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Everyday Easter

Therefore

April 16, 2017 • Mike Martindale

Seems like Easter is the ‘other kid’ among our holidays. Christmas is the biggie, but Easter, well it’s kinda the ‘other’ one. Even secular holidays like President’s Day and Halloween seem to rise above the notoriety of Easter. And yet back in the day of Christianity’s origins, Easter was the day that carried all the weight. It was the day that prompted the church to establish its worship on the first day of the week instead of the seventh day of the week (what would become known as ‘The Lord’s Day - Revelation 1:10). Christmas may have represented the incarnation, but Easter reminded the church of the single most important event in universal history: the RESURRECTION. Literally, the early believers lived each day in the shadow of the http://resurrection.the resurrection meant that they would ultimately give their lives for a living, risen Savior and not some deceased deity. So every day of Christianity became a relationship based on a living hope and not another religion based on a dusty set of teachings and traditions. Join us as this short series focuses on some of the great truths surrounding the resurrection of the living Lord. #EverydayEaster

Scapegoat

April 9, 2017 • Mike Martindale

Seems like Easter is the ‘other kid’ among our holidays. Christmas is the biggie, but Easter, well it’s kinda the ‘other’ one. Even secular holidays like President’s Day and Halloween seem to rise above the notoriety of Easter. And yet back in the day of Christianity’s origins, Easter was the day that carried all the weight. It was the day that prompted the church to establish its worship on the first day of the week instead of the seventh day of the week (what would become known as ‘The Lord’s Day - Revelation 1:10). Christmas may have represented the incarnation, but Easter reminded the church of the single most important event in universal history: the RESURRECTION. Literally, the early believers lived each day in the shadow of the http://resurrection.the resurrection meant that they would ultimately give their lives for a living, risen Savior and not some deceased deity. So every day of Christianity became a relationship based on a living hope and not another religion based on a dusty set of teachings and traditions. Join us as this short series focuses on some of the great truths surrounding the resurrection of the living Lord. #EverydayEaster

Prequel

April 2, 2017 • Mike Adams

Seems like Easter is the ‘other kid’ among our holidays. Christmas is the biggie, but Easter, well it’s kinda the ‘other’ one. Even secular holidays like President’s Day and Halloween seem to rise above the notoriety of Easter. And yet back in the day of Christianity’s origins, Easter was the day that carried all the weight. It was the day that prompted the church to establish its worship on the first day of the week instead of the seventh day of the week (what would become known as ‘The Lord’s Day - Revelation 1:10). Christmas may have represented the incarnation, but Easter reminded the church of the single most important event in universal history: the RESURRECTION. Literally, the early believers lived each day in the shadow of the http://resurrection.the resurrection meant that they would ultimately give their lives for a living, risen Savior and not some deceased deity. So every day of Christianity became a relationship based on a living hope and not another religion based on a dusty set of teachings and traditions. Join us as this short series focuses on some of the great truths surrounding the resurrection of the living Lord. #EverydayEaster