The Resurrection and the Call

by Wayne Dailey

Senior Pastor, Bethel Revival Center

43 Norwood St.

Everett, MA 02149



And when she had thus said, she turned herself back,
and saw Jesus standing, and knew not that it was Jesus.
Jesus saith unto her, Woman, why weepest thou?  whom seekest thou?
She, supposing Him to be the gardener, saith unto Him,
Sir, if Thou have borne Him hence, tell me where thou hast laid Him,
and I will take Him away.  Jesus saith unto her, Mary.
She turned herself, and saith unto him, Rabboni; which is to say, Master.
Jesus saith unto her, Touch Me not; for I am not yet ascended
to My Father: but go to My brethren, and say unto them,
I ascend unto My Father, and your Father; and to My God, and your God.

John 20:14–17

 

Jesus didn’t just teach us about His dying on the Cross for our sins, and being raised from the dead on the third day – but He also taught us that we, too, would one day be raised from the dead.  That’s something for us to consider and hang on to: one day we’re going to rise up and meet the Lord in the air, to ever be with Him.  Let us know and understand our place.

 

Jesus told Mary, I ascend unto My Father, and your Father; and to My God, and your God.  This is telling us, clearly, that the Father of Jesus, and our Father are one and the same; and that His God is also our God.

 

Jesus was giving Mary assurance, something to bring peace into her heart.  She was the first of all those who were close to Jesus to see Him raised from the dead.

 

John 20:19

Then the same day at evening, being the first day of the week, when the doors were shut where the disciples were assembled for fear of the Jews, came Jesus and stood in the midst, and saith unto them, Peace be unto you.

 

Mary had seen the risen Christ early in the morning.  Later on that same day, at evening, the disciples were behind closed doors for fear of the Jews.  

 

Why would they be frightened?  Because the Jews wanted to kill all of Jesus’ disciples, so there would be nobody to spread this any further.

 

Have you ever been afraid?  Have you ever been afraid – since you’ve been a Christian?  These disciples were afraid.  They were afraid that they, too, might be taken and crucified.  So they were worried about that: but the Lord wouldn’t leave them worrying too long.

 

Peace be unto you.  Those are comforting words, aren’t they.  Peace – not war, not more struggles, but peace.  Peace be unto you – I’m here.  Don’t let this worry you.  Don’t fret about it any more.

 

Sure this was a rough time for them, but Jesus wanted to help them.

 

John 20:20

And when He had so said, He showed unto them His hands and His side.   Then were the disciples glad, when they saw the Lord.

 

RESURRECTION PROOF

 

So you see there was some proof there.  It’s not everybody who walks around with holes in their hands, where they were spiked to a tree.  We shake a lot of hands, but not any like that.

 

Those disciples would recognize Jesus by the mere fact of those holes.  They had seen the spikes being nailed into His hands and feet.  They saw Him hanging on that cross.  So, to comfort their hearts, He showed them His hands and He showed them where the spear had been shoved into His side, and the blood and water gushed out.

 

It was enlightening to these disciples when they saw this.  They could readily identify with it.

 

THE CALL OF GOD TO SERVICE

 

John 20:21

Then said Jesus to them again, Peace be unto you:

as My Father hath sent Me, even so send I you.

 

Jesus was getting them prepared for service, for what lay ahead in their ministry.

 

As My Father sent Me, even so send I you: How simply the call of God can come to one.  

 

I would take these same words to heart, take them seriously – The Lord is always calling another to service.  

 

We should all want to be in the place of hoping that sometime the Master will come by and say something to us that would change our life, and change the service we give unto Him – so much so, as our whole life will be taken up with the work of Jesus.

 

These disciples were being encouraged to rise up to the work of God.

 

There’s a lot of work out there to do for God.  Do you see a lot of people out there telling others about Jesus?  Oh, there are those who are sharing the 1Gospel, but there are yet multitudes who are unreached.

 

Many never heard what these disciples heard, yet deep within have been made to know and understand that there is a purpose for them, there is a call.

 

These disciples are getting their eyes opened to this call.  And I want us to be more personally minded of this call, as well.

 

What does He really want you to do?  Do you know?  There’s so much to do.  Just think how God touched your life and brought you into His kingdom, into this relationship.

 

None of us can say that we know why He chose us.  We don’t know at all.  But we are surprised when we find out that He has chosen us to make our life to be a blessing.

 

EMPOWERED FOR SERVICE

 

John 20:22

And when he had said this, he breathed on them, and saith unto them,

Receive ye the Holy Ghost .  .  .

 

Put these verses together, and we have a message.  It’s not just a message of going out to do something for the Lord: but it is first receiving the 2anointing of the Holy Ghost.

 

At this time, the Holy Ghost had not yet come – but Jesus was preparing them for that.  He put a touch of God on them as He breathed on them.  He was so filled with the Spirit that just breathing on them could get them lined up to get filled with the Holy Ghost, preparing them for the 3Day of Pentecost when they would be empowered for the service of God.

 

Jesus has just recently risen, and He is bringing all of this quickly, making them to understand the realm of service He was sending them for.

 

We need anointing to do the service of God: to reach lost souls with the Gospel.  

 

It’s the 4Baptism of the Holy Ghost that prepares us for service.  Just as it was in days of old, it is today.  Everyone who is going to serve the Lord and be fruitful is going to receive the Holy Ghost.  

 

At some point God is going to pour out His Spirit in some way.  It may not be by a breath.  It may be down at an altar of prayer, praying through unto you are filled with the Holy Ghost and 5speaking in other tongues.

 

It’s not the same with everyone.

 

In my own life, God put a hunger and thirst in my heart and soul, where I wanted more.  I knew I needed more.

 

There in that tent meeting, God brought me into the place of receiving the Holy Ghost.  It came as a real experience to me, something I will never forget.  That night brought something into my life that’s been an ongoing thing with God.  He called me, and He equipped me.  It’s been there ever since.  It’s that anointing which was needed for me to do the work of God.

 

We all need that experience where we get into the depths of this.  It’s not a shallow thing for God to prepare someone for His service.

 

I look back and wonder about it all.  I had looked up to the altar at the preacher.  He opened his mouth and began to 6prophesy, speaking to me: My son!  When those words came out of that preacher’s mouth, I saw a red arrow that shot from his mouth and went right through me.  My hands went up towards heaven, and I received the Holy Ghost.  I began to speak in other tongues, and it didn’t seem like I’d ever stop!

 

I got filled with the Holy Ghost – and the anointing came.  

 

As we look in the Bible we see God moving in many strange and wonderful ways.  What does breathing on someone have to do with getting filled with the Holy Ghost?

 

Understand what was in Jesus.  Understand how He was filled, how He was anointed, how this would bring the disciples into the upper room to wait ten days for the outpouring of the Spirit of God.

 

Acts 1:4,5 & 8

And, being assembled together with them, commanded them that they should not depart from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise of the Father, which, saith He, ye have heard of Me.  For John truly baptized with water; but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence.

 

But ye shall receive power, after that the Holy Ghost is come upon you: and ye shall be witnesses unto me both in Jerusalem, and in all Judaea, and in Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth.  

 

Waiting for that day when the Holy Ghost would fall, and they would be filled and anointed to do the service which Jesus was leaving in their hands to do after He ascended out of this world.

 

Then Jesus would start doing His work in and through us by the anointing of the Spirit.

 

We should each be in the place where we want God to put something in our life that will really make the difference.

 

There are those who seem to want something more – but you can’t force God.  If God’s going to speak to you, He will speak in His time.  

 

He put me on the ground under His power, and began to talk to me about His call.  It seemed everything turned pure white.  The presence of God came over me, and I could do nothing but yield.  I lay there, and all at once the Lord’s voice clearly came with this call of God.  

 

The fact of God’s working encourages others to believe and take heart: there is a time when God will visit a man.  There is a time when God calls someone into His service, when He chooses someone.

 

Here we realize the disciples were chosen for service.  And He would get them ready.

 

Just to see the nail prints in His hands.  Just to hear those words: As My Father sent Me, even so send I you.

 

Let this account sink into your heart and mind, so that you may have more of an opportunity to take hold of those things God would want you to take hold of.

 

John 20:22,23

And when He had said this, He breathed on them, and saith unto them, Receive ye the Holy Ghost: Whose soever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them; and whose soever sins ye retain, they are retained.

 

He gave some power to these disciples.  I don’t see a place in the Scriptures where God has said this to anyone other than these disciples.  But I do see where we are to forgive those who have sinned against us, and to ask that God forgive them of that sin.

  

THE NEED TO BELIEVE

 

There are those times when something comes forth that someone needs so much in their experience – but, then, they weren’t there to get it.  Just the message they needed – but they weren’t around.

Thomas was one of the twelve and he was absent when Jesus came to show Himself to the disciples this day.  I wonder where he was.

 

John 20:24

But Thomas, one of the twelve, called Didymus, was not with them when Jesus came.  The other disciples therefore said unto him, We have seen the Lord.  But he said unto them, Except I shall see in His hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into His side, I will not believe.

 

Hard to convince!  I think of Thomas for what he was: a doubter.  He was doubting that Jesus was raised from the dead.  He couldn’t believe that.  The other disciples were telling him that they saw Jesus, that He was alive: but Thomas couldn’t accept what they were telling him.

 

Sometimes it’s hard to accept someone else’s word.

 

John 20:26

And after eight days again his disciples were within, and Thomas with them: then came Jesus, the doors being shut, and stood in the midst, and said, Peace be unto you.  

 

Then saith He to Thomas, Reach hither thy finger, and behold My hands; and reach hither thy hand, and thrust it into My side: and be not faithless, but believing.

 

Jesus told Thomas what his problem was: he was faithless.  We don’t want to be faithless, do we?  .  .  .  or do we?  

 

If we’re going to be a Christian, we’re always going to be faced with the need to believe: our believing the Word of God, taking it to heart, absorbing it.

 

Thomas just couldn’t seem to believe – unless he saw for himself.  After he put his finger into the nail prints, and placed his hand into Jesus’ side – then he believed.

 

John 20:28

And Thomas answered and said unto Him, My Lord and my God.  

 

That’s a quick change of attitude!  He saw Jesus, recognized He was alive – he’s now convinced.  But just a moment before this, he didn’t have faith to believe that Jesus had risen from the dead.  

 

He needed to rise up above that in his life, and the Lord wanted to help him come to that place of faith.

 

John 20:29

Jesus saith unto him, Thomas, because thou hast seen Me, thou hast believed: blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed.  

 

This reaches out even to us: we’ve not seen Him, but have believed.  You do, don’t you?  You believe Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God.  You believe He died on the Cross for your sins.

 

Now, on what basis are you believing?

 

Are you believing on the basis of a strong faith in God, and a faith that His Word is true?  Hold to that!

 

You’ve not seen Jesus, yet you have believed in Him.  You haven’t put your fingers in the nail prints.  You didn’t put your hand into His side.  

 

But, one thing you have done, you’ve read and studied the Scriptures and taken them to heart.

 

We didn’t have to see anything to believe it.  There are those, though, who are like Thomas.  They can’t believe in simple faith, but are faithless.

 

We want to stand in this place that Jesus spoke of: blessed are they who have not seen, and yet have believed.  This statement reflects to us how much faith we really have, taking His words to heart.  

 

That’s where the real issues are: believing the Lord, and believing His Word.



1Gospel: The Good News that Jesus Christ brought salvation: through a person's faith in His death on the cross, His burial and resurrection from the dead.


2Anointing: Literally, a rubbing or smearing with oil.  In the Bible, oil symbolizes the Holy Spirit.  People were anointed with oil when God had called them to a particular office or task (see 1 Samuel 16:12-13).  To be anointed by God's Holy Spirit is to be set apart for a particular work or service and empowered to carry out that work.


3Day of Pentecost: (fiftieth) is the Greek equivalent of the Hebrew Shabuoth, a Jewish holy day celebrated 50 days after the aPassover.  Shabuoth commemorated God writing His commandments on two tablets of stone and giving them to Moses on Mt. Horeb.  That event marked the birth of the Old Covenant (agreement) between God and His people: if they would do all of His commandments, they would be righteous and accepted by Him.  They failed to keep His commandments, so God made a bNew Covenant: He promised to write His commandments, not outwardly on tablets of stone, but inwardly, by His Holy Spirit, on people’s hearts.  This would enable them to obey Him. The Day of Pentecost 50 days after the crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus Christ marked the birth of this New Covenant and the New Testament church.  God's Spirit was poured out on Jesus' disciples, as had been promised.  This New Covenant is still in effect today for all who receive Jesus Christ as their personal Lord and Saviour.


aPassover: a Jewish holy day commemorating the children of Israel’s deliverance from slavery to the Egyptians (Exodus 12:1-51).  Jesus, the final Passover Lamb, freed mankind from bondage to sin, death and the devil (1 Corinthians 5:7).

bNew Covenant: Jeremiah 31:31-34, Ezekiel 36:25-27, Joel 2:28-32, Luke 24:46-49, Acts 1:4-8 & 2:1-21, 2 Corinthians 3:1-6, Hebrews 8:6-13, John 3:16.

 

4Baptism of the Holy Ghost: Baptism means immersion, or total submersion.  John the Baptist baptized people in water for the forgiveness of their sins. When he saw Jesus, he said that cJesus would baptize His followers with the Holy Ghost and with fire.  This immersion in the Holy Ghost would endue His disciples with power to live the Christian life and do God's work.  This first occurred on the Day of Pentecost and is dpromised to all believers.

 

cSee John 1:29-34, Matthew 3:11-12, Acts 1:4-8 & 2:1-21

dSee Acts 2:38-39


5Speaking in Other Tongues: The evidence of having been baptized in the Holy Ghost. These tongues (languages) are given by the Holy Spirit to believers as a prayer language between them and God. (See Mark 16:15-20; Acts 2:1-4, 10:44-48 & 19:1-7; 1 Corinthians 14:2, 4 & 14.)

 

6Prophesy: In the New Testament, prophecy is a gift of the Holy Spirit, given to edify (build up spiritually), exhort (warn, make urgent appeals), and comfort believers.