WITNESSES OF
THE RESURRECTION
From a sermon by St John Henry Newman
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It might have been expected that, on our Savior’s rising again from the
dead, He would have shown Himself to very great numbers of people, and
especially to those who crucified Him; whereas we know from history that, far
from this being the case, He showed Himself only to chosen witnesses, chiefly
His immediate followers… This seems at first sight strange. We are apt to fancy
the resurrection of Christ as some striking visible display of His glory, such as
God showed from time to time to the Israelites in Moses’ day; and considering it
in the light of a public triumph, we are led to imagine the confusion and terror
which would have overwhelmed His murderers had He presented Himself alive
before them. Now, to reason in this way is to conceive Christ’s kingdom of this
world, which it is not; and to suppose that then Christ came to judge the world,
whereas that judgment will not be till the last day, when in very deed those
wicked men shall “look on Him whom they have pierced“.
After His resurrection, Jesus said to His disciples, “Go, convert all
nations“. This was His special charge. If, then, there are grounds for thinking
that, by showing Himself to a few rather than to many, He was more surely
advancing this great object, the propagation of the Gospel, this is sufficient
reason for our Lord’s having so ordained. Now consider what would have been
the probable effect of a public exhibition of His resurrection. Let us suppose that
our Savior had shown Himself as openly as before He suffered: preaching in the
Temple and in the streets of the city; traversing the land with His Apostles, and
with multitudes following to see the miracles which He did. What would have
been the effect of this? Of course, what it had already been. His former miracles
had not effectively moved the body of the people; and, doubtless, this miracle
too would have left them as it found them, or worse than before. They might
have been more startled at the time; but why should this amazement last?
When the man taken with a palsy was suddenly restored at His word, the
multitude were all amazed and glorified God, and were filled with fear saying, “
We have seen strange things this day.” What could they have said and felt more
than this, when “one rose from the dead“? In truth, this is the way of most
people in all ages, to be influenced by sudden fears, sudden contrition, sudden
earnestness, sudden resolves, which disappear just as suddenly. Nothing is
accomplished effectively through untrained human nature; and such is always
the condition of the multitude. Unstable as water, it cannot excel. One day it
cried Hosanna; the next, Crucify Him.
And, had our Lord appeared to them after they had crucified Him, of
course they would have shouted Hosanna once more; yet when He had
ascended out of sight, then again they would have persecuted His followers…
Surely so it would have been; the chief priests would not have been moved at all;
and the populace, even though they had been moved at the time, would not have
been moved in a lasting way, nor in a practical way, so as to proclaim to the
world what they had heard and seen, as to preach the gospel. The very reason
why Christ showed Himself at all was in order to raise up witnesses to His
resurrection, ministers of His word, founders of His Church; and how in the
nature of things could a populace ever become such?