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John 12:12-19 – Palm Sunday

Do You Recognize Jesus?

Introduction

Have you ever been in a moment where you are talking to someone, and they know who you are, but you don’t know who they are? Talk about being a pastor’s kid (“I remember when you were just a young kid”). Like there is a bit of embarrassment but also like I don’t know you stop talking to me and acting like you know me, you know? Well that is a bit of what we are talking about today.

We are going to look at this Palm Sunday with one clear question in mind: Do you recognize Jesus? Because there were a lot of people who thought they knew Jesus. Thought they knew what he was about and what he came to do, but unfortunately people missed Him, they did not recognize who Jesus was, and what he came to do. So as we begin, let’s take a look at the outline through our text today.

  • Verses 12-13: The Perspective of the Crowd

  • Verses 14-15: The Perspective of Jesus

  • Verse 16: The Perspective of the Disciples

  • Verses 17-18: The Perspective of the Crowd in Relation to Lazarus

  • Verse 19: The Perspective of the Pharisees

The Perspective of the Crowd (vv. 12-13)

Let’s start with verses 12 and 13, where the crowd goes out to meet Jesus. There is energy and excitement and anticipation in this moment. It is a scene that is full of emotion and honestly theological weight to it as well. The timing matters here. This is passover. Every year, the people of Israel would gather to remember how God rescued them from slavery in Egypt. Psalm 118 was sung as a song of praise for what God had done. It was a song every Jewish boy and girl would sing every year, and a song they could sing by heart.

And that is what the crowd sings at this moment. They sing, “Hosanna! Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.” Hosanna means, “save now.” They even have palm branches, which is a symbol of victory. And don’t miss this piece of it because they are doing way more than just celebrating or praising God. They are actually asking Jesus to act. To save Israel from oppression, to defeat their enemy, Rome, and be the Messiah they were always hoping for. There was an urgency to what was happening and an expectation that something big was about to go down. And they add something to their song of praise. They add, “Even the King of Israel.” This is showing us they are starting to connect the dots in their mind. They are thinking, “this is the one. This is our king. This is the moment.” They found their conquering king. The one that will march into Jerusalem and take back the throne of Israel!

But here is the thing, the crowd feels the excitement, but they miss the meaning of the moment. Let me tell you what I mean here. See, the crowd does recognize Jesus, just not fully. They are excited about what He can do for them. But they do not understand what he actually came to do. There is a difference. See, some of them are ready to crown him while others might just be more curious about him and they are just caught up in the moment, like they’ve heard about what he did to Lazarus and they are coming to see the miracle worker. Whatever their case may be, the same theme is at work. They’re focused on what Jesus can give, not who Jesus is. They want a king, yes! But they want a conquering king. A political king. A king who fixes their situation. A king who will free them from oppression and put pride back into their nation. And because of that, they miss him. They miss who he really is. And I think sometimes we can be like the crowd in that way.

We fail to recognize Jesus when we feel the excitement but don’t seek the meaning.

The crowd had real emotion and real passion. But they didn’t pause to say, what is actually going on here? Is Jesus really who we think he is? And honestly, I don’t think we’re that different. We can get caught up in the moment, the excitement of following Jesus. The environment and the atmosphere, man we like to put on a show for Jesus, right? Or is that wrong? I am not saying there is a right or wrong, but I am asking where is the substance? A few years ago in youth ministry… I would focus on the emotion of the moments. What am I saying? I was relying more on the emotion of what my faith gave me and offered me, rather than the substance and depth that came from being rooted in the Word of God. If we stop at the excitement, the emotional level of our faith, then we miss so much of what Jesus has to offer. Because following Jesus is more about understanding who He is and submitting to Him, rather than just feeling something. So yes, it is possible to sing the right songs, read the right words, and feel the right emotions, but still miss Jesus. And here is my plea with you this Easter season. Learn from my mistakes. Focus on diving deeper in your faith, don’t accept the comfortability of staying on the surface.

The Perspective of Jesus (vv. 14-15)

Then, we see a shift in verses 14 and 15. We get to see a short glimpse of the perspective of Jesus. John keeps this interaction brief. A lot more brief than the other Gospel accounts of this moment. That is an important little nugget because it seems we should be less attentive to what Jesus is doing at this moment, and more attentive to what Jesus is revealing to us. He is making it very clear who He is. He is King! John says, “Jesus found a young donkey and sat on it.” So don’t miss what John is doing here. He wants us to focus on how Jesus is responding to the crowd. Because here is what is happening: the crowd is declaring Jesus as king at this moment. That much is clear. And although Jesus is responding to that claim, he is revealing something entirely different. Yes, the crowd is saying king. Yes, Jesus is showing king.

So, what is Jesus revealing then? Well, in a sense Jesus is saying, “Okay… I’ll receive the claim as King, but let me show you the kind of King I am.” Verse 15 says this, “Fear not, daughter of Zion; behold, your king is coming, sitting on a donkey’s colt!” This is directly from Zechariah 9:9, and it was a promise from long ago. It is revealing that a king would come. But not on a war horse or with an army behind him, but on a colt. Which was a symbol of humility. A symbol of peace. At this moment, Jesus is redefining what kingship actually means. And this is where it gets personal for us:

Do you recognize Jesus as King?

Because the crowd wanted a Savior. They wanted someone to free them from their situation right now. They wanted the immediate solution to their immediate problem. They didn’t want a Lord. They didn’t want someone to rule and reign over them, they just wanted someone to rescue them. And that was once again the miss. I think that is important for us to try to come to grips with. Do we want Jesus to be our problem solver? Or do we want Him to rule and reign over our lives? Cause, when we say Jesus is King, we don’t mean He’s one of many options.

Jesus is THE King.

  • The Ruler over every ruler

  • The Authority over all authority

  • The One with all power and all sovereignty

He is the King of the Jews, He is the King of Israel, He is the King of the ages, He is the King of Heaven, He is the King of Glory, He is the King of kings and He is the Lord of lords! That’s my King!

And the question that Dr. Lockridge once famously asked I now present to you. “I wonder, do you know Him?” Do you recognize Jesus as King? Because it is one thing to say He is the King of everything, it is an entirely different thing to say He is King of my life. Friends, recognizing Jesus as king is surrendering your life to Him. And that is where the crowd misses it. They celebrate Him. They sing to Him. And they get excited about Him. But they are not willing to submit to him and to His will.

And this connects us directly to how Jesus enters the city. He comes on a colt symbolizing peace. But what happens in a few days? Betrayal, violence, and death. Jesus is preparing to die. That doesn’t look like peace to me. Which has to mean one thing, he is not offering the kind of peace we might expect. He doesn’t promise us a problem free life, or financial stability, or perfect health, or easy circumstances. That is not how we recognize him. We recognize Jesus through the peace He actually gives—peace with God. Later in John 14 Jesus says, “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you.” That is internal, eternal peace. Peace in God right now, and peace in God forevermore. So here is the question: Do you want a King who makes your life comfortable, or a King who makes you right with God? Because those are not the same thing. Kingdoms rise and fall. Circumstances change. Life shifts constantly. But when Jesus is your King, this is the reality… that you have something that cannot be taken from you. Because even in life’s most difficult seasons, you have peace with God. That’s the truth.

The Perspective of the Disciples (v. 16)

Now, we get to verse 16, and this is where John stops and lets us get a peak behind the curtain. The first thing he says here is, “His disciples did not understand these things at first…” That is him included by the way. The disciples… the twelve guys who walked with Jesus, lived with Him, heard Him teach.. They had no clue what was happening. So let’s just be honest: If they didn’t understand it… what makes us think the crowd did? They didn’t that’s how. Then John tells us something really important, “…but when Jesus was glorified, then they remembered…” It’s like a foreshadow in the middle of the climax of the story. In the moment, none of what just happened clicked for the disciples.

And this isn’t new in John’s Gospel. Back in John 2:18, Jesus cleanses the temple and says, “Destroy this temple, and in three days I will raise it up.” The disciples didn’t understand it until later. In John 6, after the feeding of the 5,000, the crowd wants to make Him king, but for the wrong reasons, so Jesus hides away. Now we are back in John 12, and it’s all coming together, yet still… they don’t get it. John is showing us a pattern: People can be close to Jesus and still completely miss what He’s doing.

In other words, we fail to recognize Jesus when we don’t understand our Bible. You see, understanding Jesus requires more than being around Him, or being familiar with Him. It requires knowing and understanding what God has revealed. And this is where we need to be a little honest with ourselves. It’s possible to be in church, hear the teaching, know some of the stories, but not truly understand who Jesus is. John is writing this later, looking back, saying: “I didn’t get it then… but I see it now.” And why? Because he sees the whole picture. He sees the cross, the resurrection and the fulfillment of everything Scripture points to. And his goal is to help us recognize what he once missed. That’s the truth. And here is the question: Are you trying to recognize Jesus based on what you feel in the moment, or based on what God has revealed in His Word? Because if we don’t understand Scripture, we will create a version of Jesus that makes sense to us—instead of seeing Him for who He truly is. The question for you and I is: Will we take time to understand God’s Word, or will we miss Jesus too? The disciples were there… they missed it. The crowd was there… They missed it too. But now, you and I have the full picture. How will we respond?

The Perspective of the Crowd & Lazarus (vv. 17-18)

Let’s keep moving on here to the perspective of the crowd in relation to Lazarus. John tells us that the crowd were bearing witness about what Jesus had done when he raised Lazarus from the dead. Now is there one crowd, is there two crowds, I don’t know and frankly it doesn’t really matter. Because the point John is making is clear: people are talking about Jesus because of what they’ve seen and heard. They witnessed the sign or they heard about the sign and now they’re spreading it. That is why the crowd is here and that is why there is excitement building. We know this because of what happened earlier in verses 9-11. People saw and heard about Lazarus being raised from the dead. And the chief priests were plotting to kill both him and Jesus! That is how big this got, and how much momentum was gaining from this event. Many were drawn to Jesus. And for a moment, it delayed the plans of the religious leaders to kill Jesus. It didn’t stop them, just delayed them. Why? Because everything is still moving to a planned out moment. The hour that Jesus has been pointing to all along. Because the reality of this situation is Jesus is the only one that knows what is really going on. Though it may seem chaotic, it is not out of control. Because Jesus is orchestrating all of it. He knows why the crowd is responding the way they are. And here is where it connects with us:

We fail to recognize Jesus when we expect Him to fit our agenda instead of submitting to His will.

And you know we may live here a lot of the time. We see, we believe, we know what Jesus can do, right? We hear the stories, and we know the power, and we’ve seen Him move in the past. And so we wait for Him to move again. And we sing about it and we pray about it, and we talk to our small group about it and we wait. Waiting for the healing, waiting for the relationship to be restored, waiting for the situation to change, waiting for the prayer to be answered. And we become expectant. And that’s not a bad thing at all,……… but if I may interject one small step we may often skip… and it’s this: Are we submitted to His will, or are we just waiting for Him to fulfill ours? Because the crowd was drawn to Jesus for what he did. But they weren’t asking, “what’s he calling me to do? What’s is His will in this moment?” They were too busy focusing on the sign and were not willing to surrender to His will. And here is the truth: following Jesus is more than just believing He can do something for you. Rather, it’s about trusting Him even if he doesn’t do what you expect. It’s about remaining faithful, when the healing comes… or when it doesn’t. It’s about remaining faithful when the prayer is answered… or when it feels like it’s not. That we are willing to remain faithful to God and align his will with ours.

The Perspective of the Pharisees (v. 19)

That leads us into our final verse where we are looking at the perspective of the Pharisees. And honestly, this is the most ironic moment in the entire passage. The Pharisees look at everything happening and say: “Look, the world has gone after him.” They’re frustrated. They feel like they’re losing control. They see the crowds, the momentum, and the attention Jesus is getting. But here is the irony of it: They are accusing Jesus of doing the very thing he warned against! He says exactly that in Matthew 16, “For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world and forfeits his soul?” That is what they think Jesus is doing at this moment. But we know that is the exact opposite thing he is doing at this moment! Jesus is not gaining anything from this moment, instead he is preparing to lose it. He is preparing to lay down his life for the whole world. That is the difference between our view point and the Pharisees’ view point. You see, the crowd called it a triumphal entry because they thought it was leading to a crown. We call it a triumphal entry because we know it was leading to a cross. That’s the difference. The mission of Jesus had never changed. Can you believe that? His entire life on this earth was pointing him toward this moment.

And this is where it hits me, and maybe it hits you too. The Pharisees are accusing Jesus of having something… they wanted what they thought He had. Right, that’s the irony piece. They wanted the praise of the people, they wanted the control of the moment, and they wanted a version of the Passover that fit their expectations. They were not open to what Jesus was doing because what Jesus was doing was threatening their way of life. And it was threatening what they wanted. And if we are honest… we can fall into that same trap too.

Let me ask you something: have you ever tried to take the moral high ground… but in the process you compromised your own morals to get there? Like have you ever sacrificed your character just to feel right? Like you saw injustice being done but acted unjustly just to try and gain justice. Maybe this will help you understand a bit better, “Like when someone cuts you off in traffic… and you’re like, ‘That was wrong!’ so you speed up, cut them back off and now somehow you’re the hero in your own story.” That is the irony of this moment. The Pharisees missed it. They think Jesus has power, control, and popularity here. They complain about it because they want it! They want what Jesus has when in reality that is not what Jesus has. They were looking at Jesus through the lens of their own desires. And it leads us to this very point here:

We recognize Jesus as the suffering servant. The pharisees couldn’t recognize Him because they were too focused on the wrong things. They wanted what they couldn’t have. And failed to recognize the Messiah right in front of them the whole time.

Closing & Worship

(INVITE WORSHIP TEAM UP)

You know in verse 23, Jesus says this, “the hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified.” This moment is significant because all throughout John’s Gospel Jesus says my hour has not come, my time has not come. But now, for the first time he says… the hour has come. Everything in Jesus’ life was leading him to this moment, and in it, he says it is his time to be glorified. Oftentimes, when we think of glory we think of a throne, or a crown, or of power and praise. But this is different. This is the paradox of the moment if you will. Jesus says that the moment of his suffering, is the moment He will be glorified. The moment he is humiliated, is the moment he considers glory. That cuts to my heart. And I wonder if it does yours too?

Do you recognize Jesus? Do you recognize him as the King of your life? Do you submit to his will? Are you desiring to understand more of who He is based on what the Bible says? I don’t want Jesus to become someone I am vaguely familiar with. I want to know Him deeply. I don’t want a surfaced relationship. I don’t want him to be a stranger. I don’t want it to feel like I bumped into a long lost friend of my parents that I barely remember from when I was 5 years old. And I can’t remember their faces. I want Jesus to be the most important relationship in my life, greater than my wife, greater than our little baby that I cannot wait to meet. I want to recognize who Jesus really is. So let us give our praise and adoration to Jesus, let us give our King the praise He is due as the one who has come in the Name of the Lord. Thank you Jesus. Let’s worship.

Benediction

“My King is a sovereign King. No means of measure can define His limitless love. He’s enduringly strong, He’s entirely sincere, He’s eternally steadfast. He’s immortally graceful. He’s imperially powerful. He’s impartially merciful. Do you know Him?

He’s the greatest phenomenon that has ever crossed the horizon. He’s God’s Son. He’s a sinner’s savior. He’s the centerpiece of civilization. He stands alone in Himself. He’s unparalleled. He’s unprecedented. He’s supreme. He’s preeminent. He’s the loftiest idea in literature. He’s the highest idea in philosophy. He’s the fundamental truth in theology. He’s the only One who qualifies as all sufficient Savior.

He’s the miracle of the age. He’s the only one able to supply all of our needs simultaneously. He supplies strength for the weak. He’s available for the tempted and the tried. He sympathizes and He saves. He guards and He guides. He heals the sick, He cleans the lepers. He forgives sinners, He discharges debtors, He delivers captives, He defends the feeble, He blesses the young, He serves the unfortunate, He regards the aged, He rewards the diligent, He beautifies the meek. Do you know Him?

Well, my king is the king of knowledge, He’s the well-spring of wisdom, He’s the doorway of deliverance, He’s the pathway of peace, He’s the roadway of righteousness, He’s the highway of holiness He’s the gateway of glory, He’s the master of the mighty, He’s the captain of the conquerors, He’s the head of the heroes, He’s the leader of the legislators, He’s the overseer of the overcomers, He’s the governor of governors, He’s the prince of princes, He’s the king of Kings and the Lord of Lords.

His life is matchless. His goodness is limitless. His mercy is everlasting. His love never changes. His Word is enough. His grace is sufficient. His reign is righteous. His yoke is easy and His burden is light. And I wish I could describe Him to you, but He’s indescribable. Yes. He’s incomprehensible. He’s invincible, He’s irresistible.

The Heavens cannot contain Him, let alone a man explain Him. You can’t get Him out of your mind. You can’t get Him off of your hands. You can’t outlive Him, and you can’t live without Him. The Pharisees couldn’t stand Him, but they found out they couldn’t stop Him. Pilate couldn’t find any fault in Him. Herod couldn’t kill Him. Death couldn’t handle Him and the grave couldn’t hold Him. That’s my king! He always has been, and He always will be. He who had no predecessor and He who has no successor. There was nobody before Him and there will be nobody after Him. You can’t impeach Him, and He’s not going to resign. We try to get prestige and honor and glory to ourselves, but the glory is all His. Thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever, and ever, and ever, and ever.

This our King, may you hold out your hands and receive this blessing from our King:

The Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his face to shine upon you and be gracious to you; the Lord lifts up his countenance upon you and gives you peace.

Easter 2026: The Hope of the Empty Tomb

Scripture: John 20:11–18

Theme: Dealing with Death, Seeking the Messiah, and Seeing the Lord

Introduction: The Reality of our Arrival

Easter is a really amazing time isn’t it? It’s not lost on me that some of you walked in or joined us online with joy, family, traditions, a full house, maybe even a sense of celebration. Some of you walked in tired, carrying pressure, questions, things that didn’t turn out the way you thought they would. And some of you walked in grieving, maybe not visibly, but it’s real. Something lost, something broken, something that feels final.

That’s where the Easter story begins. John tells us, “Mary stood weeping outside the tomb.” Not celebrating, or confident, or expecting a miracle, she’s standing at what she believes is the end. And if we’re honest, that’s where a lot of people live, standing at what feels like the end of something: a relationship, a hope, a version of life you thought you’d have.

But here’s the question underneath everything we’re doing today: Is this story real? Because if it’s not, and He didn’t rise from the dead, then Mary is right to weep. If He didn’t, then death still has the final word, sin is still yours to carry, and this is just a moment, a tradition with no real power behind it, and a story to make good little boys and good little girls out of each one of us.

But if He did, oh man, if He actually walked out of that tomb, then grief doesn’t get its glory, sin doesn’t get the final say, and death is defeated. Everything changes. And I want to be clear about where we’re going today. I want to convince you in three areas:

  1. That Jesus is the Messiah.
  2. That the resurrection is real.
  3. That you, and me, we need Jesus.

Well, John 20 invites us into this moment from the perspective of someone who thinks it’s all over and that this story just can’t be real—not after everything she’s seen; a woman standing outside a tomb, weeping. And what she does next is where we start: as she wept, she stooped to look into the tomb.

I. She Stooped to Look into the Tomb

Mary does something here that is very real. There’s a part of her that is verifying the grief. Right? I know why I feel this way, but I need some form of closure. She’s looking into the place where death had done what death always does. It has the final word for our current reality.

Before we ever get to resurrection, we have to deal with death. That’s what the tomb represents. Not just Jesus’ death, but the reality that death is real and undefeated on its own terms. Every culture tries to soften it, every person tries to avoid it, but no one escapes death. And Scripture doesn’t let us minimize it either. The tomb is there because sin is real, and death is the consequence of sin. You don’t get the tomb unless there was a real death.

Let me tell you why this matters—this is where it becomes personal—because Jesus didn’t die as a martyr or because he was a bad Jew, He died as a substitute. A substitute for you and for me because the cost of our sin, the only payment for it, is the perfect adherence to God’s standard which no one has ever been able to accomplish since, well, forever! That’s why God the Father sent God the Son, Jesus, to live perfectly to the law, and to die perfectly to the law as the final and only sacrifice for sin.

See, Mary is weeping because she watched Him live that perfect life, she watched as he was beaten, crucified, and buried. If He didn’t really die, then He didn’t really pay for sin. The tomb stands as proof that the payment was real, that the weight of sin was carried fully and completely to the cross and what Mary is staring into is the place where that payment was laid.

The challenge for us is that most people want resurrection without ever looking into the tomb. We want new life, hope, and change, but we don’t want to face what makes those things necessary. When you look honestly into the tomb, you’re forced to reckon with sin, with death, and with the reality that you cannot fix this on your own. This is the reality for all of us here today, every single one of us needs to hear this: You cannot fix your life or save yourself on your own. Happy Easter, and have a great day! No, that’s not the end of the story, but we have to deal with that. It takes a lot of humility to come to that conclusion. But if you don’t, you are still living in a delusion. So, Mary stoops down and looks into it, and in the same way, before you can understand who Jesus is, you have to be willing to look honestly at who you are and why He came. I am just a human being, incapable of being perfect. And I need God. The reason why He came is so clear; it’s one of the most quoted verses in the entire bible for this reason, because it’s so clear about why Jesus came:

For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life.John 3:16 Why did Jesus come? Because God loves you! Can you hear that today? God loves you! But even then, Mary still didn’t fully understand. Think about the conversation she had with Jesus. She sees, but she doesn’t yet fully understand the need for all of this. Which is why the next question Jesus asks becomes so important: “Whom are you seeking?”

II. “Whom are you seeking?”

I love that Jesus asks this, because it’s a powerful question that deserves an honest answer. Everyone is seeking something, right? Everyone! Some are seeking peace from their chaos, some purpose, some relief, direction, control, or just something that finally satisfies.

And what’s interesting is that Mary is seeking Jesus, but she doesn’t recognize Him. She’s close! But she’s confused. She’s looking right at Him and thinks He’s the gardener! 

Look, what I’m saying is, this is a lot of people’s story. Most people tolerate Jesus and say things like: He was a good teacher, or a prophet, or even a role model. It is possible to be around Jesus, to know about Jesus, to even be searching for something spiritual, and still miss Him for who He actually is. Because the real question isn’t just are you seeking, but whom are you seeking? And the way you answer that question will change the trajectory of your life. I believe that wholeheartedly.

Because Jesus is not just a teacher, not just a good man, not just a moral example, He is the Messiah, the promised one, the fulfillment of everything God said He would do to rescue and redeem His people. He came not just to teach truth, but to be the truth; not just to point to life, but to give His life. Not just to show a way, but to be the way. In his words, He said:

“I am the way, and the truth, and the life, no one comes to the father except through me.”John 14:6 Not, I only accept the Jews. Not, I only accept Republicans or Democrats. Not, I only take good people. No, hear Jesus clearly. No one walks with God or “makes it into heaven.” No one! Those that walk with God and gain access to His glory gain it through Jesus, and that’s it. I love that Jesus doesn’t avoid hard questions; He draws it out of Mary by presenting the question, “Whom are you seeking?”

In other words, what are you actually after? Isn’t this the heart of the issue? And that’s what Jesus wants to go after—the heart of the issue. Because if you’re just looking for a better life, you might miss Him. If you’re just looking for relief from your problems, you might miss Him. If you’re just looking for religion, or routine, or something to add onto your life, you might just miss Him.

But if you’re seeking the Messiah, if you’re seeking the Savior, the one who knows your mind and your heart and your very soul because He created it, the one who deals with sin, who conquers death, who actually saves, then you’re on the right track. God says, “You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart.” (Jeremiah 29:13).

Can you hear today how much your God loves you? I hope you hear that. Oh, I would to God that you hear that today. Your God loves you and desires to be with you. Here’s what happens next in the biblical account: Mary doesn’t recognize Jesus until He calls her by name; he says, “Mary.” And in that moment, everything changes because Christianity is not ultimately about you finding Jesus; it’s about Jesus revealing Himself to you. It’s not only that you were seeking, it’s that He came for you and is calling you.

That’s what the Messiah does. He doesn’t just offer information to people, He initiates relationships—personal relationships. Which means this question comes back to every single one of us: whom are you seeking? Not in theory, but right now. Because if you’re honest, you’re already seeking something. The question is whether what you’re seeking can actually solve the problem and save you. And only one person can: the risen Jesus, the messiah, the Christ, Lord of all! He is worthy to be praised today, amen?

Let’s look at Mary’s response after this conversation. She says: “I have seen the Lord.”

III. “I have seen the Lord.”

That’s what Mary says in verse 18. And that statement carries so much weight. What convinced her? It wasn’t an argument, it wasn’t someone trying to cram Jesus down her throat. It wasn’t wishful thinking. She saw Him.

The same Jesus she watched live, the same Jesus she watched be beaten, crucified, and buried, is now standing in front of her alive. The tomb is empty, death has been defeated, and everything He said about Himself is now proven to be true. And this is where it all comes together for us. Because if Jesus really rose from the dead, then He is exactly who He claimed to be. He is the Messiah.

And if that’s true, that means His death was not an accident, or just a tragedy, it was a plan. A game plan designed in heaven. On the cross, Jesus took on sin fully and completely—your sin and mine—and in His death, he paid the price for all of sin forever. The receipt to show that it was paid in full is the resurrection. If He stayed dead He would’ve just been like any other crucified person; there were tons in history and two beside him even. In the resurrection, He proves that the payment was accepted. That sin has been paid for, fully. That death does not win and that He has authority over all of it.

And this is where it moves from Mary’s story to all of ours. Because the goal is not just that you would hear this, but that you would see Him. Not physically like Mary did—He has already ascended—but truly. Clearly. Personally. That you would come to a place where you understand that your sin is real, that you cannot fix it on your own, and that Jesus has already done everything necessary to save you. You can trust and believe this story that has been verified over millennia.

Here’s the thing, you can know about Jesus and still not see Him. You can grow up around this, you can hear this every year, and still not actually place your faith and trust in Him. But there comes a moment where it becomes clear. Where you stop treating Him like an idea, and you see Him for who He really is: Savior and Lord.

And when that happens, I promise you everything changes. Your past is forgiven. Your future is secure. Your life is no longer your own—and thank God. You don’t clean yourself up and come to Him; don’t hear that today. You don’t have to wear your Sunday best for Jesus. You come to Him and He makes you new. So the question now is simple: have you seen the Lord? Not just heard about Him. Not just believe He exists. But have you trusted Him? Have you decided to turn from doing it your way and place your faith fully in Him—His life, His death, His resurrection? Because this is the good news that we’re talking about. You have a place in this story. It can be yours today. That you would see Him and respond.

Conclusion: Baptisms & Response

And that’s what we’re celebrating today. There are people here who have come to that place. They’ve seen Him, they’ve trusted Him, and now they’re taking a step of obedience through baptism.

There’s nothing holy about our water. That’s a cow trough with warm water in it. But this is people telling the world: my allegiance is to Jesus and His story is now my story. We don’t do this to earn anything, not to prove ourselves, but to declare that we belong to Jesus. That their old life is gone, and new life has come.

We are saying “I have seen the Lord!” It’s what Mary said, and I know I have seen him too. I see Him in this church every week, and in my kids, and even in the way I think and act now as a byproduct of coming to know Jesus. I want to invite you today, to come and receive the good news and see the Lord. Easter 2026 can be your day. The bible talks about being saved that way.



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