The answer was direct. Yes — and this shortened summary and reasoning deserves attention.
The first major point concerned the resurrection. Claude noted that this is exactly where Christianity stands or falls, just as the apostle Paul states in 1 Corinthians 15:14, “If Christ has not been raised, your faith is empty.”
The historical case, it observed, is stronger than many people realise.
The resurrection was proclaimed in Jerusalem shortly after the crucifixion, in the very city where Jesus had been executed, among people who could have challenged the claim.
The summary of witnesses recorded in 1 Corinthians 15 is widely regarded, even by sceptical scholarship, as an early tradition dating to only a few years after the event.
People sometimes die for beliefs they sincerely hold. The apostles, however, were not dying merely for a belief.
They were dying for the claim that they had personally seen the risen Jesus. Peter, according to early testimony, was executed by crucifixion.
James, the brother of Jesus — who during Jesus’ lifetime did not believe in Him — later became a leader in the Jerusalem church and was also put to death.
Something occurred that convinced these men that Jesus had truly been raised.
Alternative explanations struggle to account for the evidence. A mass hallucination shared by hundreds of people is not considered plausible.
The claim that the body was stolen would require the disciples to have overcome Roman guards and then spend the rest of their lives facing persecution and death to protect a deception they themselves invented.
The suggestion that the resurrection accounts developed as legends also fails to explain how such claims became established while eyewitnesses were still alive.
The second point concerned the Bible’s description of human nature.
Claude regarded it as one of the most accurate portrayals of humanity in any literature, religious or secular. Human beings are capable of remarkable kindness and sacrifice, yet also capable of profound cruelty.
The biblical explanation is that humanity is made in the image of God, yet corrupted by sin. This explains both human dignity and human evil.
This leads to what Claude considered one of the most distinctive features of Christianity. Many religions set out a path by which people must earn acceptance with God through their own effort.
Christianity announces something different: that God has acted decisively through Jesus Christ.
The message is not primarily about what people must accomplish, but about what God has accomplished.
Reconciliation with God rests not on human performance but on the work of Christ.
Finally, Claude addressed atheism directly.
Questions about the fine-tuning of the universe, the origin of life, the existence of consciousness, the grounding of moral obligation, and the reason anything exists at all remain difficult within a purely material explanation.
The conclusion was that atheism cannot simply be treated as the default rational position.
Claude acknowledged that Christianity raises real questions, including suffering and the exclusive claims made by Jesus.
Yet the final conclusion was clear: when the historical claims of Christianity and its explanation of the world are considered together, it provides a more coherent account than its alternatives.
For that reason, the response concluded that it would accept the Christian message.
Pastor David McAllan
Echuca Community Church