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Easter / Resurrection SundayTraditional~20 minClaude Opus 4.6

He Is Alive: The Fact That Changes Your Eternity

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

The bodily resurrection of Christ as historical fact, the personal assurance of salvation, and the invitation to receive eternal life

Traditional / Conservative Evangelical

Biblical authority and orthodox doctrine

Tradition vocabulary:bodily resurrectionpersonal faithborn againGospeleternal lifeinerrantassurancesaved

This Is Not a Fairy Tale — This Happened

I want to begin this morning by saying something that might surprise you: the resurrection of Jesus Christ is the most well-attested event in the ancient world. This is not a legend. This is not a metaphor. This is not a spiritual idea dressed up in historical clothing. This happened. In real time. In a real place. To a real body. And it changes everything. Matthew tells us that on the first day of the week, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary went to the tomb. They were not expecting a miracle. They were expecting what everyone expects at a grave — finality. The stone was sealed. The Roman guard was posted. The body was wrapped and buried. By every human measure, the story was over. But God does not operate by human measures. There was a violent earthquake. An angel descended from heaven, rolled back the stone, and sat on it. The guards shook with fear and became like dead men. And the angel said six words that split history in half: "He is not here; he has risen." Paul later writes to the Corinthians and lays out the evidence like a courtroom attorney: Christ appeared to Peter, then to the Twelve, then to more than five hundred people at once — most of whom were still alive and could be cross-examined. This is not wishful thinking. This is eyewitness testimony. The Bible invites scrutiny because the Bible can withstand it.
Matthew 28:1-61 Corinthians 15:3-8

The Skeptic Who Investigated

Lee Strobel was an atheist journalist at the Chicago Tribune. When his wife became a Christian, he set out to disprove the resurrection using his investigative skills. After two years of research, interviewing scholars, examining the evidence, and testing every alternative theory, he came to an inescapable conclusion: the resurrection happened. He became a Christian — not because of feelings, but because the evidence demanded a verdict. The resurrection does not ask you to check your brain at the door. It asks you to use it.

Source: Lee Strobel, The Case for Christ (1998)

If Christ Is Risen, Then You Are Saved

Paul puts the stakes as high as they can go: "If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins." That is the negative. Here is the positive: if Christ has been raised — and He has — then your faith is not futile. Your sins are forgiven. Death is defeated. And heaven is as certain as the empty tomb. This is the heart of the Gospel. Not good advice — good news. Not a self-improvement program — a rescue mission. Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures. He was buried. He was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures. That is the Gospel in three sentences. And it is enough to save anyone who believes it. The resurrection proves that God accepted the sacrifice of the cross. When Jesus said "It is finished" on Friday, the Father said "Amen" on Sunday. The empty tomb is God's receipt — proof that the debt has been paid in full. Your sin, my sin, every sin that has ever been committed or ever will be — all of it was laid on Christ at Calvary. And the resurrection is God's declaration that the payment was sufficient. If you are here this morning and you have placed your personal faith in Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, then hear this: you are saved. Not "might be" saved. Not "hope to be" saved. Saved. The same power that raised Christ from the dead has given you eternal life. And no one — not Satan, not death, not your past, not your doubts — can take it away.
1 Corinthians 15:171 Corinthians 15:3-4Romans 8:38-39

Death Has Lost Its Sting

For every person who has lost a loved one — and Easter morning is full of those people — the resurrection is not an abstract doctrine. It is the most personal promise in the Bible. "Because I live, you also will live." Jesus did not say "you might live" or "you could live." He said "you will live." The loved ones you have lost — if they trusted Christ — 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 every believer out of theirs. Paul puts it in language that almost sounds like taunting: "Where, O death, is your victory? Where, O death, is your sting?" That is the resurrection talking. That is the sound of an enemy that has been permanently defeated. Death still exists — we feel it, we grieve it — but it no longer wins. The sting has been removed. The venom has been drained. Death is a defeated enemy doing his final damage, but the outcome is no longer in doubt. So this morning, if you have never placed your personal faith in Jesus Christ — if you have been watching from the outside, if you have been curious but uncommitted, if you have been running but you are tired — this is your moment. The same Jesus who rose from the dead is alive right now, and He is extending an invitation to you: "Come to me. Believe in me. And you will live forever." That is not a sales pitch. That is a promise backed by an empty tomb. Christ is risen. He is risen indeed.
John 14:191 Corinthians 15:55-57Matthew 11:28

Applications

  • 1If you have never trusted Christ as your personal Savior, today is the day. The empty tomb proves that God keeps His promises. Come to Him.
  • 2Share the evidence. The resurrection withstands scrutiny. Tell someone this week what the historical evidence for Easter means to you.
  • 3If you are grieving a loved one who trusted Christ, let the resurrection redefine your grief. They are not gone. They are ahead of you.
  • 4Live as a resurrection people. Let the certainty of eternal life shape how you face every fear, every failure, and every Monday morning.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Lord Jesus, You are alive. Not in memory. Not as a symbol. Alive. And because You live, we will live also. Thank You for the certainty of that promise.
  • For those in this room who have never trusted You — open their eyes to the evidence, soften their hearts to the invitation, and save them today.
  • For those who are grieving — remind them that the tomb is a door, not a wall. The best is yet to come.
  • Christ is risen. He is risen indeed. Let that truth be the foundation of every day we live from this moment forward. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

The Shawshank Redemption (1994)

Andy Dufresne was imprisoned for a crime he didn't commit. For twenty years he endured — the walls, the brutality, the injustice. And then one morning, the warden opened the cell and found it empty. The man was gone. The prison couldn't hold him. When Red finally finds Andy on that beach in Mexico, free and alive, it is a resurrection moment — the innocent man has escaped the tomb that held him. Jesus was imprisoned in death for three days. He was innocent. And on Sunday morning, God opened the cell and found it empty. The grave couldn't hold Him. He is alive. He is free. And He has made a way for every prisoner to walk out after Him.

3 Voices

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

Classic

The resurrection is not a metaphor. It is not a symbol. It is an event — the most important event in history. And it happened to a real body in a real tomb.

Pastoral

If you are here this morning carrying grief, hear this: for every believer, the tomb is a door, not a wall. Your loved one is not gone. They are ahead of you.

Edgy

Paul invited people to cross-examine five hundred eyewitnesses. The resurrection does not ask you to check your brain at the door. It asks you to use it.

More Titles

The Fact That Changes Your EternityFive Hundred Witnesses: The Evidence for EasterDeath Has Lost Its Sting: An Easter DeclarationThe Empty Tomb Is God's ReceiptAlive — Not in Memory, Not as Symbol, Alive
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Frequently Asked Questions

What makes an evangelical Easter sermon distinctive?

An evangelical Easter sermon emphasizes the bodily resurrection as historical fact, personal salvation through faith in the risen Christ, and typically includes an invitation for those who have never trusted Christ. It treats the resurrection as evidence-based, not metaphorical.

Should an Easter sermon include an altar call?

Many evangelical churches include an invitation at Easter because it draws the largest crowd of the year, including many visitors. This template ends with a clear, pressure-free invitation that meets people where they are in their faith journey.

How do I present the resurrection to skeptics?

Focus on the evidence: eyewitness testimony (500+ witnesses), the empty tomb, the transformation of the disciples, and the explosive growth of the early church. The resurrection invites investigation — scholars like Lee Strobel and N.T. Wright have found the evidence compelling.

This Sermon in Other Traditions

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