Sermon
titles are curious things. Sometimes they are meant to be punchy and grab your
attention. I remember a sermon on Acts 1:5-8 (wait in Jerusalem for the
promised Holy Spirit) – the title was “Don’t just do something. Stand there!”
The opposite of our inclination, since we have been taught from our early days
to get to work rather than stand around.
This
morning’s title is matter of fact, straight out of the conference materials:
“Resurrection Power and Love”. Why would we have so simple a sermon title? Because
the core of our faith is a simple though astonishing truth. Because we
celebrate God’s power and love, manifested in the resurrection of Jesus. That
is our title this morning. That is the reason we worship together (however
separated physically we might be) every Sunday.
In the
darkness and distress of our lives, a light shines out, bringing us hope and
joy. Jesus is Risen! He is Risen Indeed!
Consider
our texts this morning.
Psalm
118
Psalm
118 is well-loved for its first four verses. The affirmation, “His love endures
forever”, rings out to all people everywhere. In the Psalm, it is those who
fear the Lord, the Levites and the Children of Israel, who shout this praise.
Today, it is all of us who say together, “Give thanks to the Lord, for he is
good; his love endures forever.”
In the
first church, however, another verse stood out even more prominently. “The
stone the builders rejected has become the cornerstone; the LORD has done this,
and it is marvelous in our eyes.” This verse was repeated often as evidence
that Jesus was indeed the Messiah (see Mt 21: 42, Mk 12: 10-11, and Lk 20: 17;
also Acts 4: 11, Eph 2: 21, and 1 Peter 2: 4-8). Further, Jesus demonstrated
his messiahship by dying and rising. Jesus saved those in distress by dying and
rising. In his death, Jesus was rejected; in his resurrection he became the
cornerstone of the true temple of God, God’s people!
Matthew
28
In
Matthew 28, we hear the story of that resurrection. Early Sunday morning – just
after the Sabbath – Mary Magdalene and “the other Mary” went to the tomb. [Of
course, that this took place on Sunday morning is the reason that Christians
worship on Sunday, rather than on the Sabbath. The disciples were used to
worshipping on the Sabbath – they were good Jews – but came to worship on the
day after, Sunday, in memory of the defi9ning event of their lives – the resurrection.]
Just to look. Perhaps to grieve. Their grief was shattered by an earthquake and
completely dispelled by an angel bright and strong as lightning. The guards,
who might have otherwise chased the women away, were terrified. We would say,
“They made themselves scarce.” The angel comforted the women and showed them
the empty grave. Then the angel told them to give the word that Jesus had risen
to his disciples. They left to do this, and Jesus met them on the way – leading
to renewed fear and awe. Again, Jesus comforted them and reaffirmed the mandate
to tell his disciples.
The
details of the story are interesting. The women were to tell the disciples to
go to Galilee. Where then did Jesus meet the disciples in the other gospel
accounts? Who is “the other Mary”? In John’s gospel, only Mary Magdalene is
mentioned; Matthew names Mary Magdalene and “the other Mary”; Mark names the other
Mary as the mother of James and adds Salome (who may also have been named
Mary); Luke refers simply to the women – and then later names “Mary Magdalene, Joanna,
Mary the mother of James, and the others with them”. The common thread is that
the women were first at the grave, but there is not clarity on how many. Just
as we would expect from real eyewitness reports.
These
details are worth looking at carefully in some other setting, where we might
try to get at the event of the resurrection as a news story, getting all of the
facts straight. Matthew has a different concern. He wants us to know that the
women were first, that the angel appeared to them – and to the soldiers,
chasing the soldiers away, and giving the women a mandate. Jesus also appeared
first to the women and gave them the same mandate – to tell the disciples he
had risen and that he was ready to meet them.
Most of
all, Matthew wants us to know that Jesus rose from the dead. In the verses
after our text, the soldiers run to the religious leaders and tell them what had
happened. The religious leaders recognize trouble when they see it, and they
immediately devise a plan – spread the word that Jesus’ disciples had raided
the tomb and taken the body of Jesus.
Did
the Resurrection Happen?
Through
the centuries, people have challenged the reality of the resurrection. The
religious leaders in our text spread the word that it never happened. They saw
a threat to their control of society, so they rejected the miracle in favour of
their own interests. It’s a common response. Many people find it hard to
believe that Jesus rose from the dead. In online discussions between atheists
and Christians, the resurrection is a primary point of attack on Christian
faith. Is it likely, the sceptic asks, that one person alone in all history
came back from the dead? We know that dead bodies don’t rise. Why should we
make an exception in this case?
Various
alternatives to a real resurrection have been suggested. Some say that Jesus
swooned on the cross and came to in the tomb. He didn’t really die, so he
didn’t really rise. Taking their cue from the religious leaders of the time,
some say that his disciples stole the body and made up the stories of his
resurrection. Others are not willing to call the disciples simply liars.
Instead, they suggest that the disciples wanted Jesus back so desperately that
they had a mass hallucination. One after another, they thought that they saw
him, and in their collective psychosis they believed he had risen from the
dead.
None of
these alternatives fit the facts. They superimpose the readers’ fears or
desires on the text and fail to hear the gospel writers. The gospel writers
tell of disciples who were so afraid when Jesus was executed that they ran for
their lives and hid. After the resurrection, they came out and spoke boldly in
public about the crucifixion and resurrection. The way that Peter challenged
the religious leaders in Acts 2 is telling: “You killed him, but God raised him
from the dead!” Such courage and directness do not flow naturally from people
who are lying or psychologically troubled; it makes more sense to say that they
had met the risen Lord.
I have
used this story before at Easter, but it is worth hearing again. C.S. Lewis was
once an atheist. In his autobiography, Surprised by Joy, he describes
his journey from faith in atheism to faith in God and in Jesus. He tells how a
fellow atheist unintentionally undermined his belief that the gospel record
could not be trusted. His friend was a history tutor at Oxford, and they were
talking together after supper. Here is how Lewis describes it:
Early in 1926 the hardest boiled of all the atheists I ever knew sat in
my room on the other side of the fire and remarked that the evidence for the
historicity of the Gospels was really surprisingly good. “Rum thing,” he went
on. “All that stuff of Frazer’s about the dying god. Rum thing. It almost looks
as if it had really happened once.” (223f)
The
history tutor recognized the characteristic mark of eyewitness accounts, in
which the overall story is clear, but different witnesses remember different
things from the event – such as the names and number of the women at the tomb.
Lewis
recognized what his friend did not – that if the Gospel accounts were true,
Jesus rose from the dead; and that if Jesus rose from the dead, the Gospel
claims for Jesus are true. Jesus is the Son of God, one with God, the Saviour
of the world. We cannot explore the debates about the resurrection this
morning, but I can tell you what I think. As Lewis’ friend, the atheist
historian, said, the gospel accounts are reliable and accurate history. Or as
Paul put it in 1 Corinthians 15, the resurrection is the fundamental truth of
Christian faith. He adds: “If only for this life we have hope in Christ, we are
of all people most to be pitied.”
A
further consequence follows. If the resurrection really happened, the world is
very different than most people think. Most people think that power is stronger
than love and that when someone attacks us, we fight back. We give lip service
to the power of love, but when you’re in trouble you find out what you really
believe. You may say, “Love conquers all”, but you find out what you really
believe when a crisis strikes.
The
pandemic that is now sweeping the globe is one such crisis. One response among
our American neighbours is that gun sales have spiked. Seeing that spike leads
me to wonder about myself. It is good for each of us to examine ourselves. Do
we rely on God and trust in the power of love? Or do we want some exercise of
political power or other human power to deliver us?
Jesus
shows us a different path. Jesus shows us how great his love is by dying on the
cross as an expression of God’s love for us. Then Jesus shows us how great the
power of sacrificial love is by rising from the grave.
Such
truths cannot be grasped by scholarly debates about history or by sceptics
trying to protect their own turf. We sing them better than we say them. We sing
the great hymns of Easter, which speak these truths better than I can. One such
hymn is sung in Poland. [Look in YouTube for Oto Sa Baranki.] Here is part of the hymn, courtesy of Google Translate
from the Polish original. I have tried to make sense of the words, since a
computer translation can be rather strange!
Here are the young lambs, here are those who call Hallelujah!
They have come to the springs, filled with light, singing
Hallelujah! Hallelujah!
At the festivities of the Lord’s Lamb, in pure white Christmas robes,
After sea waters filled with blood we sing songs of deepest joy.
In his eternal love He heals us with his Blood,
He gives us His pure body, Christ the priest sacrifices himself.
Sprinkled with holy blood on the door, the Angel avenger is rising fearfully,
The separated sea rushes, and He devours his enemies in their currents.
…
O holy sacrifice of heaven; you overcome the power of hell
You break the heavy tethers of death; you earn the wreath of life for us.
Christ has conquered hell, His victory shines over all;
Heaven has opened to us, and the king of darkness he imprisons.
…
You have your own favourite Easter hymns. Every Easter Sunday, we sing, “Low in the grave
he lay.” I remember singing this hymn at a sunrise service a few years ago, as
a man across the aisle suffered a heart attack. While a nurse from our
congregation cared for him in the pew, we sang of victory over death until the
ambulance crew arrived. Death is strong, but Jesus is stronger! Jesus has
conquered death and hell and we have the power of his resurrection flowing in
us, so that we can love God and love each other forever.
Conclusion
We live
in an uncertain time, but the truth is that Jesus is risen!
We don’t
know what our jobs will look like next year or the year after, but the truth is
Jesus is risen!
We know
that loved ones will die and that young people will marry and that some of us
will have new children and grandchildren, and in all of this the truth is that
Jesus is risen!
We don’t
know if we will have too much rain or too little, or how well our crops will
grow, but the truth is Jesus is risen!
We do
not need to live in fear of what will happen today or tomorrow. Just as the
angel said to the women, and just as Jesus said to the women, “Don’t be afraid.
Go tell the people you meet that Jesus is alive and wants to see them too!” Our
Anabaptist forebears used the expression that we are walking in the
resurrection, much like Paul in Romans 6:4, “we walk in newness of life”. That
is our joy, our love, our power this morning – the love and power of the
resurrection.
Steinbach Mennonite Church
Resurrection
Sunday
12
April 2020
Scriptures
Psalm
118:1-2, 14-24
1 Give thanks to the Lord, for he is
good; his love endures forever. 2 Let Israel say: “His love
endures forever.” ….
14 The Lord is my
strength and my defense; he has become my salvation. 15 Shouts
of joy and victory resound in the tents of the righteous: “The Lord’s right hand has done mighty things! 16 The Lord’s right hand is lifted high; the Lord’s right
hand has done mighty things!” 17 I will not die, but live, and
will proclaim what the Lord has done.
18 The Lord has
chastened me severely, but he has not given me over to death. 19 Open
for me the gates of the righteous; I will enter and give thanks to the Lord. 20 This is
the gate of the Lord
through which the righteous may enter.
21 I will give you thanks, for you answered me; you
have become my salvation. 22 The stone
the builders rejected has become the cornerstone; 23 the Lord has done
this, and it is marvelous in our eyes. 24 The
Lord has done it this very day; let us rejoice today and be glad.
Matthew
28:1-10
Jesus
Has Risen
After the Sabbath, at dawn on the first day of the week, Mary
Magdalene and the other Mary went to look at the tomb. 2 There
was a violent earthquake, for an angel of the Lord came down from heaven and,
going to the tomb, rolled back the stone and sat on it. 3 His appearance was like lightning, and his clothes
were white as snow. 4 The guards were
so afraid of him that they shook and became like dead men.
5 The angel said to the women, “Do not be afraid,
for I know that you are looking for Jesus, who was crucified. 6 He is not here; he has risen, just as he said.
Come and see the place where he lay. 7 Then
go quickly and tell his disciples: ‘He has risen from the dead and is going
ahead of you into Galilee. There you will see him.’ Now I have told you.”
8 So the women hurried away from the tomb, afraid
yet filled with joy, and ran to tell his disciples. 9 Suddenly
Jesus met them. “Greetings,” he
said. They came to him, clasped his feet and worshiped him. 10 Then Jesus said to them, “Do
not be afraid. Go and tell my brothers to go to Galilee; there they will see
me.”
Focus
statement
Show us,
one more time, the extent of your power over death. Show us how you can help us
turn our present circumstances, world situations, and our hearts into the
miracles of new life.
Think About It
Have you ever felt as though life has no future in it? What gives you the
courage to continue when everything feels hopeless? How can light shine in the
darkness?
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