BibleProject Guide

Easter and Holy Week

Easter and Holy Week

Summary

Easter celebrates God’s victory over death through Jesus’ resurrection and the launch of a brand-new creation. But to feel the weight of that morning, you have to walk through the week that led to it. Holy Week slows us down and lets us see what was happening: betrayal, injustice, courage, surrender—and a kingdom taking shape in the dark. This guide traces those days through key scenes in the gospels of Luke and Matthew, showing how each moment connects with the Bible’s larger narrative about God blessing and renewing the whole world. Easter isn’t only about what happened to Jesus. It’s about what God is doing with everything and everyone.

What Is Easter?

Easter commemorates the turning point of history: Jesus of Nazareth’s holy week, his crucifixion, and especially his resurrection during the 1st century CE, which is seen by many as the best news ever shared. It’s the day a revolution of love began.

For millennia, the threat of death drove most human decision-making, leading to violence and suffering that made all creation ache for peace. People believed that peace came through strength, by destroying “evil” or “ungodly” people. But Jesus brings peace through a greater strength: the power of forgiveness, generosity, and enemy love. Beyond teaching such things, Jesus lived them out, even as his enemies were plotting and carrying out his unjust execution. But even crucifixion could not stop him. Jesus’ resurrection exposes divine love as stronger than death. The grave cannot keep him down.

Jesus’ way of life illuminates new possibilities for people to love one another freely. He starts changing history and re-creating the world and everyone in it to be compelled by love for each other, not fear of death.

In the Bible, Jesus’ resurrection sets “new creation” (2 Cor. 5:17) in motion. The resurrected Jesus is named “firstborn over all creation” (Col. 1:15). He shows the world a new, loving way to be human. Easter confirms his way is incorruptible, stripping even death of its victory. It no longer “stings” (1 Cor. 15:55) because it doesn’t end life—it’s a transition into the new life God has in store.

The result? Jesus’ seemingly small impact has unprecedented power, so much so that history itself starts changing. Today, calendars worldwide recognize this man as the hinge between two eras, one before Christ and one after.

According to the New Testament, those who follow Jesus are being made new every day (2 Cor. 4:16). It’s the best news ever, from Jesus, who promises that God’s life and love will once again make the entire world good, beautiful, and right-functioning.

As one New Testament writer, John, puts it, Jesus “will wipe away every tear … and there will no longer be any death. There will no longer be any mourning, or crying, or pain; the first things have passed away” (Rev. 21:4 NASB). New creation is a world where our love for God and for each other truly comes to life.

Watch this video about the Resurrection of Jesus to learn more about Luke’s account of Jesus rising from the dead.

The Resurrection of Jesus: Luke 24
5:16
Luke-Acts
The Resurrection of Jesus: Luke 24

What Are the Key Events of Holy Week, and How Do They Help Us Understand Easter?

Easter makes more sense when you see how it fits into Holy Week, the final days before Jesus’ death and resurrection. Crowds first hail Jesus as King. Days later, crowds mock him. Enemies close in to kill Jesus, who doesn’t fight back or run away. Instead, he shares a Passover meal with his friends and starts a new exodus to lead humanity out of enslavement, into freedom in God’s Kingdom. Holy Week and Easter therefore remember not only Jesus’ resurrection but also God’s renewal of all things.

Before Jesus’ arrival, people were aching for a divine king, a messiah. Jesus had divine power, but he wasn’t looking much like a king. No war horses. No armies. He’s riding a young donkey and leading a group of apprentices during his “triumphal entry” into Jerusalem on the first day of Holy Week (Matt. 21:1-11, Mark 11:1-11, John 12:12-19). Israel’s prophet Zechariah promised that God’s King would arrive on a young donkey (Zech. 9:9), so Jesus is signaling two truths: He is the rescuing King, and he’s not what most expect.

Later that week, on Maundy Thursday, Jesus shares a Passover meal with his disciples to remember Israel’s exodus from Egypt, when they experienced God’s power to free them from slavery. Like Moses, Jesus is rescuing people out of slavery. But Jesus leads with new instruction and much greater power.

“Maundy” comes from the Latin mandatum, meaning “command” or “instruction.” During the meal, Jesus gives a new command: His followers are to love one another like he has loved them (John 13:34). He kneels to scrub each disciple’s feet, and he says it’s an example of the way God’s power works (John 13:3-20), through blessing and humble love. This way of Christ, the New Testament insists, is how God destroys evil and heals the world.

Loving enemies? It’s a nice idea, but it sounds naive and ineffective, especially for a king. Divinely appointed rulers are conquerors, not sacrificers. So by Friday, the surrounding crowds are shouting “Crucify! Crucify!” (John 19:6, Matt. 27:22, Mark 15:13, Luke 23:21).

Key moments like these—the humble entry on a donkey, the foot-washing at Passover, and the self-giving death on a cross—all set the stage for Easter, the day God begins setting things right, not forcefully, but with the power of unbreakable love.

When Jesus is resurrected three days after his burial, completing his “holy week,” he is vindicated as the good King who makes all things new (Rev. 21:5). And his work of bringing new creation is celebrated worldwide every year during Holy Week and Easter Sunday.

Watch this video about the Crucifixion of Jesus to learn more about the events leading up to Jesus’ resurrection.

The Crucifixion of Jesus: Luke 19-23
4:26
Luke-Acts
The Crucifixion of Jesus: Luke 19-23

What Changed After Holy Week?

Because of Jesus’ resurrection at the climax of Holy Week, the Apostle Paul says “death has been swallowed up in victory” (1 Cor. 15:54). Swallowing up death would radically change the world, one would think, but violent wars rage on today. Everyone still dies. Those who witnessed Jesus after his resurrection—his disciples and hundreds more (1 Cor. 15:6)—surely gained new perspectives on life and death. But day-to-day life carried on as usual for most people.

Yet when we look at Scripture’s larger story, we see that everything changed after Holy Week.

Throughout the Hebrew Bible (the Old Testament), humanity’s desire to experience peace and the good life with God gets frustrated by limited access to his presence. Genesis 2 portrays the garden of Eden like a temple, a place where Heaven and Earth overlap and God dwells with humanity. But when the first humans ignore God’s instruction, they are exiled from the garden. God stations angelic beings, called cherubim, at the entrance, barring the way back (Gen. 3:24).

The story unfolding from there to the end of Scripture shows humanity trying to reunite with God. Two key locations stand out. One is Israel’s tabernacle, which becomes a mobile temple, an Eden-like space where humans can again dwell with God. The second is the temple in Jerusalem, which later replaces the tabernacle. The authors describe both as renewed points of access to God, but each has strict limitations.

Only Israel’s high priest may enter the temple’s most sacred space, the holy of holies where God dwells, and only once a year on Yom Kippur (also called the Day of Atonement). A thick curtain embroidered with cherubim blocks the way, echoing Eden’s guarded gate. While traditions and holy spaces change over time, this restricted access to God stays the same—until God arrives in Jesus.

Being in Jesus’ presence is also being in God’s presence, so John describes Jesus as the new temple (John 2:19-21), the new sacred space where Heaven and Earth overlap. At Jesus’ death, the thick temple veil tears in two (Mark 15:38, Matt. 27:51) and access to God’s dwelling place opens wide. In Jesus, the good life with God opens for all people without limitation.

After his resurrection, Jesus says those who follow his way will live in God’s Spirit and become a living temple for the entire world (Eph. 2:19-22, 2 Cor. 6:16). God no longer works through a single sacred space but through people everywhere, bringing renewal, healing, and reconciliation to all creation (2 Cor. 5:17-21).

On the surface, the world looked much the same after Holy Week. But beneath the surface, a global transformation had begun. Goodness and peace through union with God became freely available to all through Jesus.

Watch this video on Heaven and Earth to learn more about God’s temple moving from a fixed location to Jesus and his followers.

Dive Deeper

So far we’ve just skimmed the surface. Explore these studies to take a deeper dive into how this theme contributes to the whole story of the Bible.

FAQs

Easter is a complex topic, and you probably still have questions. Here are some of the questions we hear most often.

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