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Easter / Resurrection SundayBlack Church~20 minClaude Opus 4.6

Trouble Don't Last Always: The Black Church and the Resurrection

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

The resurrection as God's vindication of the oppressed, Friday-to-Sunday theology, and the joy that comes in the morning

Black Church Tradition

Liberation, prophetic worship, and communal faith

Tradition vocabulary:Friday-to-Sundaytestimonytrouble don't last alwaysHe got upjoyweeping enduresdeliveranceprophetic

We Are a Friday People Serving a Sunday God

Church, I need to tell you something you already know: we are a Friday people. The Black Church was born on Friday. Our ancestors were crucified — not on wooden crosses, but on auction blocks and cotton fields and Jim Crow signs that said, "Not welcome here." The whip, the rope, the locked schoolhouse door, the bullet, the knee on the neck — our people have lived Good Friday in this country for four hundred years. But here is what the slaveholders did not understand. Here is what every system of oppression since then has failed to comprehend. We are a Friday people, but we serve a Sunday God. Matthew tells us there was a violent earthquake. The stone was rolled away. The angel sat down and said, "He is not here. He has risen." And Church, when I read that, I hear more than a report about a tomb in Jerusalem. I hear a declaration about every tomb that has ever tried to hold God's people: the tomb of slavery, the tomb of segregation, the tomb of mass incarceration, the tomb of poverty, the tomb of despair. The stone has been rolled away. He is not here. He has risen. Trouble don't last always. That is not wishful thinking. That is resurrection theology. The God who raised Jesus from the dead is the same God who brought our people through the Middle Passage, through slavery, through Reconstruction, through lynching, through Birmingham, through Ferguson. And He is not done yet. The tomb is empty. The morning has come. And weeping may endure for a night, but joy — joy! — comes in the morning.
Matthew 28:1-6Psalm 30:5Isaiah 61:1-3

Mother Emanuel

On June 17, 2015, a white supremacist entered Mother Emanuel AME Church in Charleston and killed nine people during a Bible study. The world expected rage. Instead, the families of the victims stood in a courtroom and spoke forgiveness. That is resurrection power. Not a power that denies evil — a power that refuses to let evil have the last word. The church held its Sunday service three days later. The tomb was empty. The doors were open. The singing was louder than ever.

Source: Mother Emanuel AME Church, Charleston, SC (2015)

Joy Comes in the Morning

David writes: "Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning." The Black Church has lived inside that verse for centuries. We know what the night looks like. We have buried our children. We have visited our people in prison. We have watched the news and wept. We know the night. But we also know the morning. We know what it sounds like when the choir sings "He Got Up!" and the organ catches fire and the whole church is on its feet because we know — we know in our bones, in our blood, in the songs our grandmothers taught us — that death does not get the last word. Paul says, "Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?" And I can hear the Black Church answering back across four hundred years: "You tried. You failed. Our God is bigger than your grave." The resurrection is not an abstract doctrine for the Black Church. It is survival theology. It is the reason we are still here. It is the engine that powered the spirituals, the freedom songs, the March on Washington, and the prayer meetings in the jail cells. Every time someone told us to stay down, the resurrection said: get up. Every time the world dug a grave for Black hope, God rolled the stone away. Easter in the Black Church is not polite. It is loud. It is joyful. It is defiant. Because the tomb is empty and our God is alive and trouble don't last always!
Psalm 30:51 Corinthians 15:55-57Romans 8:37

He Got Up — And So Will We

Here is the testimony: they killed Him on Friday. They buried Him on Saturday. But early Sunday morning — early! — He got up! Got up with all power in His hands. Got up with the keys of death and Hades hanging from His belt. Got up and told death, "You have no authority here." And because He got up, we get up. We get up from poverty. We get up from addiction. We get up from despair. We get up from the grave that the world keeps trying to dig for us. The resurrection is not just what happened to Jesus. It is what happens to everyone who follows Him. Church, I don't know what tomb you are sitting in this morning. I don't know what stone is blocking your way. But I know this: the God who rolled the stone on Sunday morning can roll the stone in your life too. He is the same yesterday, today, and forever. And His resurrection power has not expired. So get up. Get up from that chair. Get up from that despair. Get up from that diagnosis. Get up from that divorce. Get up, because Christ got up, and because He lives, you can face tomorrow, and all your fears are gone. Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! And if He is risen, then everything the enemy told you was a lie. You are not finished. You are not forgotten. You are not forsaken. You are a resurrection people. Now act like it! To God be the glory!
Matthew 28:6Revelation 1:17-18Hebrews 13:8

Applications

  • 1Remember: you are a Friday people serving a Sunday God. Whatever tomb you are in, the stone is being rolled away.
  • 2Testify. Tell someone what God has brought you through. The testimony is the sermon you preach with your life.
  • 3Worship with your whole body this week. Sing in the shower. Clap in the car. The tomb is empty and that deserves a response.
  • 4Support someone who is still in their Friday. Walk with them. Remind them that morning is coming.

Prayer Suggestions

  • God of the Friday and the Sunday — You have been bringing Your people through the night for four hundred years. You are faithful. You are mighty. You are here.
  • For every person in this room sitting in a tomb — roll the stone. Not tomorrow. Not eventually. Now. In the name of Jesus.
  • We thank You for the joy that comes in the morning. We have lived in the night. We have sung in the night. And now the morning is here.
  • To God be the glory, great things He has done! Christ is risen! He is risen indeed! And trouble don't last always! Amen and amen!

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

Selma (2014)

In Selma, after Bloody Sunday — after the beatings on the Edmund Pettus Bridge — the marchers could have stayed down. The world expected them to stay down. But they got up. They marched again. They crossed the bridge. And the nation changed. The resurrection is the spiritual engine behind every freedom march, every protest song, every refusal to stay down. Christ got up. And because He got up, we get up. Every time. No matter what.

3 Voices

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

Classic

We are a Friday people serving a Sunday God. They killed Him on Friday. They buried Him Saturday. But early Sunday morning — He got up!

Pastoral

I don't know what tomb you are in this morning. But I know the God who rolls stones. And His resurrection power has not expired.

Edgy

Four hundred years of Good Friday. And still singing on Sunday. The slaveholders could not explain it. The segregationists could not stop it. Because the tomb is empty and our God is alive.

More Titles

Trouble Don't Last AlwaysHe Got Up: A Black Church EasterFriday People, Sunday GodJoy Comes in the MorningThe Resurrection and the Struggle
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Frequently Asked Questions

What makes a Black Church Easter sermon distinctive?

A Black Church Easter sermon connects the resurrection to the lived experience of Black Americans — four hundred years of suffering, resistance, and resilient faith. It frames the resurrection as God's vindication of the oppressed and uses "Friday-to-Sunday" theology: the Black Church knows what Good Friday feels like and trusts that God always brings Sunday morning.

What is "Friday-to-Sunday" theology?

"Friday-to-Sunday" theology is the belief that the pattern of Christ's death and resurrection repeats in the lives of God's people. Good Friday is real — suffering, injustice, and death are not denied. But Sunday always comes. The resurrection guarantees that evil does not get the last word. This theology has sustained the Black Church through slavery, segregation, and ongoing racial injustice.

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See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the easter / resurrection sunday sermon.