The resurrection of Jesus Christ is not an annual event on a liturgical calendar. It is a permanent reality. It confirms who Christ is, defines who the believer is, and grounds the proclamation that began at an empty tomb and has not stopped since.
What the Resurrection Actually Is
Paul doesn't treat the resurrection as a moment to commemorate. He treats it as the foundation on which everything stands or falls. "If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile" (1 Corinthians 15:17). That's not the language of a holiday. That's the language of a hinge. Remove it and nothing holds.
The early church didn't gather once a year to remember the resurrection. They gathered every Lord's Day because He was risen. It wasn't seasonal. It was the air they breathed. The proclamation that drove them into the streets, into the courts, into the catacombs, was not "He rose." It was "He is risen. He reigns. He is Lord."
Present tense. Always.
Worn Every Day
What Scripture says is this: the same power that raised Christ from the dead is at work in everyone who belongs to Him (Ephesians 1:19-20). That is not a once-a-year truth. That is the identity of the believer, every day, in every ordinary space they occupy.
A coffee shop. A gym. A grocery store. A conversation. Wherever the believer goes, the announcement goes with them. Not because they say it out loud every moment, but because they belong to a risen Lord and that belonging is written into who they are.
That's what these designs are built to declare.
The Proclamation Doesn't Stop on Monday
The kerygma was not tied to a calendar. It was tied to a fact: Christ has died. Christ is risen. Christ will come again. That fact does not expire. It does not have an off-season. It simply is, and it demands to be worn like it is.
These designs exist for the believers who already know that. Who don't need a Sunday to remind them. Who carry the resurrection into Monday and every day after it, not as a sentiment, but as a declaration.