Today is Easter. Resurrection Sunday.
Itβs the day we say, βHe is risen!ββand we respond, βHe is risen indeed!β
But hereβs the question I want us to wrestle with today:
What if the resurrection isnβt just about what happened to Jesusβwhat if itβs about whatβs possible for us?
What if Easter is not just the celebration of an empty tomb, but the invitation to a flourishing lifeβa life that begins in the garden of resurrection and spills out into every broken place weβve ever walked?
So today, letβs walk through four moments from Jesusβ resurrection story that show us how flourishing rises from the ashes, one step at a time.
When Hope Walks Out with You
π John 20:1β18
Mary Magdalene shows up at the tomb expecting to find death. Sheβs grieving. Confused. Maybe even angry.
She doesnβt find Jesus' body.
Instead, she finds an empty space.
She finds angels asking her why sheβs crying.
And thenβJesus Himself stands thereβ¦ but she doesnβt recognize Him at first.
Until He says her name.
βMary.β
Thatβs when everything changes.
Because flourishing doesnβt begin with answersβit begins with presence.
It begins when the risen Christ calls you by name.
Mary thought the garden was a grave. But resurrection turned it into Eden again.
A place of new beginnings.
Sometimes Godβs greatest work in your life will begin in the places where all hope seemed lost.
The resurrection means your worst day is not the end of the story.
When God Walks With You in Disappointment
π Luke 24:13β35
Two disciples are walking away from Jerusalem. Away from everything they hoped Jesus would be.
Theyβre discouraged. Confused. Theyβre on the road to Emmaus, trying to make sense of it all.
And Jesus shows up. He walks beside them. But againβthey donβt recognize Him.
He asks what theyβre talking about.
He listens. He teaches.
And then, as they break bread together, their eyes are opened.
They say, βDid not our hearts burn within us while He talked with us on the road?β
Jesus walks with us in our disappointment, not just our victories.
Even when we donβt see Him, Heβs there.
And when the Word of God opens your heart, even the darkest road can become sacred.
Flourishing isnβt about clarityβitβs about presence.
God doesnβt always fix the path immediately, but He walks it with us.
When Scars Become Signs of Life
π John 20:24β29
Thomas wasnβt there the first time Jesus appeared to the disciples.
And when they tell him, βWe saw the Lord!β
He says, βUnless I see the marks in His handsβ¦ I wonβt believe.β
Heβs not being dramatic. Heβs being honest.
A week later, Jesus shows up again. And this time, He looks right at Thomas and says:
"Put your finger here. Look at my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side."
Jesus didnβt shame him. He invited him.
He didnβt hide His scarsβHe offered them.
Resurrection life doesnβt erase the wounds. It transforms them.
Your scars are not signs of weakness. Theyβre signs that youβve been through the fireβand survived.
Flourishing is about healing, not hiding.
When Grace Restores You
π John 21:1β17
After the resurrection, Peter goes back to fishing.
Maybe heβs unsure. Maybe he thinks heβs disqualified himself after denying Jesus three times.
And then Jesus shows upβagain, on the shore.
Heβs cooking breakfast. Fish over a charcoal fire.
(That detail mattersβPeter denied Jesus by a charcoal fire. Now Jesus restores him by one.)
Three times Jesus asks him: βDo you love me?β
Three times Peter answers.
Three times Jesus says: βFeed my sheep.β
Jesus doesnβt just forgive PeterβHe restores his purpose.
He gives him back his calling.
Flourishing isnβt just about being healed. Itβs about being sent again, with love, with mission, and with grace.
Resurrection is the Beginning of a Flourishing Christian Life
So what does resurrection life really mean?
It means hope finds you when you think youβve lost everything.
It means Jesus walks with you, even when you donβt see Him.
It means your wounds can become your witness.
It means you are never too far gone to be restored.
π¬ βHe is risenβ isnβt just a line for Sunday morningβitβs a declaration for Monday, Tuesday, and every day after.
The empty tomb isnβt the end of the storyβitβs the launch point of a flourishing life.
Not a perfect life. Not a pain-free life.
But a life rooted in grace, ignited by hope, and sustained by the presence of the risen Jesus.
So wherever you are todayβwhether youβre standing at the tomb, walking a lonely road, feeling your wounds, or wondering if God still wants to use youβ
Let me remind you:
Resurrection is real.
Jesus is alive.
And flourishing is still possible.












