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Full Summary and Discussion Questions
At the center of the Christian faith is one defining reality: the resurrection of Jesus. In 1 Corinthians 15, Paul makes it clear that everything hangs on this. If Jesus did not rise, then faith is empty, sin remains, and death still has the final word. But if He has been raised, then everything changes.
The resurrection is not an optional belief—it is the foundation. It forces a response. We cannot simply admire Jesus as a teacher; if He truly rose, then His claims are true and His authority is absolute. The good news of the gospel is not just that Jesus lived well, but that He conquered death itself.
This is also deeply personal. The resurrection is not just something to believe about—it is something to experience. Jesus is not distant; He is alive and present. The same power that raised Him from the dead is at work, bringing spiritually dead people to life even now.
Through His death and resurrection, we are given a new identity. We are not just forgiven—we are made alive and brought into relationship with God as His sons and daughters. This is not something we earn, but something we receive.
The invitation is to live in that reality. To see ourselves no longer defined by sin or death, but by the life Jesus has given us. If the resurrection is true, then death is not the end, and our lives are not meaningless. It becomes both our foundation and our future—calling us to live fully alive to God.
By City Chapel NYCFull Summary and Discussion Questions
At the center of the Christian faith is one defining reality: the resurrection of Jesus. In 1 Corinthians 15, Paul makes it clear that everything hangs on this. If Jesus did not rise, then faith is empty, sin remains, and death still has the final word. But if He has been raised, then everything changes.
The resurrection is not an optional belief—it is the foundation. It forces a response. We cannot simply admire Jesus as a teacher; if He truly rose, then His claims are true and His authority is absolute. The good news of the gospel is not just that Jesus lived well, but that He conquered death itself.
This is also deeply personal. The resurrection is not just something to believe about—it is something to experience. Jesus is not distant; He is alive and present. The same power that raised Him from the dead is at work, bringing spiritually dead people to life even now.
Through His death and resurrection, we are given a new identity. We are not just forgiven—we are made alive and brought into relationship with God as His sons and daughters. This is not something we earn, but something we receive.
The invitation is to live in that reality. To see ourselves no longer defined by sin or death, but by the life Jesus has given us. If the resurrection is true, then death is not the end, and our lives are not meaningless. It becomes both our foundation and our future—calling us to live fully alive to God.