Dear friends, thank you for your replies. We believe in " Love for all Hatred for none". So, I want to show you the truth with the bible and logic, with my love. Maybe, I could not explain my topic, clearly to you.
Now, in other words, I am trying again to explain my topic.
1. The three hours suspension was insufficient to cause death. Sometimes the crucified man did not die until the third day.
2. Pilate wondered how Jesus could have expired so soon. (Mark 15:44).
His wonder was due to his experience that the time was not long enough to cause death. Pilate, Joseph, and the centurion—all three—were sympathizers of Jesus. They naturally wished to save him from death.
3. The two thieves who remained on the cross for the same space of time as did Jesus were both alive, and to kill them their legs were broken. Jesus was spared this ordeal. (John 19:32).
4. Blood and water flowed out immediately when the soldier with a spear, pierced his right side, as the ancient pictures show; a sure sign of life and the circulation of the blood. (John 19:34).
5. After he was taken down from the cross, it was not to his enemies, but to his friends, that his body was given. (John 19:38).
6. The haste with which his friends tried to secure his body bespeaks a desire on their part to save him whom apparently they had not yet given up for dead.
7. The steps taken by the Jews to have a guard posted at his sepulchre also shows that they were not sure of his death. Had they been certain of his death, it would not have mattered to them at all if his disciples had stolen his body. The reason was given, ‘lest his disciples come by night, and steal him away, and say unto the people, He has risen from the dead, (Matthew 27:62), is ridiculous because they could have said if he were risen let him show himself to the people and then they could have re-arrested him. The real reason for their demand for the guard was that they were not sure of his death.
8. Pilate did not wish to have Jesus crucified, and nothing would have pleased him more than to see him delivered. And he actually gave every direct and secret aid to save Jesus. His wife’s vision must have induced him to do all that was in his power to deliver Jesus from his enemies.
9. The soldiers and the centurion who refrained from ensuring the death of Jesus by the breaking of his legs, as well as the soldiers who pretended to have fallen asleep during their watch, must have been, like their governor, sympathisers of Jesus.
10. The tomb in which Jesus was laid, hewn out of a rock, was like a chamber in which a number of men could remain without being suffocated. It belonged to a devoted friend who must have lavished care on him so as to restore him to consciousness and health.
On Sunday, the day next to the Sabbath, the Jews were free to visit the spot. But early in the morning while it was still dark Jesus was not there. The stone had been rolled away and the body was not seen in the sepulchre. Shortly afterwards he was seen by Mary, who, at first, took him for the gardener. ((John 20:15). Probably he had disguised himself in the gardener’s dress, so that he might not be recognised by the Jews and re-arrested and placed upon the cross again.
11. He sent a message to his disciples to depart for the distant provinces of Galilee, saying that he would go before them and would see them there. (Matthew 28:7). He left Jerusalem in a great hurry; for he knew the Jews would soon come to know that he had left the tomb and would start a search for him.
12. He took all precautions against being re-arrested by the Jews. He met his disciples only; not openly, but in secret, or in out of the way places. Even then he did not stay long with them, made no public appearance, (The Acts 10:41), and suffered hunger and thirst. When he met his disciples, he asked them whether they could give him something to eat, and he ate in their presence. (Luke 24:42).
To his disciples who thought him a spirit, he said: ‘Behold my hands and my feet, that it is I myself, handle me, and see, for a spirit hath not flesh and bones as ye see me have. (Luke24:38).
Thomas, who doubted that the other disciples had seen him, was asked to put his fingers in the prints of the nails. (John 20:27).
And the ‘ointment of Jesus’ or ‘ointment of the Apostles’ was prepared for Jesus by his disciples to heal his wounds.
All these factors clearly show that he came out of the sepulchre with his wounded physical body.
Accordingly, we found that there is no proof of Jesus’ death on the cross. Consequently, he could not have risen from the dead. A reasonable person can read that Jesus, when taken down from the cross, was not dead. He had swooned. Afterwards, he recovered. He came out from the sepulchre with his human body of clay.
If Jesus came out with a spiritual body, where had his mortal body gone?