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We now reach the summit. With the reading of the Gospel lesson, we have reached the dramatic height of Easter Sunday morning. Here we are, gathered in the beauty of this transformed sanctuary in our Easter finery; flowers surround us, and the glad voices of our children fill our ears and our souls too. Easter is the culmination of the Christian year. Today we embrace the majesty and the mystery of our faith. This is the day which God has made--we rejoice and are glad in it! It's a great day to be alive--to be in vivo--in life!
That is why we are here this morning--to celebrate love, that great beautifier of life. It's not the love which is popularly symbolized by the Cupid, the chubby angel in diapers, mischievously shooting arrows into human hearts, but rather that Love which has moved in us through suffering and sorrow, in tenderness and turmoil. It is the love which we have seen in the Word made flesh--a love not blinded, but visionary; not innocent, but always new; love not without pain, but the love which, when crushed to earth, rises again.
We are here this morning to rejoice in the eternal Easter message: that we may kill love, but we cannot keep it dead and buried. Yet what do we find in the Gospel lesson?
More questions than answers, and certainly a loss of Love, if not the absence of Jesus himself. We hear early morning secrets, cries and whispers. We read of terrified, terrorized women running away from an empty tomb! Worse yet, they are so afraid, they are not telling anyone about the empty bier they have just seen! Astonishment, fear, and trembling--rather than resurrection, recognition, and rescue--characterize this first Easter story. Mark tells it plainly without much dressing up.
On that first Easter, at first light, with the first thin streaks of color in the sky, Mary Magdalene and Mary, the mother of James and Salome, came to the tomb expecting to anoint Jesus' body with their spices. It was not customary to bury the bodies of common criminals; usually they were left to the vultures and wild dogs. But a member of the Sanhedrin, Joseph of Arimathea, at odds with the conclusions of the Council, had saved Jesus' body from this indignity. With Pilate's stated permission, he had buried Jesus in a tomb; the tomb was then closed by a great circular stone which, like a cartwheel, ran a groove across the opening.
Arriving at the tomb, the women are startled to see the stone rolled away and a youth sitting on the right side, dressed in a white robe. They are shocked when he speaks to them, "Do not be amazed. You seek Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. Jesus has risen and is not here; see the place where they laid the body. But go, tell the disciples and Peter that Jesus goes before you to Galilee."
In this first Gospel narrative, no one sees Jesus; there are no tearful recognition or reunion scenes. There are no powerful earthquakes, no trembling guards--and no answers.
My heart goes out to this company of women, who on Good Friday had watched it all from a distance, in agony of mind and spirit. Now is their first chance to anoint the body of their friend, and they are pushed out again into the darkness of fear and trembling. No wonder they fled the tomb and withheld the story from others!
Try to imagine this moment--standing in the dark and empty cave in which the body of Jesus had been placed only days before. Try to imagine the emptiness in the hearts of the women as they stood there in that empty tomb. It was a moment when everything in their lives came to a screeching halt.
Of the four Gospel resurrection stories, Mark is the only one who dares to leave us in such a state of apprehension and suspense. As the women flee the tomb, we are left to wonder: How did anyone find out about Jesus' resurrection if they were so dumbfounded and filled with fear?
I like this Easter story precisely because it is real and without pretense. There is no dressing it up to make it pretty and palatable. In the presence of death and the mystery surrounding it, the women register disbelief, shock, and fear. This story has believability; we can see ourselves in it.
Let this be noted: Our acknowledged ignorance can unite us, while acknowledged possession of the truth can divide and even kill us. As the women discovered on the first Easter, only seekers of the truth can go forth to create a community for everyone, while those who want to possess The Truth seem to have a bottomless enmity for those who do not possess the truth as they perceive it.
Like the women who fled the tomb, we cannot prove the resurrection, nor should we even try; but we can believe in it and underwrite it with our lives. The truth contained in the resurrection is the truth about our own lives--Christ is a living presence, not an inspiring memory.
Too many Christians fail to look for the living Christ now. They don't want to see Christ in vivo--in life; they would much rather keep him in vitro--under glass--embalmed in creeds, images, dogmas, and rituals that would place limitations on who and how Christ continues to be alive in the world.
The Heaven's Gate story from several years ago is a tragic example of those who want to capture the truth of the next world without living in this one. The out-of-whack desire of Marshall Applewhite and his followers to escape the deep reality of our bodies, with all our bodily joys and sorrows, our trembling fears and shaky sensibilities--theirs was less a desire for new life than an avoidance of the one we are given. For all its New Age terminology, UFOs, Internet savvy, and monastic clothing, this group was still trying to manage their own death and resurrection, rather than trusting in the living Christ who goes before us into the world.
The Markan account of the resurrection leaves the resolution of the narrative up to us. The truth of the resurrection is placed in our lives. Will we flee or follow? Whether or not we actually see Jesus again depends on whether or not we renew our commitment to seek the risen Christ in the world, in life today. Mark allows us to embrace what we can't possibly comprehend--Jesus goes before us, into the world, summoning us to the way of the cross, not as tragedy, but as unending challenge in this life we are living now.
Where can we look for the Risen Christ today? The young man at the grave declared that he goes before us into Galilee. What and where is Galilee? It is the sphere of those who are risen themselves. Galilee is all the world, and we must seek not to possess the world but to lift it into new life, through active faith and deeds of holy love.
I will look for the Risen Christ in those who do not follow where the path leads, but rather go where there is no trail as yet. I see the Risen Christ in those who care for the suffering and the dying; I see the risen one in the eyes of people living with cancer, AIDS, terminal illness. I see Christ in mothers and fathers who love and care firmly and responsibly for their children. I see the Risen Christ in those who care for the hungry, the homeless, runaways, those in prison.
I see the Risen Christ where people give attention to another's existence; not where they try to get attention, but where they freely give it. For giving our attention to one another's humanity is our common Christian calling. "For freedom Christ has set us free." Our gift, then, is in giving, rather than taking.
I hear the voice of the Risen Christ calling us to be brothers and sisters not only to each other, but certainly to all the world. I can hear Christ calling us to God's broad vision of one whole and healed world. In God's name, Christ calls us to oppose hatred of another, which so easily can become a patriotic virtue; remember the Middle East, Albania, and Bosnia. Today, relations are so strained in Jerusalem that Palestinian Christians cannot enter the city on Easter, for fear of each other. It is a sad irony that this city which lays claim to three great religions cannot embrace their followers inside the city gates. Let us vow to work toward the day of healing.
If we can live to see the Berlin Wall come down and Nelson Mandela elected President of a free South Africa, then we shall not be detoured in our quest for peace in the Middle East.
We remember today that the historical Jesus was more than a prophet, but not less than one. And the Risen Christ is more than each one of us, but certainly nothing less than all of us together. We will find the Risen Christ among us this morning and whenever we love one another and pledge to work passionately, unrelentingly toward the day "the cast will be lifted from all nations, the tears will be wiped away from all faces, and the forces of death are swallowed up forever."
On this Easter morning, for those of us who would choose, with happy relish, to live with hope in a still suffering but beautiful world, let us vow that Christ shall be risen in us. Let us vow to work toward the day when division, fear, and hatred shall be ended; for it is Christ who crossed every existing boundary to end all divisions between us and with God, even the boundary between death and life.
We receive these powerful words: "Do not be amazed. Jesus is risen. Go, tell the others that Jesus goes before you into Galilee . . . and even into the world, and there you will see Christ, as he told you."
We don't have the luxury of staying at the tomb. We are called to go forth from this moment and this place to be Easter people in a world which too often hangs onto Good Friday.
If you ever wonder what it means to be a Christian, a follower of the Risen Christ, remember this day and this moment. Because this is it. We don't get to stay at the tomb, and we don't even get to hold on, trembling and astonished, to emotions like fear. We don't even get to be amazed. We go out into all the world and tell others what we know and have experienced. Christ is the conqueror of death. We who follow are called, not to embalm him in the tomb or preserve his memory, but to live as ones who know he goes before us.
Let us pray on this day that the Risen Christ appear in the heart of each of us, so that we may give rapt attention to each other, become brothers and sisters to all the world, and help Christ's church, the Body of Christ on this earth, draw a large, living circle of love which includes everyone.
The powers of death have done their worst,
But Christ their legions has dispersed;
Let shouts of holy joy outburst . . .
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