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Easter / Resurrection Sunday~20 minClaude Opus 4.6

He Is Not Here: The Morning That Changed Everything

Matthew 28:1-101 Corinthians 15:3-8

The resurrection, victory over death, the hope that changes everything

Before Dawn: When Hope Looks Like a Dead End

It is still dark. The sun has not risen. And two women are walking toward a tomb because that is what you do when someone you love has died — you go to the place where the body is. You bring spices. You do the next thing. You keep moving even when the world has stopped making sense. Mary Magdalene and the other Mary are not expecting a miracle. They are expecting a corpse. They are expecting the finality of stone and seal and Roman guard. They are expecting the worst thing that has ever happened to remain the worst thing that has ever happened. And that is where the Easter story begins — not with triumph, but with the long, dark, silent walk toward a tomb. If you are here this morning and you feel like you are walking toward a tomb — if the worst thing that happened is still the worst thing, if the stone has not moved, if the darkness before dawn is where you live — then you are exactly where the first Easter witnesses were. Easter does not begin with people who have it all together. Easter begins with people who have nothing left but the courage to show up. The world between Friday and Sunday is where most of us live. It is Saturday — the day of silence, the day when God is in the grave and nothing makes sense and the only thing you can do is put one foot in front of the other and walk toward the tomb with your spices and your grief and your stubbornness. And it is precisely to that Saturday people — to the walking-in-the-dark people — that the earthquake comes.
Matthew 28:1Mark 16:1-2

The Longest Saturday

We call it Holy Saturday, but for the first disciples there was nothing holy about it. It was the day after the death of everything they believed in. Peter was hiding. Judas was dead. The women were preparing burial spices. Nobody was writing hymns. Nobody was planning Easter services. They were just surviving — trying to get through the worst day of their lives without falling apart. The resurrection did not happen to people who were ready for it. It happened to people who had given up. That is not a flaw in the story. That is the point.

Source: Biblical narrative / Alan Lewis, "Between Cross and Resurrection"

The Earthquake: When God Rolls the Stone

Matthew says there was a violent earthquake. An angel of the Lord descended from heaven, went to the tomb, rolled back the stone, and sat on it. Sat on it. That detail is extraordinary. The angel did not hover nervously. The angel did not rush away. The angel rolled away the two-ton stone that sealed the death of the Son of God and then sat down on it like a park bench. There is a swagger to the resurrection. Death has been defeated, and the angel is sitting on its furniture. The guards — professional Roman soldiers, men trained to fear nothing — shook and became like dead men. The living became like the dead, and the dead was about to become the living. The irony is deliberate. The empire that executed Jesus is now trembling before an empty tomb. The stone that was supposed to keep death in is now a seat for an angel. Everything is backwards. Everything is upside down. That is what the resurrection does — it inverts every power structure, every assumption, every finality that the world has ever declared. "Do not be afraid," the angel says. It is the most frequent command in the Bible — do not be afraid — and it has never been more needed than at this moment. Because what the angel is about to say will require more courage to believe than anything these women have ever heard: "He is not here. He has risen, just as he said." Six words that split history in half. He is not here. The body is gone. The tomb is empty. Death could not hold him. The grave is a room he checked out of. The stone is rolled away not to let Jesus out — He did not need help leaving — but to let the witnesses in. The empty tomb is an exhibit. God left the door open so we could see for ourselves.
Matthew 28:2-6Matthew 27:65-66

The Encounter: When the Risen Christ Speaks Your Name

The women leave the tomb "afraid yet filled with joy." That is the most honest emotional description in the Bible. They are terrified and elated at the same time. Their hands are shaking and their hearts are singing. They are running to tell the disciples, and the ground beneath them has become a different planet — same dirt, same sunrise, same sandals on the same road, but everything has changed because the tomb is empty. And then Jesus meets them. Not in the temple. Not on a throne. On the road. He appears to women who are running and crying and barely able to breathe, and He says one word: "Greetings." The Greek is chairete — rejoice. Be glad. It is the most ordinary greeting in the language, and coming from the mouth of a man who was dead two days ago, it is the most extraordinary sentence in history. They fall at His feet and worship Him. And He says it again: "Do not be afraid." Then He gives them a mission: "Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee. There they will see me." The first preachers of the resurrection are women in a culture that did not accept women as legal witnesses. If the disciples were inventing this story, they would never have made women the first witnesses — it would have been too easy to dismiss. The fact that the Gospels all agree that women saw the risen Christ first is one of the strongest evidences that this actually happened. No one would make this up. Paul later adds the receipts: Christ appeared to Peter, then to the Twelve, then to more than five hundred people at the same time, most of whom were still alive when Paul was writing and could be cross-examined. The resurrection is not a myth. It is not a metaphor. It is not a "spiritual experience" that can be reduced to feelings. It is a historical event with eyewitnesses, and it is the single most important thing that has ever occurred in the history of the world.
Matthew 28:8-101 Corinthians 15:3-8

The Five Hundred Witnesses

Paul writes that Christ appeared to more than five hundred people at one time. To put that in perspective: if you put five hundred witnesses on a witness stand and gave each one just six minutes of testimony, it would take fifty hours of continuous testimony to hear them all. That is not a hallucination. Mass hallucinations do not happen — there is no medical or psychological precedent for five hundred people simultaneously seeing the same thing that is not there. Paul is essentially saying: go ask them. They are still alive. This happened.

Source: 1 Corinthians 15:6 / Historical argument for the resurrection

What the Resurrection Means for You This Morning

If Christ has not been raised, Paul says, our preaching is useless and your faith is in vain. That is how high the stakes are. Christianity does not work without the resurrection. Remove the resurrection and you have a dead teacher with good ideas. Keep the resurrection and you have a living Savior who has conquered the one enemy that no human being has ever defeated. And if Christ has been raised, then everything changes. Not eventually. Now. It means death is not the end. The loved ones you have lost — the parent, the spouse, the child, the friend — are not gone. They are ahead of you. The tomb is not a wall. It is a door. And the God who walked out of His own grave has promised to bring everyone who belongs to Him out of theirs. It means your failures are not final. The worst thing you have ever done, the deepest shame you carry, the regret that wakes you at 3 AM — the resurrection says: that is not the last word. The God who turns Friday into Sunday can turn your worst chapter into a testimony. The stone has been rolled away from your sin, too. It means the world is not hopeless. Every system of injustice, every disease, every war, every tyrant — they all have expiration dates. The resurrection is God's guarantee that evil does not win. The grave is empty, and the empire is on notice. The world will be made new. That is not wishful thinking. That is a promise backed by an empty tomb. So this morning, whether you came expecting a miracle or expecting a corpse — whether your faith is strong or hanging by a thread — hear the angel's words: He is not here. He has risen. Do not be afraid. And then hear the risen Christ Himself, standing on the road you are walking, saying the simplest, most revolutionary word in any language: Rejoice. Christ is risen. He is risen indeed.
1 Corinthians 15:14-191 Corinthians 15:54-57Revelation 21:4-5

Applications

  • 1If you are living in Saturday — the silent day between the worst thing and the new thing — keep showing up. The women walked to the tomb with no expectation of a miracle, and they met the risen Christ on the road.
  • 2Tell someone. The first command the risen Christ gave was "Go and tell." Share the hope of the resurrection with one person this week.
  • 3Let the resurrection redefine your relationship with death. Visit a grieving friend. Speak the name of someone you have lost. Grieve with hope.
  • 4Live as a resurrection people — people who refuse to accept that the worst thing is the last thing, because we know the tomb is empty.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Risen Lord, the tomb is empty and the world is different. Help us believe it — not just in our heads, but in our bones.
  • For those living in Saturday — the silence between the cross and the resurrection — meet them on the road. Let them hear Your voice saying: Rejoice.
  • Thank You that death is not the end, that failure is not final, and that the world is being made new. Give us the courage to live like we believe it.
  • Christ is risen. He is risen indeed. Let that reality shape every day we live from this moment forward. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers (2002)

Gandalf falls into darkness fighting the Balrog. His friends mourn him. The fellowship fractures. All seems lost. And then — on a mountainside, in blinding white light — he returns. 'I am Gandalf the White,' he says, and his friends cannot believe their eyes. Aragorn asks, 'You fell.' Gandalf answers, 'Through fire and water. From the lowest dungeon to the highest peak, I fought. Until at last I threw down my enemy. Then darkness took me, and I strayed out of thought and time. And every day was as long as a life-age of the earth. But it was not the end. I felt life in me again.' Tolkien, a devout Christian, knew exactly what he was echoing. The return from death. The enemies defeated. The friends who cannot believe it. The world remade by the one everyone counted out.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

The angel rolled away the stone not to let Jesus out — He did not need help leaving — but to let the witnesses in. The empty tomb is an exhibit.

Pastoral

If you are living in Saturday — the silent day between the worst thing and the new thing — keep walking toward the tomb. The women expected a corpse and met a risen Lord.

Edgy

Roman soldiers were trained to fear nothing. They shook and fell like dead men at an empty tomb. The irony: the living became like the dead, and the dead was alive.

More Titles

The Angel Sat on the Stone: Easter and the Swagger of GraceSaturday People: When Easter Finds You Still in the DarkThe Tomb Is an Exhibit: Evidence for the ResurrectionAfraid Yet Filled with Joy: The Honest Emotion of EasterThe First Preachers: Why Women Saw the Risen Christ First
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Frequently Asked Questions

How long should an Easter sermon be?

Easter sermons can be slightly longer than usual because the congregation expects a significant message. Aim for 18-22 minutes. This template targets 20 minutes. If you have many visitors, keep it accessible and avoid insider jargon.

How do I preach Easter to people who have heard it every year?

Focus on the details people miss: the earthquake, the angel sitting on the stone, the guards fainting, women being the first witnesses. The rawness of the narrative — not the sanitized version — makes it fresh. This template emphasizes those overlooked details.

Should an Easter sermon include an invitation?

Yes. Easter draws more visitors than any other Sunday. This template ends with an accessible, pressure-free invitation that meets people wherever they are in their faith journey.

This Sermon in Your Tradition

A easter / resurrection sunday sermon sounds different depending on your theological tradition. See all 17 versions.