“No one takes it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again. This command I have received from My Father.” John 10:18
Well, you will probably be reading this on Maundy Thursday—the Thursday before Good Friday—day day of the Last Supper—the launching pad for the greatest event in human history. This Sunday will be the epitome of the Christian calendar. That day followers of Christ around the world will be celebrating the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
That day, churches around the world will be filled with people who, at least on that day, declare their belief in Jesus Christ and His resurrection from the dead. Most churches will experience their largest attendance of the year. People who attend church infrequently seem to be drawn to worship around Christmas but especially around Easter.
Really that shouldn’t surprise us at all. At Christmas we feel the warm embrace of a baby coming into the world. In the case of Jesus, the birth of the Savior of the world…Emmanuel…God with us. Wrapped in that night is hope…hope that there will be a tomorrow. But the celebration of Easter goes forward from there.
You see, in Easter…actually in the Christ of Easter we find strength, power and victory. Buried in each of us is the confrontation with our own mortality…we all must face death. Short of the rapture, we all are going to face death. In the celebration of Easter we find that death doesn’t have to be the end…in fact, it is a beginning of sorts.
When Jesus willingly died on Good Friday and demonstrated His power over death by resurrecting Sunday morning, He forever proclaimed that mankind no longer had to fear death. I love what He said in John 10:18. Speaking of His death, He said, “No one takes it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I have power to lay it down, and I have power to take it again. This command I have received from My Father.”
Isn’t that just incredible? I lay my life down and then I can take it up again. It is that power that led Paul to write in Philippians 3:10 “that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection…”
Really, there is such power in all of this that the resurrection and the One who was resurrected must be the center of our worship every week. This most likely is the reason the first century church worshiped on Sunday. They understood the power of this great truth. Think about it–no other man–no other religious leader or teacher–no one ever did what Jesus did. It was so big that 2100 years later we are still talking about it. Incredible.
So, as you read read this may it be your motivation to get ready to celebrate this Sunday and every Sunday. Not only does this truth have the power to change our lives—it also can change the way we worship. Begin now, right now, to prepare for the biggest Sunday of the year. If you’re not sure how, just as the One who pulled all of this off. Believe me…He’s got this. Bro. Dewayne