Scripture Reading: Matthew 28:1-10
The celebration of Easter is more than a celebration. It is a mission and an invitation. In the Scripture we read from the Gospel of Matthew, the women went early on Sunday morning to anoint the body of Jesus. Instead, they encountered an angel who told them, “He is risen from the dead and is going ahead of you into Galilee. There you will see Him.” The angel also reassured them, “Do not be afraid,” and invited them to come and see the empty tomb.
This invitation—come and see—is at the heart of Easter. Yet it does not end there. As the women were leaving, they were given another instruction: “Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee; there they will see me.” Jesus Christ Himself repeated this message. Easter, then, is both an invitation to come and see and a mission to go and tell.
As we celebrate another Easter in our lives, God invites each of us to come closer, to experience Him more deeply, and to reflect on how we have encountered Jesus Christ in our own journey. The call is personal. It is an invitation to draw nearer and nearer to Him. In the Psalms, David writes, “Taste and see that the Lord is good.” This is not a distant or theoretical faith; it is an experience. We cannot stand on the outside. We are invited to come and see, to personally experience the power of the resurrection.
When Jesus began His ministry, He extended this same invitation to His first disciples: “Come and see.” The Christian life is not merely about sermons or teachings. It is about a living experience—encountering the power of the resurrection in our own lives. That power not only transforms us but also changes the world around us through us.
Throughout the Sundays of Lent, we reflected on the encounters Jesus had with various individuals, especially several women whose lives were forever changed. We remembered the woman at the well, the woman caught in adultery whom Jesus set free, and the woman who anointed His head with oil. Each of these encounters was personal and transformative. Easter calls us to ask ourselves: are we experiencing that same power in our lives today?
Consider this image. If someone told you there was a treasure buried in your backyard, you would not simply sit and debate it. You would go out and dig. In the same way, we are called to seek and experience the goodness of God. We are invited to look into the empty places of our lives—those spaces filled with heaviness, longing, or uncertainty—and recognize that God is already at work there.
Many of us carry a sense of emptiness at times. It may come from a broken relationship, anxiety about the future, concern for our children, or a longing we cannot quite name. Even in seasons of blessing, that emptiness can remain. It is into these very spaces that God invites us to welcome Him. The power of the resurrection fills what is empty and brings life where there was none.
This is the Easter invitation: come and see, come and experience, come and be renewed by the power of the resurrection.
But Easter also carries a mission. It is not only an invitation; it is a calling. “Go and tell.” As witnesses to the resurrection, we are called to share this good news with others and invite them into the same transforming experience.
When we discover something meaningful or life-changing, we naturally want to share it. The same is true when we encounter Christ. When He becomes our Lord and Savior and we experience His presence in our lives, we are filled with a desire to tell others. The women at the tomb demonstrated this urgency. The Scripture tells us that they ran to share the news. They did not delay. Their hearts were full, and their steps were quick.
As the church, we are called to that same urgency. We are sent to go and tell, to invite others to experience the power of the resurrection. In Matthew’s account, Jesus meets them along the way. Their encounter deepens, and they respond in obedience, carrying His message into the world.
The message we carry this Easter remains unchanged: He is not in the grave; He is risen. Come and see, and go and tell. This is both the invitation and the mission that God places before us today.


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