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Come Follow Me 2026 · Week 14

Come Follow Me: Easter — When “All” Means You

March 30–April 5 | Come Follow Me 2026 Week 14

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Come Follow Me this week (March 30–April 5) invites a deeply personal Easter question: Do I really believe the Savior’s victory includes me—right now, in my real life? In Come Follow Me 2026, Week 14 turns our hearts to the Atonement and Resurrection of Jesus Christ, not as a single weekend, but as the hinge point of human history.

If you’ve ever felt like your burdens are too specific, too messy, or too late for help, this Come Follow Me lesson keeps returning to one word that changes everything: “all.” “All” as in all of us, and “all” as in you.

What Is Come Follow Me About?

Easter connects God’s people across time. Ancient believers looked forward to Christ with faith, and modern disciples look back with faith—yet the center is the same Redeemer.

This week’s scriptures show a powerful pattern that repeats across the Old Testament and New Testament:

  • Real sorrow and real sin are acknowledged, not minimized (see Isaiah 53:6; Psalm 30:5).
  • A Redeemer steps into that reality and bears it (see Isaiah 53:4–6).
  • A living Christ gives peace now, not just later (see John 14:27).
  • Resurrection hope is universal—death does not get the final word (see 1 Corinthians 15:22).

As you study, watch for the way prophecy and fulfillment work together. The Lord doesn’t just ask for faith; He often prepares faith by revealing His works ahead of time.

Key Themes in

Easter scriptures can feel familiar, which is exactly why they can slip past our hearts. This section helps you slow down and notice what the verses are actually saying.

1) “All” Means the Atonement Reaches Everyone

Isaiah’s language is both honest and hopeful. “All we like sheep have gone astray” is not flattering, but it is accurate (see Isaiah 53:6).

Then comes the miracle: “the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all” (Isaiah 53:6). The burden is universal—and so is the reach of the Redeemer.

  • If you feel alone in your struggle, this verse quietly insists: you are not the only one who has wandered.
  • If you feel disqualified from grace, this verse insists something even louder: Christ already planned for your return.

2) “All” Means the Resurrection Is Bigger Than Death

Paul’s declaration is simple enough for a child to memorize and deep enough to spend a lifetime unpacking: “For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive” (1 Corinthians 15:22).

Easter is not only comfort for the grieving; it’s a cosmic announcement. Because of Jesus Christ, every grave is temporary.

  • This can change how we face loss: not with denial, but with anchored hope.
  • It can also change how we face our own future: If Christ lives, what does that make possible for me today?

3) Christ’s Peace Is Not the World’s Peace

Some weeks we don’t need more information—we need steadiness. Jesus offered a kind of peace the world cannot manufacture: “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you… Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid” (John 14:27).

Notice what He calls it: “my peace.” Not a distraction, not a temporary numbing, not a motivational speech—His peace.

  • The world often offers peace that depends on circumstances.
  • Christ offers peace that can coexist with hard circumstances.

4) The Gospel Turns Nights Into Mornings

The Psalms are honest about timing. “Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning” (Psalm 30:5).

Read through an Easter lens, that “morning” becomes more than emotional relief. It points to the Resurrection—and to the Savior’s power to bring light after darkness.

  • What if your “night” isn’t proof God forgot you?
  • What if it’s evidence you’re still in the story—and morning is still coming?

Discussion Questions for

Good discussion doesn’t require a seminary degree. It just requires a willing heart and an open scripture.

Use one or two of these for Sunday School, youth, or family study:

  1. In Isaiah 53:6, what do you notice about the repeated word “all”—and what does it teach you about who Christ came to save?
  2. How does 1 Corinthians 15:22 change the way you think about death and resurrection in your own family history?
  3. In John 14:27, what feels different about “my peace” compared to the kind of peace the world gives?
  4. Where do you need “morning” right now, and how does Psalm 30:5 speak to your timeline?
  5. Which is easier for you to believe: that Christ can forgive sin, or that He can heal a broken heart? Why?
  6. What is one way you can make Easter a season of discipleship, not only a holiday?

How to Teach

Teaching Easter at home doesn’t have to be complicated. Children understand love, rescue, and hope, and these scriptures are full of all three.

Try simple approaches that invite participation:

  • Use the word “all.” Ask: Who does Jesus help? Then read Isaiah 53:6 and 1 Corinthians 15:22 and let kids answer: everyone.
  • Make peace tangible. After reading John 14:27, invite family members to share one worry, then say a short prayer asking for Christ’s peace.
  • Mark “night” and “morning.” Read Psalm 30:5, then ask: What helps you feel light after a hard day? Connect that to Jesus bringing light after the darkest day.

Explore This Week's Full Study Guide

If you’re looking for a clear plan for the week, the Gospel Study App can help you go deeper without feeling overwhelmed. Inside the app, you’ll find a full study guide experience that helps you connect Old Testament prophecy, New Testament fulfillment, and your personal discipleship.

Practical Application

Small actions can make Easter faith feel real on a Tuesday, not just on a Sunday.

  1. Circle every “all.” As you read Isaiah 53:6 and 1 Corinthians 15:22, literally circle all. Then write one sentence: Because of Christ, I am included in…
  2. Pray for “my peace.” Use John 14:27 as your prayer language. Ask specifically: Father, please give me the peace of Christ about ______.
  3. Track your “mornings.” For one week, write down one moment of light each day—however small—and label it “morning” (see Psalm 30:5). Watch how hope grows.

Easter testimony often comes quietly, line upon line. As you study Come Follow Me this week, let the scriptures teach you what the Savior already knows: His Atonement and Resurrection are big enough for your whole life.

For more help preparing lessons, finding cross-references, and keeping your study consistent, open the Gospel Study App and explore the full Come Follow Me resources for this week. You’ll be surprised how much peace comes from a steady, guided approach to the word of God.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is Come Follow Me about this week?

Come Follow Me for March 30–April 5 (Come Follow Me 2026 Week 14) focuses on Easter and the central truth that Jesus Christ’s Atonement and Resurrection include “all.” Key verses include Isaiah 53:6 and 1 Corinthians 15:22, emphasizing universal redemption and universal resurrection.

What chapters are in Come Follow Me this week?

This week’s Easter-focused reading highlights Isaiah 53 (especially Isaiah 53:6), Psalm 30 (especially Psalm 30:5), John 14 (especially John 14:27), and 1 Corinthians 15 (especially 1 Corinthians 15:22). Many lessons also connect related prophecies like Isaiah 25:8 to New Testament fulfillment.

How do I teach the Easter Come Follow Me lesson to children?

Keep it simple and concrete: focus on the word “all” in Isaiah 53:6 and 1 Corinthians 15:22, and ask children who Jesus helps (everyone). Then read John 14:27 and invite them to name a worry so you can pray together for the Savior’s peace.

What does Isaiah 53:6 mean in simple terms?

Isaiah 53:6 teaches that everyone has wandered from God in some way, but the Lord placed our sins and burdens on Jesus Christ. It’s a promise that the Savior’s sacrifice was not just for a few people—it was for all of us.

What is the meaning of "in Christ shall all be made alive" (1 Corinthians 15:22)?

In 1 Corinthians 15:22, Paul teaches that because of Adam, death came to all people, but because of Jesus Christ, resurrection will come to all people. It points to the universal gift of being raised from the dead through the Savior’s Resurrection.