How A Dad’s Love Makes The Resurrection Hit Harder
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I didn’t grow up with my dad around in the earliest years, and that left me with a question I carried into adulthood: what kind of father will I be? When I start talking about my three boys and how wildly different they are, I’m not just telling cute stories. I’m naming the way fatherhood forces you to learn sacrifice, empathy, protection, and the kind of love that shows up even when you feel unprepared.
That’s why the cross hits differently when you become a parent. I can understand laying down my life for my kids, but I cannot fathom giving my child up for someone else. And yet the gospel claims God does exactly that. We follow that thread into the heart of Christian faith and then make the turn that everything depends on: if the story ends with Jesus dead, hope dies too.
So we walk through Luke 24, the empty tomb, the disbelief, and why the resurrection of Jesus is not a decorative belief but the load-bearing wall of Christianity. We also talk about historical claims, C.S. Lewis’s sharp challenge to the “great moral teacher” framing, and Paul’s insistence in 1 Corinthians 15 that the risen Christ is the message that saves and transforms. If you’re looking for a message with real weight, practical hope, and a reason to stand firm in a dark world, this conversation is for you.
If this helped you think more clearly about Jesus, fatherhood, or the resurrection, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What do you think the empty tomb demands from us?