As Easter fly around us quickly, you can think about the origin of the holiday; besides getting the chocolate bunny and the colored egg, there are other reasons to start celebrating. For some people, it dates back to Roman times as power and events of the world. Jesus Christ of Nazareth has risen from the dead. If Jesus Christ really came up from the death, there was speculation from that day. The problem spread as follows. He died and awoke in the cold air of the grave.
Due to the strong evidence of the empty tomb, recent scholars have not denied it. Jacob Kramer, specializing in resurgence research and critic of the New Testament, says: "It is extremely difficult to oppose the empty tombs based on history, based on theological or philosophical assumptions." "To date, most interpreters have confidence in the biblical statements about the empty tomb "He has cited 20 scholars to support his great claim.
There are also two historical facts; the grave is the sky, the life of the disciples has changed. Although the empty tomb is necessary for resurrection, it is necessary to immediately add an empty tomb to prove the resurrection. In fact, that profession will virtually counter that. Nevertheless, the disciples claimed that Jesus rose from the death and appeared to many people. When they spread the good news that caused them to collide with the guild (Greek: EU + aggelion "good news" or "good news", Latin: Evangelion, English: "Evangel"), they are surprised at these uninters The people of the people met Jerusalem's teachings. Faith spread to every point, originally called "Christian" in Antioch. That name comes from Latin Christians like the Caesarean slave and the word "Caesar family".
In the Gospel of John, Peter was the first person to enter the tomb of the sky, despite the fact that women and beloved disciples saw this in front of him. In the story of Luca, the women's reports on the empty tombs were rejected by the apostles, and Peter was the only person who went searching for himself and rushed to the grave. After seeing the grave, he returned home and apparently did not inform the other disciples. The first letter Paul wrote to the Corinthians included a list of Jesus' resurrection ceremonies. The first of them was Peter's review. Here, Paul obviously follows the early tradition that Peter first saw the resurrected Christ, but this does not seem to have survived the writing of the Gospels.