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Easter / Resurrection SundayEastern Orthodox~20 minClaude Opus 4.6

Christ Is Risen! Trampling Down Death by Death

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

Pascha — Christ's victory over death by death, the harrowing of hell, and the cosmic triumph celebrated in the Paschal homily of Chrysostom

Eastern Orthodox

Holy Tradition, theosis, and liturgical worship

Tradition vocabulary:PaschaChristus Victorharrowing of HadesAnastasistropariontheosisChrysostomChristos anesti

Christus Victor: Death Could Not Hold Him

Christ is risen from the dead, trampling down death by death, and upon those in the tombs bestowing life! This is the Paschal troparion — the hymn the Orthodox Church has sung for seventeen centuries, and the most concentrated expression of resurrection theology in all of Christendom. Notice the paradox: death by death. Christ defeated death not by avoiding it but by entering it. He did not go around the grave. He went through it. He descended into Hades — the realm of the dead — and He harrowed it. The Orthodox icon of the resurrection does not show Jesus emerging from a tomb. It shows Him standing on the shattered gates of Hades, reaching down with both hands to pull Adam and Eve out of their graves. This is the Christus Victor — the triumphant Christ who fights the enemy on the enemy's own ground and wins. The Western imagination often pictures the resurrection as Jesus rising from the tomb. The Eastern imagination pictures something far more dramatic: Jesus invading death's kingdom, breaking its doors, smashing its locks, and liberating every captive. Hades swallowed Jesus and could not digest Him. Death consumed the Author of Life and choked. The enemy's greatest weapon became the instrument of his own destruction. This is Pascha. Not a gentle morning awakening. A cosmic invasion. A prison break. A war won from the inside.
Matthew 28:1-61 Peter 3:18-20Hebrews 2:14-15

The Icon of the Anastasis

The most famous Orthodox icon of the resurrection — the Anastasis — shows Christ standing on the broken gates of Hades. Beneath His feet, locks and chains and hinges are scattered like wreckage. With His right hand, He grasps Adam. With His left, He grasps Eve. He is pulling them bodily out of their tombs. Behind them, prophets and kings and all the righteous dead are rising. This is not a picture of one man's personal victory. It is a picture of the liberation of the entire human race. Christ did not rise alone. He brought everyone with Him.

Source: Byzantine Anastasis icon tradition / Chora Church, Istanbul (14th century)

The Paschal Homily of Saint John Chrysostom

For seventeen hundred years, the Orthodox Church has read the Paschal homily of Saint John Chrysostom at every Easter service. Its words ring with the swagger of victory: "Let no one fear death, for the death of our Savior has set us free. He who was held prisoner by death has annihilated it. By descending into Hades, He made Hades captive. He embittered it when it tasted His flesh. Isaiah foretold this when he cried: 'Hades was embittered when it encountered You in the lower regions.' It was embittered, for it was abolished. It was embittered, for it was mocked. It was embittered, for it was slain. It was embittered, for it was overthrown." The language is deliberately mocking. Chrysostom taunts death the way a warrior taunts a defeated enemy. Hades thought it was swallowing a dead man. It was swallowing the Author of Life. And the Author of Life destroyed it from the inside. "O Death, where is your sting? O Hades, where is your victory? Christ is risen, and you are overthrown! Christ is risen, and the demons are fallen! Christ is risen, and the angels rejoice! Christ is risen, and life reigns! Christ is risen, and not one dead remains in the grave!" This is the joy of Pascha. This is the Church triumphant. This is the sound of death being laughed at by the people it once terrorized.
1 Corinthians 15:55Isaiah 25:8Revelation 1:18

Upon Those in the Tombs Bestowing Life

The Paschal troparion does not end with Christ's victory. It ends with a gift: "upon those in the tombs bestowing life." The resurrection is not just about Christ. It is about everyone. Every person who has ever lived under the shadow of death — which is every person who has ever lived — is included in the scope of Christ's victory. In Orthodox theology, the resurrection is the beginning of theosis — the process by which humanity participates in the divine nature. Christ became what we are so that we might become what He is. The resurrection is the hinge: because Christ has taken human nature through death and into glory, human nature itself is now capable of divinization. This is why Orthodox Christians greet each other at Pascha with the most joyful words in any language: "Christos anesti!" — Christ is risen! And the response: "Alithos anesti!" — Truly He is risen! This is not a greeting. It is a confession. It is the entire Christian faith compressed into four words. So tonight — at the midnight service, with candles blazing and bells ringing and the troparion sung in every language on earth — we proclaim what the Church has proclaimed since the first Pascha: Christ is risen from the dead, trampling down death by death, and upon those in the tombs bestowing life! Christos anesti! Alithos anesti!
2 Peter 1:42 Corinthians 3:18Romans 8:11

Applications

  • 1Greet every person you see today with "Christ is risen!" and receive the answer: "Truly He is risen!" Let the ancient greeting be your confession.
  • 2Contemplate the Anastasis icon. Christ is not rising alone — He is pulling Adam and Eve out of their graves. The resurrection is communal, not individual.
  • 3Read the Paschal homily of Saint John Chrysostom. Let its defiant joy reshape how you think about death.
  • 4Remember that Pascha is the beginning of theosis. Christ became what we are so that we might become what He is. Live into that transformation.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Christ is risen from the dead, trampling down death by death, and upon those in the tombs bestowing life!
  • O Lord, as You harrowed Hades and shattered its gates, shatter every prison that holds Your people captive — fear, sin, despair, death itself.
  • Grant us the joy of Chrysostom — the defiant, mocking, triumphant joy that laughs at death because death has already been defeated.
  • Christos anesti! Alithos anesti! Now and forever and to the ages of ages. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

The Great Escape (1963)

In The Great Escape, Allied prisoners tunnel their way out of a "escape-proof" German prison camp. The tunnel is dug in secret, under the enemy's nose, and when the breakout happens, the guards are stunned — the prisoners are already gone. The Anastasis icon shows something similar: Christ tunneled into Hades from the inside, shattered the gates, and led the captives out before death even realized what had happened. Hades thought it had swallowed a prisoner. It had swallowed the Liberator.

3 Voices

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

Classic

Christ did not go around death. He went through it. He invaded Hades, shattered its gates, and pulled Adam out with His own hands. That is Pascha.

Pastoral

Hades swallowed Jesus and could not digest Him. Death consumed the Author of Life and choked. Whatever death has swallowed in your life — Christ has gone in after it.

Edgy

Chrysostom taunts death like a defeated enemy. "It was embittered, for it was abolished. It was mocked. It was slain." That is seventeen centuries of Christians laughing at the grave.

More Titles

Trampling Down Death by DeathThe Harrowing of Hades: An Orthodox PaschaChristos Anesti! The Joy of the ResurrectionThe Anastasis: Christ Pulls Adam from the GraveLet No One Fear Death: Chrysostom's Easter
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Frequently Asked Questions

What is Pascha?

Pascha is the Orthodox term for Easter, derived from the Hebrew Pesach (Passover). It is the feast of feasts — the greatest celebration in the Orthodox liturgical year. The Paschal celebration typically begins at midnight with the proclamation "Christ is risen!" and features the reading of Saint John Chrysostom's Paschal homily.

What is the "harrowing of Hades"?

The harrowing of Hades is the Orthodox belief that between His death and resurrection, Christ descended into the realm of the dead (Hades), shattered its gates, and liberated the captives — beginning with Adam and Eve. The Anastasis icon depicts this moment. Christ conquered death not by avoiding it but by entering it and destroying it from within.

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