barked that he “Shut up!” and “Get back to work!” When another employee stepped in to defuse the situation, Mr. Stevens challenged him to a fight. When yet another employee tried to intervene, Mr. Stevens yelled back: “I’m not going to let you continue telling me I’m disrespecting my crew. Have you been in the fast food business before?” This employee calmly replied: “I have been in the restaurant business for over 20 years. And I’ve been in the fast food business for over 20 years. I’m CEO for this company.” (http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2104085/Rallys-Checkers-CEO-Rick-Silva-shuts-restaurant-Undercover-Boss-episode.html#ixzz4fNijv8Ra )
Can you just imagine the sheer horror spreading across Mr. Stevens’ face? He verbally attacked his employees. He abused them. He even so smugly challenged the authority of his boss! Now he stands in front of the judge who holds his livelihood in his hands! Maybe that is what many love watching when it comes to revealing a hidden, but powerful identity: Justice is served. Yet, when the tables are turned and you are the one caught red-handed by a powerful identity, well, you can feel the hope drain out of life. And when Peter points at you and trumpets: “You challenged the authority of God!” What shall you do? Let’s Be Sure: Jesus is ‘Lord’ and ‘Christ.’ This truth cuts to the heart. This truth creates new life. This truth could not be ignored. Peter’s own eyes took in the sights of an empty tomb. His ears heard Jesus breathe: “Peace be with you!” (John 20:19). His fingers touched real flesh and blood. Jesus is not dead; he is risen indeed! Yet, fifty days after Easter, life returned to normal and so many people act as though nothing happened. Something did happen— an event no one can ignore or shrug off or pass over. Peter stands up in Jerusalem’s city square to let everyone know. “Therefore let all Israel be assured of this: God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, both Lord and Christ.” This Jewish nation knew exactly who Jesus was. He is the carpenter’s Son, the teacher in the synagogue, the man who healed their neighbors. And Peter shouts: “You crucified him! You laughed at his authority, mocked his miracles, cut his Word out of your heart, and sent innocent life to death! You cannot blame Pilate for complying with your chants of ‘Crucify!’ He tried to calm you down, but you pushed harder. You cannot hide behind soldiers; they did what you asked them to do. You cannot look at the pitch-black sky, the earthquakes shaking the earth, and the dead coming to life and shrug it off, acting as though nothing divine was happening. You killed the Son of God! You crucified this Jesus!” That’s right, “you” crucified Jesus. Not just this Jewish nation, but you and I as well. I know, you did not actually pound nails into his hands and you didn’t taunt him and mock his miracles. You were not even born to be there on Calvary! Yet, you made it necessary for Jesus to be crucified. You, who confess every Sunday that your ‘Lord’ is seated at God’s right hand in power— and yet you still worry about your future. You, who believe Jesus ‘Christ’ preaches for your ears— and yet you still found reasons why the Bible’s clear teachings on marriage still do not apply to you or why you can rip into your neighbor’s reputation or why your daily schedule cannot prioritize even ten minutes each day of Bible reading! Yes, even right now, you can create a mountain of excuses: “Well, I am human after all, I’m just fearful over where the world is heading.” You can defend your case: “Well, my family deserves my anger.” You can justify your stance: “Well, my schedule is too busy for God every day.” But know this: Jesus is not crucified for the rebellion of your neighbor or spouse or child or the person next to you. Your behavior made it necessary for Jesus to be crucified. If hearing this makes you squeamish, then God’s Law is doing exactly what it is supposed to do. Remember what God’s “Law” means? (Catechism students? Bible class attendees?) God’s Law is a list of “Do this!” and “Don’t do that!” “Do” be perfect! “Do not” be anything less than perfect! If you obey it always, you have eternal life (Proverbs 11:18). Fail and you reap death (Romans 6:23). So, why do you need to hear this? After all, no one admits they are perfect. Isn’t that the reason why— because you aren’t perfect? The sinful nature within you hears these commands and bristles. It creates those myriad of excuses: “Yes, but…” “ I don’t need to hear this anymore…” “Everyone does it…” “It’s no big deal.” Your sinful nature will try to shrink the seriousness of sin so much that you too are tempted to shrug off sin’s consequences. If you think rebellion against a holy God is nothing significant, then you will soon think you do not need a Savior— just the like the Jews thought. Like them, you will reject his Word for your life. You will mock his promises. You may even reject any use for him at all! Instead of running away from God’s Law or trying to soften its stinging words, let This truth cut the heart. Listen to God’s Law. Let it expose your failures and faults as they truly are. Let it kick out any excuses, remove every hiding place, and take away every defense. Let God’s Law slice you to pieces so that you appreciate more fully just what God has done for you. Let this truth create new life. Just look at the crowds’ reaction. When the people heard this, they were cut to the heart and said to Peter and the other apostles, “Brothers, what shall we do?” No excuses. No defense. No scrambling around to figure out a way to make things better. Just a simple: “God, I confess that I am by nature sinful… Have mercy on me, a sinner.”And Peter replied, “Repent… which means: “Turn!” (like making a U-turn). You do. Not because you realize how far you have fallen and that you need to choose Jesus as your Savior. The Bible clearly teaches that you and I do not choose to come to faith (John 15:16; Romans 10:17). That is what God has done; he has brought Jesus into your life. When you are baptized, the water and the Word joins you to Jesus Christ and Jesus puts his name on you, claiming you as his own. [B]e baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ. Do not overlook his titles. Names have meaning. “Lord” means “master” or “one in authority.” When Peter calls Jesus “Lord,” he means that Jesus holds authority. No other person has the ability to control the weather or universe as Jesus does. No other human being has the privilege, right, or power to judge the living and the dead. Not only is Jesus “Lord,” but also “Christ.” Remember, “Christ” means “Anointed One.” To “anoint” someone means to “mark” them or “set them aside” for a specific mission. The “Christ” would be “set aside” for the special work of removing the sins of the world. No one would miss the “Christ.” The life of “Christ” would match up to every single Old Testament prophecy. Be Sure: Jesus is ‘Lord’ and ‘Christ.’ Be Sure that your ‘Lord’ is perfect— never spewing out filth against his neighbor or fearing for his life. Be sure that your ‘Christ’ is without sin— always spending time with God—even though he is God! He meets the demands of God’s Law in your place. Jesus fulfills the role of “Christ” by removing your every sin. That is why, when you are baptized, the Holy Spirit applies forgiveness to you. To “forgive” means to send away or to cancel (like releasing a dove to fly away). If God “sends away” your sins, then they are forever gone! If God “cancels” out what you owe him, then you owe him nothing! Your every single sin is removed, forgotten, cancelled out, and never brought up again. This is a promise for you— and Peter stresses that. For you and your children and for all who are far off— for all whom the Lord our God will call.” Yes, this gift is for the Jews who killed Jesus. Their unbelief was not too bad for God to forgive. This gift of forgiveness is for you—regardless of your past and present. This gift of forgiveness means you will have a blessed future with God. So, when Peter pleads: “Save yourselves from this corrupt generation,” you can be sure you are saved, rescued, delivered, set aside from a generation that still scorns its Lord. Your baptism has washed away sin and marks you as a child of God. This truth creates new life. Yes, it means you are different; you live different from a corrupt generation. The Holy Spirit lives within you. He strengthens you with the Word. He helps you to fight temptation. He increases your reliance on God and every single promise he makes. The Holy Spirit continues bringing you back to the hope of eternal life. You know, there will be times when guilt throws you into despair. Maybe your remember some foolish thing you did years ago. Maybe your words are still fresh in your mind. Perhaps you wonder if God’s forgiveness sounds too good to be true. The temptation is to look into yourself and find a reason to believe you are saved. Yet, is that where Peter points you? To yourself? No! He points you back to the work of Jesus. Be Sure: Jesus is ‘Lord’ and ‘Christ.’ Your ‘Lord’ is God himself. Your ‘Christ’ lived a perfect life for you. That is a fact. It does not change with how you feel today. Your guilt does not undo the fact Jesus had no guilt. When Jesus died, he made payment for sin. This became yours personally at your baptism. The Holy Spirit brought into your heart. When guilt flares up, point to the cross, point to the baptismal font and say: “Jesus died for me to forgive me!” Live Sure: Jesus is ‘Lord’ and ‘Christ.’ The more you study it, the more your appreciation for God’s tremendous love will grow. The more you will gladly serve him, study his Word, and give him thanks. This truth creates new life. You could say Mr. Stevens lived an entirely new life too. His CEO exposed his every shortcoming and failure. There was nowhere for Mr. Stevens to hide, no excuse he could make, no reason he should keep his job; he was caught red-handed. And yet, his CEO forgave him. So, how do you think Mr. Stevens manages now? Well, you guessed it: more generous, kind, and compassionate. His life has changed. Just like God has changed your life. Your world— even people you may know— may love defending their wrongs. They may hold up reasons why God must love them. It will be tempting for you to do the same. Yet, let God’s Law cut into you. It hurts. Others may tell you it is unnecessary, but God knows his Law is necessary. It cuts into you so that you may have new life. A new life with him in heaven. A new life to thank him with your behavior. A new life which relies on his promises more and more. Be Sure: Jesus is ‘Lord’ and ‘Christ.’ This truth cuts to the heart. This truth creates new life.
Now what? After all, Easter Sunday was last week. Last week you heard heart-pounding testimonies that Jesus is alive, but you will not hear this testimony repeated today. Last week you sang beloved Easter hymns and responded with heartwarming Bible verses, but some of those hymns you will not sing today. Last week your heart fluttered with the joy of knowing peace with God. Yet, that was all last week and six days stand between last Sunday and this Sunday. Six days that trumpeted cancer treatments and doctor appointments and school deadlines and global anxiety and stress from family and fears of nuclear war and— anything but that peace you experienced on Easter. It can leaving you feeling that Easter lasts only one day. That Easter Sunday gives you joy and peace and a reason to sing, but when Sunday ends, you pack Easter’s joy away in boxes for another year.
Treating Easter like a one-day event can rob you of its lasting joy for today (and tomorrow and the day after). In fact, if you ever read through the entire New Testament, you will realize that every Bible writer treats Easter as more than just a one-day event. You see that today. The events of that first Easter fill every part of life, Making Every Day Easter Day! You carry joy in every situation because You are born into a living hope. Look again at our reading from 1 Peter. Blessed (or Praise) be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who according to his great mercy, has caused us to be born again. See the life you live now. At one time, you lived in the darkness of uncertainty— not sure how you stand before God, not sure if you will enter heaven, not sure if you are living a truly fulfilling life as God would have it. But you have clarity now. Your way of life has changed. Not because you chose to have life with God, but because [as Peter says] God, in his mercy, chose to give you new life! He uses baptism to create faith in your heart and he strengthens you in faith through his Word and sacrament. So, even though the first Easter Sunday happened thousands of years ago, God’s Word continues whisking you and me back to the empty tomb. There you see a lifeless body regain life. Jesus lives again to declare the wages owed to God for sin paid in full. If a debt is fully repaid, then there is no more debt. If sin’s consequences are fully repaid, then there is no more consequence of death. That is why, in verse 6, Peter says: In this you rejoice… You rejoice that Jesus makes God at peace with you. When Peter says “rejoice,” he does not mean singing hymns, but rather jumping up and down and fist-pumping as though your favorite team just won a championship. You “rejoice”— not just for one day, but for every day, every moment, all the time! Yes, you can rejoice even though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been grieved by various trials. Is that what you do? Look over last week. Did you wake up every day knowing that a risen Jesus means eternity in heaven and a risen Jesus means God-for-you? Did this deep, lasting, satisfying joy trump every trouble that entered life? It is not easy to jump and shout for joy when you endure various trials, is it? Your sibling gets sick— and she is a Christian. To you, it seems she did nothing to deserve this struggle. She is not a drunk or argumentative. She is kind, loving, and supportive. You wonder if she struggles because God is angry with her. Cancer enters your life. You don’t know why. You ate healthy, exercised, and watched what kind of stuff you inhaled. You even go through months of exhausting treatments. Yet, you wonder if God really cares about you enough to heal your body. You obey God’s command and you worship here, but you don’t feel any different. You still mourn the death of your spouse. Yes, you know she lives in heaven, but you still hurt inside. You still have no God-sent answer as to whether you should move or you should stay. You daily deal with the increase of evil in the world, the increase of people avoiding worship, the insults you absorb because of what you believe, the pressure to compromise your beliefs and tolerate false teaching, the battle inside between the lifestyle you want to live versus what Scripture so clearly and plainly teaches, and the thought of approaching death. All these troubles and trials suffocate any whimper of joy. What is it that makes it difficult to rejoice even when you are going through a challenge? Could it be that you doubt God is with you? Could it be that your focus is attached to fixing a problem yourself? Could it be that you are looking away from Easter? The more our attention drifts away from the empty tomb, the more you will doubt if God really loves you at all. Peter knows this can happen. He knows that you can experience grief and a debilitating illness and that you can hurt sometimes. If you notice, he never says: “Ignore your problems and put on a brave face.” No. Peter does not leave “Rejoice!” hanging by itself. Rather, he reveals the reason you and I can rejoice— even if we encounter trials. Listen again to our words: In this you rejoice, though now for a little while, if necessary, you have been grieved by various trials, so that the tested genuineness of your faith—more precious than gold that perishes though it is tested by fire—may be found to result in praise and glory and honor at the revelation of Jesus Christ. Go home and search the internet for “raw gold” and you will be amazed by what you see. Gold just mined up from the earth looks like a dull, jagged, gray rock. It is not the glistening, shiny-yellow, smooth material with which we are familiar. Someone heats a fire to 1,100 degrees, throws the chunk of gold into a pot, and everything melts. The dirt covering the gold melts off and floats on top of the golden puddle. Any bugs, twigs, or grass stuck in the gold incinerate. After burning away all the impurities, you are left with pure gold; you are left with a better, more valuable product. The troubles you face in life refine faith. The greater the intensity, the more you despair of yourself. By that I mean, instead of looking to your mind for deliverance, turn to the risen Lord who brings you peace. Let any fear that God has abandoned you melt away when you see Jesus return to his disciples (and return to you through his Word). He would have every right to leave us for questioning the sincerity of his love, but he remains to forgive you and me. Let the thoughts that God is angry with you disintegrate when you hear Jesus say: “Peace be with you. If you are forgiven, you are forgiven indeed!” Let worries about the future or griefs in the present find comfort in a Savior who says: “I am alive.” Jesus lives to prove that he is the Savior who comes to take away the sins of the world! Your life will go through this world and into eternity! The fact that Jesus lives now means you can Make Every Day Easter Day! Why? Because you run to the cross of Jesus again and again. There you discover a Savior who loves you so much that he removes every sinful impurity so that you can be his priceless treasure. You carry this joy in every situation. You can be confident of this because you are born into a living hope. Already, in this life, God promises in six different ways that you can be sure you are his child. He calls eternal life an inheritance. At your baptism, God etched your name into the book of eternal life. The sign of the cross made on your head and heart marks you as his child—not an orphan or a stranger, but his! In case you are still uncertain about that, then listen to him call this inheritance imperishable, undefiled, and unfading. God’s promise does not decay or rot over time. His guarantee is not untrustworthy. God is not a lawyer who changes terminology. God never forgets what he promises you. Your confidence that Jesus always stands beside you is living. It will never change, never fade, never expire. Even if your life-situations change, God’s guarantee to be with you never changes. Then this inheritance is kept in heaven for you. If a business owner puts money in his safe and leaves, he expects to return and find the money still there. God secures your guarantee of life in heaven. If God is protecting it, then you can be sure it remains there for you. Yet, you not only look forward to life with God. Rather, if God loves you so much that he prepares eternity for you, then you can be sure he stands beside you in every trouble. You, by God’s power, are being guarded through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed in the last time. Imagine military men forming a circle to keep an official safe. God constantly guards you against all danger, delivers you from trouble, and strengthens your faith through his Word. At just the right time, heaven will be revealed (either on the Last Day or at the moment you leave this worldly life). Though you have not seen him, you love him. Though you do not now see him, you believe in him and rejoice with joy that is inexpressible and filled with glory, obtaining the outcome of your faith, the salvation of your souls. Persevere through every struggle because you are not alone. By faith you trust God is with you always, even to the end of the age. So, the more trouble presses into you, the more you look up to God who helps you. Run to him in prayer, constantly pleading and trusting. He lives to put your heart and mind at peace. This is your living hope. Make Every Day Easter Day even if last week was Easter. The days and months might change, but the new life Jesus wins for you never changes. Your life situations might pose new challenges, but God constantly stands beside you. New fears and doubts may creep up. Yet, run to the Word, be assured of God’s love in baptism and communion, flee to him in prayer. Light and momentary trials stretch you to trust and rely on your God in ways you might never have done before. All this makes the testing of your faith far more valuable than the gold our world cherishes. Easter is more than just a one-day event. Jesus is not still dead and in his tomb. He has not re-entered his tomb a second time. He lives—and he lives now! He lives for you to Make Every Day Easter Day! You carry joy in every situation because You are born into a living hope.
After all, I’m assuming you consider this day significant. You are here today, maybe even dressed in a new outfit. You may be planning an Easter brunch or Easter dinner for after service. Perhaps a part of you is excited to sing some favorite Easter hymns. Yet, what is it about Easter that sets it apart as “special?” How do the events of this one single day change life as you know it?
Come & See! the empty tomb of the risen Savior and then discover your newfound life in the risen Savior. What do you think Mary Magdalene and the other Mary were up at the crack of dawn looking for? Look at the first verse of our reading: After the Sabbath, at dawn on the first day of the week [they] went to look at the tomb. They are on their way to tuck fine-smelling spices into the linens wrapping the body (Luke 24:1). If you are carrying burial spices to a tomb, then you expect to find a dead body. If you expect to find a dead body, then you expect the dead body to remain dead. If you expect a dead body to remain dead, then you expect this body will be forever out of your life. So here it is: The women are not expecting to lead Jesus home, eat Easter brunch with him, sit around the table, and hear him teach. They expect to find the dead body of Jesus Christ, to finish burial customs, and then leave it behind in the cemetery as they walk home. Really, that is no different from what we expect to experience in cemeteries. On their journey there, There was a violent earthquake, [because] an angel of the Lord came down from heaven and, going to the tomb, rolled back the stone and sat on it. When the women arrived, they saw the angel and the angel [immediately] said to the[m], “Do not be afraid.” What reason to be afraid! The women had seen what happened to Jesus. He is crucified! The noontime sky turns pitch-black. Earthquakes split stones and rip buildings in two! Jesus shouts out: “My God, why have you forsaken me!” They had witnessed just how serious God is over sin! May I confess something to you? I have never gone hunting. I have never sat in a deer blind, huddled next to the heater, with rifle in hand, looking and aiming for deer. I have never hunted. Yet, I think I know what the point of hunting is: to shoot the deer. Right? To aim a rifle at (or near the heart), pull the trigger, and make sure the bullet strikes home. So, does it matter if you miss? What if you find a 10-point buck, aim, fire, and miss? The big buck scampers off into the woods. Is it a big deal? Of course it is! The point of hunting is hit the mark, to strike the bull’s-eye. Missing the mark is to fail. Or, as the Bible teaches, missing the mark is to “sin.” That’s what “sin” means: to “miss the mark” of being as perfect as God. If it is a big deal to miss shooting your 10-pointer, then be sure it is a big deal missing God’s standard of perfection. God is not laughing when you pick just the right word to destroy the ego of your boss. He does not look past the fact that global tensions send you running for help in your government, rather than placing trust in his Word: “Be still and know that I am God” (Psalm 46:10). When you think you are sitting alone with the bottle or online or any other substances, your God sits right beside you. He declares: The soul who sins will die (Ezekiel 18:4). Yes, you can try to ignore the wrongs you have done. You can point to others who struggle with the same addictions (as you) and shrug off your consequences. You can try to create your own rules and believe that God must love you— in spite of your behavior. Yet, nothing you say or think can change what God, the Lord of death and life has to say about sin: the wages of sin is death (Romans 6:23). That is why the fiercest fighters of the day— the seasoned Roman soldiers wrapped in armor and armed with the finest of deadly daggers, were so afraid of [this holy angel] that they shook and became like dead men. That is why these women running to the tomb trembled before this heavenly messenger. That is why, my friends, sin is a big deal. It misses the mark of God’s perfection and earns eternal death. But that is why the events of Easter change life as you know it. God knows the fear that can plague our minds and so he sends his angel with a message for you: “Do not be afraid!” That means right now. This is not a suggestion, it is a command! “Do not be afraid,” because Jesus was crucified— once, in the past. He was crucified to die the death you (and I) deserve. Our words “missed the mark” of being perfect words to encourage, but Jesus suffers our consequences. Our trust misses God and fixates other objects, and yet the life of Jesus is cut dead. The wages of sin is death, but Jesus uses his life to pay for the consequences of our sins (Romans 6:23). This is what makes Easter change life. The women expect to find only another dead body, thinking that Jesus is just like everyone else. He is not. He is not here; he has risen, just as he said. His heart beats. His brain functions. Breath rushes into his lungs. Blood courses through his veins. Muscles contract. He opens his eyes, sits up, swings his feet over the side of the stone slab, stands up, and leaves the tomb! He lives! And he lives to declare to you and me that the wages of sin have been paid in full. Where there is nothing more to pay for guilt, there is nothing more owed to God. It means you will not die forever, but rather you will rise to eternal life! If you wonder if this is really true, then Come & See the empty tomb of the risen Savior. The stone rolls away like a coin on its edge, spins, and falls down. You can see inside the tomb. What is in there? Nothing! No more sins holding Jesus down in death. Our wrongs have been removed as far as the east is from the west! Seeing the empty tomb of the risen Savior means that he has fixed death. Since death is no longer a fearful consequence, you can discover your newfound life in the risen Savior! The women hurried away from the tomb… because they have new news to share! The dead in Christ come back to life! Yet, they still run out of the cemetery afraid yet filled with joy. Then suddenly Jesus met them. “Greetings,” he said. What a message! Just think about it. These are women who heard he would rise again on the third day, but still carry burial spices in their hands because they doubted Jesus would actually come back to life. These are women who wailed in utter despair because they feared he was still dead. These are women who think Jesus failed his mission to bring them to God. Out of all the things Jesus could have said regarding the fear of the women, out of all the reasons he could be angry with them women, he sends greetings of peace. Jesus says, “Do not be afraid.” You— you do not need to be afraid! Jesus is not against you; he is for you! He does not afflict you with cancer because you were not the best parent. He does not call your loved one to heaven because you fight with your family. Your accident is not the result of making God angry. Jesus has restored a right relationship between you and God! So you can “Stop being afraid!” Stop probing the very recesses of your heart, hoping to figure out a way to rise up into the presence of God! Stop searching for comfort in human advice or to manmade remedies. Stop thinking your Jesus is dead, lifeless, and unable to help you—because he is not dead. He has risen, risen indeed to proclaim you at peace with God! In case you still worry that Jesus meant something else, then listen on. “Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee; there they will see me.” Go and tell… who? “My brothers.” Jesus is not speaking about going to his literal family (—his mom and dad, brothers and sisters). Rather, these are Jesus’ disciples— his followers who completely failed him at the end of Holy Week. One disciple gets caught in this mob— and he wants to escape so much that he wiggles out of his clothes and runs away naked! Peter promises to cling to Jesus, but denies knowing him three times. Every single disciple abandons him, not standing by his side, offering refreshment, or working to free him! If there were ever a time for Jesus to make life a living hell, this would be it. Instead, he calls them: “My brothers.” People who will live in his house, share the same view towards life, and share the same Father in heaven. It means your relationship with God has changed entirely! Come & See your newness of life in the risen Savior. The empty tomb reveals a Savior who conquers death— literally. He does not leave his body behind and live on in our hearts (as some disembodied spirit). He rises— body and soul united— and Jesus is your brother, your family member. Because of the events of Easter you have a right relationship with God. You can bring every worry, anxiety, fear to him in prayer and know that he is listening. You can face challenges and illness, confident that this is not a punishment for a specific action. You know God will stand beside you to strengthen and heal. You can even walk into a cemetery and trust that you will rise to eternal life. This is not some unfounded hope or wish. Rather this is a certain truth (1) demonstrated in the empty tomb of Jesus and (2) promised by Jesus himself. Come & See the newness of life you have in the risen Savior. Christ is Risen! He is risen indeed! So what? Do you have a concrete, specific answer now? Easter changes life as you know it. Because Jesus lives, it means you also will live in heaven forever! Because Jesus lives, it means you can approach God as your Father—and approach him without fear or trembling. You stand in a right relationship with God. Not because you are trying to make up new methods. Not because you are trying to convince yourself this is true. But because Jesus tells you so and because Jesus shows you so. Come & See! the empty tomb of the risen Savior and live your newfound life in the risen Savior.
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