B060416
EASTER
DAY: APRIL 16, 2006
WOW!
Mark
16:1-8, (Sermon 2: “Fact or
Fantasy?”)
or John 20:1-18 (Sermon 1: “No Handle.”)
1
Corinthians 15:1-11
or Acts 10:34-43
Isaiah
25:6-9
or Acts 10: 25-39
Psalm
118:1-2, 14-24
ENTRY INTO CELEBRATION
Christ is risen!
He is risen indeed!
Stones roll away, tombs are open, new
possibilities are born, women sing for joy
and men race to share the good news.
Things that were old are becoming young again, and all things
are returning to their pristine
beauty.
The Easter joy of the living Christ Jesus
be with you all.
And also with you.
OR
Do
not be dismayed,
you
seek Jesus of Nazareth?
He
is not in a tomb,
for
he has risen.
Look, this is our God!
We have waited for him;
let us rejoice in his salvation.
The
Lord God will swallow up death forever,
and
will wipe away tears from all faces.
God is my strength and my song
and has become my salvation.
PRAYER OF JOY
Wonderful
are you, God of Easter!
Wonderful are your complex purposes and
wonderful are your saving deeds.
Today
we celebrate your irrepressible grace in Christ Jesus:
we rejoice with Mary Magdalene in the
garden,
we run with Peter and John to find the tomb
empty,
we walk beside two disciples on a dusty
road to Emmaus,
and we recognise the living Lord at the
breaking of the bread.
By
the power that raised up your Holy Son,
please put indestructible joy into our
thoughts and words,
our songs and prayers, and into our creeds
and deeds
.
Let
everything we think and do be praise.
Through Christ Jesus our risen Lord.
Amen!
THERE IS GRACE TO COVER ALL
OUR SIN
Let
us immerse ourselves in the saving grace of Christ Jesus. Let us pray.
God
our most holy and remarkable Friend, we are here again before you,
ready
to confess our sins because the living Christ has gone on ahead of us,
and
who waits for us here in this trysting place.
We
can dare to be honest about our participation in the evil of the world because
he has overcome the worst that the world can do, and has committed unto us the
ministry of the forgiveness of sins in his name.
We confess to you and each
other that our Easter faith is pitted with flaws and doubts,
our hope is corrupted by the
wants and lusts of the community around us,
and our love for others has
been contaminated by selfishness and so remains brittle.
We have tried to do our best
as the disciples of the living Christ,
and we have at times done
better than we thought likely;
for which we are most
thankful.
Yet also we have failed,
sometimes solely because of our own wilful fault,
and sometimes because the
evil within us has joined forces with the evil around us
and brought us down heavily.
We remain spiritual battlers
who constantly need a Saviour who will never weary or forsake us in life or in
death.
We profess Christ as that
Saviour, and praise and thank you for the resurgent power of his Easter truth
and grace.
Amen!
FORGIVENESS
Friends
of the living God, Easter is about new life bursting free from the most deadly
restrictions. Receive the remarkable gift of new beginnings which the
forgiveness of the living Christ makes freely available. Let nothing detain you
in guilt, nothing restrain you from accepting this bonus of new life. It is
here in abundance!
Thanks be to God!
The
peace of the living Christ be with you all.
And also with you.
PRAYER FOR CHILDREN
Dear
God, you are wonderful!
You
brought Jesus back from the dead
and
put smiles our faces forever!
We
don’t know how you did it,
but
wow! You really did!
Thanks
a million!
Dear
God, you are wonderful!
Amen!
PSALM 118: 1-2, 14-24
Thank
the Lord, the greatest,
whose sure-love lasts forever!
Let
the congregation shout it:
God’s sure love lasts forever!
God
is my life and song,
my freedom and my healing.
Listen
to the victory songs
in the camps of the liberated.
For
the complete text, see ‘More
Australian Psalms’ page 153
Ó Open Book Publishers.. email: service@openbook. com.a
GREAT DIVIDE
There
are many shrewd minds
and
many rank fools
who spend their days
among those who camp
on the wrong side of Easter.
There
are many good souls
and
many corrupt
who become bogged down
among those who camp
on the wrong side of Easter
There
are many leaders
and
many followers
who live in the dark
among those who camp
on the wrong side of Easter.
There
are many godfearers
and
many godless
who die in the cold
among those who camp
on the wrong side of Easter.
There
are a few great saints
and
many of small faith
who have found boundless life
among those who camp
on the right side of Easter.
Ó
B D Prewer 2002
COLLECT
God
of life and joy, through the rising of your true Son you have brought life and
immortality to light, and turned the
valley of death into an avenue of hope for all who trust you.
Increase
in us, we pray, that vital faith which commits us to live this earthly life to
the fullest, loving one another even as
Christ has loved us,
and at our journey’s end praising you for
all that is past,
and trusting you for all that is to come.
Through
this same Jesus Christ,
who
with you and the Holy Spirit,
live
and love immortally.
Amen!
SERMON 1: NO HANDLE
Mary of Magdala went to the
disciples with her news:
“I have seen the Lord!:” she
said.” John 20: 18
Mary
had no doubt.
Neither
did any of the others, once they had seen the risen Christ.
But
how could they explain this to outsiders?
A
big ask.
There
is no way a mere mortal can get a easy handle on what happened at Easter. What
took place is outside all our normal ways of understanding things. It
transcends all attempts, ancient and modern, to define it. There was no
pre-existing language, nor subsequent
religious or philosophical concepts adequate for that Easter happening.
Those
people of two thousand years ago were in exactly as the same position as we are
today. They had no way of getting a handle on the resurrection. Nor can we, not
even with our advanced scientific method and technological know-how. There is
no adequate category to explain what took place. Handles just do not exist within
human experience.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOME
BELIEFS IN A “HEREAFTER”
For
Jewish people of that era, there had not been a strong tradition of belief in life
after death. There were a couple of
exceptions: Elijah was thought to be taken up alive by God’s chariots of fire to a physical
heaven above the earth. Moses, long
after his demise, was granted a similar
status. Because there was no known tomb to be found for the remains of Moses,
the belief took hold that Moses like Elijah had been gathered up, physically
alive, into the heavens.
By
the time of Jesus, there were some Jews (a minority which seems to have
included most of the sect called the Pharisees) who believed in a physical resurrection of the body at the very
end of this present world. That Pharisee named Saul of Tarsus, who against all
the odds became the Christian apostle Paul, may have started out with that kind
of belief. On judgment day the graves would open up and the righteous would
come back to life.
But
most of the inhabitants of the land of Israel, did not possess such a
hope. Although some may have been
influenced by Greek culture, which was common in the Galilean region.
Among
the Greeks were those who, following the philosopher Plato, argued for the
existence of a separate soul. The soul at death would be freed from the base
stuff of earth to inhabit a pure spiritual world. This was called the
immortality of the soul.
Others
folk developed ritualist mystery religions where the soul (if it were initiated
into the right secrets) could journey safely through the treacherous layers of
the heavens above and finally attain the eternal spiritual sphere.
Of
course, down In Egypt, with its panoply of gods and goddesses, there was a
belief that if the body was correctly preserved, and the right rituals
performed, a person would be able to journey beyond the sunset into the
heavenly realm. But there is scant evidence that Egyptian belief, or its
practice of mummification, meant anything to the people of the holy land.
In
summary, there was no current belief for those first witnesses to fall back on
as an explanation.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
VARIATIONS
ON A COMMON THEME
The
truth is, there could not be any simple handle to enable them get a grip.
This
unique event blew apart all common expectations, it transcended all known
categories of thought either held by the educated elite or the ordinary people
of the land. What they encountered with
the risen Christ was neither immortality of the soul, nor was it a bodily
regeneration at the end of time.
They
had to search for new ways of speaking about the risen Christ who appeared to
them on that first Easter morning and thereafter. It should not surprise us that that each of the four Gospel writers tell the event in different
ways. One cannot easily harmonise the peripheral details in Matthew, Mark, Luke
and John.
Just
what one should expect? I certainly
would expect those variations.
I
would be most suspicious if different people told the story in exactly the same
words, without divergences. Memory is
not a video tape, nor is it like still pictures stored on a CD.. We remember
the things that make an impact on us, and on those people who were in some ways
important (negatively or positively) to us in that situation.
I
have strong memories of special events in parishes where I have served. So do those people who were around me in
those congregations. They also remember some events clearly. Yet if you
interviewed a dozen of us separately, you would find the same core stories but
differing versions of them. For example, in one’s person’s memory certain
people would feature. In another memory some different people would get
mentioned. Some of the names might overlap. Yet at the core of each we would
find they and I were witnesses to the same events.
That
our Gospel writers do vary; and that St Paul has a slightly different version
in his letter to the Church in Corinth, is what we would expect. Isn’t it? Of course there are variations. But they are
variations on a common theme. Yet there is a striking similarity in those early
written records. They were grappling to recount the same mind-stretching
meeting with Jesus their Lord. Those people were witnesses to a happening which
had not precursor. An event for which there was no existing theory, no
category, not even adequate metaphors with which to express it.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------RADICALLY
NEW.
The
fact is that on Easter Days God did something radically new..
It
was the same Jesus, yet not the same Jesus. He was no mere immortal spirit (as
some Greeks might believe)), nor was he an earth-trapped ghost destined to
spook people over the centuries. Those
first believers, from Mary of Magdala, to Peter and John, to Thomas, to Paul,
all encountered a real person with some radically new kind of body which defied
explanations based on their normal experience in time and space.
This
Easter event was unheard of. Utterly fresh. God’s new age was here.
In
one sense, it meant that the end of the old world had indeed come, and the new
world had risen up with Christ Jesus.. The new age of the resurrection of the
dead had been inaugurated. It was on!
However this was not a resuscitation of Jesus’ old
body, but something quite unique; something OTHER. This otherness evoked awe.
This
OTHERNESS is displayed within the written records-
Mary
weeps by the tomb, yet strangely did not recognise her beloved Master standing
beside her until he spoke her name
“Mary!” Then she clung to his feet.
At
evening the disciples were hiding behind locked doors. Those same doors stayed
locked, yet suddenly Jesus appeared in
their midst.
That
same evening two other disciples were travelling out of the city, heading the
village of Emmaus. They were joined by
a person whom they did not recognise, who spoke with them, interpreting the Scriptures and setting their hearts
alight. But it was only at supper as
he broke the bread that they recognised him. And then he was gone.
There
is not acceptable language to explain this new type of bodily resurrection..
All they can do it to tell the story their way, and keep on telling it.
Paul
often uses the similar words about Jesus being raised. He extends this
resurrection language with talk of
“appearances” of Jesus. Jesus “appears” here and there.
God
had done a new thing. A radical new age has arrived. And there are many witnesses to these appearances.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A
REMARKABLE TESTIMONY
I
still find it a marvel that we actually have a letter written only about twenty
years after the Easter event. A letter
in which Paul’s writes:
Christ died for our sins, in line with the Scriptures, and he
was buried. He was raised on the third
day, also in line with the Scriptures. He appeared to Cephas (Peter) and
then to the twelve. Then he appeared to over five hundred believers at the
one time, most of whom are still alive.
Though some have fallen asleep. Then he
appeared to [his brother] James, then to all the apostles. Last of all,
like a freak born long after the
birth date, he appeared also to me.
This
is remarkable stuff. Not only did the inner circle of disciples witness this
new form of resurrection life, their risen Lord Jesus, but over 500 others saw
him at the one time! “Ask them
yourself!” Paul was writing. “Ask them! They will tell you. Most of them are
still around.”
Not
that it was easy for Paul to express. Like the Gospels which were written a few
years later, Paul finds it hard to employ adequate language. There was in truth
no convenient handle. Paul strains to do the theme justice. Just as we do
today.
We
struggle. So we should. How can any of us
explain something that is supra-natural, something OTHER, in words drawn from the natural world in
which we live? We can’t. But we hang in
there and try.
The
church has usually stayed with the “resurrection” word. This way of speaking
stresses that Jesus was not a ghost, not a presence to be invoked at a seance,
not a vision conjured by the minds of the disciples, not a lofty spirit taking
his place among the ranks of the immortals. The risen Jesus was a real person,
approachable,, hearable, seeable, touchable.
Easter
says: Get ready to stretch your minds. Prepare to stretch your understanding to
the limits and then still some more! For on this day God has done a thing
unseen before; a new era has begun. Jesus is the first ripe fruit from the
harvest of the dead.
You
cannot fit a handle to the resurrection.
Yet
is happened. That is the only feasible staring point. It is the only reasonable
explanation of the sudden emergence of that vibrant community which was the
dynamic young church in action.
Those
people around Jesus were no more gullible than sophisticated intellectuals of
the twenty first century. (They were less gullible than of our contemporaries
who believe in magic crystals, glass
pyramids, and all the nonsense of the astrologers!) Those first witnesses to
the risen Jesus were tough realists They had to be, living as they did under
constant occupation by the ruthless Roman military. Life was precarious. Death
could be sudden and brutal. Crosses were for real. The dead were buried and
stayed there. They were certain Jesus had been butchered, entombed, would stay there like every other human
being. He would never be seen again on
this earth.
Then
came the third day. Inexplicably their Master, Christ Jesus, was alive again!
This awesome new thing had entered the human story. Inexplicable yet true!
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FAULTY
MEMORIES
When
I was younger I used to have some sympathy for those critics who asserted there
was a long period between that Easter day and those first written records that
refer to it. Time enough for witnesses
to have died. Time enough for memories to maybe become distorted, for vain
imaginings or superstitions to take over.
These
days I realise how pretentious (contemporary hubris!) are those who caste
aspersions the integrity or the sanity of those first witnesses to the
resurrection.
The
period of time from the first Easter to the first existing record (in Paul’s
letter to the Thessalonians) is only about 17 years. The time to Paul’s
extensive references to the resurrection in 1 Corinthians 15, is only about 24
years. That is such a brief time!
I
can even remember ordinary things that happened twenty four years ago without
much distortion. As for special events, I carry their memory vividly. So please don’t try to tell me that over a
short period of about 25 years people would get the resurrection event all
wrong, and quickly forget what actually happened.
Jesus
had risen from the dead. That they knew it with unshakeable certainty. There
was no ready handle, yet the wonder and mystery of it was real. They just had
to tell others. No matter how foolish it might make them seem. They gave it a
try. This good news was
irrepressible. They wanted the whole
world to know.
And
I still do.
Christ
is risen!
He is risen indeed!
SERMON 2: FACT OR FANTASY?
And
the young man sitting in the tomb said to the women: “Do not be amazed; you seek Jesus who was crucified. He has risen, he
is not here; see the place where he lay. But go and tell his disciples and
Peter that he is going before you into Galilee; there you shall see him as he
told you”. And they went out and fled from the tomb; for trembling and
astonishment had come upon them; and they said nothing to anyone, for they were
afraid.
Fact
or Fantasy?
There
are some people who would quickly answer “Fantasy of course!” They do so
because they have made a priori decision, maybe years ago, that nobody
survives death. This is like an article of faith to them: “Nobody outlives
death. It is the total end of existence. Finish. Lights out forever.”
Such
people live by this negative faith; for it is certainly a kind of faith, as
unprovable as any other faith.
Therefore,
a priori, if nobody survives death, Jesus could not have survived it in any
form. By their own “fundamentalist” secular creed, Jesus could not have
appeared to his disciples. Fantasy. Christians are deluded. Easter is a
religious fraud.
-----DEATH
IS FOR
REAL---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Now
this attitude, or negative faith, is quite understandable. Death is for real.
The dead look very dead. And as far and normal observation of the facts goes,
they remain that way. Dead. Dead. Very dead.
We
don’t meet people who have been dead in the Mall. We don’t find them sitting
again in their favourite chair reading the newspaper. We don’t meet them on the
golf course or at church. They are gone. From one point of view it is
reasonable to assume the possibility that at death the total person ceases to
be.
But
is it reasonable to turn that possibility into a dogmatic fact? It is
reasonable to jump to the conclusion that because of our assumption, Jesus
could not have transcended death? To do that is to act as if those first Christians
were pathetic simpletons, credulous fools.
That
is not fair. To treat those first believers as nitwits is to take up a position
of blind arrogance. What makes us think that we citizens of the twenty first
century are smarter, or braver, or more truthful than those of the first
century? Arrogance! We are not the first well educated generation; we have not
discovered reason and logic; we are not the first to notice that the dead stay
where they are buried.
The
disciples drew the same conclusion as we might today. Death was real. And they
saw a lot more of dead people on public display than we do. Those people had
eyes and ears, and brains with which to reason. They did not meet the dead in
their city squares, or find them sitting in a favourite chair, or worshipping
at the temple. They knew the dead were dead. When Jesus was killed he looked
gone forever. Those who entombed him knew they were dealing with rigor mortis.
They did not expect to hear his voice; he was silenced forever.
Yet
something happened. Something quite un-reasonable yet true.
------THE
LIMP END TO MARK’S
GOSPEL----------------------------------------------------------
Now
that takes me to the Gospel reading for today. Mark’s account of that first
Easter is at first glance a meagre and disappointing story. It does not finish
with joyful tears but with confusion and fears.
Three
women, Mary Magdalene, Mary mother of James, and Salome, went to the tomb at
about dawn to place perfumes on the body. They found no body. But there was a young
man sitting there who told them Jesus had risen. You might think that would
delight them. But no, it confused and frightened them. Compared with John’s
moving account, which is also in the lectionary for today, Mark’s story ends
“not with a bang but a whimper.”
And they [the three women] went out and fled from the tomb; for
trembling and astonishment had come
upon them; and they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid.
At
this point I need to outline the complication concerning the ending to Mark’s
Gospel. Most scholars agree that the verses that come after verse 8 of chapter
16 are later additions. They do not appear in most of the earliest manuscripts.
Either the original ending was lost, or Mark intended it to end with a whimper.
Later scribes could not tolerate such a weak ending, so verses 9-11 were added
and then verses 12-20.
If
we stay with Mark at verse 8, there is no story of Mary Magdalene meeting Jesus
near the tomb, there is no exciting women running to tell the other disciples
their good news, there is no Peter and John running to the tomb to see for
themselves, there is no story of the walk to Emmaus and the breaking of bread,
and no story of Jesus greeting his friends behind locked doors. Mark’s account
is brief and inconclusive. Just three women suffering shock.
For
my part, I am well content if Mark decided to end it at verse 8, with the women
confused and keeping quiet about their weird experience at the empty tomb. That
seems to be nearer to what I might expect to happen. That would make it similar
to Luke’s story where we are told that when the women do try telling the male
disciples, but they are met with disbelief:
“these words seemed to them an
idle tale”.
------THIS
RINGS
TRUE------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I
put it to you that such confusion and disbelief is good. It rings true. It
makes an immediate connection with the world as we know it. Faced with a young
man saying that Jesus has risen, the women are confused and the disciples at
first think the story nonsense. Fair enough!
The
story of Jesus rising from the dead in a transformed state is a certainly hard
yarn to swallow. Right? Isn’t that how
we would be in a similar situation? Put yourself in their shoes. Would you
readily believe such a far fetched tale told to you at dawn by a young man
sitting inside a tomb?
I
consider it may be true that Mark deliberately ended his Gospel at this point.
With confusion and disbelief. Why?
By
the time he was writing his Gospel, somewhere about thirty years later, there
were vibrant Christian communities established in dozens of cities across the
Mediterranean world. Even in the imperial city of Rome, under the very nose of
Caesar who considered himself a god and who demanded absolute allegiance, there
were men and women prepared to give their own lives for their belief in a Jesus
who was crucified yet risen.
How
could such faith be? How could it possibly happen? Mark leaves us with a
dispirited band of previous followers of Jesus, and with two Marys and Salome
who find the story unlikely. And they
went out and fled from the tomb; for trembling and astonishment had come upon
them; and they said nothing to anyone, for they were afraid What turned things around?
-----EVANGELICAL
TEASING?-------------------------------------------------------------------------
Mark’s
Gospel is particularly severe on the men who were the 12 disciples. He stresses
their slowness to understand what was really happening with Jesus. They were
dull-witted, disbelieving, unlikely candidates for Christ’s A team. What
changed things? How could there be, thirty years later, dozens of Christian
communities all over the world. What turned it around. Big events demand a big cause; what was the
big event?
Maybe
Mark is deliberately indulging in some evangelical teasing; making us face the
possibility that Christ is gloriously alive. How else do you explain, he is
asking, the discrepancy between the crushed disciples on Good Friday and
Saturday and the disciples after Easter Day and the lively churches 30 years
later? What happened to take things beyond three confused and frightened women?
Unless.....unless.....unless
what the young man in the tomb had said was true. Unless Jesus had somehow
transcended death and was very much alive. Unless Jesus did go before them and
met them again in Galilee. Otherwise, how was it that a story that ends with a
whimper explodes with a mighty roar of love across the whole known world?
There
is only one reasonable explanation: the unlikely has happened, Christ has risen
indeed! “Do not be amazed; you seek Jesus
who was crucified. He has risen, he is not here; see the place where he lay.
But go and tell his disciples and Peter that he is going before you into
Galilee; there you shall see him as he told you”
Before
long many of those first believers themselves had to face violent deaths. They
did so without fear. What had taken the fear of death right out of the
equation? Unless it be true that they knew a risen Lord who says “:because I
live you shall live also,” their martyrdom is inexplicable.
Mark
ended his Gospel with a whimper of confusion and disbelief. In sharp contrast,
everywhere small congregations of enthusiastic Christians were springing up;
people of exuberant faith and indomitable courage. That sharp contrast left
enquirers with the unavoidable question: What happened? What event took place
of such magnitude as would logically explain the transformation from whimper to
exuberance?
Disbelief is where most of us start. Mark’s
story connects with us right there. And dares us to find out for ourselves
whether our doubts are credible.
-----CHRISTIANITY
BEGINS WITH EASTER--------------------------------------------------------
Today,
here and around the world, the greeting
“Christ is risen! Christ is risen indeed!” is being spoken in a thousand
different languages. This is not a fantasy for fuzzy-headed, meek-hearted wimps
who cannot face the hard reality of death. Rather it is a hard fact of history
and of contemporary experience, a living truth that takes us from confusion and
disbelief to light and faith and holy joy.
I
conclude with some words from the eminent Roman Catholic theologian and at
times rebellious soul, Hans Kung:
“Christianity begins with Easter. Without Easter there would be
no Gospel, not a single narrative,
not one letter in the New Testament. Without Easter Christendom would have no belief in Christ, no proclamation of
Christ. Not any church, nor any divine worship, nor any mission.”
And
then again from Mark:
“Do not be amazed; you seek Jesus who was crucified. He has
risen, he is not here; see the place
where he lay. But go and tell his disciples and Peter that he is going before
you into Galilee; there you shall see
him as he told you”
EASTER THANKSGIVING
The joy of the living Lord be with you!
And
also with you!
Lift up your hearts.
We
lift them up to God.
Let us give thanks to our loving God.
It is
our joy to give thanks and praise.
Most
generous God, our one sure Friend on earth and in heaven,
in
every day and every place our thanks and praise rise to you.
Always
planet earth has been your chosen and much-nurtured project,
and
in every age you have chosen people to declare your glory.
Especially
on this holy day we give exultant thanks for Christ Jesus,
truly
your holy Son, truly our brother and saviour.
Blessed
is the day on which he was born,
blessed
the deeds and words by which he is known,
blessed
forever the cross on which he died.
Blessed
is the dawn on which he arose,
blessed
his meeting with Mary by the tomb,
blessed
his greeting to the disciples behind locked doors.
Blessed
is the Spirit of grace, mercy and peace
which
he breathed into them for the healing
of the world,
and
his promise that to the end of time he would be with them.
Therefore
with angels and archangels..............
PRAYERS OF THE PEOPLE
God
our Lord Jesus Christ, bruised for our iniquities, risen for our salvation,
please receive our prayers for all your world. Especially we pray this Eastertide
for those members of your human family who are dying, and for all who are
grieving their passing.
Wherever
this day death arrives with the roar of bombs or the rattle of machine guns,
come risen Christ Jesus;
Come quickly living Friend with your Easter light and salvation.
Wherever
today death arrives with the malnutrition and disease of refugee camps, come
risen Christ Jesus;
Come quickly living Friend, with your Easter light and
salvation.
Wherever
today death arrives with the assassins knife or the bullet of the hit man, come
risen Christ Jesus;
Come quickly living Friend with your light and salvation.
Wherever
today death arrives with the swallowing of illegal drugs or the insertion of an
injection needle, come risen Christ Jesus;
Come quickly living Friend with your light and salvation.
Wherever
death arrives today with the squeal of car tyres or the shouts of an alcoholic
brawl, come risen Christ Jesus;
Come quickly living Friend with your Easter light and salvation.
Wherever
death arrives today despite the best of medical care, and watched over by loved
ones, come risen Christ Jesus;
Come quickly living Friend with your Easter light and salvation.
Whenever
death arrives today as a most welcome friend to those whose bodies are wasted
and who long to go home, come risen Christ Jesus;
Come quickly living Friend with your Easter light and salvation.
Wherever
death has left in its wake desolate loved ones, desperate orphans, or angry
people looking for revenge, come risen Christ Jesus;
Come quickly living Friend with your Easter light and salvation.
God
of Easter, please let it be written indelibly on our mind and soul, that
nothing can defeat your love, nothing sever us from the grace of our risen
Christ. Let is be so written that we awoke each morning with faith and hope
ingrained, and with love ready flow through every deed we do, to the glory of
your wonderful name!. Through Christ Jesus our Lord.
Amen!
GO WITH EASTER CONFIDENCE
Death,
which some have called “the final enemy,” is real.
Easter
is not a time of denial, but a time of declaring a reality which is far greater
than death. This reality is God’s indomitable
love.
Christ
is risen!
He is risen indeed!
Nothing
can hold Jesus down. With his assistance nothing can overcome you while you
journey with him to the end of time and far beyond.
Christ
is risen!
He is risen indeed!
The deathless joy of Christ Jesus will be
uplift you,
the everlasting love of God will embrace
you,
the inner warmth of the Spirit will hearten
you,
today and ever more.
Today and evermore. Amen!