By Agnes Ansah, GNA
Accra, April 4, GNA – Holy Saturday, often regarded as a day of silence, is in fact a moment of profound spiritual victory, the Lady Reverend Grace Tera-Korsinah, Pastor of God’s Haven Ministries, has said.
In an interview with the Ghana News Agency on Saturday, she explained that the day signifies the unseen victories God is actively accomplishing even in seasons of waiting.
Rev. Tera-Korsinah noted that while Jesus Christ’s body lay in the tomb, He descended into the depths of the earth, confronting the powers of darkness and breaking their hold over humanity.
Holy Saturday, she said, stood as a powerful testimony that Christ’s mission reached every realm of existence.
Rev. Tera-Korsinah described the day as one of hope and assurance, urging Christians and Ghanaians to look beyond the events of Christ’s death, burial, and resurrection.
“These events are not the ultimate goal but the pathway to a greater purpose – the redemption and restoration of humanity to its true identity,” she said.
“This restoration reclaims the sonship, authority, and dominion originally given to humanity at creation.”
Quoting scripture from Galatians 4:4–7, she explained that through Christ, believers were no longer slaves but sons and heirs of God, empowered by the Spirit to call Him “Abba, Father.”
Rev. Tera-Korsinah stressed that Easter is more than a commemoration of forgiveness; “it represents the full restoration of humanity to its rightful place as children of God.”
Through the resurrection of Christ, she said humanity’s union with God was restored, along with the authority lost in Eden.
She called on Christians to embrace their identity as heirs of God and to live confidently in the power of divine sonship.
The Pastor further urged Ghanaians to rise above despair and division, noting that true transformation could not be achieved through human policies and laws alone but through the restoration offered by Christ.
She added that Christ’s resurrection provided the foundation for peace, prosperity, and good health, not only for individuals but for the nation as a whole.
Rev. Tera-Korsinah prayed for both the Church and the nation, asking that people receive wisdom and revelation to know God more deeply and to have enlightened hearts.
She encouraged Ghanaians to recognise the power made available through Christ’s resurrection and to walk boldly in that authority to build a society grounded in peace, justice, and love.
Holy Saturday marks the period when Jesus Christ lay in the tomb after His crucifixion on Good Friday.
It represents a moment of stillness, grief, and uncertainty for His followers, teaching believers the importance of patience and trust in God during difficult or unclear times.
GNA
Edited by Agnes Boye-Doe