Question
I have heard of many other religions such as Buddhism, Islam, Jews, Jehovahs Witnesses, etc. How can we -as Christians- be so sure that we are the right ones out of all other ones? What makes Christianity different and unique?
Hope to get a reply real soon
Thanks!
– Cesar Sosa
Response
Thank you very much for your question, Cesar!
Well the first thing I’d have to say is because its true. If Christianity is true, then it wouldn’t be a question as to why it would be the correct, one “true” religion.
Space would not permit me to go into detail about the other religions but you’re more than welcome to look at my YouTube channel playlist on arguments for God’s existence. This will narrow it down to a monotheistic religion which bring us to Islam, Judaism, and Christianity.
So why Christianity? Many reasons can be given such as it answers the human condition better than any other religion or that its very outlook on the human conditionboxers surpasses every other religion. For example every other religion makes you live in a way to reach God where as Christianity makes us aware that we can not, so God reached down to us.
However, the only argument really needed to establish Christianity as true is the historical fact of the resurrection of Christ. Once this point is proven, every other religion that is not Christian will, by default, be false, plain and simple. So, let’s take a look at the argument for the resurrection briefly. Here is a link to the full video for the argument: Jesus and Why I’m not an Atheist.
There are three facts that need to be established regarding the historical account of the resurrection of Jesus.
- The empty tomb
- The postmortem appearances
- The origin of the Christian faith
The world’s leader on the topic of the resurrection is none other than Gary Habermas. These are facts that virtually every historian, whether Christian, agnostic, atheist, or the like, agrees upon. That is to say that they all agree His tomb was empty, they all agree that people did in fact claim to have seen him after his death, and that the origin of the Christian faith does depend on the earliest disciples believing that he did in fact rise from the dead. Whether or not they all agree that their claims were true or not is irrelevant so far. The point is, they all agree these claims are made and believed by the people making them.
Whatever the best explanation is, it must:
- Have explanatory scope- explain the majority of the evidence
- Have explanatory power- makes the evidence more probable
- Be plausible- fit better than any other information
- Be less contrived- won’t call for superfluous new beliefs that don’t have justification.
- Be disconfirmed by fewer accepted beliefs- won’t conflict with already known and established beliefs of that time.
For example, if one explanation was that aliens took the body (which was actually an attempted alternative explanation), then sure it would explain the missing body, but would not fit numbers 2-4, such as #4, it would then contrive us to believe that now aliens exist and would have a reason to take the body in the first place!
Once again, rather than go into the leading competing hypothesis to explain these facts, I’ll just mention the resurrection hypothesis.
The Resurrection Hypothesis– God Raised Jesus From The Dead
- Best explains all three established historical facts. Far more than a rival hypothesis.
- On this theory, all the facts are supported by this explanation. The facts of the empty tomb, appearances, and origin of the Christian faith are best supported by this explanation
- It’s highly plausible considering the historical context and the philosophical context. That is, if God exists, then it is highly probable that He could and would and did raise Jesus from the dead.
- Is it contrived? It only requires one new hypothesis: that God exists. Every other hypothesis requires much more than that. But for the believer, it does not require anything new. Given the context, this is not a “God of the gaps”. In fact, to cry out for a natural explanation is by default excluding the supernatural altogether. So we aren’t asking what the best natural explanation is, but rather what best explains the historical evidence, irrelevant to our bias.
- No prior accepted historical beliefs need to be disconfirmed on this hypothesis. One might say, “dead men do not rise” as a disconformity, but this is based on what naturally happens. It is not a contradiction to say “men do not rise naturally from the dead” and “God raised Jesus from the dead”.
The only objection would be a naturalistic assumption that miracles are impossible. But that would then need to be justified, and is a separate issue in itself. However, once you give up the unjustified prejudice against miracles, it’s hard to deny the historical resurrection of Jesus to best explain all the facts. After all, if an all-powerful God exists, then He could raise someone from the dead. And if no other hypothesis bears the explanation that 1-4 does, then it logically fits as the best explanation.
Thus, given this argument, it puts to rest all other religions and would validate Christianity as the one true religion, plain and simple, whether one likes it or not.
-Eric Hernandez





