The DeathTest
Not a miracle. Not power. The deepest rule meeting the one person it had no right to bind.
God can be proved only by a rightful exception to the deepest rule.
Every created thing is under law.
Matter is under physics. Bodies are under decay. Minds are under ignorance. Moral agents are under consequence. Living things are under death.
So if something merely breaks a rule, that does not prove God.
A demon could break a rule. A magician could fake a rule. A simulator could alter a rule. An advanced intelligence could exploit a rule we do not understand.
Raw exception is not enough.
The exception has to be rightful.
That means the exception must not look like cheating. It must look like the Law recognizing its own Author.
Proof by Jurisdiction
God is proven, if He is proven at all, when the deepest law of the fallen system encounters someone it cannot lawfully bind.
Not because the person hacks the system. Not because the person overpowers the system. Not because the rule is suspended randomly.
But because the rule itself has no rightful claim.
In this frame, sin is what gives death jurisdiction. Death is not merely biology ending. Death is the final claim of a corrupted order against everything that belongs to that corruption. If there is no sin, there is no rightful claim. If there is no rightful claim, death has no legal ground to keep what it has taken.
Death can hold the guilty. Death can hold the corruptible. Death can hold the creature under decay. Death can hold everything that belongs to the broken order.
But death cannot rightly hold the one who owes it nothing.
The proof is not: Jesus came back from the dead.
The stronger proof is: Death had no rightful jurisdiction over Him, and reality was forced to release Him.
That reframes resurrection as a structural verdict, not just a supernatural event.
The Clean Answer
A non-arbitrary exception to the universal rule, where the exception is not a violation of justice but the fulfillment of it.
If the universe has a deepest constraint, and one person passes through it without being owned by it, then that person is not merely inside the universe like everything else.
He stands in relation to the rule as its rightful superior.
Not an escapee. Not a lucky anomaly. Not a hacker.
The rightful superior.
A miracle can look like power. But power alone does not prove God. Power could be evil. Power could be alien. Power could be technological. Power could be deceptive.
But rightful authority is different.
If someone violates death, maybe he is a sorcerer. If someone defeats death by brute force, maybe he is just stronger than death.
But if someone enters death innocently, bears it voluntarily, and death cannot keep Him because it has no claim on Him, then the event is not merely force.
It is justice. It is reality saying: This one does not belong here.
That proves something power alone cannot prove. It proves moral authority over the final law.
The Shortest Version
God is proven, if He is proven at all, when the final law of the fallen world is forced to confess that one man is above it.
Death is the final law of fallen creation. Christ enters it. Death examines Him. Death finds no rightful claim. Death loses.
That is not just 'God proves Himself.' That is the system's final constraint testifying against itself.
A true proof of God would not be a rule being broken.
It would be the deepest rule meeting the one person it had no right to bind.