Savannah Guthrie speaks on faith in Easter message as search for Nancy Guthrie continues in Tucson, Arizona
US TV host Savannah Guthrie delivered an unusually candid Easter message as the search for her missing mother continues ahead of her return to screen.
Easter messages are usually framed around certainty, renewal, reassurance, and resolution. Savannah Guthrie offered something more unsettled.
In a recorded address for her New York church, the US Today show co-anchor reflected not on answers, but on uncertainty, describing the emotional dissonance of holding belief in the absence of clarity, as the search for her missing mother stretches beyond two months.
“We celebrate today the promise of a new life that never ends in death. But standing here today, I have to tell you, there are moments in which that promise seems irretrievably far away. When life itself seems far harder than death,” she said.
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By continuing you agree to our Terms and Privacy Policy.Her remarks were delivered as part of an Easter livestream shared by Good Shepherd New York, coming just days before her expected return to the NBC program and after her mother, Nancy Guthrie, disappeared from her Tucson home, People reported.
“These moments of deep disappointment with God, the feeling of utter abandonment. For most of us, there will come a time in our life when these feelings hold sway,” she said.
The journalist described grappling with the Christian teaching that Jesus experienced the full spectrum of human emotion, questioning whether uncertainty itself could be among the most painful.
The broadcaster said she has “questioned whether Jesus really ever experienced this particular wound that I feel, this grievous and uniquely cruel injury of not knowing, of uncertainty and confusion and answers withheld.”
“In those darkest moments, I have thought bitterly and perhaps irreverently that I have stumbled upon a feeling that Jesus did not know,” Savannah said, explaining that despite Jesus’ suffering, he “knew” what would happen.
“And so I thought he never suffered this excruciating not knowing.”
“Suddenly, I remembered the grave. I remembered three days in the grave,” Savannah said.
“No one talks much about that. We focus mostly on Easter. Of course we do. We cut to the happy ending and the joy of Sunday morning. And yes, we do observe the Friday before the agony of crucifixion. We mourn by candlelight that darkest night. But after Jesus died, after he breathed his last, what did he actually know?”
“On the cross, he cried out, ‘My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?’ That is the anguished cry of someone who does not know the answers,” she continued.
Her mother, Nancy Guthrie, was last seen entering the garage of her Arizona home late on January 31 and was reported missing the following day after failing to attend a scheduled virtual church service.

Authorities have not identified any suspects. Surveillance footage showed a masked individual approaching the property on the night of the disappearance.

The Guthrie family has offered a reward of up to $1 million for information leading to Nancy’s recovery, while the FBI has issued a separate $100,000 reward.
Savannah acknowledged the sombre tone of her Easter reflection but suggested that confronting uncertainty may ultimately deepen the meaning of hope.

“Perhaps this is too dark a message to share on Easter morning, but I have long believed that we miss out on fully celebrating resurrection if we do not acknowledge the feelings of loss, pain, and yes, death,” she said.
“It is the darkness that makes this morning’s light so magnificent, so blindingly beautiful. It is all the brighter because it is so desperately needed.”
“So, I close my eyes this morning and I feel the sunshine,” she continued.
“I see a bright vision of the day when heaven and earth pass away because they are one on earth as it is in heaven. When we celebrate today, this is what we celebrate. And I celebrate too. I still believe. And so I say with conviction: Happy Easter.”
