When the News Is Actually Good

On Second Thought

If you were to scroll through headlines this morning, you would likely encounter a steady stream of violence, corruption, illness, economic anxiety, and global unrest. Our culture has trained us to brace for impact. We expect the worst. The word “news” itself has become almost synonymous with alarm. Against that backdrop, the claim of the Christian faith—that there is genuinely good news—can sound naïve at best and suspicious at worst.

Yet when Jesus stood with His disciples after His resurrection, as recorded in Luke 24:44–49, He did not offer them motivational slogans. He opened their minds to understand the Scriptures. He showed them that everything written in the Law of Moses, the Prophets, and the Psalms pointed to Him. He explained that the Messiah would suffer and rise from the dead on the third day, and that repentance and forgiveness of sins would be proclaimed in His name to all nations. This was not sentimental optimism. It was redemptive reality.

The Greek word translated “gospel” is euangelion, meaning “good news.” In the ancient world, this word was used to announce military victories or the birth of a king. It signaled that something decisive had happened that changed the future. The gospel of Jesus Christ is good news because something decisive has happened. Sin—the bad news that infects every human heart—has been confronted at the cross. Death—the universal fear—has been broken by the resurrection. When John writes, “For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life” (John 3:16), he is not offering vague comfort. He is declaring a cosmic intervention.

Modern skepticism often whispers, “There must be a catch.” We have been conditioned to assume that free offers conceal hidden costs. But the good news of the gospel is untainted. The Son of God, fully divine and fully human, bore the penalty of sin in our place. As the apostle Paul summarized it, “Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures… and that He rose again the third day” (1 Corinthians 15:3–4). The offer of salvation is not earned by moral performance or social standing. It is received by faith.

This is where the gospel challenges our instincts. We prefer transactions we can manage. We are comfortable with merit-based systems. But the gospel removes our leverage. It declares that salvation is a gift. The word “believes” in John 3:16 comes from the Greek pisteuō, meaning to trust, to rely upon. It is not mere intellectual agreement; it is personal dependence. We entrust ourselves to Christ, believing that His death and resurrection are sufficient.

The good news is for every age and temperament. It does not discriminate. There is no fine print restricting access. The same message that reached fishermen by the Sea of Galilee reaches executives, students, parents, and skeptics today. Augustine once wrote, “Our hearts are restless until they rest in You.” That rest is precisely what the gospel provides. It offers not only forgiveness but friendship with God—eternal life that begins now.

And yet, we must not overlook that Luke 24 connects the good news with repentance. Jesus declared that repentance and forgiveness would be preached in His name. The gospel is free, but it is not casual. It calls for a response. It invites us to turn from sin and to trust Christ. In doing so, we step out of the cycle of fear-driven headlines into a story shaped by redemption.

If you are weary of bad news, consider this: the resurrection of Jesus is not a seasonal slogan. It is the central fact of Christian faith. It assures us that evil does not have the final word. It grounds our hope not in political stability or economic growth but in the finished work of Christ. As J.I. Packer observed, “The gospel is the message of God’s grace to sinners deserving His wrath.” That grace changes everything.

On Second Thought

Here is the paradox that often escapes us: the good news begins with bad news. The gospel only makes sense if we acknowledge the seriousness of sin. In a culture that prefers self-affirmation to confession, that can feel uncomfortable. Yet the very reason the news is so good is because the diagnosis is so honest. If sin were merely a minor flaw, the cross would be excessive. If death were a temporary inconvenience, the resurrection would be unnecessary. The gospel does not minimize reality; it confronts it.

On second thought, perhaps the reason we struggle to believe in good news is that we have underestimated the depth of our need. When we see how thoroughly sin has distorted human hearts and systems, we begin to grasp the magnitude of what Christ accomplished. The cross is not an accessory to a decent life; it is the rescue of a dying one. The resurrection is not a religious symbol; it is the inauguration of new creation.

And here is the unexpected turn: the good news does not only change our destiny—it reshapes how we view today’s headlines. When we know that Christ has overcome sin and death, we do not deny the darkness of the world, but we refuse to surrender to it. We live as witnesses. Luke 24 ends with Jesus telling His disciples, “You are witnesses of these things.” The good news is not meant to be admired from a distance; it is meant to be shared.

So the next time you encounter another wave of troubling reports, remember that the truest headline of history has already been written: Christ has died. Christ is risen. Christ will come again. That is news worth believing—and worth living.

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Opened Minds and Sent Hearts

A Day in the Life of Jesus

There are moments in the life of Jesus that feel quietly decisive, moments where the future of the Church turns not on spectacle but on understanding. Luke 24:44–49 places us in one of those sacred rooms in Jerusalem, where fear still lingers, confusion still clouds the heart, and yet resurrection life has already begun to break through. As I walk through this scene with you, I am struck by how patiently Jesus gathers the scattered threads of Scripture and human experience and weaves them into meaning. Luke, writing carefully to a Greek-speaking world, wants his readers to see that Christianity is not a novelty or a philosophical invention, but the fulfillment of a story God has been telling all along. Jesus says, “everything written about me by Moses and the prophets and the Psalms must all come true”. In Jewish terms, this phrase encompassed the entire Hebrew Scriptures—Torah, Nevi’im, and Ketuvim—declaring that the whole witness of Israel pointed toward Him.

What moves me most is not simply that Jesus proves He is the Messiah, but how He does it. Luke tells us, “Then he opened their minds to understand the Scriptures.” The Greek verb διήνοιξεν (diēnoixen) suggests something unlocked, something previously closed now made accessible. Understanding Scripture is not merely an academic exercise; it is a spiritual act that requires illumination. As many commentators have noted, including Darrell Bock, “Understanding does not come merely from exposure to Scripture, but from divine enablement to grasp its significance.” I recognize myself in those disciples—faithful, present, yet still unable to connect the dots until Jesus Himself bridges the gap. This is deeply reassuring. It means that confusion in our study is not failure; it is often the threshold where dependence on the Holy Spirit becomes necessary.

Jesus then speaks plainly about suffering, death, and resurrection, grounding these events in passages like Psalm 22, Isaiah 53, and Psalm 16. What had once seemed like tragedy is now revealed as design. “It was written long ago that the Messiah must suffer and die and rise again from the dead on the third day.” The word ἔδει (edei)—“it was necessary”—carries theological weight. The cross was not an accident, nor was the resurrection a reversal of plans. Together they form the heart of God’s redemptive purpose. When I sit with that truth, I realize how often I resist necessity in my own spiritual life. Yet Jesus shows us that God’s purposes often pass through suffering on their way to glory.

From this foundation flows the mission. Forgiveness of sins is to be proclaimed, beginning in Jerusalem and extending to all nations. Luke’s emphasis on the worldwide scope of the gospel is unmistakable. Salvation is not tribal or regional; it is cosmic in reach. As N. T. Wright observes, “The resurrection is not simply the happy ending of Jesus’ story, but the launching of God’s new world.” That new world advances through witness—ordinary people testifying to what they have seen and heard. Jesus tells the disciples, “You are witnesses of these things.” The Greek μάρτυρες (martyres) reminds us that witness is not abstract speech; it is embodied truth, lived and, at times, costly.

Yet Jesus also knows their limits. Before sending them out, He instructs them to wait. “Stay here in the city until the Holy Spirit comes and fills you with power from heaven.” This is not hesitation but preparation. Obedience sometimes means restraint, trusting that God’s timing is as important as God’s calling. I find comfort here, especially in seasons when clarity outpaces capacity. The same Spirit who opened the Scriptures now empowers the mission. As believers today, we stand in that same pattern—illumination before proclamation, formation before action.

As I reflect on this day in the life of Jesus, I am reminded that discipleship is both a gift and a calling. Christ opens our minds so that our lives may be opened to others. He roots our faith in Scripture, anchors our hope in resurrection, and sends us outward with a message meant for the whole world. May we never lose sight of that gracious sequence.

For further reflection on the global mission rooted in the resurrection, see this article from The Gospel Coalition:
https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/resurrection-mission-church/

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