Don’t Lock Yourself Out
Though the doors were locked, Jesus came and stood among them…
John 20:26 (NIV)
The disciples are gathered together behind locked doors, convinced that confinement is protection. Fear, grief, uncertainty, and danger have convinced them that locking themselves in is the safest option.
But the danger is not what they think it is. The problem is that in locking themselves in, they locked themselves out. Locked out of mission. Locked out of witness. Locked out of courage. Locked out of sharing faith with a world that desperately needed the resurrected Christ.
This pattern of behavior is not limited to a room in Jerusalem. We can lock ourselves into our anger, our disappointment, our despondency, our fear, our grief. Locking in becomes emotional. It becomes spiritual. And over time, locking in becomes a prison.
Here’s the warning we can glean from this text: Don’t let life make you lock yourself in until you lock yourself out. You cannot stay locked into one emotion until it imprisons you and robs you of what God intends to do on the other side of healing and growth.
And here is the hope of the passage: When you’ve locked yourself in, Jesus appears anyway. He steps into locked spaces because you can lock yourself in, but you can’t ever lock Him out.
Locked in is not a spiritually productive option. It feeds fear instead of mission. It protects doubt instead of faith. And it contradicts everything the resurrected Christ empowers His people to become.
The doors did not stop Jesus. But staying behind them could have stopped the disciples.
Living at the Level of Resurrection
She turned around and saw Jesus standing there, but she did not recognize that it was Jesus.
John 20:14 (NIV)
Mary sees Jesus but cannot recognize Him. She assumes He is the gardener. This is not because Jesus has failed her, but because grief lowers her level of vision.
There is a difference between life lived beneath the level of resurrection and life lived at the level of resurrection. When faith is frozen, we misdefine everything around us. We assume loss instead of transition. We assume denial instead of redirection.
Jesus does not correct Mary immediately. He calls her name. And when He does, paralysis becomes transformation. Recognition happens not through analysis, but through relationship. “My sheep know my voice.”
Then comes the shift. “Do not hold on to Me. From now on, you must hold Me by faith.” This is resurrection-level living: trusting God without clinging to old forms of security.
At that moment, Mary becomes more than a disciple. She becomes the first proclaimer of the resurrected Christ. Frozen faith turns into forward movement. Confusion turns into commission.
Resurrection living reframes everything. Loss becomes shift. Closed doors become protection. What looked like an ending becomes an assignment.
When Faith Feels Frozen
Mary stood outside the tomb crying…
John 20:11 (NIV)
Mary stands at the tomb, caught on a threshold… unable to step back and unable to step forward. Her faith, once burning, now feels cold and empty like the grave she is staring into. She is grieving. She is confused. She is afraid. She is paralyzed.
This kind of moment is familiar to you and me. Life can press and push and pull so hard that we stand halted between what was and “what does it all mean now?” The flame of faith is still there, but questions, disappointments, and exhaustion have pressed in until discernment feels strained and progress feels fatiguing.
This is what a paralyzing faith looks like. Stuck between belief and hopelessness, excitement and despair, curiosity and bewilderment. And the danger is not the grief itself. The danger is analyzing ourselves into paralysis.
When faith freezes, we start questioning God’s reality, God’s love, and God’s power. We replay circumstances until doubt gets louder than trust. You can analyze yourself into a frozen faith.
But God allows these moments. Not to destroy faith, but to mature it. These seasons create intimacy, depth, and endurance that sunshine never could. Faith grows when life squeezes.
Paralysis is not proof of failure. It is often the doorway to formation.
The Messiah We Want vs. the Messiah We Need
We are going up to Jerusalem… and the Son of Man will be delivered over… and on the third day He will be raised to life.
Matthew 20:17–19 (NIV)
As Jesus journeys toward Jerusalem, He pauses to prepare His disciples for a truth that will unsettle everything they believe. They thought they were meeting the Messiah they wanted: a conquering king, one who would overthrow Roman oppression, restore national glory, and sit on David’s throne with power and majesty.
But Jesus interrupts those expectations. “We are going into the city, and I am going to be sentenced to death.” The crown will be thorns before it is glory. The throne will be a cross before it is exalted majesty.
This moment forces a hard question. How often have we wanted a Jesus who fits our expectations? One who delivers prosperity without sacrifice, victory without struggle, redemption without blood. We celebrate a God who parts the Red Sea, but we resist the God who leads us through the wilderness.
And yet, God sent not the Christ we perhaps wanted, but the Christ we desperately needed. We needed a Christ who understands suffering because He bore it Himself. One who could heal our deepest wounds because He allowed His body to be wounded. One who could truly set us free because He knew rejection, humiliation, and pain.
The Messiah we want doesn’t always come the way we want Him. But the Messiah we need always comes right on time. And when He comes, He brings exactly what the human soul requires.
The Freedom of Simplicity
Life does not consist in an abundance of possessions.
Luke 12:15 (NIV)
When Jesus teaches about the non-importance of worldly possessions and attachments, He is not trying to take anything from us. He is trying to free us. One of the greatest freedoms in life is learning to live with less.
When possessions and attachments multiply, clarity disappears, cravings become idols, and what should serve us begins to master us. That is why Jesus invites us into simplicity, not deprivation. It is breaking the stronghold of unhealthy and unholy attachment.
Simplicity brings focus. Where there is simplicity, there is clarity. The soul becomes single-minded. Anxiety loosens its grip. Needing less makes us less dependent on externals for our joy and happiness.
Jesus contrasts what is temporary with what endures. Everything stored on earth is subject to moths, corrosion, and theft. But not everything in life is fragile. Nobody can take your eternal security. Nobody can frustrate your free channel of communication to God. Nobody can penetrate that hedge of protection God has around your life.
These are the treasures worth storing. Inner health creates outer beauty. Righteousness and obedience have eternal value. Love for God, love for others, faith, trust, and good works done with pure motivation—these are riches that cannot decay.
Do not confuse accumulation with abundance. Many things God places in your life are not intended for forever. Some things are for a season, and when the season changes, you don’t have to hoard what was meant to pass through your life. What matters is not what you keep, but who you are becoming in Christ.
Here is the anchor truth beneath it all: As long as you’ve got Jesus, you can rebuild any and everything else. Houses, land, status, access, and applause may pass, but what God has for you cannot be stolen.
Simplicity is not loss. It is freedom. It is clarity. It is peace.
Hold loosely what fades. Store deeply what lasts.

