Easter Sunday main service 2026
Early
in the morning, while Jesus’ disciples were still living with grief and
disbelief, two women walked toward a tomb. They carried no expectations other than to
prepare Jesus’ body for proper burial. They
came in the face of death not expecting anything that they were about to
experience. Mary Magdalene and “the
other Mary” went simply to see the tomb. Nothing more. But God had other plans. It was still
dark in the early Dawn. Dawn is a time of transition —the night has not yet
gone, day has not yet arrived. It’s the perfect setting for resurrection,
because the clarity of day has not yet arrived. Most of us don’t meet God in
moments of clarity.
We
often meet God in uncertainty—when we’re not sure what comes next, when grief
still clings to us, when hope feels out of sight. The women go to the tomb in the dark, and that
is where God meets them. It is like Moses meeting God on top of Mt Sinai where
he enters the dark cloud where God was. Suddenly the earth shakes and
extraordinary things happen. An angel
descends. The stone rolls back. The guards collapse in fear. Notice what the
angel does not do: He does not free Jesus from the tomb. He rolls the stone
away so the women can see that Jesus is already gone. Resurrection is not God
resuscitating to return to the old way of life. Resurrection is God doing
something entirely new as John declares in his Revelation chapter 21 – God will
wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or
crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away. He who was seated
on the throne said, “I am making everything new!”
.The
angel’s message is simple and yet life changing: “He is not here; for he has
been raised.” This is the heart of the gospel. Death does not get the last
word. Violence does not get the last word. Fear does not get the last word. God
does.
And
that is so important today as we live with so much fear an uncertainty. Another
war – uncertainty over petrol supplies – uncertainty over interest rates – my
superannuation has lost a fortune.
The
women run from the tomb “with fear and great joy.” What a combination – fear and joy. It’s what
King David declared in Psalm 23: Even though I walk through the valley of the
shadow of death I will not fear because you are with me. That is what we call
faith. Joy in the midst of fear. Faith
does not always give us the clear picture of the future but it tends to our
fear. So it is often a mixture of fear and hope, confusion and courage. The women don’t wait until they feel brave. They run with what they have. The Good News.
And
then—before they reach the disciples, before they have time to process
anything—Jesus meets them. He doesn’t appear in the temple. He doesn’t appear
in the palace. He appears on the road, to two women running with fear and
faith.
And
that’s where Jesus meets us – when we need him. His first word is not a lecture
or a command. It is simply: Greetings.” A
word that brings warmth. I am here. I am alive. And I am with you. They fall at
his feet and worship.
And
then he gives them a mission: “Do not be afraid; go and tell my brothers.” And
so the story ends with mission:
“Go
and tell.” And that is still the message today: Go and tell. Jesus Resurrection
is not a private message. It is a public declaration.
We
are sent to proclaim hope in a world that still believes death is the final
voice. We are sent to embody hope in places that feel hopeless in a world that
still lives in darkness. We are sent to announce that Christ is risen—not as a
3 word slogan which is how politics tends to go, but as a reality that reshapes
everything. The resurrection invites us to stand with the first disciples — to
feel the earth shake beneath our feet, to hear the angel’s impossible news, to
run with fear and joy,
and
to meet the risen Christ on the road. And when he says, “Do not be afraid,” he
is not scolding us. He is freeing us.
The
world has changed because of Jesus’ resurrection. Death has been defeated. Christ
is alive. And now we are Jesus’ witnesses of the resurrection. Go and tell –
Christ has risen – he has risen indeed.
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