Sunday, July 25, 2021 ~ The Book Of John ~ Series: LOVED BY JESUS ~ Message: The Raised ~ Scripture: John 20:1-18 ESV ~ Pastor Philip Miller

Image: "The Resurrection of Christ" 1570 by Paolo Veronese


WELCOME

Sunday, July 25, 2021


The Book Of John 

Series: LOVED BY JESUS

Message: The Raised

Scripture: John 20:1-18 ESV

Pastor Philip Miller


Scripture Reading Colossians 1:15-20 ESV

Colossians 1 ESV and Audio

The Preeminence of Christ

15 He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. 16 For by him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—all things were created through him and for him. 17 And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together. 18 And he is the head of the body, the church. He is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in everything he might be preeminent. 19 For in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, 20 and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross.

Message: The Raised

Scripture: John 20:1-18 ESV

Pastor Philip Miller

Scripture: John  ESV

John 20 ESV and Audio



SERMON NOTES

Sunday, July 25, 2021



The Book Of John 

Series: LOVED BY JESUS

Message: The Raised

Scripture: John 20:1-18 ESV

Pastor Philip Miller


The Raised: Is this resurrection life yours?


Cognitive dissonance is the influx of intellectual disequilibrium. In other words, when your tidy framework of reality is suddenly unsettled by unexpected facts, your “mind is blown.” And suddenly, you see the world very differently. 

Resurrection morning created massive cognitive dissonance for the followers of Jesus. They never saw it coming! Not only did they not see it coming, but at first, they couldn’t believe their eyes. 

Curiosity is key when cognitive dissonance occurs. John highlights three curious moments from resurrection morning; he wants us to meditate on them so that we might understand the significance of our resurrected Jesus. 

1) The Conscientious Guest: Jesus thoughtfully tidied up after Himself on resurrection morning. Remember, this is a borrowed tomb. When it was time for Jesus to be resurrected, he tidies up the place as He leaves.  How thoughtful is that!? John realizes that Jesus is conscientious. 

2) The Mistaken Gardener: Mary is the first one to visit the tomb on Easter Sunday. What we often forget is that Mary had a life of trauma, of severe demonic possession. Jesus was her lifeline to freedom, healing, and safety. So, when He died, her world was shattered. When she arrives at the empty tomb, her trauma is triggered all over again, because the body of Jesus is gone. And as her panic and anxiety take hold, Jesus comes to meet her, but she doesn’t recognize Him at first. Jesus called her name, and everything changed. When Jesus called her by name, the fear began to ebb, the anxiety calmed, the sadness was undone. And the man she thought was the gardener turned out to be her rescuer, healer, teacher, and Lord all along. 

3) The Ascending Lord: When Mary realizes that Jesus is alive in the flesh, she is overjoyed and wants to grab hold of Him forever. But Jesus tells her not to cling to Him. Why? Because Jesus is in the middle of cosmic redemption. The resurrection isn’t the end, but the beginning of a new creation. There’s still work to be done! Jesus must ascend to the Father where He will rule until His enemies have been made His footstool. When He shall return again, in that day justice will reign, peace will abide, and glory will cover the earth. It will be a New Heaven and a New Earth, and in the Garden City of God, heaven will come down to earth. So, when Mary mistook Jesus as the gardener, she wasn’t entirely wrong. Jesus is the Gardener, the caretaker of the New Creation. Just as Adam was the Gardener and Caretaker of the old creation, now Jesus is the Gardener and Caretaker of the New Creation.  


Takeaways:

Is this resurrection life yours? 

Philip Miller Senior Pastor

PASTOR TO PEOPLE

Last week after church, our daughter Violet observed, “Wow, we’ve sure been doing a lot of Easter at church!” Krista and I chuckled, because it has felt a lot like Easter in July as we’ve walked through the final week of Jesus’ life and ministry. We’ve seen Jesus wash His disciples’ feet and surrender Himself in Gethsemane; we’ve seen Him condemned, crucified, and buried.

Today we come to resurrection morning in the twentieth chapter of the Gospel of John. This is the morning when everything changes. It is the morning when the light breaks through and hope dawns. It is the beginning of the restoration of all things. It is when everything sad begins to come untrue.

Sometimes we forget how beautiful Christian hope is. Our God has conquered sin, death, and Satan forever. He is enthroned above the heavens with Jesus at His right hand awaiting the day of His return. In that day, justice will reign, peace will abide, and glory will cover the earth. There is so much hope in the gospel of Jesus Christ! Resurrection morning means, in the end, the redemption of all things.

As we gaze on the beauty of this bright and glorious resurrection morning, we long for the fullness of redemption and say with the Apostle John at the end of Revelation, “Come quickly, Lord Jesus!”

For we are loved, more than we know.

Pastor Philip