Sermon 17th April 2022 – Easter Sunday
Text John 20:1-18 – Passing the message on.
No one expected it - not one
single person. What we celebrate here today was totally outside of the realm of
belief of every single disciple even though Jesus had told them over and over
again that it would happen, that he would be killed and that on the third day
he would be raised from the dead. It is now the 3rd day and not one of his
disciples sat in waiting.
Not one of them believed it would happen. Not one of them took Jesus at
his word.
On the day after the Sabbath – on that first Easter Sunday morning -
while it was still dark Mary Magdalene and some other woman went to the tomb of
Jesus with special spices to finish the process of preparing his body for
burial – not to see if Jesus’ promise came true but to confirm his death by
preparing it for burial. Mary went out
first - by herself - ahead of the others. She went ahead of them - not because
she was expecting a surprise, but because she wanted to be alone for a while in
the graveyard. She went out alone because her dearest friend
had been tortured and killed and because she wanted to grieve awhile before
undergoing the ordeal of doing what needed to be done. She needed closure. She
wanted to treat Jesus’ broken body with the dignity that the dead should
receive. When she got to the tomb, something was different than it had been
when she had been late Friday afternoon.
The huge boulder in front of the
tomb had been rolled away. The entrance to the place where Jesus' body had been
laid was now open for all to see. Mary is stunned by this, she is shocked. But
she doesn’t for a moment believe that it was true after all - that Jesus said
that he would rise from the dead and at
last believes it; No, she is shocked and grieving because now there can be no
closure for her because she believes that someone has stolen Jesus’ body.
So Mary returns and she tells Simon Peter and John what she believes has
happened. "They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we don't know
where they have put him!" she tells them. And so they return to the tomb
with her and they look in the empty tomb and then they go away - back to their
own homes because they have no idea what’s going on.. Things
don’t add up. Why would someone steal Jesus’ body but And why are the strips of linen laying there
and the burial cloth for his head, folded neatly Peter and John return home - still in mourning
but Mary is again alone by the tomb - and she is weeping. The body of the one
she loved is gone. She cannot even do the little that she had
come to do. She stands there weeping and finally gathers her courage and she looks into the tomb. And
when she does she sees two angels dressed in white seated on the ledge of the tomb where the
body of Jesus was supposed to be.
But Mary still doesn’t get it – she doesn’t believe that Jesus has been
raised from the dead. When they ask her why she is crying - she says to them:
because "someone has taken the body of my Lord and I don't know where they
have put it!" Mary turns around, and she sees Jesus standing there and she
supposes he is the gardener. Mary doesn't expect to see Jesus walking about -
fully alive - and so she doesn't see
him. She doesn't see Jesus and even when he talks to her she doesn’t recognise
his voice. "Woman - why are you weeping?
Who are you looking
for?" Still thinking he is the gardener she asks him
if he has moved the body. "Tell me," she says, "where you
have laid him, and I will take him away."
But then something different happens. She doesn’t recognise his
appearance. She doesn’t recognise his voice. But Jesus calls her by name, "Mary"
- and then - suddenly - her eyes are opened - her heart opens - and she
realizes that Jesus is alive - and standing in front of her. And she grabs hold of him and embraces him -
and clings to him but Jesus tells her to let him go – Go and tell the others what you have seen -
tell them that I have risen just as I said I would. And she does as Jesus has
asked but still they do not believe her
It is easy to sit here with 2000 years of hindsight and listen in
disbelief. How did they not realise that Jesus rose from the dead as he
promised. How did Peter and the other disciple miss the option that Jesus has
risen. How did Mary not recognise Jesus appearance or voice. It’s easy to
criticise But are we just like Mary, Peter and the other disciples in difficult
times
- the times of trial
- the times of loss
- the time of mourning,
Like Mary it can be hard to see Jesus and ask “where is God” even though
God is right there with us. It can be very hard to believe in what Jesus has
said about being raised on the third day when the reality of death, suffering,
covid are staring directly at us. But today - Easter Sunday the tomb is empty, And
while we can list innumerable reasons to weep like Mary there are even more
great reasons to rejoice. Jesus was crucified, he died, and he was laid in the
tomb, but that tomb could not hold him. Christ has risen. The grave could not
hold Jesus and he has promised that neither can it hold us.
Notice the tense – he WAS dead – He IS risen. Death is in the past – new
life is NOW. Death is not the end of the story of Jesus. Nor is it the end of
our stories. The signs of God's love are all about us in the midst of our
world's troubles and turmoil. Just as Jesus revealed himself by calling Mary’s
name, the voice of the one who called Mary by name is here to speak to you and
call your name. He first did that in your Baptism and continues to do that as
he invites you to receive his risen body in Holy Communion. It is not over. If
Christ was not raised - the church would never have come into existence.
Would the disciples have gone on in the face of the opposition including
death to proclaim that God raised Jesus from the dead on the third day if it
never happened? They would never have passed on to us their testimony because
they would have had nothing to testify As
Paul says - If for this life only we have hoped in Christ, we are of all people
most to be pitied.
But in fact Christ has been raised from the dead, the first fruits of
those who have died.
And now Jesus needs us, like Mary to go and tell others so future
generations can hear the Good News. People often say the church is one
generation away from extinction. While I don’t believe God would allow that what
it is saying is that the church needs us to pass on to others what has been
passed on to us – the Good News of Jesus resurrection from the dead. We thank
God for Mary - and for Peter and for all the other disciples who have passed on
the message of Jesus’ resurrection even if they did not believe at first. Jesus
rising from the grave means that there is hope for all of us when we weep; hope
for us even when we find it hard to believe like Mary and Peter that Jesus will
call our names; hope for us that when we or someone we love faces the
gruesomeness of death and feels despair that we have the assurance of rising
from the grave when Jesus calls us home.. We thank God today for the living
Christ Jesus - God's anointed one - the one who was raised up on the third day
and who - for me - and for you - has broken the power of sin and death to give
us hope..
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