The resurrection of Jesus Christ stands as the ultimate declaration of God’s power. It demonstrates that no situation, not even death itself, is beyond His reach. This power is not limited or situational; it is an all-encompassing force that can shake the very foundations of our lives. It is the same power that spoke light into darkness and brought dry bones to life. We can trust that this power is still active and available to us today, ready to move any trouble out of our way. [01:06:32]
“Ah, Lord GOD! It is you who have made the heavens and the earth by your great power and by your outstretched arm! Nothing is too hard for you.” (Jeremiah 32:17 ESV)
Reflection: When you consider a current challenge that feels overwhelming, how does the truth that “nothing is too hard” for God shift your perspective and invite you into a deeper trust?
We often struggle with disappointment when God’s timing does not align with our own. We can become impatient, wanting Him to move right now according to our schedule. Yet, God’s delays are not denials; they are part of His perfect process to prove who He is. He has a history of providing, healing, and strengthening us even when we didn't know we needed it. Trusting His timing means surrendering our own plans and understanding that He moves when He is ready to reveal His glory. [01:06:57]
“For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares the LORD. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.” (Isaiah 55:8-9 ESV)
Reflection: Where in your life are you currently feeling impatient for God to act, and what might it look like to release that timeline and actively wait on His perfect plan?
It is possible to know the truth about God’s power and faithfulness yet still live in disbelief, especially after a difficult season. We can have a “mental relapse,” forgetting who we are dealing with and creating backup plans that rely on our own understanding. True belief in the resurrection means trusting that what God has said, He will do, even when circumstances seem to contradict His promises. It requires moving from head knowledge to heart conviction. [01:01:05]
“But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves.” (James 1:22 ESV)
Reflection: What is one specific area where you find yourself knowing God’s truth intellectually but struggling to live it out in faith? What is one practical “doing” step you can take this week to bridge that gap?
Encountering the living God often produces a complex response—a mixture of holy fear at His awesome power and great joy at His faithfulness. This combination can shake and shift our lives, moving us in directions we may not fully understand but cannot resist. It is a call to get up from our places of sorrow and stagnation, propelled by the news that Christ is risen. This response is not passive; it is an active, engaged movement fueled by a renewed understanding of who God is. [01:10:06]
“So they departed quickly from the tomb with fear and great joy, and ran to tell his disciples.” (Matthew 28:8 ESV)
Reflection: When has an experience of God’s power in your life simultaneously stirred awe and joy? How did that moment compel you to move or “run” in a new direction?
The resurrection is not a truth to be kept for ourselves; it releases a mission. The command to “go and tell” gives us purpose and focus, calling us to be a testimony to those who do not know. It is an active commission to move forward and share the goodness of a Savior who conquers death. This mission is for everyone, as God has uniquely gifted each person to participate in declaring that He is risen and active in the world today. [01:15:12]
“Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee, and there they will see me.” (Matthew 28:10 ESV)
Reflection: Who is one person in your life who needs to hear the good news that God is powerful and active, and what is one specific, gentle way you can “go and tell” them this week?
On an early Sunday morning, women set out for the tomb with heavy expectations and a clear task: care for a dead body. Arrival brought a surprise that overturned grief—an empty tomb and an angelic command that Jesus had risen. The narrative contrasts Friday’s finality with Sunday’s new beginning, exposing a common human failure to believe what is already known and revealing how divine power refuses to be confined by past endings. The resurrection surfaces as an unmistakable demonstration that God’s power breaks decay, defeats death’s sting, and redefines impossible situations into new opportunities.
The text highlights human responses: fear mingled with great joy, moments of disbelief, and the need for a renewed, active faith that remembers Jesus’ words. Belief must move from intellectual assent into embodied action; the angel’s instruction to “go quickly” converts witness into mission. The resurrection not only validates divine promises but issues a practical call to get up, move, and tell others—turning personal encounter into communal proclamation. Life requires willingness to be rerouted when God shifts direction, to leave passive waiting behind, and to participate in God’s restorative work in everyday places.
Practices of repentance, confession, and the Lord’s Supper frame this truth within covenant life: acknowledgment of sin, reception of mercy, and ongoing remembrance of Christ’s sacrifice. The assembled community receives strength to act, a mandate to “pull up” on those who remain stalled, and a charge to embody resurrection power through service and witness. The resurrection, therefore, functions both as theological fact and as a mobilizing force—transforming sorrow into mission, doubt into durable trust, and endings into openings for God’s continued work in the world.
Can I just tell y'all something? All of us go through times in life where we wake up on a Friday and have a bad day, and that Friday rolls on for the rest of the week. We we we wake up in in dead situation. We wake up lost and trouble. We wake up trying to recover from relationship problems. We wake up from bad mistakes that we made and we wake up on Friday knowing that it's over for us and only to find out that god is getting ready to rock your world to to shake the foundation for which you stand on because what happens on Friday does not change what god can do on Sunday.
[00:59:41]
(38 seconds)
#FridayIsNotFinal
why did the angel have to repeat what Jesus had already said? They believed and saw all the miracles that Jesus did. They they knew who Jesus was. They knew that Jesus kept his word. They knew that Jesus had raised folks from the dead. They knew that Jesus had dealt with death and tombs and sickness and and ailments. They they knew that Jesus had replaced ears and fixed hearts and changed minds and they knew that Jesus had protected folks and and Jesus was a keeper of his word. But apparently, somewhere between Friday and Sunday, they had a mental relapse.
[01:00:33]
(37 seconds)
#RememberHisPromises
We will clap our hands. We will jump up and down. We will shout that god is good and still refuse to change. We we will tell our neighbor that we blessed and highly favored and and yet still walk around with a lemon face. We'll jump for joy in church and walk into the world and be routine about who god is. We will encounter god he will fill our nets but we won't tell the world about the fish he brought in. We we we we'll see our lives changing and and yet and still go in a different direction than god is calling. So, god sometimes has to block you.
[01:11:45]
(39 seconds)
#FaithBeyondRoutine
This ain't a sit down season no more y'all. This a pull up season. Yeah. Yeah. And Jesus pulled up on folks all the time. Y'all that's a phrase that the young folks use. I'm fixing to pull up on you. In other words, they gonna show up and say something to you. But Jesus pulls up in us on us all the time. When you're going through struggle and strife, he'll pull up in your prayer life. When you don't know which way to go, he'll pull up in your purpose. When you need a little bit more strength, he'll pull up with your power. When your family gets on your last nerve, he'll pull up on your family.
[01:16:24]
(38 seconds)
#GodPullsUp
If you believe god is able, you ought to be able to stand through some troubles and and go through some problems and and be able to stand up when the devil is attacking you and say, Satan, rebuke you despite of the pain you may be going through. Every once in a while, you ought to show some allegiance to god and get up and go do something. Yes. Yes. The resurrection requires something else. It requires a response.
[01:08:27]
(27 seconds)
#StandAndRespond
They got a mission at a graveside that we ought to go and tell our brothers that the savior has risen, that god has kept his word and and that when you get there, when they see you, they ain't gonna believe you but you still gotta keep telling them. He's risen because when he told them to go, he gave them a purpose.
[01:15:14]
(23 seconds)
#GravesideMission
We have to talk about the power that Jesus displayed, the the courage that he had. Can you just imagine yourself being nailed to a cross for folks who ain't did who were always wrong, have done anything to anybody, but you're taking the punishment for somebody who did not deserve who deserve their punishment. We we all have problems. We all have predicaments, but Jesus was a perfect vessel sent by a perfect god to deal with an imperfect people. The text says and shows us that the resurrection reveals the power of god.
[01:02:57]
(37 seconds)
#PowerInTheResurrection
Because when god calls you into something, he does not leave you destitute. He does not leave you out there by yourself. God stands on his promises, and he keeps his word. Amen. There's no situation that is beyond the reach of god. Some of us let those things destroy us and tear us down, but we have a record in the bible of how many times that god has spoke with the power to change things simply because god was not trying to show out because he's a loving god.
[01:05:29]
(31 seconds)
#GodKeepsHisPromises
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