No you cannot touch jesus, but Jesus can touch you if his is in the mood...if you know what I mean(;
have fun touching jesus....(;
A:This depends on the passage being read:In Matthew 28:9, the women touch Jesus, holding him by the feet, on the morning of his resurrection. Jesus allowed them to worship him thus.In John 20:17, Jesus says to Mary Magdalene, "Touch me not; for I am not yet ascended ..." In this gospel, not only could Mary not touch Jesus, but no one could before he rose to heaven.Eight days later, still in John's Gospel at verse 20:27, Jesus forgets his earlier concern and tells Thomas to touch his wounds.
march 1 or may
Thomas initially could not believe Jesus was present with them after crucifixion. His doubts quickly disappeared when Jesus spoke to him and invited Thomas to touch His wounds.
Sailors believed the touch of earth could cure scurvy before they realized that Vitamin C would prevent it.
Black and yellow with a touch of Jesus colors
all he has to do is to touch them.
In wall ball or four square, a double touch is where you touch the ball twice before it goes to the next person. Hope that 's what you were looking for. ^ This could be true. But in football, instead of tacklefootball there is touch/tap football which can also be used. The double-tap could be used to get a running player out.
10000
The apostle Thomas said this to Jesus after he was resurrected. (John 20:28) It was a statement of astonishment that Jesus was indeed alive again. Thomas had doubted the reports of others that they had seen Jesus resurrected and said that unless he sees it with his own eyes and actually touches the wounds Jesus received from the nails and the spear he wasn't going to believe it. So you can imagine his reaction when Jesus appeared before him and actually materialized himself so that Thomas could indeed touch the wounds.
No. You go to a kind of holding area before judgment. Jesus said to them man on the cross beside him "Today you will be with me in paradise". Then three days later he said to Mary "Touch me not, for I have not yet ascended to my Father". Here, Jesus refers to the holding area as paradise.
The widely used King James Version gives Jesus' words to Mary as follows: "Touch me not; for I am not yet ascended to my Father." Then he told her to go tell the disciples about his resurrection and coming ascension. (John 20:17) Modern speech clarifies Jesus' meaning, as we see by An American Translation's rendering: "You must not cling to me, for I have not yet gone up to my Father." It was not a question of her touching Jesus; she had not only touched him but was clinging to him, doubtless fearful that he would vanish and ascend into heaven. Jesus assured her that he was not going yet, and that she should stop clinging to him but go tell his disciples what had happened. That same day Jesus appeared to other disciples, but Thomas was not present and later said he would not believe it till he saw the nail wounds on Jesus and had thrust his hand into Jesus' speared side. A few days later Jesus did appear to the disciples when Thomas was present, and he invited Thomas to touch the wounds. (John 20:25-27) In both instances Jesus had good reasons for speaking as he did, and there is no contradiction or inconsistency between the two cases.
Nope. I've tried and asked a similar question before. I wish you could.