Home »
All Resources »
Sermons on Easter: Resurrection »
Charles Whitmire, The Rest of the Story - Page 1 of 2
Staff Picks of the Week:
Memorial Day 2013
Memorial Day 2013 Preaching Bundle »
Greater Love Video Illustration »
Everlasting God Worship Music Video »
Sabbath
Sabbath Preaching Bundle »
1 Outta 7 Video Illustration »
Before The Throne… Worship Music Video »
The Rest of the Story
Topic: #1638 of 2000 for Sermons on Easter: Resurrection
Scripture:
Luke 23:55-24:48
Denomination: Baptist
Date Added: March 2008
Audience: General Adults (31 - 49)
Keywords: none (Suggest a Keyword)
Paul Harvey, for years, has ended his broadcasts with a story called, “The rest of the story” They are usually stories with endings that are unpredictable. Or maybe they point out the meaning of something that we thought we knew already - Last week we looked at Mark 15. We looked at the brutality of the cross. It was a dark message - and it was difficult to preach. This week we look at “The rest of the story”
I recently came across this story, it was told by “Dear Abby” in a response to someone’s question. A young man from a wealthy family was about to graduate from high school. It was the custom in that affluent neighborhood for the parents to give the graduate an automobile. "Bill’ and his father had spent months looking at cars, and the week before graduation, they found the perfect car. On the eve of his graduation, his father handed him a gift wrapped Bible. Bill was so angry that he threw the Bible down and stormed out of the house. He and his father never saw each other again. It was the news of his father’s death that brought Bill home again. As he sat one night going through his father’s possessions that he was to inherit, he come across the Bible his father had given him. He brushed away the dust and opened it to find a cashier’s check, dated the day of his graduation - in the exact amount of the car they had chosen together.
As I thought about this story, I couldn’t help but wonder how many people in this world have done the same thing to God. Literally tossed aside a wonderful promise, because they didn’t understand it, or they didn’t believe that it was possible. In our world, we are taught that; “if it sounds to good to be true, it probably is.” So many of us have been taken in by “empty promises,” that we are leery of anything or anyone that tells us we can have something for nothing.
It’s possible for us to look at Easter in that same light... It’s a story that sounds almost too good to be true, right? (Read Luke 23:55 - 24:48)
I have been trying all week to get my brain around this text. I wanted to come up with something witty - something that rhymed...something that sounded pretty - but as I read this text over and over again - there was really only one thing that came to mind - It’s centered around the verse in 24:25 “Then Jesus said to them, You foolish people! You find it so hard to believe...”
I think the Easter story is a story about Christ - and about coming to terms with the fact that he was more than just a prophet, more than just a great teacher, but someone that deserves to be believed - and that if I would believe him - everything would change...
I first believed as a boy. I was seven years old when I was touched by the Holy Spirit - At the foot of my mother’s bed I prayed to receive Christ as my savior - for him to come into my life and save me...
See as Christians we are called believers - because we believe the story... We believe that Jesus Christ was God’s son, that he was born of a virgin, that he lived a sinless life, that he died on a cross to atone for my sins and that he rose again in three days - that belief is everything...
What is the message of Christ without the empty tomb? It is dark - it is hopeless - it is empty...
And what is the message of Christ after the empty tomb? There is light - there is hope - there is victory over death -
I recently came across this story, it was told by “Dear Abby” in a response to someone’s question. A young man from a wealthy family was about to graduate from high school. It was the custom in that affluent neighborhood for the parents to give the graduate an automobile. "Bill’ and his father had spent months looking at cars, and the week before graduation, they found the perfect car. On the eve of his graduation, his father handed him a gift wrapped Bible. Bill was so angry that he threw the Bible down and stormed out of the house. He and his father never saw each other again. It was the news of his father’s death that brought Bill home again. As he sat one night going through his father’s possessions that he was to inherit, he come across the Bible his father had given him. He brushed away the dust and opened it to find a cashier’s check, dated the day of his graduation - in the exact amount of the car they had chosen together.
As I thought about this story, I couldn’t help but wonder how many people in this world have done the same thing to God. Literally tossed aside a wonderful promise, because they didn’t understand it, or they didn’t believe that it was possible. In our world, we are taught that; “if it sounds to good to be true, it probably is.” So many of us have been taken in by “empty promises,” that we are leery of anything or anyone that tells us we can have something for nothing.
It’s possible for us to look at Easter in that same light... It’s a story that sounds almost too good to be true, right? (Read Luke 23:55 - 24:48)
I have been trying all week to get my brain around this text. I wanted to come up with something witty - something that rhymed...something that sounded pretty - but as I read this text over and over again - there was really only one thing that came to mind - It’s centered around the verse in 24:25 “Then Jesus said to them, You foolish people! You find it so hard to believe...”
I think the Easter story is a story about Christ - and about coming to terms with the fact that he was more than just a prophet, more than just a great teacher, but someone that deserves to be believed - and that if I would believe him - everything would change...
I first believed as a boy. I was seven years old when I was touched by the Holy Spirit - At the foot of my mother’s bed I prayed to receive Christ as my savior - for him to come into my life and save me...
See as Christians we are called believers - because we believe the story... We believe that Jesus Christ was God’s son, that he was born of a virgin, that he lived a sinless life, that he died on a cross to atone for my sins and that he rose again in three days - that belief is everything...
What is the message of Christ without the empty tomb? It is dark - it is hopeless - it is empty...
And what is the message of Christ after the empty tomb? There is light - there is hope - there is victory over death -
Free Download: All New Outreach Ideas
Download immediately when you sign up for emails from SermonCentral.com & partners.
Comments
Be the first to leave a comment!
Join the discussion
















