Got the Tee-shirt : Christ is Risen!
The ultimate in tee-shirt messages!

There would have been no new sloganed tee-shirts to greet the amazing event of the first Easter morning. There was no one around to produce them. It was too early in the morning and no good Jew would have been working on them the previous day as it was the Jewish Sabbath. Besides, no one yet knew the good news, and no one would have believed it anyway.
If you had asked the dispirited followers of Jesus, when they woke up on this morning behind locked doors, for a key word or phrase for what faced them after all that had happened, perhaps they would have picked up on Christ’s last words, ‘It is finished!’, to sum up their despondency. They might simply have used the word ‘CALAMITY,’ though that is hardly a good slogan for a tee-shirt. All their
hopes had collapsed and their dreams ended because their leader had been taken from them, crucified on a cross and buried in a tomb. Later in the day, two of them, walking back to Emmaus, were to tell a stranger who caught up with them just what might have been, if only Jesus had lived (Luke 24.21).
But it was scarcely daylight when the women arrived at the tomb where Christ’s body had been so hastily put two days before. They came in order to complete the necessary actions for the decent burial of their master, and what they saw changed their view from ‘Calamity’ to ‘ABSOLUTE DISASTER,’ for the tomb was open, the stone rolled back from the entrance, and Christ’s body had gone. Their blood must have run cold with the realisation of the disappearance, and possible desecration, of the mortal remains of the One they loved so dearly.
But messengers at the tomb interrupted their despair with words they could hardly believe. ‘He is not here, for He is risen!’ (Matthew 25.6). It was not the news that Jesus had somehow recovered from the fearsome lacerations caused by the whipping and the crown of thorns, the carrying of the heavy cross laid across his beaten and torn shoulders and the nails driven through hands and feet to hold Him to it, together with the exhaustion of hanging on that cross as life drained from Him and the thrust of a spear into His side to prove it had. No, the Roman execution party had officially declared him dead. The words of the messengers were a clear statement that Jesus, the Christ, had risen from the dead and was alive.
It took some time for it to sink in and it would take even longer to understand it. Jesus would come to them in the upper room and on other occasions to prove that He was their Living Lord but already, at the end of that Easter Day, there was only one slogan for any tee-shirt for the believers, and it would remain the theme of the Christian Church down the centuries and continues so today - ‘CHRIST IS RISEN!’








