NT Text: Luke 20:37
OT Source(s):
Source: Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Reference Type: Direct Quotation
Connection Method(s): Analogy + Redemptive-Historical Progression
Anchor Text: Exod 3:6 — God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob
Significance: Jesus' proof of resurrection from the Sadducees employs a striking argument from Exodus 3:6 — Yahweh's self-identification at the burning bush as "the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob." The argument pivots on verbal tense: God said "I AM (ʾānōkî) the God of Abraham," not "I was." Since God is not God of the dead but of the living (Luke 20:38), the patriarchs must be alive to God in some ongoing sense. Moses — the Sadducees' own authority — testifies to resurrection. The argument demonstrates that the resurrection hope is not a later doctrinal addition (as the Sadducees claimed) but was embedded in the foundational covenant text from the beginning. The present-tense divine identity (eimi, "I am") implies that the covenant relationship established with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob is not terminated by death — it persists into and beyond death, requiring resurrection for its ultimate fulfillment.