John 20:1-18
Two or three times a week I receive e-mails
suggesting I look at some phenomenal event recorded on the internet. There is no such thing as a private moment
anymore. Even professional basketball players
are texting comments to their “face book” during halftime. I guess I should comb my hair just in case
someone is recording this sermon.
Imagine if the Easter event had happened
in the 21st century. In this
age of mass media, CNN would have camped out in the cemetery and Anderson
Cooper would have entered the tomb at first light. On Monday Jesus would have begun the morning
on the “Today Show” and ended the day singing ditties with Jimmy Fallon. The news of the resurrection would have been
no secret whatsoever. Two months after
Easter, CBS would have aired a made for TV movie titled, “Alive”. The pre-airing commercials would tease us by
guaranteeing it was based on a real story.
But that is not the way it
happened. There are eye witness
accounts, each contradicting the other.
Mark’s original version was so sparse that someone later went back and
added an additional ending. Luke highlighted
events along the road to Emmaus as the center piece of his story. In Matthew the disciples don’t see the risen
Lord until they return to Galilee .
Then there is the account in John.
It begins with Mary Magdalene going to the tomb by herself. If this were a made for TV movie you can just
imagine the creepy soundtrack being played as alone, Mary walked in the
semi-darkness toward the tomb. There
would be shrieking sounds as Mary found the stone rolled away. We would have all feared for her life as she looked
inside the tomb. When she found it empty,
she would have turned, stumbled, then ran back to Jerusalem to tell the
disciples what she had discovered. In
the next scene we would witness the detectives Peter and John gathering clues concerning
the mysterious disappearance of the body.
Completely confused the disciples would return home, leaving Mary alone,
weeping.
I have no idea why Mary returns to the
tomb. Obviously Jesus wasn’t there. Maybe she just wanted to be close to the
place where she had seen him last. Maybe
in her grief, she also wanted to die.
For whatever reason, she returns to the tomb and goes inside. Imagine
her surprise when she discovers two angels sitting where the body had
been. The angels ask a ridiculous
question, “Woman, why are you weeping?”
For many of us, Easter is the most
glorious moment in the history of humankind.
Yet imagine being Mary. She found
herself right in the midst of God’s revelation but none of the pieces seem to
fit. The tomb was empty, the grave
clothes were left behind, the disciples had run off to who knows where and two
angels calmly sat in the tomb telling her not to weep over the death of the
most important person in her life.
Marie Berger wrote, “Once in a while
one becomes profoundly and spiritually bewildered. The neat answers crumble in a sea of
confusion as we are led astray into a pathless wilderness that has no obvious
beginning or end.” Many of us have sat
with spouse at the moment of their loved one’s death. One minute the person they love more than
anyone else is here, and then they are gone.
The survivor looks sorrowfully into our eyes and asks, “Why?” We whisper the first thing that comes to our
mind, “The person you love is not dead; they are living eternally with
God.”
An Affirmation? Yes.
Words of comfort? Not always.
While the disciples stumbled over each
other trying to figure out which one of them was the greatest, it was the women
who were faithful. When Jesus was tired,
the women washed his feet. When the Last
Supper was prepared, do you really thing the men cooked the meal? Even at the cross, where Jesus was deserted
by the disciples, the woman gathered together and supported each other. When
the final breath was taken, they claimed his body. These women listened to Jesus. They remembered his stories. And now Mary Madeline, in the midst of her
grief, came to make those final burial preparations. For all the promises of life, Mary could only
see death. For all the promises of
tomorrow, Mary could only see yesterday.
Even the angels served to further confuse her bruised heart.
“Where have you taken him? I need to
finish the work I started. I need to say
the final prayers. I need to shed a
tear. I need to hold his hand and kiss
his face one last time.” Mary stared blindly at the angels. She was overwhelmed
by grief and overcome by her personal
sea of confusion. Then she hears that
voice she had heard a thousand times before, “Mary”.
There was no one around to record this
scene. The disciples had gone home. The soldiers had fled. No cameras, no fancy cell phones, no CNN, no
one, except Mary. She turned and looked
into that face she adored and answered, “Teacher.”
Karl Barth, the great Swiss Reformed pastor
wrote, “Faith is a decision to believe in God’s mysterious breaking forth.
Faith is the belief that God is not dead, not passive, nor inactive but that
God works through history for the redemption of humankind. Faith is enacted by announcing, ‘I have seen
the Lord’.”
There is an African-American spiritual
that captures Mary’s moment of recognition.
The song begins, “Hush, hush, somebody’s calling my name. Hush…… hush, somebody’s calling my name. Hush………
hush, somebody’s calling my name. Oh my
Lord, O my Lord, what shall I do?”
The Christian faith began when Mary
found Peter, and John, and the rest of the disciples and testified to the
resurrection. She didn’t bring pictures
of the body. She didn’t share a
recording of the voice. She simply declared,
“I have seen him.”
At my last congregation we had a
children’s program which met every other Wednesday. On the Wednesday before Easter we turned the
church grounds into Jerusalem. We began
with a parade in the fellowship hall. We
went outside and pretended to be Jesus praying on the hill for the sins of Jerusalem . We climbed the steps to an “Upper Room” where
the kids told me all about the significance of the bread and the body. We headed back outside to the garden. We talked about the disciples falling
asleep. We traveled to the court of
Pilate, and finally made our way into the sanctuary. On the communion table was a cross wrapped in
black. The kids were filled with
questions. “How did Jesus die? Why did he forgive everyone? Why he was thirsty?”
Then I sent a couple of girls to the
choir room and told them to pretend it was the tomb where Jesus was buried. They
quickly came back and announced the tomb was empty. I asked them what had happened and one girl
said, “Jesus rose from the dead.” I
asked her how she knew. She said, “Somebody told me.”
Yes, Easter is the day of resurrection,
but Easter is not about worrying with the details. I suspect Easter is best
understood when we share the story of God calling our name.
Hush…..Hush…… Someone is calling my
name.
O my Lord, O my Lord, what shall I do?
To God be the Glory. Amen.
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