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title: "Unit 10: What Happened When Jesus Rose?"
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# Unit 10: What Happened When Jesus Rose?

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Question: What happened when Jesus rose from the dead?

Answer: God raised Jesus bodily from the dead, beginning new creation and guaranteeing the resurrection hope of his people.

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## Read

- Luke 24 (NIV): the risen Jesus opens Scripture and shows his wounds.
- John 20 (NIV): the disciples encounter the risen Lord.
- Acts 2:22--36 (NIV): Peter proclaims that God raised Jesus and made him Lord and Christ.
- Romans 6:4--11 (NIV): believers share in Christ's death and resurrection life.
- 1 Corinthians 15 (NIV): Christ is raised as firstfruits.

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## What the Answer Means

The resurrection is not a metaphor for feeling hopeful. Jesus rose bodily. The tomb was empty. The crucified one is alive. Death has been broken from inside history. The risen Lord is the same personal subject who was crucified, now bodily transformed; resurrection is neither the survival of a disposable soul nor God's production of a replacement copy.

This changes the whole Christian life. Forgiveness is not a private religious mood. It belongs to a new creation already begun in Christ. Bodies are not disposable shells. They are destined for resurrection. Justice is not finally swallowed by death. Christ will judge and renew. Suffering is real, but it is not final.

When Christians gather, repent, baptize, break bread, forgive, endure, and serve the poor, they are living now under the future Christ has opened.

The resurrection also keeps the faith from spiritual escape. God does not save us by teaching us to despise creation, bodies, history, or public truth. The same Jesus who was crucified is raised. His wounds are not erased from reality. They are taken into victory.

That means Christian hope can look directly at graves, injustice, sickness, failure, and decay. It does not have to pretend. It can say: this is evil, this hurts, this should not be, and Christ is risen.

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## Hope for the Body You Have

Resurrection hope belongs to the body you have, not just to an idea about the future.

Your body may be young or old, strong or weak, healthy or sick, rested or exhausted, disabled or in pain. It may carry scars, grief, hunger, compulsive habits, trauma, aging, infertility, or fear. Some bodies are praised by the world. Some are ignored. Some are mocked. Some are used. Some are hidden by shame.

The resurrection says the body is not meaningless. This does not remove present suffering. Christians still get sick. They still need doctors. They still bury people they love. They still groan with creation. But they do not have to call the body disposable. God raised Jesus bodily, and he will raise his people. The future is not escape from creaturely life. It is creaturely life healed, judged, renewed, and filled with God.

So attention to the body can become an act of hope. Rest, medicine, food, chastity, tenderness, burial, and lament can all confess that bodies matter to God.

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## The Risen Christ Still Knows Wounds

The risen Jesus is not a vague shining idea. He is the crucified one raised.

That matters for people who carry wounds. Some wounds are visible. Some are hidden in memory, body, trust, or fear. Some came through illness. Some came through sin done by us. Some came through sin done against us. Some came through grief, aging, failure, loss, or years of carrying more than one person can carry.

Resurrection hope does not say wounds were never real. The risen Lord shows his wounds. They do not rule him. They do not shame him. They do not keep him in the grave. But they are not treated as if the cross never happened.

After surgery, Elaine avoided the mirror for weeks.

People told her she was strong. Strong was not the word for the way she moved through the kitchen, one hand on the counter, avoiding the mirror over the sink. She was grateful to be alive and angry that gratitude did not make the scar easy to see. One Sunday after Easter, she stayed seated while everyone else stood to sing because standing pulled at the place that still hurt.

After worship, a friend asked, "Do you want me to tell you it does not matter, or do you want me to sit with you while it matters?"

Elaine laughed because the question was so much better than the comfort she had been dreading.

They sat in the empty row for a few minutes. Her friend did not tell her to love the scar. She did not tell her to build an identity around it either. She said, "The risen Jesus still knows what wounds are. I do not know what healing will feel like for you this year. But your body is not outside his future."

That week Elaine made the follow-up appointment she had been avoiding. Resurrection hope did not make her brave in every mirror. It gave her enough truth to bring the wounded body back into care.

This makes hope honest. A grieving person does not need to say, "It is fine." Death is not fine. A person sinned against does not need to say, "It did not matter." Evil matters. A sick person does not need to pretend the body is only a lesson. The body hurts. A repentant sinner does not need to pretend consequences are gone. Mercy is real, and consequences may still be real.

The resurrection says something better than denial, and it can be spoken without rushing the wounded:

> Christ is alive, and nothing true will be wasted, hidden, or left outside his final healing.

Bodily resurrection does not explain every suffering, remove every tear, or tell the wounded to hurry. It gives hope a body. The same Jesus who knows betrayal, nails, thirst, abandonment, death, and burial now stands in victory. He can meet wounded people without being overwhelmed by wounds.

This also changes how the Church treats wounded people. Resurrection hope can stay near grief without demanding cheerfulness, rushing testimony from pain to triumph, or using hope to silence lament. The risen Christ can stand in a room where grief is still speaking.

Hope can say both halves at once:

> This wound is real, and Christ is risen.

Both halves matter. If we lose the wound, hope becomes shallow. If we lose the resurrection, the wound becomes lord. Christian faith holds both because the risen Christ still knows wounds.

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## Resurrection for Ordinary Mondays

Resurrection hope reaches beyond funerals. It belongs to Monday morning when the body has little strength, the dishes are still there, the job feels small, the child is sick, the inbox is full, and prayer feels unimpressive. The risen Christ does not make ordinary life meaningless. He makes ordinary life part of a creation that is being restored.

Many people quietly divide their lives into spiritual moments and regular moments. Worship, prayer, Bible reading, and church service feel spiritual. Laundry, meetings, bills, diapers, meals, homework, physical therapy, commuting, and sleep feel merely necessary. But the resurrection says God is not finished with bodies, labor, food, places, or time.

The risen Jesus eats with his disciples. He shows his wounds. He speaks peace. He sends them. He opens Scripture. He restores a failed disciple over breakfast. None of that looks like escape from creaturely life. It looks like creaturely life brought under victory.

So a Christian can enter Monday with more than a pep talk. You may not feel triumphant. You may not feel strong. You may still carry grief. But your labor in the Lord is not empty.

The small obedience done in Christ is not swallowed by decay. The cup of water, the apology, the honest spreadsheet, the changed diaper, the visit to the sick, the refusal to lie, the study session, the meal cooked for a neighbor: these are not glamorous, but they belong to resurrection life. So does the body taken to the doctor. So does the prayer whispered in traffic.

Not every task is equally important, and busyness is not holy. Resurrection hope also teaches rest. Bodies matter enough to stop. Sleep is not unbelief. Medicine is not weakness. Limits are not failure. Christ was raised bodily, and that means bodies are not disposable tools for religious productivity.

A Monday prayer may be simple because the hope itself is strong enough to carry the ordinary day:

> Risen Jesus, meet me in this ordinary day. Teach me to receive my body, my work, my limits, and my neighbors under your living hope.

Then choose one ordinary action as an act of hope. Do the chore without contempt. Take the walk. Tell the truth. Eat with thanks. Answer the person gently. Rest when it is time to rest. Bring your body into obedience without treating it as an enemy.

The resurrection will one day fill all things with visible glory. Until then, it teaches Christians to live ordinary days as people whose future has already begun in Christ.

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## What Resurrection Changes

The resurrection changes how Christians understand ordinary life in concrete ways:

- Bodies matter because Jesus was raised bodily.
- History matters because God acted in history.
- Justice matters because death does not get the last word.
- Suffering can be named truthfully because hope does not depend on denial.
- Creation matters because resurrection begins new creation, not escape from creation.
- Obedience matters because our labor in the Lord is not in vain.

Christians speak falsely when salvation sounds like becoming less human. The risen Jesus is not less bodily. He is glorified. The future God promises is not a thin spiritual cloud. It is life healed, judged, raised, and filled with God.

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## Practice

Bring one fear of death, decay, failure, or loss under resurrection hope. Name it plainly before God. Then pray:

> Risen Lord Jesus, teach me to hope with my body, my grief, and my future before you.

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## Questions for Conversation

- Why is resurrection more than a symbol for optimism?
- What grief or fear needs bodily hope, not vague comfort?
- How does Christ's resurrection change the way Christians think about ordinary work, justice, and suffering?

Watch for this.

Resurrection is more than metaphor, escape, or optimism. Christian hope is bodily, public, and anchored in the risen Jesus.
