Relatable with Allie Beth Stuckey - BONUS: What the Resurrection Means for All of Us
Episode Date: April 16, 2022This Easter weekend, we wanted to take time to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus three days after He died on a cross & was buried. We'll read some Scripture about the resurrection morning, & reflect... on what Christ's victory over death accomplishes for all believers. He is risen! --- Buy Allie's book, You're Not Enough (& That's Okay): Escaping the Toxic Culture of Self-Love: https://alliebethstuckey.com/book Relatable merchandise: https://shop.blazemedia.com/collections/allie-stuckey
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Okay, guys, happy Easter weekend.
I wanted to just give you a little bonus episode to wish you happy Easter and to do the only
fitting thing before Easter Sunday.
And that is talk about the wonder and the beauty and the great news of the gospel of Jesus
Christ.
And I thought the best way to do that was to read you some scripture.
So whether you are a seasoned believer or whether you're still trying to figure out if this
whole God thing is real or maybe you're a new.
new believer and you're still trying to understand, okay, how do I express what the gospel is?
What exactly is Easter celebrating? I hope that this encourages and edifies you. So let me read you
a little bit of Romans 5. We'll start with verse 1. This is really the gospel. Therefore,
since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.
Through him, we have also obtained access by faith and to this grace in which we stand. And we
rejoice in hope of the glory of God. And then I'll fast forward a little bit to verse 6.
For while we were still weak, at the right time Christ died for the ungodly. For one will
scarcely die for a righteous person, though perhaps for a good person one would dare even to
die, but God shows his love for us and that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.
Since therefore, we have now been justified by his blood much more shall we be saved by him
from the wrath of God.
For if while we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his son, much more,
now that we are reconciled, shall we be saved by his life?
More than that, we also rejoice in God through our Lord Jesus Christ,
through whom we have now received reconciliation.
So we are reconciled as an unholy, sinful people to a holy, perfect God.
We had to be restored.
we had to be renewed, we had to be redeemed in order to be granted access to this perfect
holy God of the universe. We are sinful. We have all sinned and fallen short of the glory of God,
whether you have the most egregious sins in your past, or whether you think that your sins are
just small and petty, you've stolen a pen, or you've told a lie, or you've gossiped,
or you've judged someone hypocritically, whatever is in your pen. You've stolen a pen. You've told a lie. You've gossiped.
past. No matter how bad you think that you are or how good you think that you are, the fact of
the matter is, is that as Ephesians 2 says, we are all equally dead in our sins apart from Christ.
If you think about a dead person, a dead person can't help themselves. They can't do anything.
They can't save themselves. They can't make themselves better or fix themselves up so they
look more presentable. They are completely and totally helpless. And that is how Ephesians 2 paints us,
that we are dead in our sins.
This Romans 5 passage says that we are enemies of God.
So we were in a really bad place.
All of us, no matter our background,
does it matter our race or our sex or our socioeconomic background?
Or like I said, our sin history,
we were all equally dead in sin apart from God.
We were enemies of God.
We were hostile to God.
We were under the reign of Satan.
And we had to be saved.
And how were we saved?
Again, going to Ephesians 2,
specifically verses 8 through 10 we were saved by the grace of God through faith in Christ.
He made us alive together in Christ. He made us new. He gave us new hearts. He made us new creations.
He gave us his righteousness. He gave us his holiness. He forgave us of our sins and he made us
acceptable before God, not because of anything that we have done, but as a gift he gave us
us this salvation and redemption and reconciliation. So we have a hope of salvation. We get to now
go from being enemies of God to friends with God. We get to be fellow heirs with Christ of God's
inheritance. We get to look forward to the hope of heaven after death, but not only that,
we are free from the chains and the shackles and the slavery to sin. So not only do we have something
to look forward to in the next life. But we also have liberation from the burden of sin that holds
us down today. We find joy and we find freedom. We find a lightness. We find a satisfaction and
fulfillment in the repentance from sin and in obedience to God. Jesus's burden is light and his yoke is
easy, whereas the burden of sin is really heavy. The yoke of the devil is really difficult.
And so Jesus gives us freedom not just in the next life, but also in this life.
So that's what Jesus's death accomplishes, but that's also what Jesus' resurrection
accomplishes.
That's what sets Jesus apart.
A lot of people who claimed that they were special or claimed that they were maybe
some kind of Messiah or some kind of prophet died.
In fact, they all died.
Only one of them rose again, according to the testimony of multiple eyewitnesses.
And so I want to read you from Luke 24 what happened when Jesus was raised from the dead
three days after he died on a cross for our sins, becoming our sacrifice to reconcile us to God,
taking on our punishment, our sins that we might be forgiven and made acceptable before God.
So let me read you about, let me read to you about the resurrection.
Luke 24 verse 1
1 but on the first day of the week at early
dawn they went to the tomb taking the spices
they had prepared and they found the stone
rolled away from the tomb and when
they went in they did not find the body of the
Lord Jesus. While they were
perplexed about this behold two men
stood by them in dazzling apparel
and as they were frightened and bowed their faces
to the ground the men said to them
why do you seek the living among the
debt? Meaning Jesus
he is not here but has risen
remember how he told you
while he was still in Galilee, that the son of man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men
and be crucified and on the third day rise. And they remembered his words. And returning from the tomb,
they told all these things to the 11 and to all the rest. Now, it was Mary Magdalene and Joanna
and Mary the mother of James and the other women with them who told these things to the apostles.
But these words seemed to them an idle tale, and they did not believe them. But Peter rose and ran to
the tomb, stupid and looking in. He saw the linen cloths by themselves, and he went home.
marveling at what had happened. And we could keep going there who Jesus spoke to after he rose
from the dead and the entire story of the resurrection. But I highly encourage you if you have or if
you have it read Luke 24, the account of the resurrection to go do that today and tomorrow. Maybe
gather your family around. If you've never done that before, maybe it feels a little bit
awkward. That's okay. It's not you speaking. It's the word of God working. And it's the Holy
Spirit working and he cannot fail. It doesn't matter if you're a bad reader. It doesn't matter if you've
never read the Bible out loud. It doesn't matter if you've never said a prayer with your family.
You can pull this passage up on your phone and you can read it with those who are around you.
I promise it will only be an encouraging and Holy Spirit-filled experience and it will glorify God.
That is what the resurrection accomplishes for us, that it is the defeat of death.
is victory over sin and darkness.
Just as our sinful selves have died as Christ has died.
So our new selves, our renewed selves that we were given by grace through faith,
have also defeated spiritual death forever in Jesus' resurrection.
And so that's our hope is that, yes, death, physical death,
unfortunately, sadly, still happens, but we have faith and we have hope and the ultimate victory
over death, that death does it have the same consequence, the same impact, the same sting
for the Christian because our God defeated it and he is given us that hope in the power
and the reality of his resurrection. That's a bold claim. It's a bold claim. It's a bold claim.
that the God that we serve came as a man, fully man, fully God, that he died on a cross for our sins
and that he was raised to life three days later. And in that we get salvation that we never even
earned, but it's just given to us as a gift. It's a bold claim. And that is Christianity.
Christianity has always been controversial. It has always been countercultural. It has always
been scandalous. It has always been radical. It has always been the center of scorn for people
who don't believe the gospel. So let us not be surprised by the adversarial and even hostile
culture when it comes to contending for our faith. It's always been that way. Let us rejoice in our
sufferings, let us rejoice in any persecution experienced here or abroad by Christians. Let us remember
that it's worth it, that the gospel is worth speaking up about, is worth defending, is worth
rejoicing over with all the crazy stuff going on in the world today. Let us take time to rest with
our family, to truly celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ and to remember the eternal truth
that God came to save us and that he is in total control and that he has already claimed victory
over darkness. And even as it seems like darkness is winning, we know that God wins. So thank you
so much for listening to this. We will be back here on Monday.
