Christ Is Risen Bass Guitar

Bass Guitar

Add To

Rehearsal Player

Play the song with your instrument loud in the mix

Full Mix
Acoustic
Electric
Bass
Keys
Keyboard
Piano EASY
Vocals
High Harmony
Low Harmony
Melody
Put Capo on Fret:
Capo
Play in these Chord Shapes

Intro

E Esus E Esus
                                                           

Verse 1

E
Let   no one caught in sin remain
A
Ins ide the lie of inward shame
E/G#
We   fix    our eyes upon the cross
A C#m B
And r un to Him who sh owed great l ove

Pre-Chorus

E/G# A B
And b led       f or         us
E/G# A B
Freely  You  b led         f or         us

Chorus

E
Christ is   risen from the dead
E/G#
Trampling   over  death by death
A
Come a wake come awake
C#m B
Come and   rise  up from the   grave
E
Christ is   risen from the dead
E/G#
We are   one   with Him again
A
Come a wake come awake
C#m B
Come and   rise up from the   grave

Turn

E Esus E Esus
                                                           

Verse 2

E
Ben eath the weight of all our sin
A
You bo wed to none but heaven's will
E/G#
No sc heme of hell no scoffer's crown
A C#m B
No b urden great can h old   You d own

Pre-Chorus 2

E/G# A B
In st rength       Y ou       re ign
E/G# A B
Forever  let Your   church       p ro   -   cl aim

Chorus

E
Christ is   risen from the dead
E/G#
Trampling   over  death by death
A
Come a wake come awake
C#m B
Come and   rise  up from the   grave
E
Christ is   risen from the dead
E/G#
We are   one   with Him again
A
Come a wake come awake
C#m B
Come and   rise up from the   grave

Bridge

E/G# A C#m B
Oh         death     where is your   sting
E/G# A C#m B
Oh         hell     where is your   victory
E/G# A C#m B
Oh         church   come   stand in the   light
E/G# A C#m B
The   glory  of   God   has de feated the   night
E/G# A C#m B
Singing   Oh         death     where is your   sting
E/G# A C#m B
Oh         hell     where is your   victory
E/G# A C#m B
Oh         church   come   stand in the   light
E/G# A C#m B
Our   God   is   not   dead  He's a live   He's a live

Chorus (2X)

E
Christ is   risen from the dead
E/G#
Trampling   over  death by death
A
Come a wake come awake
C#m B
Come and   rise  up from the   grave
E
Christ is   risen from the dead
E/G#
We are   one   with Him again
A
Come a wake come awake
C#m B
Come and   rise up from the   grave

Outro

E Esus E Esus
                                                           
E Esus E Esus E
                                                                           

Devotional

Christ Is Risen

Play the devotional:
LISTEN WITH SONG
LISTEN WITHOUT SONG

You make known to me the path of life; in your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore. (Psalm 16:11)

“Preserve me, O God, for in you I take refuge.” So David begins Psalm 16.

Immediately, we see the language of faith. David takes cover in God. He doesn’t merely acknowledge that God exists, but he understands his entire existence in relation to God’s supremacy. That he continues throughout this psalm: “I have no good apart from you” (verse 2); “The Lord is my chosen portion and my cup; you hold my lot” (verse 5); “I have set the Lord always before me” (verse 8). David portrays the life of faith, and it’s this picture that leads us to the fullness of joy in verse 11.

The life of trusting God, as David shows us, makes his heart glad, indeed, his whole being rejoices, and his flesh dwells secure (verse 9). But why does his flesh dwell secure? It’s because God will not abandon his soul to the grave. The Lord won’t let his holy one see corruption. Which is to say: either his death will forever be prevented, or there will be a resurrection.

Jesus Was Raised

The theme of resurrection is important, and it has clear allusions to the Messiah. In fact, the apostles tell us explicitly that this verse is about Jesus (Acts 2:19–36). David is speaking here, but as Peter proclaims in the Book of Acts, “[David] foresaw and spoke about the resurrection of the Christ, that he was not abandoned to Hades, nor did his flesh see corruption” (Acts 2:31).

So Psalm 16 is about Jesus, and that is really good news. If this psalm is about Jesus, then that means it’s about us, too. For just as Christ was raised from the dead, so also will we be raised (1 Corinthians 15:17–20). For the Christian, we have more than the promise of resurrection; we have an actual demonstration. The tomb is empty.

The Path of Life

The theme of resurrection helps us understand what David means in verse 11, “You make known to me the path of life.” The path of life is not mainly about the here and now. The guiding grace of God is for more than this life. As John Calvin writes, “It is to form a very low estimate, indeed, of the grace of God to speak of him as a guide to his people in the path of life only for a very few years in this world.”

There is much in the Bible about how to live life in this world, but this passage isn’t talking about that. The path of life isn’t about balancing your checkbook, or making wise decisions in your relationships, or blessing others with your words (all of which are good things). The path of life goes beyond the nuts and bolts of faith to refer to the whole trajectory of our lives as those who, in Christ, have been reconciled to God.

The path of life means being united to God such that we’ll never be without him.It’s not so much a trail to follow as it is a promise to embrace.

That’s the glorious shift in Psalm 16. It begins with our faith in God and ends with God’s faithfulness to us. He will not abandon us. No, he won’t! He won’t. He makes known to us the path of life — life beyond the grave, life that ushers us into his presence where there is fullness of joy, where at this right hand there are pleasures forevermore.

So We Rejoice

So we dwell secure here. Our whole being rejoices. We are glad. We can go forth today and tomorrow and the next knowing that not even death can separate us from God’s love for us in Christ. We can fix our eyes upon the cross and run to our Savior — our Savior who is risen from the dead, who has trampled death by his own sacrificial death. We can rejoice because Jesus, by his strength, is raised from the dead, and we, by his grace, will be raised with him.

Church, come awake! Let us proclaim: Christ is risen from dead!