Easter

Good Friday Services

Victoria
Moreland City Corps, 828 Sydney Road, North Couburg
Friday 22nd April at 2.30pm

Box Hill Corps, 17-23 Nelson Road, Box Hill
Friday 22nd April at 3pm

Traralgon Corps, Lot 1 Cross’s Road, Traralgon
Friday 22nd April at 3pm

Tasmania
Hobart Citadel, 180 Elizabeth Street, Hobart
Friday 22nd April at 3.00pm

South Australia
Adelaide Congress Hall, 277 Pirie Street, Adelaide
Friday 22nd April at 2.30pm

Northern Territory
Darwin Corps, Crn Lee Point Road & Yanyule Drive, Anula
Friday 22nd April at 9.30am

Western Australia
Perth Fortress, 333 William Street, Northbridge

Friday 22nd April at 2.30pm

Videos

From the "I want to know Christ" Easter Resources. Developed by Corps Resources 

Maundy Thursday

Better - Have you ever thought yourself better than someone else? Friends? Family? how about the homeless guy on the street? What does Jesus think about the idea of 'better'?

Good Friday

Passion - The final week of Christ is one of the central events of history. But how did Christ feel about it? How did those around him feel about it? What does it mean for all of us?

Easter Sunday

Resurrection - This clip looks at what Jesus' resurrection means for us in our daily lives, featuring Major Geoff Webb, Principal of The Salvation Army Training College in Melbourne.

Easter Hope

Raymond Finger
Raymond Finger (Commissioner)

Tucked away in the post resurrection appearances of Jesus is the account of two nameless men walking the road from Jerusalem to Emmaus, a walk of about 10kms. 

Unrecognised, the resurrected Jesus joins them and initiates a conversation that saw them recount what had been happening in Jerusalem. They talked about Jesus, about the things he did and said and about how he was arrested and crucified.

They then revealed their response to his death, it's found in verse 21, "'but we had hoped that he was the one who was going to redeem Israel.'   "But we had hoped."

All of us have hopes and many of us know the pain of having our hopes dashed:

  • "I hoped for a successful marriage."
  • "I hoped to find meaningful employment"
  • "I hoped my children would grow to be responsible adults."

The rest of this encounter is that these two men discover that their hopes are realised through the resurrection of Jesus, a realisation that made all the difference.

Easter at its core is all about hope!  Hope that we are not alone, hope that life isn't a random series of meaningless events, hope that death is not the end.

I pray that you may experience Easter hope.  My God bless you!

Raymond Finger (Commissioner), Territorial Commander

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The General's Easter Message 2011

General Linda Bond
General Linda Bond
The Gentle Invitation to Believe

Time changes one's perspective, does it not? That is so for me and perhaps for many of you when you reflect on the Easter story. Maybe it has to do with our life experiences which make us see things differently. Or maybe the gracious way the Lord has dealt with us has taught us to read the Scriptures differently. Whatever the cause, the account of Thomas's reaction on hearing that Jesus was risen illustrates this point for me.

Many of us perhaps think he deserved the name 'Doubting Thomas'. The Bible tells us that he was not with the other disciples when Jesus came, but they were quick to tell him the good news: 'We have seen the Lord!' (John 20:25). Then comes his famous response: 'Unless I see the nail marks in his hands and put my finger where the nails were, and put my hand into his side, I will not believe it' (v25). 'Seeing is believing' - or at least Thomas felt so.

A week later, Jesus showed up again. This time Thomas was with the disciples. After greeting them all: 'Peace be with you!' (v26), Jesus initiated the conversation with Thomas. He said to him: 'Put your finger here; see my hands. Reach out your hand and put it into my side. Stop doubting and believe' (v27). These words of Jesus are not written in our Bibles with exclamation marks, in bold print or in capital letters. Yet sometimes they are read as though they were a shout, a stern rebuke from the Lord to a stubborn disciple.

Have you considered that this was no shout but a gentle invitation to a struggling soul? That day, Jesus showed up especially for Thomas.

The risen Lord knew his disciple's heart. Thomas truly wanted a personal encounter with Jesus as his friends had experienced. He had been honest enough to admit his struggle. He could not believe the impossible or comprehend the incredible. Having witnessed the miracles of Jesus, he should perhaps have seen this as yet another of those amazing moments. But for him, resurrection after crucifixion was beyond the realm of possibility.

Maybe this was no embarrassing moment for Thomas, no public shaming in front of his friends. Surely Jesus did not expose him before the others as a 'doubting Thomas'? Rather, don't you think that as Thomas was invited into Jesus' wounds, the Lord whispered a word of faith into his ear?

It is true that we can't go beyond what the Scriptures tell us. But we can read them with the knowledge of how Jesus deals with us. Knowing how understanding and gracious he is, the story of Thomas can be read as our story.

How often we have heard others share their joy about their experience with Jesus and somehow we just can't relate to it? Rather than declare our doubts, we have kept silent or even tried to express a conviction that we did not hold. But for those who truly want to know him, Jesus comes, doesn't he? No rebuke, no word of condemnation, but a whisper. He gives us a moment so convincing that we know with absolute certainty: He is alive. He is real.

Thomas's response may surely also be ours: 'My Lord and my God' (v28). What a wonderful Saviour! What a wonderful Lord!

  • Scripture quotations are from the New International Version
by General Linda Bond