Speaker: 
John Piper
Date Given: 
April 15, 2001

Now if Christ is preached, that He has been raised from
the dead, how do some among you say that there is no resurrection
of the dead? 13 But if there is no resurrection of the dead, not
even Christ has been raised; 14 and if Christ has not been raised,
then our preaching is vain, your faith also is vain. 15 Moreover we
are even found to be false witnesses of God, because we testified
against God that He raised Christ, whom He did not raise, if in
fact the dead are not raised. 16 For if the dead are not raised,
not even Christ has been raised; 17 and if Christ has not been
raised, your faith is worthless; you are still in your sins. 18
Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ have perished. 19
If we have hoped in Christ in this life only, we are of all men
most to be pitied. 20 But now Christ has been raised from the dead,
the first fruits of those who are asleep.

This passage of Scripture describes five sad consequences if
Christ is not risen from the dead and is not alive today as the
only Lord of the universe with all authority in heaven and on
earth. What I would like to do this morning is show you these five
consequences, and then take just one of them and use it to unfold a
very powerful and often-neglected incentive for us to believe in
Jesus Christ as the living Lord and the greatest treasure of your
life – beyond the grave and forever.

My hope and prayer is that many of you – for your
everlasting good – will be won over by him this morning. Not
me, but him, because he is alive and here and able to persuade you
that he is true and the greatest treasure in the universe.

The text begins in verse 12 by pointing out that in the
community in Corinth, some were saying, "There is no resurrection
of the dead." Period. Nobody rises from the dead. So in verse 13
Paul points out the obvious: "If there is no resurrection of the
dead, not even Christ has been raised." And then he begins the list
of five consequences if this is true – if Christ is not
raised from the dead.

Now let's be sure before we see these, that we know what Paul
really believes. Verse 20: "But now Christ has been raised from the
dead, the first fruits of those who are asleep." In other words,
this apostle of Jesus is persuaded that Jesus did rise from the
dead, and that his resurrection is the guarantee of our
resurrection – that's what "first fruits from the dead"
means. The first fruits were the first pickings of the harvest
which showed that there is a harvest – this
resurrection signifies the certainty of our resurrection. The way
Paul put it in Romans 8:11 is: "If the Spirit of Him who raised
Jesus from the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ Jesus from
the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through His
Spirit who dwells in you." If Christ is raised, then those who
belong to Christ will be raised with him in everlasting life and
ever-increasing joy.

So when Paul says in verse 13, "If there is no resurrection of
the dead, not even Christ has been raised," he also means –
and we won't be either. That doesn't seem to bother some of these
folks in Corinth. So Paul spells out five consequences if Christ is
not raised from the dead – in the hopes of wakening them to
the misery and the mistake of what they are saying.

Consequence #1: Our Preaching Is in Vain & Our Witness Is
False

Verse 14a: "If Christ has not been raised, then our
preaching is vain
." That is, it is empty. Or as verse 15 says,
"Moreover we are even found to be false witnesses of God,
because we testified against God that He raised Christ." In other
words, if Christ has not been raised, then Paul's preaching is both
empty and a false witness against God.

Of course that's no skin off their nose. They don't really care
about that. But for Paul and for other preachers like me, and for
people who love the preaching of the gospel, that would be tragic.
It would be the end of my vocation and my life as now I know it. I
would quit this job of preaching if I did not believe that Christ
was raised from the dead. That's consequence #1: Paul's preaching
and mine are empty and false to God, if Christ is not raised.

Consequence #2: Your Faith Is Worthless & in Vain

Verse 14b: "If Christ has not been raised, then our preaching is
vain, your faith also is vain." Or, as it says in verse
17a: "Your faith is worthless." Your faith is empty and
useless, if Christ is not raised. It's not going to do you any
good.

One wonders, What did they have faith in – what
was their faith – if they didn't believe Jesus was
raised from the dead? Well, he doesn't tell us. But these were
savvy, philosophical, cosmopolitan folks who didn't like the idea
of believing anything as literal and physical as the actual
resurrection of Jesus' body from the dead and, later, the
resurrection of our bodies with him.

Perhaps they were like many more liberal "Christians" today.
Perhaps their faith was that Jesus was a great teacher, or that he
was a good example of the way of love and that the stories of his
resurrection are simply symbols pointing to the triumph of the
human spirit, or that his influence lives on after him. In other
words these folks in Corinth had not said: this resurrection
business is all a myth so we reject it. They had said:
this resurrection business is all a myth and so we
reinterpret it. It's just a symbol of God's love and the
indomitable power of the human spirit, or, perhaps, the divine
world-force.

Paul's response to this was to say, If Christ has not been
raised, your faith is empty. That kind of faith has no substance.
It's worthless in the end. It profits nothing.

Consequence #3: You Are Still in Your Sins

Verse 17: "If Christ has not been raised, your faith is
worthless; you are still in your sins." Now this is
getting increasingly serious. He is pointing out here an utterly
crucial connection between the death of Jesus and the resurrection
of Jesus. And he is saying, If Christ is not raised, then his death
accomplished nothing for the forgiveness of our sins. And if Christ
accomplished nothing to remove the guilt and condemnation of our
sins, then we are still in our sins and under the wrath of God
– for sin is what alienates us from God.

We have to get very clear here that the death of Christ, the Son
of God, was the basis of our forgiveness and justification before
God. Romans 5:8-9 says, "God demonstrates His own love toward us,
in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. Much more
then, having now been justified by His blood, we shall be saved
from the wrath of God through Him." So it is the death – the
blood – of Christ that that pays the debt we owe to God and
frees us from our sins – justifies us, gives us a right
standing with God.

But Paul says in verse 17, "If Christ has not been raised . . .
you are still in your sins." In other words, If Christ didn't rise
from the dead, the death of Christ did not rescue us from our sins.
This is what Paul was getting at I think in Romans 4:25 when he
said, "[Christ] was delivered over [to death] because of our
[sins], and was raised [from the dead] because of our
justification." In other words, the resurrection of Jesus is the
proof that his death was sufficient to cover all our
transgressions.

So he concludes here in verse 17, If he wasn't raised, then his
death is useless as the basis of forgiveness. and we are still in
the guilt and condemnation and bondage of our sins. And that leads
to consequence #4.

Consequence #4: Those Who Have Fallen Asleep Have Perished

Verse 18: If Christ is not raised from the dead, "Then those
also who have fallen asleep in Christ [that is, those believers who
have died] have perished." And Paul refers to something more than
physical death when he uses the word "perish." In fact what he says
is, If Christ is not raised from the dead then believers don't just
die, they perish. That is they come under the wrath of God after
they die. They face judgment when they die.

Consequence #5: We Are to Be Pitied Above All Men

Verse 19: "If we have hoped in Christ in this life only, we are
of all men most to be pitied." What Paul is saying here is that the
life Paul has chosen to live, based on his deep and confident hope
for his own resurrection, would be a pitiable, foolish life, if in
fact there is no resurrection.

Now this final consequence (of all five) is the one I want to
unpack for a moment here to show why it is a powerful and
often-neglected incentive to embrace Jesus as the risen Lord of
your life and with him the hope of your own resurrection into
everlasting joy.

Sacrificial Love, not Selfish Indulgence

The incentive goes like this: I believe that deep down most of
you, at your best and highest moments, dream of spending your lives
in sacrificial love, not selfish indulgence. We dream of a life
that's cutting edge and radical and risk-taking and different from
the cautious, prudent, secure, self-enhancing life of middle-class
America.

I know that there is another side to us and that we have other
dreams that we are not very proud of. We dream of all the physical
pleasures, all the material comforts, all the earthly securities,
all the family delights, all the human esteem or fame that is
possible
to get in this life. And if that's all you dream about,
then my point in this message is probably going to go in one ear
and out the other.

But I think most of you have had those higher moments when you
dream of spending your life in the service of some great cause that
helps other people in spite of tremendous cost to you – a
life of sacrificial love, not selfish indulgence.

The Life of the Apostle Paul

Now the apostle Paul lived a life like that. He poured out his
life to bring the good news of Jesus to perishing people so that
they might have eternal life. The risks he took and the suffering
he endured were incredible. He says in verse 30 that he was "in
peril every hour." In another place he explains that:

[I am] often in danger of death. Five times I received . . .
thirty-nine lashes. Three times I was beaten with rods, once I was
stoned, three times I was shipwrecked . . . in dangers from rivers,
dangers from robbers, dangers from my countrymen . . . dangers in
the city, dangers in the wilderness, dangers on the sea, dangers
among false brethren; I have been in labor and hardship, through
many sleepless nights, in hunger and thirst, often without food, in
cold and exposure. (2 Corinthians 11:23-27).

And in this same chapter he asks, "Why? Because I do not love
you? God knows I do! (2 Corinthians 11:11).

In other words, here is a life of radical, risk-taking,
perilous, sacrificial love. Where did it come from? Where would
yours come from? Well, look again at our text, verse 19: "If we
have hoped in Christ in this life only, we are of all men most to
be pitied." Now we see what "this life" means to Paul – risk,
peril, danger, suffering – all in the service of love. And we
stand in awe – and there rises up a longing in our hearts to
be like that. It is written by God, I believe, on your heart that
this is beautiful. This is right. This is true. This, in the end,
would be the best life.

If the Dead Are not Raised, I Am a Pitiable Fool

And Paul says: If the dead are not raised – if this life
of risk and sacrifice is my only life – I am a fool. A
pitiable fool. Which means that a deep abiding confidence in the
resurrection is what kept Paul going in this life of radical
risk-taking love. And my point is: this same confidence in the
resurrection can be the key that opens a new life for you.

Or to put it another way: the great obstacle to a life of
sacrificial, risk-taking love for other people is found in 1
Corinthians 15:32b: "If the dead are not raised, let us eat and
drink for tomorrow we die." In other words, without a hope for
resurrection and everlasting joy with Christ we all tend to treat
this life as a place where we have to squeeze out as much pleasure
as we can and take as few risks as we can. Because there is nothing
else.

If Christ Is Raised, This Life Is a Prelude to Eternal Life and
Joy

But if Christ is raised, and if trusting him means that I will
be raised with him, then this life is just a brief prelude to
eternal life with Christ and ever-increasing joy with him. And if
that is true, then Paul is no fool. His life of radical,
risk-taking, sacrificial love is not to be pitied. Pity not them
that rise with Christ.

Let me give you one small illustration of how this works from
the teachings of Jesus in Luke 14:13-14. Jesus says, "When you give
a reception, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind,
and you will be blessed, since they do not have the means to repay
you; for you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous."
Do you see the effect of believing in the resurrection –
really believing, not just saying you believe it? Without the
resurrection we tend to want our pleasures here and now, and so we
avoid risk and danger and difficulty and pain and discomfort and
frustration; and so our love is tame and bland and weak and
cautious and timid.

But, Jesus says, if you believe that your joy in the
resurrection will make up for a thousand losses and self-denials
and sacrifices and dangers and risks here for the sake of love,
then you will love people without a view to what you can get out of
it here. It will be sustained by the joy set before you (see
Hebrews 12:2). And that will be the kind of love that we all dream
about from time to time.

We were made for it. Christ died and rose again to make it
possible. Come to him. Trust him. The Bible says, "If you confess
with your mouth Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that God
raised Him from the dead, you will be saved" (Romans 10:9). Saved
from sin. Saved from judgment. Saved from a life of mere
self-serving indulgence.

"If in this life only we have hoped in Christ we are of all men
most to be pitied." But since Christ has been raised, and since by
trusting in him we will be raised with him, then this life of
radical, sacrificial love is not to be pitied. Pity not them who
rise with Christ.

© 2012 Bethlehem Baptist Church