One of the most striking questions from the account of the resurrection of Christ came from the women who made their way to the tomb early on the first day of the week, before the rising of the sun. Some of them had witnessed the act of Joseph of Arimathea in rolling the stone across the mouth of the cave before he had departed. They remembered the size of the stone and the effort required to move it, and they did not believe they could do it. The stone across the mouth of the tomb of Christ was a barrier to them in the last act of the devotion they hoped to perform for the Savior. But it also speaks of those barriers that would have remained in place for us if Christ had not risen from the dead.
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Rev. David Mook is the pioneer pastor of Phoenix Free Presbyterian Church, founded early in 1986. Following his graduation from Bob Jones University in 1974, he joined the faculty in the Division of Speech, continuing there until 1983 when he entered the Free Presbyterian...