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Savannah Guthrie Opens Up About ‘Utter Abandonment’ in Easter Address
Today show co-anchor Savannah Guthrie shared a deeply personal Easter message in a YouTube video alongside members of a Manhattan church Sunday, opening up about feelings of “utter abandonment” and “the torment of uncertainty” as the investigation into her mother Nancy’s disappearance enters its third month with no suspect identified.
Savannah Guthrie, who returns to the anchor desk Monday after a two-month absence, described this Easter as “bittersweet” — saying there are moments when “life itself seems far harder than death.”
The Context
Nancy Guthrie, 84, has been missing since February, when she vanished from her Tucson, Arizona, home. Despite doorbell camera footage capturing an alleged perpetrator, authorities have been unable to identify a suspect or determine her whereabouts. Alleged ransom notes have been sent to multiple news outlets.
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos said at a news conference in February that there were clues at the crime scene indicating that Nancy Guthrie “did not leave on her own.” He also said Guthrie needs daily medication, and it could be fatal if she did not take it every 24 hours.
What To Know
Savannah Guthrie was featured in the video as part of a digital Easter gathering organized by Good Shepherd New York, a Manhattan church.
Meanwhile, new reporting raises serious questions about how investigators have handled the search for Nancy. A source with knowledge of the case told NewsNation there is currently no direct suspect and “no name on the table,” alleging that early responders treated Nancy’s disappearance as a search-and-rescue matter rather than a potential criminal case — a framing that, according to the source, “stayed with the investigation.”
The source also raised concerns about the experience level of detectives initially assigned to the case and whether the scene was properly secured. Adding to the turmoil, every deputy in the Pima County Sheriff’s Office union voted in favor of a no-confidence motion against Sheriff Nanos.

Savannah’s Easter Message: ‘The Torment of Uncertainty’
In her video remarks, Guthrie wrestled aloud with whether her specific grief — the anguish of not knowing — was one even Jesus Christ could understand.
“I have questioned whether Jesus really ever experienced this particular wound that I feel,” she said. “This grievous and uniquely cruel injury of not knowing, of uncertainty and confusion, and answers withheld.”
She found her answer in the three days Christ spent in the grave — a period she said is rarely discussed.
“We cut to the happy ending and the joy of Sunday morning,” Guthrie said. “But after Jesus died, after he breathed his last, what did he actually know? Did he think his time in the grave would be a day or two, or a thousand years? Does his agony seem indefinite to him — that torment of uncertainty, the way indefinite pain can feel eternal? Perhaps he did know this feeling after all.”
She described the present as a kind of collective suspended state, saying: “As humans living on this earth now, we are all suspended in that moment of uncertainty — feeling unsure, lost, abandoned, disappointed, enraged, forgotten.”
“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.
Despite the weight of the message, she closed on an affirmation.
“Perhaps this is too dark a message to share on Easter morning,” Guthrie acknowledged. “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. I still believe. And so I say with conviction, Happy Easter.”
Savannah Guthrie’s remarks start at the 48:43 mark:
What Happens Next
Savannah Guthrie returns to the Today show anchor desk Monday. The investigation into Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance continues into its third month with no named suspect.
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