Resurrection began on Easter as Jesus became the firstborn of the dead. But the Bible’s wider portrait of resurrection shows us not only that we’re the secondborn, but that resurrection has already begun in us now.

Pray Like You’re Expecting a Reply 1208PODCAST

We all know the verse—ask and you’ll receive, seek and you’ll find—but what if we’ve been asking the same things over and over? In this message, we talk about what it really means to trust that God is a good Father who wants to respond to us. Sometimes he answers right away, sometimes not, and sometimes in ways we don’t see coming. You’ll be challenged to mix it up in prayer—start asking questions you haven’t asked before and see what God might say.

2 responses to “The Already But Not Yet of Resurrection”

  1. […] get it—I preached about how hard it can be for people to believe in something like resurrection (a basic belief upon which Christianity stands) and I preached this on Easter no less. But my point was to not be surprised when outsiders […]

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  2. […] is, in part, the story of the already-but-not-yet of resurrection life; for without the Holy Spirit, there is no resurrection. He is the one who raised Jesus from the […]

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