Triumph Church

Triumph Church Triumph Church is a growing and thriving Christian Church meeting in Clane, Co. Kildare.

05/04/2026

Early on Sunday morning, several women went to Jesus’ tomb to anoint His body.

Instead, they found the stone rolled away.

An angel announced the most important message in history:

“He isn’t here! He is risen from the dead!”

The resurrection confirmed everything Jesus had claimed about Himself. Death could not hold Him. The grave could not contain Him.

The resurrection was not only proof of Jesus’ victory. It became the foundation of Christian hope.

Because He lives:
• Sin is defeated
• Death is overcome
• New life is available to all who believe

Later that day Jesus appeared to His disciples, showing them the wounds in His hands and feet. The one who had been crucified now stood alive before them.

The resurrection changes everything!

It means that the story of Jesus does not end with a tomb, it begins with a living Saviour.

Think on this - The resurrection assures believers that life, not death, has the final word. How can you let Christ’s life have the final word in your life today?

04/04/2026

Saturday is the quietest day of Passion Week.

Jesus lies in the tomb. The crowds are gone. The disciples are scattered. What once felt full of hope now feels empty and uncertain.

The religious leaders, still uneasy, secure the tomb.

Matthew 27:66 (NLT)
“So they sealed the tomb and posted guards to protect it.”

From every human perspective, it looks final. The stone is in place. The guards are watching. The story seems over.

But Saturday is not the end.

It is the space between promise and fulfillment.

The disciples couldn’t see it, but God was still at work. The cross had already secured victory. Sin was paid for, redemption was accomplished. What looked like silence was actually preparation.

Saturday teaches us how to trust God in the in-between.

When prayers feel unanswered…
When circumstances seem final…
When God feels silent…

He is still working.

What looks like an ending may actually be the setup for resurrection!

03/04/2026

After a night of trials and accusations, Jesus was sentenced to death by crucifixion.

Roman soldiers mocked Him, placing a crown of thorns on His head. He was led to Golgotha, the “Place of the Skull,” where He was nailed to a wooden cross.

For hours He hung there, bearing unimaginable physical suffering. Yet the deeper reality was spiritual.

On the cross, Jesus carried the weight of humanity’s sin.

At the final moment, He declared:

“It is finished.”

These words were not a cry of defeat but a declaration of completion. The work of redemption had been accomplished.

At that moment the veil of the temple was torn in two, symbolizing that access to God had been opened.

The cross stands at the center of Christian faith. It reveals both the seriousness of sin and the immeasurable depth of God’s love.

Think on this - The cross reminds us that salvation was purchased at the highest possible cost. How do you honour that cost to Jesus with your life?

02/04/2026

Are you looking for a Christian Church to attend this Easter Sunday? Join us 11am at the Westgrove Hotel in Clane Co. Kildare.

02/04/2026

Thursday evening began with the Passover meal Jesus shared with His disciples.

During the meal, Jesus took bread and said:

“This is my body, which is given for you. Do this in remembrance of me.”

Then He took the cup and spoke of the new covenant established through His blood.

In this moment, Jesus revealed the deeper meaning behind what was about to happen. His death would not be an accident or defeat. It would be the fulfillment of God’s plan of redemption.

Later that night, Jesus went to the Garden of Gethsemane to pray.

There, in deep anguish, He prayed:

“Father… not my will, but yours be done.”

This prayer reveals the profound obedience of Christ. Though He knew the suffering that awaited Him, He submitted completely to the will of the Father.

Soon after, Judas arrived with soldiers, and Jesus was arrested.

The path to the cross had begun.

Think in this - True obedience often involves surrendering our will to God’s greater purpose.

Are you looking for a Christian Church to attend this Easter Sunday? You’re welcome to join us at Triumph Church meeting...
01/04/2026

Are you looking for a Christian Church to attend this Easter Sunday? You’re welcome to join us at Triumph Church meeting at the Westgrove Hotel in Clane. We’ll be meeting this Sunday through the courtyard just off the Dunnes entrance in the O’Connell Suite, 11am. Hope to see you there!

01/04/2026

Behind the scenes, a devastating decision was unfolding.

Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve disciples, went to the chief priests and asked:

“How much will you pay me to betray Jesus to you?”

They agreed on thirty pieces of silver.

It is difficult to imagine how someone who walked so closely with Jesus could choose betrayal. Judas had witnessed miracles, heard the teachings of Christ, and lived among the disciples. Yet somewhere along the way, his heart turned away.

Scripture suggests that greed played a role. John’s Gospel tells us Judas often helped himself to the disciples’ money bag.

But the tragedy of Judas’ story is not merely about money. It is about the danger of outward association with Christ without inward surrender.

Judas followed Jesus physically but never truly yielded his heart.

The betrayal reminds us that proximity to spiritual things does not replace genuine devotion to God.

Think on this - Following Jesus requires more than outward participation, it requires a surrendered heart.

31/03/2026

Tuesday of Passion Week was filled with teaching. Jesus spent much of the day in the temple courts, speaking openly to the crowds and confronting the religious leaders.

The Pharisees questioned His authority. The Sadducees attempted to trap Him with theological arguments. Others tried to entangle Him politically.

Yet every challenge only revealed the depth of Jesus’ wisdom.

He spoke in parables exposing hypocrisy. He warned about religious pride. He called people back to wholehearted devotion to God.

One of the most profound teachings of this day came in what is known as the Olivet Discourse, where Jesus spoke about His future return.

“So you, too, must keep watch! For you don’t know what day your Lord is coming.”

These words remind believers that history is moving toward a divine conclusion. The same Jesus who walked the streets of Jerusalem will one day return as King and Judge.

Tuesday of Passion Week reveals that Jesus was not merely a teacher or prophet. His authority extended beyond the present moment to the future of the entire world.

Think on this - Jesus calls His followers not only to believe in Him but to live with watchfulness and faithfulness.

30/03/2026

The day after entering Jerusalem, Jesus returned to the temple. What He found there grieved Him deeply.

Instead of being a place of reverence and prayer, the temple courts had become a marketplace. Merchants were exploiting worshippers who had traveled long distances to offer sacrifices. The sacred had become commercialized.

Jesus overturned the tables of the money changers and drove them out, declaring:

“My Temple will be called a house of prayer, but you have turned it into a den of thieves.”

This was not simply a moment of anger, it was a prophetic act. Jesus was confronting a religious system that had lost its heart for God.

The temple was meant to be a place where people encountered the presence of the Lord. But the leaders had turned worship into profit and devotion into ritual.

Jesus’ actions revealed something deeper: God desires authentic worship, not empty religion.

Today, believers themselves are described as the temple of the Holy Spirit. The cleansing of the temple reminds us that God cares deeply about the condition of our hearts.

True worship flows from a heart devoted to Him.

Think on this as we go into Easter Sunday - God is not looking for performance or ritual. He is looking for hearts that seek Him sincerely. Are you truly seeking Him?

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Clane

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