The Day Between: When All Hope Seemed Gone
Sitting in the Silence of Saturday: What to Do When Hope Feels Lost
We rarely pause to sit in the silence of the day between—the day after the crucifixion, before the resurrection broke the sky open with light. It's a day shrouded in confusion, grief, and unbearable silence. The disciples weren’t singing hymns of hope or preaching sermons of victory. They were hiding—terrified, disoriented, broken. The One who spoke and calmed storms, who raised the dead, who looked at them and said, “Follow Me”—they had just watched Him breathe His last, mangled and nailed to a Roman cross.
Imagine the rawness of that day. The shock that lingers when tragedy strikes. They had given up everything to follow Jesus. They had watched Him heal the blind, touch lepers, and silence demons. They believed they were walking with the Messiah—the One who would set Israel free, the One who would set them free. But now? Now He was gone. His body laid cold in a borrowed tomb. Every promise He made must have felt like a cruel joke. They didn’t know Easter was coming. All they knew was the darkness of Friday bleeding into the hopelessness of Saturday.
How angry were they? How afraid? Peter had denied Him. The others had scattered. The weight of regret must have been suffocating. And yet, isn’t this where so many of us still live? We, who know the whole story, still find ourselves paralyzed by fear and swallowed by doubt. We know the stone was rolled away. We know death was defeated. We know Jesus is alive, yet we live as though He’s still in that tomb—speaking words of life, but walking as though we are dead inside.
If we could sit in that day between with them, maybe we’d be honest enough to admit that we too have days like that—when promises feel broken, when hope feels far away, when we question if God really sees us. But here’s the truth: Resurrection is coming. It was always coming. Even in the silence. Even when no one could see it. Jesus had already said, “Destroy this temple, and I will raise it again in three days” John 2:19. They had heard it but couldn’t yet believe it.
So what if we lived as though Sunday had already come? What if, instead of shrinking back in fear, we spoke and walked like people who know that life has already conquered death? His Spirit now lives in us—the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead Romans 8:11. We should be the most dangerous people on earth to the kingdom of darkness—because nothing, not even death, can hold us.
This is the day between, and yet, we stand on the other side of the empty tomb. Let’s live like it. Let’s speak like it. Let’s hope like it. Let His words spring forth life from us to a world still sitting in the dark, waiting for a dawn they don’t know is already breaking.
Takeaways:
Relational Christianity and Identity in Christ:
Even when we feel abandoned or lost, Christ’s resurrection is our assurance that He has not left us. We are sons and daughters of the living God, filled with His Spirit to face every dark "Saturday" of life.Apologetics and the Defense of Faith:
The disciples' fear and doubt are historical markers of real human experience—proof that the resurrection wasn’t fabricated by men ready to die for a lie. They were lost—until they saw Him risen.Humanity’s Cosmic Role and Redemption:
In Christ’s resurrection, humanity’s story is rewritten. No longer victims of death but co-heirs with Christ Romans 8:17, called to bring His light into a dark world still sitting in its "Saturday."Biblical Theology and the Supernatural Worldview:
The resurrection is not just a past event but a present reality. It proves that God's kingdom has broken into this world. We live between the "already" and the "not yet," empowered by His Spirit to carry resurrection life wherever we go.
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Do you have days like this? How do you get back in line with the promises of the resurrection?