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Is the Resurrection of Jesus Real and Relevant? An Easter Message for Livermore and the Bay Area

  • Table of Contents:

    • Why the resurrection is the most important question

    • Why believing in the resurrection is reasonable

    • How the resurrection reaches anyone

    • How the resurrection gives us living hope

    • What Easter means for your life today

    Suffering is one of life’s hardest realities—and one of the biggest reasons people question God. Whether it’s emotional pain, broken relationships, illness, or loss, we’ve all faced moments where we’ve asked: “God, where are You?”

    At Arroyo Church, we believe in facing hard questions head-on. And this is one of the deepest: Where is God when I am suffering?

    If you’ve ever wrestled with that question, you’re not alone. But the good news is that the Bible doesn’t ignore suffering—it speaks directly into it. And even here in the Bay Area, often described as a “spiritual desert,” God is still moving, still speaking, and still offering hope like a river in the dry places.

    1. Understanding What Started Suffering

    To understand suffering, we have to go back to the beginning.

    God created the world good—perfect, without pain, death, or brokenness. But humanity chose to turn away from God. Sin entered the world, and with it came suffering.

    This means something important: God is not the author of suffering—sin is.

    Instead of blaming God, we can recognize that we live in a broken world. That doesn’t make the pain easier, but it gives clarity. Suffering isn’t proof that God is absent—it’s evidence that something is not as it should be.

    So what do we do with that truth?

    • Don’t blame God for what sin has caused

    • Don’t be surprised by suffering—prepare for it with faith

    When we understand the origin of suffering, we stop asking “Why is this happening at all?” and start asking better questions.

    2. Learn to Pray Honestly About Your Pain

    One of the most powerful truths in Scripture is this: God invites your honesty.

    In Psalm 10, the writer cries out:

    “Why, Lord, do you stand far off? Why do you hide yourself in times of trouble?”

    That’s raw. That’s real.

    God isn’t looking for polished, perfect prayers—He wants a real relationship with the real you.

    When you pray honestly:

    • You release the burden you’re carrying

    • You invite God into your pain

    • You open the door for His peace

    Prayer is not pretending everything is okay. It’s bringing everything that’s not okay to the One who can handle it.

    And here’s the promise: God hears you. He cares. And He responds.

    3. God Is Working Even in Your Suffering

    One of the hardest truths to accept is also one of the most powerful:

    While you are suffering, God is working.

    Romans 5 tells us that suffering produces:

    • Perseverance

    • Character

    • Hope

    Think of suffering like fire. Fire can destroy—but it can also refine. Gold becomes purer through fire.

    The difference isn’t the fire—it’s what’s being refined.

    So instead of asking:

    • “Why is this happening to me?”

    Try asking:

    • “God, what are You teaching me through this?”

    Maybe:

    • That difficult situation is producing patience

    • That painful relationship is teaching forgiveness

    • That uncertainty is growing your trust in God

    God doesn’t waste pain. He uses it.

    4. Believe That God Is Always Good and Powerful

    In Mark 4, Jesus calms a storm while His disciples panic. Before the miracle, they ask:

    “Don’t you care if we drown?”

    They doubted two things:

    • God’s goodness (“Do You care?”)

    • God’s power (“Can You do anything?”)

    Sound familiar?

    When we’re in a storm, fear often reveals that we’ve forgotten one—or both—of these truths:

    • God is good

    • God is powerful

    He’s not one or the other. He’s both.

    That means:

    • If He allows the storm, He has a purpose

    • If He doesn’t stop it, He will strengthen you through it

    God is good even when life isn’t. And He is powerful enough to either change your situation—or change you through it.

    5. The Hope Beyond Suffering

    Here’s the ultimate hope of the Christian faith:

    Suffering is not the end of your story.

    Jesus Himself suffered more than anyone—rejected, beaten, crucified. On the cross, He cried:

    “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”

    But three days later, He rose again.

    Because of Jesus:

    • Suffering has meaning

    • Pain has purpose

    • Death is not the end

    Revelation promises a future where:

    • Every tear is wiped away

    • There is no more pain, death, or sorrow

    That’s the hope we hold onto.

    Even here in the Bay Area—where life can feel spiritually dry—Jesus offers living water, a river of hope in the desert.

    So where is God when you’re suffering?

    • He’s beside you

    • He’s listening to you

    • He’s working in you

    • And He’s preparing a future for you

    If you’re in Christ, suffering is not your whole story—it’s just a chapter. And the ending is already written.

    And it is good.

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