#PowerOfTheResurrection

Intentional Faithmhoggin@pastorhogg.net
2025-12-17

When the Stone Is Already Rolled Away

A Day in the Life of Jesus

There are moments in the life of Jesus that resist being rushed past, and the resurrection morning is one of them. Mark tells us that when the Sabbath ended, Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James, and Salome went out to purchase spices so they could anoint Jesus’ body. Their actions are tender and deeply human. They are not planning for resurrection; they are preparing for grief. They are doing what love does when hope seems spent. I find myself drawn to these women because they show us that faith often continues in motion even when clarity has not yet arrived. They rise early, they carry their spices, and they walk toward the tomb with unanswered questions echoing between them.

As they walk, their concern is painfully practical: who will roll away the stone? Mark notes that it was very large, a detail that underscores both physical reality and emotional weight. In Scripture, stones often represent finality, boundaries, or obstacles beyond human strength. The women assume, reasonably so, that death still reigns. Yet when they arrive, the stone is already moved. Resurrection often meets us this way—God has been at work ahead of us, solving problems we believed would define the limits of our obedience. The Greek verb Mark uses for “rolled away” implies decisive action, not partial movement. God has done fully what the women feared they could never do themselves.

Inside the tomb, they encounter a young man clothed in white—an unmistakable sign of divine presence. His words are among the most insightful ever spoken into human fear: “You are looking for Jesus the Nazarene, who was crucified. He is not here; He has risen.” The angel does not deny the crucifixion; he names it. Resurrection does not erase suffering—it transforms it. The Jesus who lives is the same Jesus who died. This matters deeply for discipleship because it assures us that God does not bypass pain to bring life; He passes through it. As N. T. Wright has often noted, the resurrection is not an escape from the world but the launching of God’s new creation within it.

The message continues with remarkable grace: “Go, tell His disciples—and Peter.” That last phrase lingers with pastoral weight. Peter, who denied Jesus, is named explicitly. Resurrection is not only victory over death; it is restoration for the ashamed. John Calvin observed that the resurrection is the “principal article of faith,” because without it, grace would remain abstract. Here, grace becomes personal. Peter’s failure does not exclude him from the future Jesus is unfolding. Neither do ours. The risen Christ goes ahead of His disciples to Galilee, just as He promised. Faith is anchored not merely in surprise but in trustworthiness. Jesus keeps His word even when His followers falter.

This brings us to the reality of the resurrection itself. First, Jesus kept His promise to rise from the dead. That simple truth stabilizes everything else He said. If He was faithful in the face of death, He will be faithful in the details of our lives. Second, the resurrection ensures that the ruler of God’s eternal kingdom is not a memory or an idea, but the living Christ. Christianity does not proclaim principles alone; it proclaims a Person who lives. Third, as Paul argues in 1 Corinthians 15, Christ’s resurrection secures our own. “If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile,” Paul writes, but because He has been raised, death no longer has the final word.

Fourth, the same power that raised Jesus is now at work in us. Resurrection is not only future-oriented; it is present and formative. The Spirit brings life to places in us that have grown morally tired or spiritually numb. Growth, change, and repentance are not self-improvement projects; they are resurrection realities. Finally, the resurrection provides the substance of the church’s witness. We are not simply offering ethical teaching or inspirational stories. We are bearing witness to an event that redefined history. As Michael Green once wrote, “The resurrection was not an appendix to the gospel; it was the gospel.”

Mark ends this account with an unsettling honesty: the women flee trembling and bewildered, too frightened to speak. Resurrection does not immediately produce composure; it produces awe. Faith often begins not with confidence but with holy disorientation. God has done something so new that it takes time to find language for it. If you have ever felt overwhelmed by what God is doing in your life—unsure how to explain it or even fully grasp it—you are in good company. Resurrection invites us to grow into understanding as we walk forward in obedience.

As we consider this day in the life of Jesus, we are reminded that resurrection is not merely something to be believed; it is something to be lived. The stone is already rolled away. The tomb is empty. Jesus goes ahead of us. And like the women, we are invited to keep walking—even when our hands still carry spices meant for a reality that no longer exists.

May the risen Christ meet you today in your early-morning assumptions, your unanswered questions, and your quiet acts of devotion. May you discover that God has already been at work ahead of you, and may the life of Jesus reshape not only what you believe, but how you live.

For further study on the historical and theological significance of the resurrection, see this article from The Gospel Coalition:
https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/why-the-resurrection-matters/

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