A Different View of Easter: What If New Life Is Already Here?
05 April 2026

A Different View of Easter: What If New Life Is Already Here?

United Methodist Church Westlake Village

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Earthquakes, lightning, guards collapsing, a once-in-history moment that feels too big to miss. That’s one way the resurrection story gets told, and it can quietly train us to believe God only shows up when life gets cinematic. We start by looking at Matthew’s dramatic Easter scene, then we slow down and notice who actually stays standing: the women who come in grief, with questions, ready to do the hard, ordinary work of love.

Then Luke’s razor-sharp line cuts through our expectations: “Why do you look for the living among the dead?” We talk about what that question exposes in everyday Christian life, especially when we’re waiting for a sign, a breakthrough, or a spiritual high to prove our faith is real. Easter becomes more than a calendar holiday. It becomes a new start that reaches into spiritual health and into how we relate to God, to our family and neighbors, and to the parts of ourselves we struggle to call worthy.

From there we name the gifts that have been here all along: community that serves, grace that holds, hope that pulls us forward, and the small holy moments that don’t look “spectacular” until we finally pay attention. The promise is simple and stunning: you are loved even when you are unlovable. We end with a butterfly release as a symbol of transformation, and a question you can’t dodge for long: what would your “butterfly life” look like, and who might be blessed if you let God grow it in you?

Subscribe, share this with someone who needs a new start, and leave a review so more people can find these Easter reflections on resurrection, grace, and new life. What’s one place you’ve been looking for life that can’t give it?

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