Hope | John 20:30-31

This message brings the Gospel of John series to its powerful conclusion by focusing on the final and greatest sign—the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ. It opens by comparing the clarity of Charles Dickens’ famous line, “Marley was dead to begin with,” to the Gospel’s purpose: to show that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, so that by believing, we may have life in His name. The message walks through Jesus’ brutal crucifixion, explaining its historical and spiritual depth—the cross as both excruciating pain and ultimate love. When Jesus declared “It is finished,” He wasn’t giving up; He was completing the redemptive work God sent Him to do. The message emphasizes that the cross was necessary because sin required payment, and in His mercy, God sent His Son to make that payment once and for all.

This message then moves to the resurrection, showing how the empty tomb, eyewitness accounts, and historical evidence affirm Jesus’ victory over death. Mary’s encounter with the risen Jesus and her proclamation, “I have seen the Lord,” symbolize both personal faith and the beginning of a global movement rooted in hope. The message stresses that Christianity hinges entirely on this event—without the resurrection, there is no hope. Yet because Jesus lives, believers can face life, loss, and eternity with unshakable confidence. It ends with an invitation to believe, reminding us that God made a way through Jesus for all to be made right with Him. The hope of the gospel—Christ’s death, burial, and resurrection—is what we cling to, what we share, and what changes everything.

This site is registered on wpml.org as a development site. Switch to a production site key to remove this banner.