“Christos Anesti.”
Christ has risen.
He has risen indeed.
My friends, with those words we step onto holy ground—
something ancient,
something new.
We stand where creation began…
where the covenant was born…
where the sea opened…
where the prophets cried out…
and where the stone was rolled away.
Tonight, the whole story of God’s love gathers into one flame,
one Word,
one empty tomb.
And it begins with Genesis.
“In the beginning…”
God speaks into the darkness,
and light breaks open.
Life begins not by accident,
but by love.
Creation itself is God’s first promise:
I want you to exist.
I want you to live.
But tonight we hear that story not as a memory—
but as a pattern.
Because the God who brought light out of nothing
is the same God who brings life out of death.
Creation was the first dawn.
Easter is the new dawn.
Then we walk with Abraham—
a father asked to trust,
to surrender,
to believe that God can bring life
even from what seems impossible.
This is the rhythm of salvation:
God asking us to trust
when the path is unclear,
when the promise feels delayed,
when the heart is stretched thin.
Abraham shows us that faith is not certainty—
faith is movement.
Faith is saying “yes”
before we see the blessing.
Then we come to the Red Sea—
that moment when God’s people discover
that salvation is not escape but passage.
Not avoidance,
but deliverance.
The waters open,
the people walk through,
and the old life stays behind.
This is the pattern of baptism,
the pattern of conversion,
the pattern of every Easter.
God does not simply remove obstacles—
God makes a way through them.
And the prophets—
Isaiah, Baruch, Ezekiel—
rise up tonight like voices across centuries:
“Come to the water.”
“Return to the Lord.”
“I will give you a new heart.”
They remind us that salvation is not a single moment
but a journey—
a slow, steady reshaping of the heart
until it beats in rhythm with God’s own.
All of this—creation, covenant, deliverance, promise—
leads us to the Gospel.
The women come to the tomb
carrying spices,
carrying grief,
carrying the weight of Friday.
But what they find is not what they expect.
The stone is rolled back.
The tomb is empty.
And the angel speaks the words
that change the world forever:
“He is not here.
He has been raised.”
This is not just news.
This is new life.
This is the moment when everything God has ever done
rushes into the present.
The God who created light
now recreates the world.
The God who opened the sea
now opens the grave.
The God who promised a new heart
now gives us the Risen Christ.
Tonight, we do not simply remember salvation history—
we step into it.
We stand in the light of the new fire.
We bless the water that washes us clean.
We renew the promises that shape our identity.
We proclaim that death does not have the last word.
Because Easter is not an event—
it is a birth.
A beginning.
A new creation.
A new life in Christ.
And that new life is not abstract.
It is meant to be lived—
in the way we forgive,
in the way we speak hope,
in the way we carry one another’s burdens,
in the way we choose love
when fear tries to take the lead.
Tonight, God whispers again the truth spoken at creation:
“I want you to live.”
But now the whisper is stronger,
deeper,
more radiant—
because it comes from the Risen One.
So let us step into this new life.
Let us walk out of our tombs.
Let us rise with Christ.
For the light has returned,
the stone has been rolled away,
and the world has been made new.
Alleluia.
Alleluia.
Christ has risen—He has risen indeed.
Praise be to Jesus Christ, forever and ever.
Prayer
Lord Jesus, Light risen from the tomb,
shine into every shadow of my heart.
Let Your new life break open what has grown cold.
Carry me through every sea that still feels deep.
Give me the courage of Abraham to trust Your promise.
Give me the joy of the women who found the stone rolled away.
Make my life a living alleluia to Your love.
Amen