Mary Magdalene was still
wiping tears when history flipped upside down. One moment she stood in a garden
of heartbreak; the next, she was carrying the greatest headline the human heart
has ever heard. John 20:18 captures that breathtaking pivot: She ran to the
disciples and declared, “I have seen the Lord!” The living, no longer dead
Lord!
And here’s the jaw-dropper:
the first herald of the resurrection wasn’t a theologian, priest, rabbi, or
seasoned apostle. It was a woman whose past had been marked by shadows. Heaven
deliberately chose the least likely voice to announce the most important truth,
as if to shout, “No broken past can ever silence a redeemed present.”
Picture it. The disciples
were barricaded behind locked doors, terrified Rome’s next knock might be for
them. Hope felt buried. Faith felt brittle. Then Mary bursts through their
gloom with five thunderous words: “I have seen the Lord!” Not, “I think something
happened.” Not, “I have a theory.” Not even, “I saw an empty tomb.” But “I have
seen the Lord.” This was eyewitness faith—faith with breath, scars, and
heartbeat. The resurrection wasn’t a metaphor or a mood. It was a Person,
alive, speaking her name.
And isn’t it just like Jesus
to reveal Himself first to the one who stayed when others left? Peter and John
sprinted to the tomb, peeked inside, and then went home (v.10). But Mary
lingered. She wasn’t the fastest runner, the boldest disciple, or the most
influential believer—but she was the one who refused to walk away. Sometimes
the deepest revelations of Christ come not to the hurried but to the heart that
lingers.
Her announcement isn’t just
historical; it’s deeply personal. Every follower of Jesus eventually stands in
their own garden of disappointment—confused, hurting, uncertain—and hears Him
call their name. Every believer is invited to become a messenger: to step back
into rooms still heavy with fear and speak hope that sounds impossible until
it’s spoken aloud. “I have seen the Lord” is the birthright of all who have
been rescued by grace.
May the Lord who revealed Himself to Mary reveal Himself afresh to you today. May He turn your sorrow into a story worth telling and fill your mouth with words that carry resurrection life. May you, too, see the Lord—and boldly proclaim what He has spoken to you.













