
Episode 128: The Three-Day Plan – God’s promise of the third day
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The Three-Day Plan – God’s promise of the third day, A message of hope.
Today, we are going to take you through a practical and spiritual example of what a Three-Day Plan looks like. This will hopefully explain and help you through life and spiritual issues as they come up.
“Three days” stands out as one of the most recurring and significant time periods, appearing across both the Old and New Testaments. It is a period that often signals suspense, anticipation, transformation, and, ultimately, divine intervention. The use of three days is never arbitrary; rather, it is laden with theological and narrative meaning, guiding readers to see God’s hand at work in moments of waiting, trial, and deliverance.
The number three in biblical literature often denotes completeness, wholeness, or something significant coming to fruition. When paired with the concept of “days,” it creates a sense of a defined, purposeful period which leads to an important resolution or revelation
When we are faced with what seems like insurmountable difficulties, we go through a three day plan, whether we realize it or not.
Many say that we are currently living in the third day. What does that mean? Stay tuned and we will see.
On the first day we experience many emotions. We may experience darkness, Silence, and waiting.
First of all, we are not referring to a 24-hour day. We can be stuck in the first or second day if we don’t approach it correctly, We must never lose the hope that we find within.
As we stand at the edge of our struggles, the first response is often one of shock—of darkness, hopelessness and uncertainty settling in. We feel the weight of our burdens, the silence of unanswered prayers, and the ache of waiting with no clear end in sight. Like those who mourned in Jerusalem, we may experience confusion, sorrow, and a sense of finality as dreams seem locked away behind a stone too heavy to move.
Yet, within this silence and waiting, something sacred is unfolding. The pause is not merely emptiness; it is a space in which faith is refined, and hope is quietly rekindled. The three-day pattern—of despair giving way to waiting and waiting opening to transformation—reminds us that what feels like an ending may, in fact, be the threshold of newness.
The first day can be a 24-hour day or it could go on for some time, depending on the trial or struggle we are going through, we can shorten the time despair and anguish by going within and tapping into the power in us to break the yoke of that which has us thinking negatively. This is when we have to look at the big picture and say to ourselves, this too shall pass.
The third day is when life bursts forth from apparent defeat, when hope emerges from despair. This is most clearly seen in the resurrection of Jesus, but echoes of it are heard in every story where God brings his people through darkness into light.
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