April 20, 2025
John 20.1-18
+ As I say every year, I am very much an Easter person.
Some people are Christmas people.
I am very much an Easter person.
For me, this Day is what it’s all about.
Today everything just seems to come together.
This day is, by far, the most glorious day of our Christian year.
This is the day when it all happens.
This is the high point, the highlight.
This is what it’s all about.
This is what’s all about to be a Christian—to be a follower of
Jesus.
Yes, we followed Jesus through his birth, through his childhood,
through his baptism and ministry.
We followed Jesus as he performed miracles and raised the dead and
preached and proclaimed this seemingly elusive Kingdom of God.
And this past week, we followed him through the exhausting journey
of his last supper, his betrayal, his torture and his death.
And we even followed him as he descended into hell.
But now, all that following of Jesus pays off.
Now—today—is what it’s all about to be a Christian.
Now is the pay-off.
Easter, for me anyway, is like that glorious vision we are given.
Today is what heaven must be like.
Today is what those who have gone before us must experience all
the time.
Today, all that darkness that we traveled through, all that
uncertainty, all that doubt, all that pain and frustration, all that anger and anxiety and
depression, all those things we thought were so powerful are now seen for what
they are—illusions.
Today, we see that the Light that has dawned upon us this glorious
Morning has driven away those shadows and has shown us only this wonderful,
holy moment.
The tomb is empty.
Death is not what we thought it was.
Jesus, the one we have been following, the one we have doubted at
times, the one we have betrayed and turned away from and been embarrassed
by—the one we thought was dead—is alive.
God has raised Jesus to eternal life.
Christ is alive, and because he is, we know that, even though we too
will die, we too will live.
God will raise us like Jesus, as well, to eternal life.
What I love about all of this is that there are no pat answers to
the big questions in this moment.
Everything we once used to gauge a situation to be true has been
thrown out the door.
Instead, what we have is just this one perfect moment.
This one glorious moment, filled with light and life and promise
and hope.
And joy.
Following Jesus means following him through those miserable, hard
dark times.
But it also means following him to this moment.
This is the pay-off.
Yes, we might be tired.
Yes we might be exhausted from the gauntlet of life that we have
been through.
But somehow, in this moment, in this mystery we are celebrating
today, it’s all made right.
And that is what Easter is all about.
It is about renewal.
It is about life not in the midst of death, but life that destroys
death.
I can tell you that I am very grateful that I am follower of
Jesus.
I know.
It’s easy to say that right now in this moment.
But I am even grateful for following Jesus through all that we
have been through liturgically with him these last few days.
Because in so many ways, this is what our own lives are like as
well.
We do have those moments of darkness and we have those moments of
light.
We have those moments in which we feel as though we might actually
be able to touch death.
And we have those moments in which life seems to incredible and
wonderful that we almost can’t believe it.
Following Jesus is very much like going through the valleys and
mountains of our own lives.
Now, in this moment, we are celebrating the victory.
We are celebrating the victory over every bad thing that has
happened.
We are celebrating the victory of light over darkness.
We are celebrating the victory of life over death.
I know that it all almost seems too good to be true.
But it is true.
And we know it’s true because the One we follow has shown the way
for us.
So, let us celebrate today.
Let our shouts of Alleluia be true shouts not only of joy, but of
victory.
Let our hearts ring out as our voices do this day. And let us
continue to follow Jesus into that glorious Easter Light.
Alleluia! Christ is risen!
The Lord is risen indeed. Alleluia!
No comments:
Post a Comment