There are seven Biblical phrases that Jesus said while on the cross and, of course, "It is finished" is one of them. It was a declaration that His earthly mission was complete, He had accepted our sin and served as sacrifice on Good Friday. This would be a marvelous story of self-sacrifice and an example how to treat each other if the story ended there. But it's not where the story ended.
Three days later, on a Sunday like today, Christ rose. He predicted this (Mark 8:31-37, Luke 18:31-35). He told His disciples what was necessary and what would happen -- like the Scripture has told us what is necessary and what will happen -- and they did not understand. I can't say I blame them; we still have trouble understanding now.
The importance of the Resurrection is a demonstration of both His power over death (symbolically important for us, since we no longer have to fear death) and His faithfulness (more immediately important to us because He fulfills promises). He promises us the Spirit, the counselor, in John 14:15-21. In Matthew 28:20, He states, "And lo, I am with you always, even unto the end of the world." (The preacher at my church in Clemson used to end his sermons with that, and it gave me goosebumps every time.)
The Bible is a series of promises that God lays out and fulfills. His track record is pretty hard to beat. This, though, is the realization of the most important one. Today is the anniversary of the Resurrection of Christ, the Son of God, the fulfillment of the promise that in addition to all the things laid on for Good Friday, that He is with us. That He is trustworthy. That He is more powerful than death. I can get behind that. Happy Easter!
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