April 8, 2007--Easter Sunday
Lectionary Texts:
Psalm 118:1-2, 14-24;
Isaiah 65:17-25;
Acts 10:34-43;
1 Corinthians 15:19-26;
John 20:1-18 or Luke 24:1-12
Sermon Text: Luke 24:1-12
Look, Remember and Go!
Note: The other lectionary passages for Easter are also
quite powerful and I would suggest all of them be read at some time during
the worship service. At the very least, the John 20 passage would be an
appropriate Call to Worship, inviting all people to hear the tenderness
with which Jesus calls out to the grieving Mary, and the power of the
words of the angels: “He is not here, He is risen!”
Phillip Yancey’s book, The Jesus I Never Knew, includes
an old joke about a sad man standing in front a church greeting another
on Easter Sunday. When asked by his friend why he is so sullen on Easter
Sunday, he says: “Didn’t you hear? They found the body.”
Yancey remarks that even though this joke is in bad taste, it has a very
clear point: If they had found the body, not only would Easter not be
Easter, but also Christianity would not really be Christianity. However,
no body was found! And the Easter readings done every year always include
the account from the angels in Luke that reminds us, “He is not
here; he has risen!” (24:6). For Christianity, this is the “shot
heard ‘round the world” that transforms all of Christ’s
followers and announces the defeat of our greatest enemy, death. A former
professor of mine once reminded me that the biggest fear of Old Testament
believers was not sin. Sin, as troublesome as it was, had remedies in
the Old Testament. The biggest fear, even among those who were righteous,
was death. Death, even for the righteous in the Old Testament, was veiled
in mystery. Death was described in terms of the Hebrew word, sheol, which
evoked spooky and mysterious images of a place outside of meaningful fellowship
with God and others (see David’s words about sheol in Psalm 88:5:
“I am set apart with the dead, like the slain who lie in sheol,
whom you remember no more, who are cut off from your care.”).
Easter Sunday, the Sunday of Resurrection, reminds us that
death does not cut us off from the care of the Lord. Death, once our biggest
foe, is now defeated, thanks to the resurrection of the Son of God!
A mentor of mine once said that if I preach about anything
and don’t include a “so what?” portion, then I haven’t
really preached. Thankfully, the resurrection of Jesus as experienced
in this text today gives us more than a theoretical “so what”
that announces Jesus’ mastery over death for us. The “so what”
of this great day is found in the words of the angels to Mary and her
companions – a message that is meant to be delivered to us on this
very day and every day as we walk with Jesus. You see, the “Jesus
walk” does not end with Easter, even though Lent is an important
and necessary part of the journey. The “Jesus walk” really
begins at Easter, and here’s how:
Look. . .
The angels begin with an invitation to observe the obvious,
“He is not here!” We walk in newness of life because the One
who is life demonstrated at the Resurrection the defeat of death! Our
Christian walk really begins with an observation that God has made the
first move. Jesus is risen and our faith in His resurrection is the first
part of our eye opening. At first we, like the women in this story (v.
5) look in the wrong place. In their case, they were looking in the place
where dead people reside for a Lord who had risen! In our case, we look
in all kinds of places where there is nothing but death, seeking in desperation
for some sign of life. Thankfully, God’s grace calls out to us:
“Don’t look there! There is only death! Look here. Look to
me! I am Life!” God’s grace is calling. Are you looking in
the right place?
Remember . . .
For many of us, the journey to faith in Christ comes after
many seeds have been planted. Even those seeds are acts of grace that
God has allowed. They are means by which God calls to us in our desperate
and lost state. If you’re like me, when I really made a decision
to follow Christ, it was at a time that was a culmination of many subsequent
moments when I had said no. At the moment of my surrender, though, I was
not only responding to the “moment,” but I was also reflecting
on the times that God had used to get me to that point.
Christian artist Larnelle Harris recorded a song years ago
that says, “So, You [referring to God] were in it after all.”
The song says, “All of the times I spent crying when something inside
of me was dying; I didn’t know that you heard me each time I called.”
God was already at work--remember? His ongoing grace brings us to a place
of real encounter.
“Remember,” the angels are saying, “all
the words that Jesus spoke were bringing you this point; to this ‘aha’
moment.” Remember . . . .
Go. . .
Thankfully the “aha” moment came. These women
became the first evangelists, the first missionaries, the first preachers
of the Resurrection. Verse 8 reminds us, “Then they remembered his
words.” And after remembering and allowing this holy moment to arrive,
they did what Jesus always seemed to be saying after the Resurrection
when He appeared in person to His disciples: “Go!” In fact,
Jesus’ resurrection still evokes this call today.
These new evangelists were not as successful as they would
have liked, since the disciples did not believe them at first. How could
they? It seemed to ridiculous, so impossible. So they checked it out and
they did their own looking and remembering. The power of the truth of
the resurrection is that not only does it permit further inspection, it
invites it! Later on, when Jesus appeared to “doubting Thomas”
(who, as we see, was not the only doubter), Jesus invites further inspection:
“See for yourself. Touch my wounds.” Look, remember, reflect.
Today, on this Easter Sunday, I do not offer a long discourse on the many
“proofs” of Resurrection about which many books have been
written. That does not seem to be what this text is asking me (or any
of us) to do today. Instead, I will offer just one: they looked, they
remembered Jesus’ words, and the result is they went! Boy, did they!
Nothing from then on could stop these once skeptical disciples from proclaiming
the resurrection of Jesus to everyone they met. Not even death could stop
it. Death never could stop resurrection, anyway. There are many of us
who are still going and telling everyone about this resurrected Christ,
especially today. Come, experience God’s call for yourself. Feel
free to look around in the direction you feel God tugging you. Reflect
upon the words of Jesus in God’s Word. Allow the Holy Spirit to
demonstrate to you through these ancient words that Jesus is just as alive
and present today as He was then. And when you do, you will encounter
life. This life invites and empowers us to go in His name. He is risen
indeed! Amen.
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