On
Easter Sunday, as we gather to celebrate the Resurrection of our Lord and
Savior Jesus Christ, we celebrate the truth that God changes the rules. We celebrate how God changes a story of death
into a story of life, a story of fear into a story of grace, a story of hatred
into a story of love.
A world that was once
bound by the forces of death, fear, and hatred is now free to live with a love
that undoes even the power of death and the grave, with a love that makes the
heart believe in grace, with a love that has the power to move hearts of stone. Alleluia, Alleluia, the Lord is Risen,
Indeed!
It has been said that
original sin is the belief that we are not loved. Sin is rooted in feelings of inadequacy, in
the idea that we must do something to earn love, in the belief that we are not
good enough. But on Easter Sunday God wants
you to believe in something else.
God wants you to believe
that you are a beloved child of God and that nothing can change that truth – a
truth that we will celebrate in just a few minutes when John Bryars Alvey is
baptized and marked with the words – Christ’s own forever.
God wants you to stop
living according to the law of fear, a law that convinces you that you aren’t
good enough, so that you can start living according to the law of mercy, a law
that is meant to tell you that God’s love in Christ makes you and everyone else
good enough, a law that teaches you to live according to grace.
I realize that for some
of you this new story of unconditional love might sound more like a fairy-tale
than eternal truth, some of you have been hurt by a life lived according to
grace. I realize that some of you might
even believe in this eternal truth of God’s love but you just can’t come to
trust this truth in your daily lives.
Like the famous prayer in scripture says, you pray, “Lord, I believe;
help my unbelief."
I hear this same prayer
through the tears of Mary Magdalene this morning. Behind her tears, I hear Mary saying, “I so
wanted Jesus to be true but now he is gone.
I so wanted to believe that my Lord would restore beauty and love to a
world that has been destroyed by hatred and sin and death, but maybe that story
was too good to be true.”
Tiffany Window at St. Paul's by Clara Weaver Parrish |
“Lord, I believe; help my
unbelief.” Underneath your Easter best,
I imagine some of you are weeping with Mary.
You’ve done everything you're supposed to do but life keeps dealing you a
bad hand. Loss and disappointment have
drained your heart and soul from all hope.
As the tears pour down
Mary’s face, I also see the emptying out of her heart and soul. Two angels ask
why she is weeping and she says, “Someone has taken my Lord and I don’t know
where they put him.” Just then Jesus
appears behind her but she didn’t recognize him through her tears and again she
is asked, “Why are you weeping?”
Again, Mary asks who she
supposes to be the gardener, “Please tell me where you have laid my Lord.” Jesus says to her, “Mary!” Immediately, Mary can see past her tears and
says, “Rabbouni!” Mary has seen the
Lord. The story is true – “I have called
you by name; you are mine.” It is true –
“Jesus will wipe away every tear from our eyes.”
Jesus tells Mary to go at
once and tell the others what she has seen.
So, Mary goes and tells the disciples, “I have seen the Lord.” And with that, the truth “I have seen the
Lord” has echoed from generation to generation.
These five words continue to restore hope to lives that are drowned with
tears of sin and sadness.
Our life and witness to
Jesus Christ is informed by these five words – I have seen the Lord. Beginning
with Mary, to Peter, to John, and on down the line, Christians have proclaimed,
I have seen with my own two eyes that
love really does win. We proclaim, I
have seen how love lifts the sick to life.
I have seen how love transforms communities. I have seen how love brings peace in the
midst of chaos. I have seen how love
turns anger and bitterness into mercy and compassion. I have seen how the commitment to love others
unconditional covers a multitude of sins.
I have seen the Lord means that I can trust love every time – no
matter what happens along the way because love can never be defeated. And because Easter allows us to trust love we
are free to trust grace.
We are free to trust the
truth that God will make whole anything and everything that is broken by human
sin and death. We can’t stop worrying
about how we can ever make things right and put our trust in the way of love,
in the way of Jesus who makes all things right.
Love is what puts us back
together again. Love has the power to
restore ourselves, our families, our churches, our communities and even the
world. Love is what makes us hope
again. Love does what the law will never
do, love heals the world from the darkness of sin.
But love is not a magic
trick. Love is not a software that can
be download. Love is something we grow
into through a life time of grace which inevitably includes a lifetime of
failure, a lifetime of starting over, of being born again.
We grow in love by
practicing our faith. We grow in love by
following the perfecter of our faith, the One who is risen from the dead. We can trust the way of love even when it
causes us grief and pain because Jesus, the One who loves perfectly, lives
beyond grief and pain.
Ultimately, we grow in
love by finding our lives hid within the life of Christ, by giving up on our
own ideas of greatness and finding greatness in the One who came not to be
served but to serve. God’s love changes
the rules on the true meaning of greatness.
I received a call from
Margie Burk the other day about a homeless man she found sleeping outside of
Wal-Mart. She said he looked beaten up
by life and wanted to know how she could help.
There are no homeless shelters in Selma so the only thing should could
do was buy him a dinner plate and tell him about the Bosco Center food
kitchen.
In addition to noticing
this homeless man and giving him food, Margie introduced herself and asked him
what his name was. The man told her his
name – John. Margie also noticed his
eyes. She said he had the bluest eyes
she had ever seen. Upon reflection, one
of her friends made the comment, “it could have been Jesus!”
This man sleeping outside
of Wal-Mart went from “the homeless man” to “John” to “Jesus.” How did that happen? How did this man go from low-life to human to
God? Love made this happen. God’s love changes the rules.
God’s love notices the
people the world declares the most unlovable.
God’s love notices the people who have lost all hope. And the good news of the risen Lord tells us
that God’s love changes the trajectory of the story. In the end, God’s love
turns a story of despair into a story of hope.
I know that tears will,
again, blind us to the truth that love wins after the Easter glow begins to
fade. You may find yourself saying one
day, “I thought the story was true, but I must be mistaken.” But the truth of the resurrection tells us
that love will not be held back.
The power of love can and
will resurrect any story that seems to be at a dead end. The risen Lord Jesus gives us reason enough
to keep hoping, to keep showing up at the empty tomb in the hope that love will
once again change the rules regarding the powers of sin and death.
Easter morning signals
the end of Jesus’ earthly ministry but it marks the beginning of our ministry
that declares, “I have seen the Lord!”
Even more, our ministry includes showing forth in our lives what we say
with our mouths. As followers of Jesus, we
give ourselves up to Christ’s service by seeking the least and lost for these
are the greatest in the kingdom of heaven, these the those whom the Church, the
body of Christ has the greatest responsibility for. We do this because we have seen the Lord and
know the joy of resurrection life.
On this Easter morning,
may the power of God’s love change the rules about how you view sin and death –
not as things to fear but as vehicles that you lead you depend on grace. May the power of God’s love that raises even
the dead to life raise you to a life where you see in yourself and in the face
of all others a beloved child of God.
May the power of God’s love open your eyes to how the risen Lord is
loving the whole world back to life again.
Amen.
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