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https://square.link/u/UHRU92rp - Donate Here
The silence of the tomb is shattered—but not everyone understands what they’re seeing. The stone is rolled away, the body is gone, and heaven has already declared what earth is still trying to process: He is not here… He has risen. Yet even in the face of the empty tomb, confusion lingers. The women remember, but the others struggle to believe. Because resurrection truth doesn’t just require evidence—it demands faith.
Two disciples walk away from Jerusalem, talking about everything that happened, trying to make sense of a story they thought had ended. And it’s there, in their confusion and disappointment, that Jesus draws near—but they don’t recognize Him. He walks with them, opens the Scriptures to them, and reveals that this was always the plan. Their problem wasn’t lack of information—it was slowness to believe.
And that’s where this passage presses us. You can hear the truth, walk near Jesus, even discuss Him—and still miss Him. Until your eyes are opened. Until your heart burns. Until you stop analyzing and start believing. Because the risen Christ is not just to be studied—He is to be seen, known, and followed.
By Anthony Caldwellhttps://square.link/u/UHRU92rp - Donate Here
The silence of the tomb is shattered—but not everyone understands what they’re seeing. The stone is rolled away, the body is gone, and heaven has already declared what earth is still trying to process: He is not here… He has risen. Yet even in the face of the empty tomb, confusion lingers. The women remember, but the others struggle to believe. Because resurrection truth doesn’t just require evidence—it demands faith.
Two disciples walk away from Jerusalem, talking about everything that happened, trying to make sense of a story they thought had ended. And it’s there, in their confusion and disappointment, that Jesus draws near—but they don’t recognize Him. He walks with them, opens the Scriptures to them, and reveals that this was always the plan. Their problem wasn’t lack of information—it was slowness to believe.
And that’s where this passage presses us. You can hear the truth, walk near Jesus, even discuss Him—and still miss Him. Until your eyes are opened. Until your heart burns. Until you stop analyzing and start believing. Because the risen Christ is not just to be studied—He is to be seen, known, and followed.