Easter Sunday: Something New Is Coming
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Easter arrives quietly, almost unexpectedly. The stone is rolled away. The tomb is empty. What seemed finished is opened again.

But the way it happens matters. No one forces the resurrection. No one controls it. It is given.

This is the final movement of Holy Week. What was surrendered is raised. What appeared lost is returned in a new form.

Resurrection is not something we achieve; it is something we receive.
And this pattern is not only about Jesus—it is the pattern about us and life itself.

Again, we are invited to let go of what we cannot control, to trust what we cannot yet see, and to be open to what is still unfolding. And often, it is precisely in those places where something new begins.

Easter does not erase the reality of suffering. It transforms it. It reveals that loss is not the end, and that life continues to emerge in ways we could not have planned.

So we move forward—not with certainty, but with trust. Not with control, but with openness.

Because beneath our lives, there is a deeper current—steady, faithful, and good.

And our role is not to force Gods Grace into existence, but to receive it, trust it, and to step into it with courage.







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