Skip to content

Most Recent Blog Posts

The Last Straw: A Guest Post by Nicki Koziarz

Nicki KoziarzHave you ever gotten to the place where you just couldn’t take it anymore? Dreams. Programs. Jobs. Relationships. There are so many different areas where we feel like calling it quits. It’s time for an honest conversation on how not to give in to the temptation to give up.

Nicki Koziarz (@NickiKoziarz) is a woman who has thrown in the towel a time or two. In fact, she’s quit just about everything in her life. But with God’s help, she’s discovered a few habits that have helped her and others conquer the choice to quit. In her book, 5 Habits of a Woman Who Doesn’t Quit (B&H Books, 2016) (book website), she explains how to evaluate the internal personal struggles that make you want to quit, cultivate consistent habits to help you progress toward your goals and receive a fresh dose of perspective from the Bible that will help you develop perseverance.

Click to buy your copy of 5 Habits of a Woman Who Doesn’t Quit in the Bible Gateway Store

The following article is excerpted from 5 Habits of a Woman Who Doesn’t Quit (B&H Books, 2016) by Nicki Koziarz.

The Last Straw

We were driving down the road when our realtor called. It was the sixth time we had tentatively scheduled the closing for the Fixer Upper Farm. And of course, there was a problem and our closing was rescheduled again. I threw the phone down and said to my husband who was seated next to me, “This is NEVER going to happen. We just need to give this thing up. That’s it! I can’t take it anymore.”

And wouldn’t you know, there was this little eight-year-old girl sitting behind me who piped up her little voice and said, “Nuh uh Momma. Thoughts become words. Words become actions. Actions become reality. Don’t you speak that over our farm!”

My husband smiled and nodded his head. I was eating my own words. This season of learning to wait, to trust God and to believe was starting to mess with my thought process. It was refinement mixed with stress, anxiety and fear. A quitting formula for sure.

It required a transition in my thinking, my prayers, and my belief. I had to make this shift while not knowing the end of the story.

I know this whole buying a farm-drama-thing may sound incredibly juvenile in comparison with the “real” problems of this world, but trust me when I say the Lord used it to work in my life. I assure you there will be all kinds of seasons of refinement as we work to become women God and others can count on. Later you’ll hear more about the seasons of refinement I’ve gone through that were no laughing matter.

Some seasons of refinement will cause us to look back and laugh. Others may continue to produce an ache felt deep in our spirit for many years to come.

Maybe one day Ruth got to a place where she was able to look back on a few places of this horrible tragedy and smile about the refining process. But where we are meeting her right now, there’s nothing funny.

Her thoughts could have easily become clouded. But she seems to have so much clarity in her decision to stay. There’s not a hint of hesitancy to flee. It makes me think her desperation was creating a dependence upon God.

Thoughts are powerful when we are walking through refinement assignments. While we will never be able to control all the events that happen or hard situations we find ourselves wandering through, we have control over our thoughts.

For as he thinks in his heart, so is he.
Proverbs 23:7a (NKJV)

For My thoughts are not your thoughts, and your ways are not My ways.” This is the LORD’s declaration.”
Isaiah 55:8 (HCSB)

Understanding how the Lord views us is foundational to viewing these seasons of refinement as assignments from God. There’s something He wants to shift in us, teach us and fulfill through us. As shown in Isaiah, we are different from God in both our natural thoughts and actions. In order for the shift to take place, we must spend time learning His thoughts and His ways. We have to allow Him (and His Word) into those deep places, our thoughts. The places where no one goes but Him.

Our thoughts become the words we speak. The words we speak become the actions we take. The actions we take determine our steps toward the future.

God is not a puppet master controlling our every move. The decision to stay with Him through our thoughts, words and actions will always be ours.

The above article is excerpted from 5 Habits of a Woman Who Doesn’t Quit (B&H Books, 2016). Copyright © 2016 by Nicki Koziarz. Used by permission of B&H Books. www.bhpublishinggroup.com. Pages 34-36. All rights reserved.

Bio: Nicki Koziarz is an author and speaker with Proverbs 31 Ministries. Each week she helps lead thousands of women through P31 Online Bible Studies. She and her husband, Kris, own a fixer upper farm just outside Charlotte, North Carolina. There they are raising their three beautiful [but hormonal] daughters, a barnyard of misfit animals, and one slightly famous pug. After a broken experience in the church, Nicki is consumed with learning to lead her generation on the pursuit of truth and love.

Bible Gateway March Mania Continues

As the NCAA college basketball tournament rolled along in the USA last week, we announced our own “competition”: #BibleGatewayMarchMania, which continues this week. Learn more about it, see the brackets, and cast your votes for your favorite Bible stories by reading our original Blog post. And see what Bible story will be voted the “champion!”

[Browse the Sports section in the Bible Gateway Store]

[See our Blog post, New Sports Devotional: Be Inspired by “Devotions for Die-Hard Fans]

[Browse and sign up for any of our many free email devotional newsletters]

Death and Resurrection: Guest Post by Philip Johnston

Dr. D.A. Carson unpacked the biblical theology of the resurrection on Desiring God’s Ask Pastor John podcast.

Dr. Philip JohnstonThe New International Version of the Bible translation is available in a variety of editions, one of which is NIV Zondervan Study Bible (website). A team of more than 60 contributors crafted study notes, book and section introductions, a library of articles, and other study tools that specifically focus on biblical theology—the progressive unfolding of theological concepts through the Bible.

[See our blogposts, Accolades for the New NIV Zondervan Study Bible and The NIV Zondervan Study Bible: An Interview with Dr. D.A. Carson.]

Click to browse the many available editions of the NIV Zondervan Study Bible in the Bible Gateway Store[When you purchase the NIV Zondervan Study Bible print edition: you’ll get a code to gain free digital access (a $19.99 value) to its comprehensive study notes, maps, charts, articles and more from your computer or mobile device through Bible Gateway and Olive Tree.]

One of the contributing scholars is Dr. Philip S. Johnston, Senior Tutor and Director of Studies in Theology & Religious Studies at Hughes Hall, University of Cambridge, who wrote the article in the NIV Zondervan Study Bible on Death and Resurrection, which is excerpted here:

The resurrection of Christ is central to Christian faith (1 Cor 15), part of the radical newness of the gospel. Paul writes that “our Savior, Christ Jesus. . . brought life and immortality to light through the gospel” (2 Tim 1:10, emphasis added) — so before then the afterlife was an unknown quantity, in the shadows rather than the light. This is the key to a biblical theology of death and resurrection, affirming both the light shed by the gospel and the relative ignorance of earlier times (see Mark 9:10).

DEATH

God punished the first human sin with death. But humans were not created immortal since they had to eat from the tree of life to live forever and since the death sentence was fulfilled by their banishment from that tree (Gen 3:22 – 23). Sin is strongly linked to substitutionary animal death in the Levitical sacrifices but rarely to human death elsewhere in the OT (e.g., Ps 90:7 – 10), though the link is made extensively in the NT (e.g., Rom 5:12; 6:23; 1 Cor 15:21). Christ’s resurrection potently responds to death as punishment for sin.

Hos 13:14 envisages God ransoming Israel from the power of death, which Paul sees accomplished in Christ’s resurrection (1 Cor 15:55,57). God will “destroy the shroud” and “swallow up death forever” (Isa 25:7 – 8), and the NT cites this in relation to Christ’s victory (1 Cor 15:54,57; also Rev 21:4). For the Christian, death may be the last enemy, but it is also a glorious transition.

In the OT the above themes are rare, however, and death is generally presented as the natural end of life. Sometimes death is peaceful (e.g., Abraham, Gen 25:8), sometimes abrupt (e.g., Nabal, 1 Sam 25:38), but usually it is recorded without comment (e.g., Samuel, 1 Sam 25:1). The NT echoes the theme of peaceful death in describing the believer’s death as “sleep” (e.g., 1 Cor 15:51). However, the NT seldom portrays death as simply the end of life, partly because there are so few accounts of death, but mainly because of the new, distinctively Christian understanding of it.

THE DEAD

The Old Testament

Strikingly, the OT shows very little interest in the dead, and it mostly envisages one fate: the underworld. This is a realm of sleepy, shadowy existence in the depths of the earth. The most common term for the underworld is sheol, occurring 66 times and usually translated “realm of the dead” or “grave.” Two texts briefly describe it: the mighty king of Babylon becomes as weak as those he had conquered (Isa 14:9 – 11) and different armies lie separately in a vast cavern (Ezek 32:17 – 32). These descriptions are similar to those of contemporary cultures, but the disinterest in the dead is unique to Israel. For them, the Lord was God of the living, faith was for this life, and what followed was relatively unimportant.

While the underworld is the only fate described, it is envisaged mostly for the wicked rather than the righteous, and this is explicit in Ps 49:14 – 15. There are only four instances of righteous people fearing the underworld; but they all suffer extreme misfortune and probably interpret their current state and future fate as divine punishment. For instance, Jacob fears descent to the grave when separated from his favorite sons (Gen 37:35; 42:38; see Job 14:13; Ps 88:3; Isa 38:10). But years later, when his family is happily reunited, his death is recorded without mentioning the underworld (repeatedly from Gen 46:30 to 50:16). Only two texts seem to indicate that everyone goes to this place, and these occur in the somber contexts of divine punishment (Ps 89:48) and human futility (Eccl 9:10). The OT writers clearly view the underworld negatively.

Alongside this general picture, there are rare glimpses of a more positive afterlife. God “took” Enoch (Gen 5:24), and Elijah ascended to heaven in a fiery chariot (2 Kgs 2:11). However, these instances are unique; godly psalmists and prophets do not generally pray for a similar fate. A few OT passages envisage some form of continued communion with God beyond death, but this is ill-defined and unlocated (Pss 16:10; 49:15; 73:24). In Acts 2, Peter quotes Ps 16, though as prophetic of Christ rather than as personal to the psalmist. Job’s defiant wish in Job 19:25 – 27 may refer to the afterlife, but the severe textual difficulties in this passage make this uncertain.

Later Jewish Thought

Intertestamental Jewish literature displays a spectrum of views on the dead. In the Apocrypha, the traditional Ecclesiasticus (17:28 – 30) echoes the OT’s general perspective, while the Hellenistic Wisdom of Solomon affirms that “the souls of the righteous are in the hands of God” until “the time of their visitation,” i.e., resurrection (3:1 – 8). In the pseudepigraphal book of 1 Enoch the dead are in several separate groups in Hades awaiting judgment (ch. 22); in some texts the wicked will be punished with torment forever, as an eternal spectacle for the righteous (22:11; 27:3), and in others they will be “destroyed forever” (91:19).

The New Testament

The NT gives less attention to the preresurrection state of the dead. Jesus’ story in Luke 16 reflects one strand of Jewish belief: the nameless rich man is in Hades, while Lazarus is apparently in heaven (carried to Abraham’s side by angels, though still visible to the rich man).

In his early letters, Paul seems to expect the imminent return of Christ and focuses on the resurrection body (1 Cor 15; 1 Thess 4). Later he anticipates the present “earthly tent” being replaced with “our heavenly dwelling” to avoid being “naked” (2 Cor 5:1 – 4), i.e., in a disembodied intermediate state. Yet elsewhere Paul seems to ignore the state of believers between death and resurrection: he speaks of being immediately in Christ’s presence (Phil 1:23) or being brought safely to the heavenly kingdom (2 Tim 4:18) without further detail.

There are a few references in later NT books to the ungodly dead awaiting judgment (2 Pet 3:7; Jude 6 – 7). After his death Christ “made proclamation to the imprisoned spirits,” proclaiming their judgment (1 Pet 3:19).

RESURRECTION

The Old Testament

A few prophetic passages present resurrection as an image for national restoration after the exile (Ezek 37:11 – 14; Hos 6:1 – 2). Two texts go further and propose individual resurrection: God’s people (but not the wicked) will awake (Isa 26:19), and multitudes (but not necessarily everyone) will awake to everlasting life or contempt (Dan 12:2). These texts apply the ancient belief that God can raise the dead (e.g., 1 Sam 2:6) to situations where he will do so to vindicate his people. But they are at the edge of OT theology since the rest of the OT retains the traditional view of death outlined above.

Later Jewish Thought

In the mid-second-century BC persecutions, martyrs were bolstered by a growing belief in the physical resurrection with restored and rejuvenated bodies, though for their tormentor Antiochus “there will be no resurrection to life” (2 Maccabees 7:14, in the Apocrypha). A little later another text affirms a total resurrection: after the patriarchs, “all men will rise, some to glory and some to disgrace” (see the pseudepigraphal Testament of Benjamin 10:8).

By NT times, belief in resurrection was common among many Jews, including Pharisees (Acts 23:8). This resurrection was envisaged as God’s restoration of Israel in a transformed physical world, not an ethereal heavenly realm. However, some Jewish groups, like the Qumran community, were less sure (there is only one fleeting reference, in 4Q521.ii.12). The Sadducees denied resurrection altogether (Acts 23:8), ostensibly because it is not mentioned in the Torah, but also because such belief encouraged insurrection and martyrdom, which in turn threatened their establishment position.

Gospels and Acts

In Luke 20:27 – 38 and its parallels, Jesus categorically opposes the Sadducees’ trick question regarding multiple marriages and describes a resurrection state in which marriage is superfluous and death unknown. He then freshly interprets Exod 3:6: Israel’s God is the God of the living, so his relationship with the patriarchs is not broken by death and the dead must therefore rise. Elsewhere Jesus could speak of “the resurrection of the righteous” (Luke 14:14), but his teaching on final judgment clearly implies universal resurrection (Matt 25:31 – 46).

Jesus repeatedly tells his disciples of his forthcoming death and resurrection (e.g., Mark 8:31). John typically focuses on the implication of these events: Jesus himself is the resurrection and life, which implies resurrection and eternal life for all believers (John 11:25 – 26). From Pentecost onward, the center of apostolic preaching is Jesus’ resurrection, vindicating him as Messiah and necessitating repentance and faith (e.g., Acts 2:24 – 36).

The Letters and Revelation

For Paul, Christ’s resurrection is the foundation of Christian life and hope, as carefully explained in 1 Cor 15: Jesus’ resurrection happened; Christians universally believe it; death came through Adam and resurrection through Christ; this profoundly affects our lifestyle; the perishable “soul-animated” (psychikon) body will be raised an imperishable “spirit-animated” (pneumatikon) one; and so death itself is “swallowed up in victory” (1 Cor 15:54). Christ’s resurrection is thus the prototype of Christian experience.

1 Peter echoes Pauline themes in grounding its opening doxology on Christ’s resurrection (1 Pet 1:3) and in contrasting the perishable and the imperishable (1 Pet 1:23). Hebrews similarly lists resurrection as a basic tenet of faith (Heb 6:1 – 2). Revelation, for all its apocalyptic imagery and eschatological focus, speaks only cryptically of a “first resurrection” of martyrs to a millennial reign with Christ (Rev 20:5 – 6). Different terminology is used for the final judgment: the sea, death, and Hades “give up” their dead to stand before God’s throne (Rev 20:12 – 13). Here death and the realm of the dead are not just defeated but are forced to surrender all their captives and are finally destroyed. The God of life ultimately triumphs.

Bible News Roundup – Week of March 27, 2016

Read this week’s Bible Gateway Weekly Brief newsletter
Bible Gateway Weekly Brief
Newsletter signup

Support Bible Gateway—Browse the Bible Gateway Store
BibleGatewayStore.com

50 New Translations of the Bible Completed in 2015
United Bible Societies
See multiple Bible translations on Bible Gateway

More Americans Agree Christians Face Intolerance But Complain Too Much About It
Facts & Trends

Vast Majority of Americans Believe the Bible is Sacred Literature
The Blaze
American Bible Society State of the Bible 2016

Tennessee Senate Committee Approves Bill to Make Bible State Book
WBIR-TV
The Tennessean

Diboll, TX Police Dept Hopes to Place Bible Verse on Uniform Shoulder Patch
Law Officer
Read Matthew 5:9 on Bible Gateway

Incredible Proof for Why You Should Have Faith in the Bible
CBN News
The Undeniable Reliability of Scripture: An Interview with Josh McDowell
Why Trust the Bible?: An Interview with Greg Gilbert
Questioning the Bible: An Interview with Jonathan Morrow
Browse the Archaeological section in the Bible Gateway Store

University of British Columbia Acquires 13th Century Paris Bible
The Ubyssey
A Collection of Bible Museums & Exhibits

Bible Distribution in Abbotsford Canada Schools Draws Criticism
The Chilliwack Progress

Malaysian Court Upholds Right to Convert from Islam
World Watch Monitor
Interview: Nabeel Qureshi, author of Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus

2 Million Scripture Booklets Sent to Rwanda
Mission Network News

Iranians and Israelis Are in a Battle Over History—and the Holiday of Purim
The World
Read the book of Esther on Bible Gateway

Bible Reading Marathon is a Success with Local Cumbria, UK Community
North-West Evening Mail

78-Hour Bible Reading Marathon Completed in New Zealand
NZStuff

Carroll County Arkansas Bible Reading Marathon April 28—May 5
Lovely County Citizen

Welsh Bible in the Book-Collection of Elbląg Library
Minorities Records

Women in UK More Likely to Pray than Men
Premier

See other Bible News Roundup weekly posts

He Is Risen!

Click to read Mark 16:5-7 (NIV) on Bible Gateway

What Happened on Good Friday?

Browse resources for Easter in the Bible Gateway Store.

Today is Good Friday, the bleakest moment in the Gospel story. Reading the story of Jesus’ arrest, trial, and crucifixion today, we have the benefit of knowing that it’s all leading up to the triumph of Easter. But to the Jesus-followers present at the scene, it must have seemed that the world as they knew it was falling apart.

To refresh your memory, see what happened on Monday and Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday of Easter week.

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Infographic: What Happened During Holy Week Day-By-Day.

Today is the day that the events of Holy Week really begin to move. Our timeline shows the many different strands of the Easter story coming together on this day (click to see the full timeline):

goodfriday

If you haven’t read the complete story of the crucifixion recently, today’s a perfect day to revisit it. Here are the four Gospel accounts of the story:

One of the challenges of reading the crucifixion story two thousands years after the event took place is that it’s difficult for us to empathize with its participants. From our perspective, the Easter crowds seem insanely fickle; Jesus’ disciples seem utterly clueless; the members of the Sandhedrin contemptibly evil; Pilate laughably corrupt.

Those things are true. Nobody except Jesus behaves well in the Good Friday story. But it’s these very people—fickle, clueless, evil, corrupt—that Jesus died for.

The truth is that we have much in common with the fools and villains of Easter. The wonder is that Jesus loved them, and us, enough to submit to foolishness, injustice, and death. The miracle is that three days later, he rose from the dead to offer us salvation. Hallelujah, what a Savior!

What Happened on Thursday of Holy Week?

As we approach Easter Sunday, the events of Holy Week intensify. We’ve already looked at what happened on Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday of Easter week. What about Thursday?

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Infographic: What Happened During Holy Week Day-By-Day.

Browse resources for Easter in the Bible Gateway Store.

Thursday of Holy Week—also known as Maundy Thursday—witnessed several key events in the Easter story and set in motion the trial and crucifixion of Jesus. The events of this day, particularly the Last Supper, continue to be remembered and commemorated in Christian churches around the world today. Let’s take a look at these events as the Bible describes them by looking at the Thursday section of our Holy Week Timeline, which maps interactions between the important people and events of the Easter story:

Event timeline for Maundy Thursday

Preparing the Upper Room

Where to read it: maundythursdayMatthew 26:17-19

On the first day of the Festival of Unleavened Bread, the disciples came to Jesus and asked, “Where do you want us to make preparations for you to eat the Passover?”

He replied, “Go into the city to a certain man and tell him, ‘The Teacher says: My appointed time is near. I am going to celebrate the Passover with my disciples at your house.’” So the disciples did as Jesus had directed them and prepared the Passover. (NIV)

The Last Supper

Where to read it: Matthew 26:20-35. The most well-known scene can be found in Matthew 26:26-29:

While they were eating, Jesus took a loaf of bread, and after blessing it he broke it, gave it to the disciples, and said, “Take, eat; this is my body.” Then he took a cup, and after giving thanks he gave it to them, saying, “Drink from it, all of you; for this is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins. I tell you, I will never again drink of this fruit of the vine until that day when I drink it new with you in my Father’s kingdom.” (NRSV)

Jesus Prays

Where to read it: Matthew 26:36-46

Then Jesus went with them to a place called Gethsemane, and he said to his disciples, “Sit here, while I go over there and pray.” And taking with him Peter and the two sons of Zebedee, he began to be sorrowful and troubled. Then he said to them, “My soul is very sorrowful, even to death; remain here, and watch with me.” And going a little farther he fell on his face and prayed, saying, “My Father, if it be possible, let this cup pass from me; nevertheless, not as I will, but as you will.” And he came to the disciples and found them sleeping. And he said to Peter, “So, could you not watch with me one hour? Watch and pray that you may not enter into temptation. The spirit indeed is willing, but the flesh is weak.” Again, for the second time, he went away and prayed, “My Father, if this cannot pass unless I drink it, your will be done.” And again he came and found them sleeping, for their eyes were heavy. So, leaving them again, he went away and prayed for the third time, saying the same words again. Then he came to the disciples and said to them, “Sleep and take your rest later on. See, the hour is at hand, and the Son of Man is betrayed into the hands of sinners. Rise, let us be going; see, my betrayer is at hand.” (ESV)

As you can see, the events of Maundy Thursday are integral to the Easter story. For more information about this day (including the story behind its unusual name), see this essay by Mel Lawrenz on the significance of Maundy Thursday.

La Biblia Reina-Valera Actualizada ya está disponible en Bible Gateway

We have some news of special interest to our Spanish-language readers. See below for an English translation.

Nos complace anunciar la adición de una nueva Biblia en español a nuestra biblioteca disponible en línea: La Reina-Valera Actualizada.

editorialmh-logo-1438565134La Reina-Valera Actualizada (RVR 2015) es una revisión de la Biblia Reina-Valera 1909, pero tiene raíces que se remontan a una larga tradición de Biblias en español. La Reina-Valera Actualizada utiliza los lenguajes bíblicos originales, cotejando el texto con otras versiones antiguas y modernas de la Biblia. El resultado es una actualización que ofrece muchos de los beneficios de una traducción nueva pero reteniendo mucho de lo grandioso de las Biblias traducidas al español clásico. Con una filosofía de traducción basada en la fidelidad, honestidad y claridad, la RVR 2015 es una traducción moderadamente literal.

Pulse aquí para echar un vistazo al texto de la Reina Valera Actualizada:

Y el primer día de la semana, muy de mañana, fueron al sepulcro llevando las especias aromáticas que habían preparado. Y hallaron removida la piedra del sepulcro; pero al entrar no hallaron el cuerpo de Jesús.

Aconteció que, estando perplejas por esto, he aquí se pusieron de pie junto a ellas dos varones con vestiduras resplandecientes. Como ellas les tuvieron temor y bajaron la cara a tierra, ellos les dijeron:

—¿Por qué buscan entre los muertos al que vive? No está aquí; más bien, ha resucitado. Acuérdense de lo que les habló cuando estaba aún en Galilea, como dijo: “Es necesario que el Hijo del Hombre sea entregado en manos de hombres pecadores, y que sea crucificado y resucite al tercer día”.Lucas 24:1-7 (RVA-2015)

Puede iniciar su lectura de la Reina-Valera Actualizada aquí, o buscarla en el menú para seleccionar Biblias en la parte superior de la mayoría de las páginas de BibleGateway.com. ¡Esperamos que sea una útil adición a su biblioteca en línea para la lectura de la Biblia!


Reina-Valera Actualizada Now Available on Bible Gateway

We’re pleased to announce the addition of a new Spanish Bible to our online library: the Reina-Valera Actualizada!

The Reina-Valera Actualizada (RVA 2015) is a revision of the Reina-Valera 1909, but has roots that reach much further back in the tradition of Spanish-language Bibles. The Reina-Valera Actualizada uses the original biblical languages, collating the text with other ancient and modern Bible versions. The result is an update that offers many of the benefits of a new translation while retaining much of the grand feel of classic Spanish Bible translations. With its translation philosophy of fidelity, honesty and clarity, the RVA 2015 is a moderately literal translation.

To get a feel for the Reina-Valera Actualizada, here’s how it renders Luke 24:1-7:

Y el primer día de la semana, muy de mañana, fueron al sepulcro llevando las especias aromáticas que habían preparado. Y hallaron removida la piedra del sepulcro; pero al entrar no hallaron el cuerpo de Jesús.

Aconteció que, estando perplejas por esto, he aquí se pusieron de pie junto a ellas dos varones con vestiduras resplandecientes. Como ellas les tuvieron temor y bajaron la cara a tierra, ellos les dijeron:

—¿Por qué buscan entre los muertos al que vive? No está aquí; más bien, ha resucitado. Acuérdense de lo que les habló cuando estaba aún en Galilea, como dijo: “Es necesario que el Hijo del Hombre sea entregado en manos de hombres pecadores, y que sea crucificado y resucite al tercer día”.Lucas 24:1-7 (RVA-2015)

You can get started reading the Reina-Valera Actualizada here, or find it in the Bible selection menu at the top of most pages on BibleGateway.com. We hope you find it a useful addition to your online Bible reading library!

Devotional Study: Crucifixion and Resurrection

howtostudythebible

This lesson is part of Mel Lawrenz’ “How to Study the Bible” series. If you know someone or a group who would like to follow along on this journey through Scripture, they can get more info and sign up to receive these essays via email here.


One way of studying Scripture is to ponder the meaning of a short passage and to reflect on the greatness of its ideas and the life-changing impact of its meaning. We may call this devotional study.

Because this is the time of year Christians all over the world are focussing on Jesus Christ, crucified and risen from the dead, here are two examples of devotional reflections on the cross and resurrection (excerpts from Knowing Him).

htsb-easter

The Crucifixion

They came to a place called Golgotha (which means “the place of the skull”). There they offered Jesus wine to drink, mixed with gall; but after tasting it, he refused to drink it. When they had crucified him, they divided up his clothes by casting lots. And sitting down, they kept watch over him there. Above his head they placed the written charge against him: THIS IS JESUS, THE KING OF THE JEWS. — Matthew 27:33-37

Now came the time for the clash between good and evil, heaven and hell. The crucifixion of Jesus is both the most horrific moment in human history, and humanity’s only hope. That’s why we call the Friday before Easter, Good Friday.

Jesus’ followers were still too weak to understand, and so they scattered. The religious elite carried out their plot. The political leaders passed the buck, and in the end, they discarded Jesus for the sake of convenience. The crowds gawked. Two thieves hung on either side of a man whose crime was hard to comprehend. The placard above his head announced with biting sarcasm: King of the Jews. That must have attracted some attention.

We know of seven things Jesus said from that cross, including a pronouncement of forgiveness for the soldiers, provision for the care of his mother, and a plea for something to wet his parched mouth. But the last words on that last day of his natural human life were the most important: “It is finished!” (John 19:30). That was not a cry of resignation, nor capitulation or surrender. It was a shout of victory that all that God had planned for the restoration of sinful human beings was now accomplished. Now there could be justification! Redemption! Reconciliation! All that needed to be done for the debt and scar of sin had been done. Forgiveness was now free.

All that remained was for Jesus to step out from the shadow of death, which he would easily do after a few days. But first, the disciples had time to search their hearts for how something good could be found in something so bad. And the enemies of God disappeared into the darkness of their own duplicity.

Ponder This: How does the crucifixion of Jesus most powerfully impact you? What do you think?

The Resurrection

Early on the first day of the week, while it was still dark, Mary Magdalene went to the tomb and saw that the stone had been removed from the entrance. So she came running to Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one Jesus loved, and said, “They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we don’t know where they have put him!” — John 20:1-2

How difficult was it for the One who is Lord of the universe—who had a hand in creation itself, who is the very force of life that holds living things together—to wake up from the sleep of death and set aside the burial cloths draping his body?

As was always the case, Jesus’ revelations of himself did not happen with television cameras focused on him. Not even a respectable crowd was gathered. An alarming word from young Mary Magdalene about Jesus’ body being gone produced a panic and a footrace among two of Jesus’ beloved disciples, Peter and John. One looked and merely saw the emptiness of the tomb; the other saw the connection between this moment and the mysterious words of Jesus—and he believed.

Now things were really complicated and the disciples went home. So Jesus first appeared to a brokenhearted Mary who stayed at the tomb. Mary was the first to behold something the world had never seen before—a resurrected, transformed life.

Resurrection day for Jesus was simply the first installment of a resurrection of masses of people when this era of the history of the universe draws to a close. What God promises to those who belong to Jesus is not the loss of self into a nothingness bliss, but the resurrection and remaking of everything that is right and good in the world he created. And until then, he invites us to begin living transformed lives, continually shaped and changed by the hope of the redemption of all that God has made.

Ponder This: Where in your life do you need the resurrection power of Jesus at work today? What do you think?


Mel Lawrenz trains an international network of Christian leaders, ministry pioneers, and thought-leaders. He served as senior pastor of Elmbrook Church in Brookfield, Wisconsin, for ten years and now serves as Elmbrook’s minister at large. He has a Ph.D. in the history of Christian thought and is on the adjunct faculty of Trinity International University. Mel is the author of 18 books, the latest, How to Understand the Bible—A Simple Guide and Spiritual Influence: the Hidden Power Behind Leadership (Zondervan, 2012). See more of Mel’s writing at WordWay.

What Happened on Wednesday of Holy Week?

Earlier this week, we looked at what happened during Monday and Tuesday of Holy Week. Today, we’ll look at the events of Holy Wednesday. All our references are drawn from the Holy Week Timeline.

[Read the Bible Gateway Blog post, Infographic: What Happened During Holy Week Day-By-Day]

Browse resources for Easter in the Bible Gateway Store.

Here’s Wednesday’s portion of the timeline. The horizontal axis is a timeline; the vertical axis represents the proximity between the key individuals and groups of the Easter story:

Event timeline of Holy Wednesday

Mattia_Preti_-_Tribute_Money_-_WGA18400The major event of Holy Wednesday is Judas’ decision to betray Jesus. Although the betrayal doesn’t take place for another day, our knowledge of the impending act colors our reading of the Last Supper story, which we’ll encounter tomorrow. Here’s the short but critical scene from Wednesday of Holy Week:

Holy Wednesday

Judas Agrees to Betray Jesus: Matthew 26:14-16 (GNT):

Then one of the twelve disciples—the one named Judas Iscariot—went to the chief priests and asked, “What will you give me if I betray Jesus to you?” They counted out thirty silver coins and gave them to him. From then on Judas was looking for a good chance to hand Jesus over to them.

Image: “Judas receiving thirty pieces of silver for betraying Jesus,” by Mattia Preti, c. 1640.