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What Does the Resurrection Change?

WEEK 4 DAY 2 — WHEN DEATH LOST ITS FINAL WORD

 

Hi church family. I’m really glad you’re here again today.
Yesterday, we began the week by seeing what the resurrection changes first.

Because Jesus is alive, guilt no longer has the final verdict.
We are no longer hiding from God or defending ourselves.
We stand at peace with Him.

But that immediately leads to the next question.

If guilt no longer gets the last word…what about death?

Because even forgiven people still fear loss. Even people at peace with God still grieve.

Standing face to face with the risen Jesus, death still feels powerful.
Rome still rules. The cross still happened. Graves still exist.
Scripture never pretends otherwise.

The Bible does not minimize death. It names it honestly.
Paul actually calls death an enemy.

So Christianity doesn’t deny death. And it doesn’t rush past grief.
But it does make one staggering claim. This enemy has been defeated.

Paul writes in First Corinthians chapter fifteen,
“Christ has been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.”
His death and resurrection is the means to our forgiveness and promise of eternal life for us too!

Like Jesus didn’t escape death neither will we.
Like Jesus We will go through it—and come out the other side victorious!

For the disciples, seeing Jesus alive didn’t make death disappear.
But it did change what death means.
Death was no longer an ending. It became a doorway.

And for those who are in Christ, death is no longer powerful enough to separate us from the love of God. Paul will later say that not even death can do that.
Which means we still grieve—but not as people without hope.
We grieve because death is an enemy. But we grieve differently because it is a defeated one.

And there’s more.

The resurrection doesn’t just promise survival after death. It promises transformation.
Paul says what is perishable will put on what is imperishable.
What is weak will be raised in power.
What is broken will be made whole.

Death becomes the moment when corruption gives way to glory.
Not because death is good—but because God is greater.

So the resurrection doesn’t remove tears. But it reframes them.
Every loss is temporary.
Every injustice will be answered.
Every grave is on borrowed time.

 

 Here’s your action step today.

When grief surfaces—or when fear of death creeps in—don’t rush to silence it.
Name it honestly.

Then say this, slowly and out loud:
“Death is an enemy—but the sting of death has been removed. Because Jesus lives, I will live also – a life that cannot be corrupted, fade, or perish!”

About our Author

Pastor James M. Armpriester, Jr. worked as a molecular biologist at Procter & Gamble for ten years before becoming a pastor. With over thirty years of experience in ministry, he has been heavily involved in church planting and church health. He has served as a district director in Ohio and North Texas and has been a national leader in curriculum development, coaching, and consulting for church planting and revitalization. Pastor Jim has been the lead pastor of several churches, including New Hope in Cincinnati, Ohio, First Assembly of God in Niagara Falls, NY, and Transformation Life Church, which has multiple campuses in New Jersey.

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