As I write this, I have just finished preaching the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ to more than 430,000 people gathered in Meskel Square in the city center of Addis Ababa, the capital of Ethiopia. I praise God for the thousands who repented of their sins and professed their faith in Jesus Christ during the two-day Encountering God outreach.
Sixty-five years ago, my father preached the same Gospel message of faith and repentance in Christ in this same Ethiopian capital. Since then, the world has changed, politics have changed, but the Gospel does not change. It’s the same yesterday, today and tomorrow.
In the book of Acts, we read how Philip shared the same Gospel message with an Ethiopian man he encountered while traveling from Jerusalem to Gaza. The Ethiopian, who had been reading from the Prophet Isaiah, asked Philip to explain the Scriptures to him.
“The place in the Scripture which he read was this: ‘He was led as a sheep to the slaughter; and as a lamb before its shearer is silent, so He opened not His mouth.In His humiliation His justice was taken away, and who will declare His generation? For His life is taken from the earth’” (Acts 8:32-33).
After Philip explained the Gospel, the Ethiopian put his faith in Jesus Christ. God saved him, and he asked to be baptized in a nearby pool of water.
The hope the Ethiopian received is the same hope we celebrate at Easter. Through Christ’s resurrection, He conquered sin and the grave. He paid our sin debt by dying in our place, thus fulfilling the Biblical requirement—“For the wages of sin is death” (Romans 6:23).
Thankfully, Christ defeated death! And because He’s alive, those who have been redeemed by the blood of Christ can rejoice that “the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 6:23).
At Easter, we celebrate that God raised His Son from death to life to rescue us from an eternity separated from Him in a place the Bible calls hell. The Bible says: “For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved”(John 3:17).
As Easter approaches, I’m truly grateful that the FOX News Channel and Trinity Broadcasting Network will televise on Easter Sunday a sermon that we taped several weeks ago from the Palisades Fire District in Southern California. While standing in the wasteland of charred rubble and gray ash, I preached a message titled “Easter from the Ashes.”