Easter in My Heart, Part 1
How do you approach crisis? Many of us see crisis as a dead end, when, in reality, it’s a crossroads, presenting both danger and opportunity. Opportunity for what? To see what God alone can do with the most impossible situations. Jill shares how the miracle of Easter can change how you respond to crisis.
Guest (Male): How do you respond when a crisis hits? Do you use it to make life better or run away and hide? Maybe it depends on the situation. This time on Telling the Truth, Jill Briscoe talks about big obstacles that pop up in life and how the miracle of Easter and the resurrection of Jesus can change how you respond.
Jill opens her message in just a moment. Did you know you can find more life-giving content from the Briscoes at tellingthetruth.org and on the Telling the Truth app? There, you can sign up for daily devotions, watch videos, read blogs, and access a variety of other resources to help you experience life. And while you're there, you can also request this month's featured resource as thanks for your gift of support to help share the abundant life Jesus offers with more people around the world. Visit us online or download the app today and experience life with Telling the Truth. Now, here's Jill Briscoe with Easter in My Heart.
Jill Briscoe: I want to talk about what it means to have Easter in your heart. If you turn to the word of God with me to Mark's Gospel. I could have gone to any of the Gospels to read any of the Easter stories. I wanted one that dealt with women coming to Easter. I wanted one with women coming towards Easter Sunday with heavy hearts, and of course, I found it in all the Gospels.
But here there is a little bit of detail that I wanted to use in Mark chapter 16. When the Sabbath was over, Mary Magdalene, Mary the mother of James, Salome, brought spices so that they might go to anoint Jesus' body. And very early, the first day of the week, just after sunrise, they were on their way to the tomb and they asked each other, "Who will roll away the stone from the entrance of the tomb?" But when they looked up, they saw that the stone, which was very large, had been rolled away. And as they entered the tomb, they saw a young man dressed in a white robe sitting on the right side and they were alarmed.
"Don't be alarmed," he said. "You're looking for Jesus the Nazarene who was crucified. He's risen. He's not here. See the place where they laid him? But go tell his disciples and Peter, he is going ahead of you into Galilee and there you will see him just as he told you." Trembling and bewildered, the women went out and fled from the tomb. They said nothing to anyone because they were afraid.
Now, if you read all of the Gospels, you will see almost contradictory statements. They said nothing to anyone because they were afraid. And yet, we read about Mary Magdalene rushing into the disciples and telling the disciples what she had seen and who she had met. And then in another of the Gospels, it looks as though some of the women went and told the disciples.
And so, it isn't that we have contradictions in the Word of God. It's just that if you have four people telling the same story, they see different things and hear different things and record different things. And that's why there are sometimes apparent contradictions in the things that you read if you read it all.
But what I wanted you to notice was that these women had been in a living nightmare. They had been living in a living nightmare. They had just witnessed a crucifixion. Now think about it. Not only must that have been the most incredible experience, I cannot imagine, but it was the crucifixion of someone they loved to distraction. It was the crucifixion of someone in whom all their hopes and dreams resided. And they had been no doubt traumatized by this.
I have two friends who have witnessed an execution. Anne Graham Lotz ministered to a woman who was being put to death in Texas because the lady asked her if Anne, who had led her to Christ on death row, would be with her. It took Anne probably two or three years to recover. I was with her shortly afterwards. She had lost weight. She couldn't sleep. I can't imagine.
And then I have another friend who lives in Milwaukee, who was instrumental in a very prominent situation again. A woman that was put to death in Texas. And Linda is a chaplain working at that facility, working with the women on death row. And she and Carla Faye, their life was just woven together. And Carla Faye asked the same thing: "Linda, would you be with me when the day comes?" And Linda, dreading that question, knowing it was coming, said yes. I don't know how many years it's taken Linda and whether she'll ever get over that particular experience.
And that in a sense was a lot more humane than this. And so we have women, ordinary women, women from Galilee, women that probably had never learned to read and write unless they were educated women, as many of these were actually. Mary Magdalene certainly and the other women that had followed Jesus, helping to support him out of their means, would be wealthy women and perhaps were educated.
But women were not educated in those days. And they had not probably in all of their lives ever faced such trauma. And they were out of context. They were up in the big city from the country. And they'd been through this incredible mob violence. And they had been there at the cross. John was there. Peter turned up eventually. The rest of the men were not there. But the women were watching from afar. And so they came to Easter Sunday having lived in that living nightmare with heavy hearts.
Now, the Chinese combined two characters for the word crisis. One means danger and the other opportunity. And these two possibilities are inherent in every crisis. A crisis is a crossroads, and the outcome is determined by which path is taken. When a person is described as critical in medical terms, it means he can either move towards life or move towards death. Just so the crisis of life presents not only danger but also opportunity.
Isn't that interesting? We come into a crisis. Now, all of us have experienced crisis in our lives. And when a crisis comes, remember you've got a crossroads. You can either use it and walk towards opportunities, or you can recognize the danger and freak out basically, run away and hide. Now, there was danger involved in this scene for these women. There was danger in making the burial ointment and daring to put their nose outside into those streets and actually go to the place that was guarded by the temple guard and possibly by the Romans.
They didn't know. They had no idea that Pilate had said to the temple guard, "You've got a guard. Go and make that tomb as safe as you can. Make sure nobody gets in it and nobody gets out of it. Just go and do your thing." They didn't know that. They had no idea what they would find. The only thing that they expected was a stone, a great big humongous stone, far too big for them to move. If they had known about the guard, I wonder if they would have gone. But they didn't.
Danger. Very dangerous for women in that particular situation, in that particular society, to do what they were going to do. And fear rises in danger, which can be torture. And yet a dangerous crisis can mean an opportunity to overcome the fear and do the right thing. It's an opportunity to find the risen life of Christ in this nightmare, in this living nightmare that they were living in.
So women should not have been where they were doing what they were going to do. That was a restricted area. It was a religious restricted area. They were women in a men's world in a way that you and I do not know what that means. We do not know what that means. They were women in a world gone mad. And please God, we should never know what that means. I have certainly been among women in those situations in this last year in danger that just beggars the mind. And here they were, walking towards the danger with no faith, just sheer obedience probably driving them.
Guest (Male): More powerful teaching from the Briscoes is headed your way, so don't go anywhere. We've made a wide array of resources and content available to you online for free at tellingthetruth.org and on the Telling the Truth app. There, you can listen, read, and watch powerful teaching from Stuart and Jill on relevant topics, like the sovereignty of God, the importance of the church, and how to grow closer with Jesus Christ. You can also request this month's featured resource as thanks for your gift of support to help share the abundant life Jesus offers with more people around the world. Visit us online or download the app today and experience life with Telling the Truth. Now, here's Jill Briscoe once again.
Jill Briscoe: But the biggest restriction for these women in a men's world, if you wish, was the stone. "Who will roll away the stone?" That's what the scriptures tell us. All they could think about was this great big stone. This impossibility. And some of you have come here today and there's a great big stone as you walk towards Easter this point in your life. It's impossible. There's nothing you can do about it.
So what are you doing anyway? There is this humongous difficulty, this incredible thing. Maybe it's a relationship and you're going to have to face it at a family gathering. And it's just huge and you've tried to do things about it before and what's the point? It's just too big. And even as the group, "Who is going to move away the stone?" There's five, six, seven women—we're not quite sure how many of those women were going to try and move away this stone. But it was too big for one of them certainly. It was too big for the group.
Have you ever been in a situation like that? You're moving timewise towards an impossibility. "Who will move away the stone? Who will move away the stone?" What a difficulty. Huge, immovable object, an obstacle. You're overwhelmed. Have you ever been overwhelmed? I have heard that word from some young women in my life in this last month. They are totally overwhelmed. Can't do it. It's too much. It's too big. It's too heavy. Too heavy for me.
And instead of moving towards it in faith, they're moving towards it in fear and in sorrow instead of joy, and in darkness instead of light. So I want to ask you, what is your stone at this point in your life? Now, you might say, well, Jill, you know, you might say these women had big things and maybe a crucifixion is bigger than my problem. Yes, okay, I'll give you that. But really, you don't understand. You don't understand the complexity of the stones in my life and the problems in my life.
Well, let's think of two of these women briefly for a minute. Mary Magdalene. She was delivered from seven demons. I mean real demons, there are such things. I mean demon demons of the nastiest kind. She was mad. She was absolutely crazy, driven crazy by these demons, spirits. You think you have problems? Try that. Try being possessed by seven demons.
She had a lot of things to prove once she came to faith and Christ cast them out. She had to prove she wasn't mad anymore. And what she did was take off after this nobody preacher, leave her home and her responsibilities and traipse around the countryside, which women never did. Rabbis had disciples but always men, never women. And start spending her money, which she had much, on him, supporting him out of her own means. Well, then everybody really thought she was mad. Now she was sane and she was mad.
And so here she is, facing no doubt ostracism, problems with her family. Here was Mary Magdalene. I don't believe this woman was a sinner woman in the sense of the sinner woman that came to Jesus. We get them mixed up. Nowhere in the scriptures do we see that she was sexually perverse, this woman. She was certainly inhabited by demons, which might have driven her that way, but if you look into the history of Mary Magdalene, that is not one of her characteristics.
She had many problems, but that wasn't one of them. But she had to prove herself and she was not going about it the right way and she would have known what it was to have her whole family on her back. "Why are you going to that church, that Galilean church? Didn't bring you up to do that. You should be sitting in the synagogue back home," etc., etc. So there are plenty of women in this Easter story no strangers to difficulties, and Mary of course was one of them.
But I tell you, there's another one, Joanna, wife of Chuza. He was Herod's steward. So she lived in the palace with Herod the puppet king and he was the one that beheaded John the Baptist. And she became a follower, probably first a secret believer in the Jewish preacher, in Jesus of Nazareth. And I wonder if Joanna was in the kitchen when they asked for a very big plate at the party, one big enough for a man's head. Probably.
What did Herod think when he heard his steward, his right-hand man, his steward's wife had taken off after the Baptist's cousin, traipsing around the country as a groupie? And what did Chuza think? Was he a believer too or wasn't he? Jesus had been taken in front of Herod to be tried. Chuza would have been there. Was he wondering where his wife was? He knew she was in Jerusalem, coming up for the feast turned disaster. Where was she now? Were his eyes going this way and that, trying to find her?
They were working at crucifying Jesus. Can you imagine what Chuza watching this was thinking? If they were going to do this to Jesus, what were they going to do to his followers? Where was his wife? So these women were no strangers to dangers and difficulties and obstacles to their faith.
But crisis is made up of danger and opportunity. Opportunity for what? To see what God alone can do with the most impossible, ridiculous situations. And Easter is all about taking the ridiculous and turning it into the miraculous. That's what Easter is about. And you know it's possible to experience an Easter in your heart and watch God's resurrection power at work.
Didn't mean all their dangers and difficulties would vanish when the women found out about the resurrection. They still had to pay taxes to Caesar. Herod was still doing his thing in Galilee where they lived. Paul or Saul the persecutor was on the horizon and Jesus had still been crucified. So it doesn't mean that the whole of their life was changed back to what they wished it had been. And often for us, that is the case.
But what had happened was the stone was rolled away. And what I think we do is we walk towards the difficulties in our life saying, "Who will remove this? How will I cope with this? What's going to happen?" And when we get there, the stone is rolled away. Just think, 90% of the things we worry about never happen. "Who will move away the stone? Who will move away the stone?" We freak out. We get there and there's an angel sitting on top of it and it's been moved. We needn't have bothered.
And so the danger and the difficulties were facing them and also the despair. They were overwhelmed and they had been overcome. The crisis. But the crisis is the crucible of faith, if we will allow it so to be. They had been in the crucible of watching. Watching. They hadn't slept. You can't. Somebody you love has just been crucified, has just died. I think about God who was watching his son from a distance on the cross and what that must have been like because he could have done something about it and chose, because he loved us as much as he loved Christ, not to.
Guest (Male): Now, here's Jill Briscoe to go a little deeper with some thoughts from today's message.
Guest (Female): Jill, you mentioned today that a large percent of what we worry about never even happens. How does a chronic worrier refocus their thoughts instead of worrying?
Jill Briscoe: Well, let me tell you something that, believe it or not, I've only just consciously started helping myself with on this. I wake up worrying. I mean, the first thought is a worry thought, still, after all these years. And so in the past, I have worried immediately and worried through breakfast, and I'm really looking forward to my time when I can worry in prayer with God and he's going to sort it out.
And it just occurred to me to invite him into my worrying as soon as I wake up. And it's made a huge difference. So immediately I wake up, here's the worry, I form a thought about the worry, and then I immediately, and it's a choice, invite him into the conversation. "So Lord, here I am again. I'm worrying all over again, all over again. Please give me a thought." And something from his Word immediately comes into my head. "Hey, this works." And I think, why didn't I figure this years and years ago? So what we do is we save it up for our prayer time, and by the time we get to our prayer time, we've added another hundred worries that come out of the first worry and where on earth do you start? And so just invite him into the first worry and ask him to remind you of a word from his Word.
Guest (Female): What would you say to that person who says, "Jill, you don't know how big my stone in front of my tomb is," and just feels helpless?
Jill Briscoe: It's a wonderful picture to me: who will move the stone? Here's the women at Easter walking towards this huge piece of masonry in front of the object of going and doing what they're going to do to see to the body of Jesus. "Who's going to move the stone? We're just little women. It's a huge piece of masonry. We're going to need men to do that," etc., etc. And when they get there, the stone is gone.
That's what I find. If you worry about who's going to move the stone, you might find when you get to the actual thing, the worry hasn't happened, or it's not as bad as you think, or the stone is smaller or it's manageable, or the stone is gone altogether. So don't waste your worry time worrying about the stone. Wait until you get there and then start worrying about it if you have to.
Guest (Male): Thanks, Jill. Tellingthetruth.org and the Telling the Truth app are great resources to help you grow in your spiritual life. Packed with videos like Ask the Briscoes, articles from Stuart and Jill, and encouraging audio teaching content, you'll find a treasure trove of resources to encourage you and others in your faith. And while you're there, you can also request this month's featured resource when you give a gift to help more people around the world experience life in Christ. So visit us online or download the app today. We look forward to connecting with you. Next time on Telling the Truth, it's more from the Briscoes about how you can experience abundant life in Christ when you open your life to be changed by God. We hope you'll be listening then.
Featured Offer
In her 3-message series, Finding God, Jill Briscoe shares biblical encouragement for seasons when God feels distant and faith feels tested.
Through powerful teaching and personal insight, Jill reminds you that you don’t have to exhaust yourself searching—God is already there, even in the shadows.
This special series, available as a digital download or on USB, is our thanks for your gift to help more people around the world experience God’s presence and true Life in Jesus.
Past Episodes
- A Conversation with Pete Briscoe, #GivingTuesday 2018 Special Programming
- A Lifetime of Wisdom
- A Little Pot of Oil
- A Modern Day Disciple
- A Portrait of Jesus
- A Two-Sided Coin
- A View from the Porch Swing
- Addressing the Issues
- After I Say "Yes, Lord"
- Alive and Free
- Anchored and Moving Forward
- Anchored in Genuine Prayer
- And He Shall Be Called
- Ask and Bask
- Be a Witness
- Be Wise
- Believing What We Believe
- Believing with Confidence
- Better: A New and Living Way
- Beyond Ordinary
- Body Language
- Brave Enough to Follow
- Breaking the Grip
- Building a God Honoring Church
- But What Did Jesus Say About It?
- Carry On
- Celebrating Marriage and Family
- Changed by Christ
- Cheerful Godliness
- Choosing
- Christianity Q&A
- Comfort For Troubled Hearts
- Confronting the Enemy
- Conversation with Pete Briscoe, #GivingTuesday 2019 Special Programming
- Conversations with the Briscoes
- Conversations with the Briscoes 2016
- Coping with Christmas
- Easter in My Heart
- Eight Things that Make a Marriage Work
- Empowering the Next Generation
- End Times: What's Going On?
- Enjoying the Good Life
- Entrapment
- Everness
- Every Soul Needs a Break
- Everyday Disciples
- Everyday Jesus
- Experiencing God
- Experiencing God’s Love on Life’s Journey
- Experiencing Peace
- Extraordinary Marriage
- Facing God in Your Loneliness
- Facing Jesus in Your Loneliness
- Faith Enough to Finish
- Faith With Boots On
- Faith, Hope, and Love
- Families Made New
- Family Business
- Family Values
- Fathers
- Feeling Alone
- Fight for the Family
- Fighting Unseen Forces
- Finding Contentment
- Finding Freedom in Your Finances
- Finding God
- Finding God's Will For Me
- Finding Happiness
- Finding Healing
- Finishing Strong
- For People on the Grow
- Freed by Forgiveness
- Freedom
- Frontline Christianity
- Getting Ready for Christmas
- Go Ahead and Ask
- God Has a Plan - and We're Part of It!
- God in the Shadows
- God of Wonder, God of Worship
- God Promises
- God's Design for Marriage
- God's Love For Us
- God's Perfect Gifts
- God's Unfailing Love for You
- God's Will for My Life
- Good News, Great Joy
- Grace in the Garden
- Grace to Go On
- Great News, Great Joy
- Growing the Fruitful Life
- Growth of a Soul
- Have No Fear
- He Came to Give Us Life
- Healing Broken Relationships
- Hearing the Holy Spirit's Voice
- Heart Hunger
- Here Am I, Send Aaron
- Heroes of Faith
- Heroes of the Faith
- Hidden Treasures
- Hope for the Disheartened
- Hope for Your Marriage
- How Much I'm Loved
- How the Story Ends
- How to Be Up When You're Down
- How to Face a New Year
- How to Live a Productive Life
- How to Pray for Your Pastor
- Identity Defined
- I'm Not Who You Think I Am
- Immanuel - God with Us
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- Inside the Box
- Lessons from the Boy Jesus
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- Lost and Found
- Love One Another
- Making God Smile
- Making Him Known
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- Making Room for Him
- Making Sense of Signs
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- Making Your Life Count
- Marriage Made New
- Mary's Little Box
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- Mother's Day
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- Perfect Peace
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- Powerful and Effective Prayer
- Prayer School
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- Pulling Together
- Searching
- Secrets of the Heart
- Secrets to a Successful Marriage
- Seeing Jesus in the Old Testament
- Seeing Through Suffering
- Sermon on the Mount
- Settling for More
- Settling for More in Work
- Sexual by Design
- Shaking Up Your World
- Shelter from the Wind
- Six Things a Mother Can't Do
- Six Things We Must Never Forget
- Six Ways to Get a Life
- Slaying Giants
- Solid Ground
- Spirit-Powered Living
- Spiritual Arts
- Spiritual Renewal
- Staying Spiritually Sharp
- Sticking Together When We're Pulled Apart
- Sticking with It When Faith Seems Hard
- Take 5: A Christian Point of View
- Taking Jesus Next Door
- Teach Us to Listen
- The Answer Is Yes...Now What's the Question?
- The Answer to Anxiety
- The Awesome Power of Encouragement
- The Balancing Act
- The Barrenness of Busyness
- The Best of 2010
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- The Book of Romans
- The Cross of Christ
- The Cutting Edge
- The Devoted Life of Daniel
- The Difference Christ Makes Today
- The Empty Tomb
- The Essence of Christian Living
- The Essence of Worship
- The Fatherhood of God
- The Good Life
- The Gospel
- The Gratitude Attitude
- The Healer
- The Heart and Soul of Friendship
- The Heart of Christmas
- The Heartbeat of the Master
- The Holy Spirit
- The Holy Spirit and You
- The Innkeeper's Daughter
- The Last Word
- The Life I Now Live
- The Meaning of Love
- The Names of God
- The New Normal
- The People and the Book
- The Power to Change
- The Search for Answers
- The Squall: Weathering the Storms of Life
- The Steeplechase
- The Visitor
- The Woman at the Well
- Thinking Clearly in a Messed Up World
- Thirsty for Living Water
- This Is Big
- Thoughts from a Woman's Heart
- Time Bandits
- To Love and to Cherish
- Triumph In Trouble
- Triumph Over Temptation
- True Identity
- Truly Centered
- Truth for Troubled Times
- Turning a Kind Eye
- Two-Thirds of the Way
- Weathering the Storms of Life
- What About Those Who Have Never Heard?
- What Did Jesus Do?
- What Do You Give When You Have Nothing to Give?
- What Happens When We Die?
- What Is God Really Like?
- What Really Happened on the Cross
- What the World Needs Now
- What to Do While Your Life is Happening
- What Will Jesus Do?
- Whatever Happens
- What's So Special About Easter?
- When Will Christ Return?
- Where to Find Help
- Who Are You God?
- Why Christ Came
- Why Church?
- Women in the Life of Jesus
- Women Who Changed Their World
- Words to Live By
- Worry-LESS
- Worship and Prayer
- Worshipful Living
- Wrestling with God
Featured Offer
In her 3-message series, Finding God, Jill Briscoe shares biblical encouragement for seasons when God feels distant and faith feels tested.
Through powerful teaching and personal insight, Jill reminds you that you don’t have to exhaust yourself searching—God is already there, even in the shadows.
This special series, available as a digital download or on USB, is our thanks for your gift to help more people around the world experience God’s presence and true Life in Jesus.
About Telling the Truth
Telling the Truth is an international broadcast and internet ministry that brings God's Word into the lives of people all over the world. Stuart and Jill Briscoe are the featured Bible teachers, encouraging and challenging listeners to study the Word of God and be drawn closer to Christ. Gifted with wisdom, discernment, and a bit of English humor, the Briscoe's bring God's Word to life. With distinctly different teaching styles, you'll be moved by the emotional appeal of Jill and the compelling logic of Stuart, as they boldly proclaim God's sovereignty, grace, and love.
About Stuart and Jill Briscoe
Jill Briscoe was born in England and found Christ when she was 18 years old. She never looked back. Upon graduating from Cambridge University, she began working as a teacher by day and had a vigorous street ministry to the youths of Liverpool by night.
She met Stuart at a youth conference and they married in 1958. In the 50 years since, Jill has become a highly sought-after Bible teacher and author who travels around the world ministering to under-resourced churches and speaking at international seminars and conferences. Since 2000, she and Stuart, who was formerly senior pastor of Elmbrook Church for 30 years, have had the joy of equipping and encouraging believers across the globe in their roles as ministers-at-large for Elmbrook.
Jill has authored more than 40 books including devotionals, study guides, poetry and children's books. Her vivid, relational teaching style touches the emotions and stirs the heart. She serves as Executive Editor of Just Between Us, a magazine of encouragement for ministry wives and women in leadership, and served on the board of World Relief and Christianity Today, Inc., for over 20 years.
Jill and Stuart call suburban Milwaukee, Wisconsin their home. When they are not traveling, they spend time with their three children, David, Judy and Peter, and thirteen grandchildren.
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