held to be true. They died
because they declared that Jesus was the Messiah, the Son of God, and was indeed risen
from the dead. The tremendous personal risk they took to spread their story makes theirs a
powerful testimony.
The Law of Compound Probability
Although Peter was one of the eyewitnesses, he does not ask that we
believe only his testimony. He says that we should examine evidence even stronger than
eyewitness accounts. He says we have "the more sure word of prophecy." (II Peter
1:19)
For over a thousand years, holy, godly men wrote down the inspirations
that God sent to their hearts, telling of One whom God would send to be the Savior of the
World. They listed His birthplace, the circumstances of His birth, and the events of His
life. They even predicted how He would suffer and the way He would die. Finally, they
wrote of His resurrection.
Examining the records of these holy men of God, we find over 300
stipulations concerning the Messiah and what He would accomplish in His birth, life, death
and resurrection. It is fair to ask about the possibility of one person fulfilling all of
the requirements by just "being in the right place at the right time." There is
a way to compute the chance factor of this occurring.
The scientific "Law of Compound Probabilities" allows us to
accurately calculate the chance of any prophesied event taking place. Each stipulation
added to the prediction lessens the chance of the event's occurrence, because the
possibility of several details coinciding is more remote than the possibility of one event
occurring alone. When 300 details are considered, the chance factor becomes astronomical.
Let's look at the Law of Compound Probability by starting with just eight of the Biblical
prophecies pertaining to the Messiah and calculating the possibility of one man fulfilling
all eight of those requirements.
For instance, Micah 5:2 said Christ would be born in the city of
Bethlehem. The chance of an individual being born in Bethlehem is easy to determine by
taking the average population of Bethlehem since the time of the prophecy in about 725
B.C.it turns out to be about 7,000and comparing it with the average population of the
earthabout 700 million. Divide the second by the first, and you find there is one chance
in 100,000 of being born in Bethlehem.
Then Malachi 3:1 said there would be a forerunner who would go before
Christ to prepare His way. How many men have had a forerunner prepare the hearts of the
people to receive them? Though I can't think of any, let's say one in 1,000. Zechariah 9:9
said Christ would make His triumphant entry into Jerusalem on a donkey. How many of the
great rulers of history have made their triumphant entries on donkeys? I don't know of any
others, but let's say one in 1,000 again, to keep it conservative. Most triumphant entries
are made on something like a majestic stallion or in a great chariot-certainly not on
donkeys. But Zechariah said, "Behold, thy king cometh unto thee; He is just, and
having salvation; lowly and riding upon an ass, and upon a colt, the foal of an ass"
Zechariah also said He would be betrayed for thirty pieces of silver by a friend
(Zechariah 11:12). How many men in history have been betrayed by a friend for exactly
thirty pieces of silver? Again, keeping our estimates low, let's say one in 10,000.
Then Zechariah 11:13 added that the thirty pieces of silver would be
used to buy a potter's field. What are the chances of that coincidence? Let's say one in
100,000, though I don't know of any others in history. Isaiah 53:7 says that, although He
was innocent, He would make no defense. How many innocent men refuse to answer in their
own defense when brought before a court? An innocent man falsely accused wants everyone to
know about his innocencethat's a natural reaction. Still conservative, we'll say only
one man in 10,000 would be silent in the face of false charges. Finally, Psalm 22 said
that both His hands and feet would be pierced. On the average, how many men could you find
with both hands and feet pierced? We'll say one in 10,000.
Multiplying these chance factors according to the Law of Compound
Probability, we establish how many men we would have to look at before we found one who
met all eight stipulations. The number of men would be 10 to the twenty-eighth power, or
10, followed by 28 zeroes. And ours were just conservative estimates! (We can subtract the
total estimated population factor of 10 to the eleventh power, but that still makes the
chance factor one in 10 to the seventeenth power.)
If you had that many silver dollars, you could cover the entire state of
Texas with a layer of silver dollars two feet thickand Texas is a big state! If you
marked one of these silver dollars and let someone roam through them blind-folded, his
chance of coming up with that marked silver dollar would be the same as the chance of one
person just happening to fulfill the eight requirements laid out in the prophecies we
looked at. But there were over 300 stipulations contained in the prophecies! Let's examine
the chance of 16 requirements fulfilled by one man.
Assuming the chance factors for another eight prophecies would be fairly
equal to the factors of the prophecies we examined, there would be one in 10 to the
forty-fifth power, or 10 followed by 45 zeroes. This is a number so vast that, if you had
this many silver dollars, you could make a ball of silver dollars with a diameter which
would be 30 times the distance from the earth to the sun. Can you imagine marking one of
these silver dollars and letting some fellow dive into the pile blindfolded? Can you
imagine him grabbing the dollar you marked, just by chance? The coincidence of this is the
same as the chance of Jesus fulfilling 16 of the prophetic requirements, just by accident.
And again, remember-He fulfilled over 300!
Increase the number to 48 requirements. Now the chance factor increases
to one in 10 followed by 157 zeroes, a number so huge our minds can't really conceive it.
There's no way to make a ball this size of silver dollars. Even if there were enough
silver dollars to make it, the universe is just too small. Let's compare the number to one
of the smallest things we know-an electron. If two and a half quintillion electrons were
placed single file, the line of them would only be an inch long. That would be 2.5 x 10 to
the fifteenth power. To count these electrons would take one person nineteen million years
of counting day and night at the rate of 250 per minute. Imagine how many electrons there
are in a one inch cube three times two and a half quintillion. To count that many would
take fifty-seven million years!
10 to the one hundred and fifty-seventh power electrons make a solid
ball the estimated size of our universe, which has a radius of approximately six billion
light years. In fact, if you could go into mass production and somehow start manufacturing
these balls at the rate of about five hundred per minute, you could go on making them for
the six billion years it is estimated that this universe has been in existence and you
could do that 100,000,000,000 times over. Now if you marked just one of the electrons you
had used to make the balls and asked someone to find it, the chance that it would be found
by random selection is the same chance that Jesus had of fulfilling forty-eight of the
requirements set forth in prophecy just by accident. And Christ fulfilled over three
hundred!
That is why Peter said: I was an eyewitness, I saw it all happen, I
heard it all. But if you don't believe me, look at something more sure than what I've seen
and heard: evidence that is stronger than an eyewitness account. Look at the evidence of
God's sure word of prophecy fulfilled by Jesus Christ.
It's Time For Your Verdict
In the prophecies mentioned, I didn't include Daniel 9:25, in which
Daniel said: " ... from the going forth of the commandment to restore and rebuild
Jerusalem until the coming of the Messiah, there would be sixty-nine sevens. . ." (or
483 years). Because Daniel was computing with the Babylonian calendar, we refer to a year
with just 360 days, so it was 173,880 days from the time of the commandment to restore and
rebuild Jerusalem to the coming of the Messiah, according to Daniel's prophecy.
Artaxerxes, the Persian king, was the one to command the restoration of Jerusalem in the
year 445 B.C. on March 14. We know this because the Persian record has been preserved by
God so we can be sure of the exact date.
Starting then, on March 14, 445 B.C. and marking the next 173,880 days
off the calendar, we come to April 6, 32 A.D. This happened to be a Sunday, the day that
Jesus made His triumphant entry into the city of Jerusalem.
Luke 19:41 tells us that Jesus wept over Jerusalem that day as He beheld
it. Now how many men made a triumphant entry into the city of Jerusalem that day? just one
man, the one who fulfilled this and all of the other prophecies concerning the Messiah ...
Jesus Christ!
Now you must make your decision based on the evidence set out for you.
Jesus asked, "What think ye of Christ? Who's Son is He?" (Matthew 22:42) Now you
must answer that important question.
If your verdict is "Yes, Jesus is the Christ, the promised
Messiah," then you should make Him the lord of your life. There is something very
interesting about your decision concerning Jesus Christ. Though you are the judge, what
you conclude will not change HIS destiny at all. Your decision determines your destiny
because you will eventually be judged by your decision concerning Jesus Christ. He is what
He is, whether you believe it or not.
John said "And this record, that God hath given us eternal life and
this life is in His Son. He that hath the Son hath life; and he that hath not the Son of
God hath not life. "
It's time for your verdict. You have examined the evidence; what will
you do with Jesus who is called the Christ?
May the Lord bless you and may His love fill your heart and life to
overflowing. What a joy and blessing for us to share with you God's Word and God's love.