Where History Meets the Eternal: Why the Resurrection Cannot Be Ignored
The past shapes everything. What happened yesterday determines the possibilities of tomorrow. This is why historians labour so carefully over events long gone — because understanding them illuminates the present and the future.
The Tomb That Changed the World: Confronting the Missing Body
In the predawn darkness of a Sunday morning nearly two thousand years ago, several women made their way to a garden tomb on the outskirts of Jerusalem.
He Appeared to Them: The Fourteen Encounters That Shook the World
An empty tomb, compelling as it is, cannot by itself prove a resurrection. It proves only an absence. Something more was needed — and something more was given.
First at the Tomb: Why the Women Witnesses Show the Resurrection's Truth
If someone in the first century were going to fabricate a story about a resurrection, there is one thing they would almost certainly not do: make women the primary witnesses. In the ancient world, the legal and social status of female testimony was routinely dismissed.
Doubting Thomas and the Architecture of Belief: Evidence, Faith, and the Risen Christ
Of all the figures who populate the resurrection narratives, none has captured the modern imagination quite like Thomas. He has been immortalised — unfairly — as the emblem of stubborn scepticism.
Every Sunday Is ‘Easter’: The Resurrection's Imprint on the Christian Week
You have probably never thought of it this way, but every time Christians gather for worship on a Sunday morning, they are making a historical claim.
From Locked Rooms to the Ends of the Earth: The Resurrection and the Birth of Christianity
On the evening of the day Jesus was crucified, his disciples were hiding behind locked doors, paralysed by fear (John 20:19). Within fifty days, they were proclaiming his resurrection before thousands in the streets of Jerusalem (Acts 2:41).
They Died for What They Saw: The Apostolic Martyrdoms as Resurrection Evidence
People throughout history have died for many things. They have died for beliefs, ideologies, nations, and causes. Martyrdom, in itself, is not historically unusual.
The Theory That Fits All the Facts: Why Alternative Explanations Fail
Over the years, various theories have emerged to explain the resurrection claim without actually accepting it. Jesus did not really die — he merely fainted. His body was stolen. The disciples looked in the wrong tomb. The appearances were hallucinations.