Resurrection Peace
Big Idea: The resurrected Jesus meets the fear and doubt of my life with His real, bodily presence and speaks peace to my troubled heart.
Introduction: Peace is one of the most desired and least experienced realities in our lives.
We look for peace:
- By resolving circumstances
- By controlling events
- By creating outcomes
But Luke 24 shows us a different kind of peace.
This passage finds the disciples in fear, confusion, and uncertainty. A resurrected Jesus steps into that moment and speaks peace to those he loves.
So, this passage answers an important question: What kind of peace does Jesus actually give, and how does He give it?
First: The Peace of Jesus Comes to Fearful People (v. 36–37)
As they were talking about these things, Jesus himself stood among them, and said to them, “Peace to you!” 37 But they were startled and frightened and thought they saw a spirit.
Jesus appears among them and says, “Peace to you.”
This is not a calm room. The disciples are:
- gathered behind closed doors
- confused by reports of the resurrection
- startled and frightened by Jesus’ appearance
And the room becomes even less calm because Luke says they thought they were seeing a spirit.
But the important point here is that the peace of Jesus is not given after their fear is resolved. It is given in the middle of fear.
He comes into their confusion and speaks peace into it.
APP: If you are waiting for fear to be eliminated before you have peace, you won’t ever have peace. The peace of Jesus is not the reward for calmness. It is the gift He gives in the midst of fear and doubt.
Second: The Peace of Jesus Confronts Our Fear (v. 38–40)
And he said to them, “Why are you troubled, and why do doubts arise in your hearts? 39 See my hands and my feet, that it is I myself. Touch me, and see. For a spirit does not have flesh and bones as you see that I have.” 40 And when he had said this, he showed them his hands and his feet.
Jesus responds directly to their inner struggle: “Why are you troubled, and why do doubts arise in your hearts?”
Then He shows them:
- His hands
- His feet
- He invites them to touch Him.
Jesus does not ignore doubt or shame their fear. He confronts it with the resurrection, as if to say, “Is there anything a resurrected Savior cannot do/calm?”
IMP: This means the resurrection is not presented as an idea to believe, which we often see it as, but it is a reality to embrace so that it changes the way we interact with life.
APP: In other words, you don’t overcome fear by pretending it does not exist. You overcome it by remembering that Jesus has come back from the dead. If God can do that, what can’t he do?
Where are doubts rising in your heart?
- about God’s goodness
- about your future
- about the truth of the gospel
Jesus meets your doubt and fear with his resurrection.
Third: The Peace of Jesus is Grounded in His Real Resurrection (v. 41–43)
And while they still disbelieved for joy and were marveling, he said to them, “Have you anything here to eat?” 42 They gave him a piece of broiled fish, 43 and he took it and ate before them.
Luke tells us Jesus’ followers still struggled to believe, “for joy.” So Jesus takes it further. He asks for food and eats in front of them.
This is not incidental to what Jesus is doing. It is essential. Jesus is proving
- He is not a spirit
- He is not a vision
- He is physically, bodily alive
Again, Christian peace is grounded in a historical, bodily resurrection. It’s not just a fact to believe. It’s a reality to bring into your world when you are troubled.
If Jesus is alive:
- sin has been dealt with
- death has been defeated
- the future is secure
APP: Your peace will only be as stable as what it is built on. What is it built on?
If it is built on:
- circumstances, it will fluctuate
- feelings, it will shift
- control, it will collapse
But if it is built on the historicity of the resurrection of Jesus, it will provide you peace in the midst of fear and doubt.
Ill: I’ll create a word about Ebenezer here.
Fourth: The Peace of Jesus Leads to Assurance and Rest
The progression in the passage is important. Is there,
- fear - Jesus speaks peace
- doubt - Jesus reveals Himself
- confusion - Jesus provides assurance
Real peace that will change you comes through encountering the risen Jesus.
APP: Peace is not something you create. Just like salvation, it is something God has created for you and that you receive from Jesus.
This means:
- you don’t have to hold everything together
- you don’t have to resolve every question
- you don’t have to secure your life or future
Jesus has already secured what matters most and his resurrection proves it.
Fifth: Applying the Resurrection to Your Life Now
So, the question is not: “Do you have a peaceful life?” The question is: “Have you received the peace of Jesus?” And for those who have: “Are you living in the power of his resurrection?”
ILL: Think about how Paul applied Jesus’ resurrection to his life (And this may be the most important part of the sermon).
Philippians 3:10-11 - that I may know him and the power of his resurrection, and may share his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, that by any means possible I may attain the resurrection from the dead.
Paul means two things here:
- He wants to live again after he dies.
- He wants to enjoy the resurrected life now
What Paul longs for in Philippians 3 is what the disciples are encountering in Luke 24. They are not just seeing Jesus alive. They are seeing the beginning of the life Paul says he wants to attain.
In Luke 24, the disciples are standing in the presence of the risen Christ. In Philippians 3, Paul is saying, “I want that life to fully take hold of me.”
This means the resurrection is something to believe. But it is also a life to enter, a power to live by, and a future to press toward.
The same Jesus who stood in that room and said, “Peace to you,” is the one Paul is pressing toward, and He is the one who gives us both the power to live now and the promise of life forever.
(Friends, that’s a great conclusion for believers but it will take the rest of the week for me to flesh that out and say it with the full force it deserves).
Conclusion: Think about this - The words “Peace to you” are not casual. They are purchased. (Hallelujah!). Jesus can speak peace because:
- He went to the cross
- He bore the wrath of God
- He satisfied divine justice
- His resurrection proves he is King of kings and Lord of lords
Gospel: The peace He offers is not superficial calm. It is reconciliation with God and all the benefits of it.
As Paul says in Romans 5:1 - “Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” You can have that peace!










