Sunday, April 17th, 2022 – Easter Sunday
Philip’s Reflection: “The Empty Tomb” (Luke 24: 1-12)
“This is the day that the Lord has made; let us rejoice and be glad in it.” (Ps 118:24)
I’m so happy to be with you here this morning on this, my first Easter Sunday at St.
David’s. Easter is such an important celebration in the life of the church - we might even
say that without Easter, without the stories of the empty tomb, and without the
appearances of the risen Jesus to his first followers, we might never have known about
Jesus – and it’s Easter that gives the crucifixion of Jesus its lasting significance –
without Easter, we probably wouldn’t know about Good Friday either because the
crucifixion of Jesus was one of many thousands of gruesome executions conducted by
the occupying forces of the Roman imperial army. What was so special about the death
of this wandering Jewish peasant-leader from Nazareth in Galilee, a little town of 400 or
so inhabitants at that time?
We all come to worship this morning with our own “preunderstandings” of Easter, often
formed in our earliest years. And my own was shaped by what has become a liberating
message from the pulpit one Sunday morning about 20 years ago when the preacher
opened his reflection with the words “You know, I don’t know whether it happened like
that; but I do know it to be true.” And he might have said this morning, don’t get too
caught up on the details of whether there was one angel or two, at the tomb; what was
said by them; or how often and where did the risen Jesus first appear to the disciples.
But there are some common features, some basics if you like, in all of the differing
gospel accounts, that are central to the meaning of the Easter story – Jesus was
crucified; three days later, when Mary Magdalene and the women came to the tomb, the
tomb was empty; the dead body wasn’t there; the women believed that God had
transformed the body of Jesus; and later, the risen Jesus really did appear to his
followers in a form that could be seen and heard, and even touched.
But an emphasis on even these basics or, getting caught up in the more general
question of their historical accuracy, risks missing the central meaning of the Easter
story and I’m not going to go there because I’m now convinced that the truth of this
story, its truthfulness, its truth-telling, doesn’t depend on its factuality; the
importance of the Easter story is its meaning.
What does the Easter story mean for you and me? To answer that question I believe we
have to view the resurrection, the raising of the body of Jesus to new life, (however that
was done - and we do believe that all things are possible for God), as inescapably
linked to the crucifixion that came before it. Yes, it’s the Easter story, of the raising of
Jesus, that gives significance to the crucifixion; but it is the murderous nature of the
crucifixion that also gives full significance to the resurrection – because the crucifixion
reveals the depravity of the human condition under sin, like no other mode of execution.
Jesus died a brutal, unjustified and, literally, excruciating death and in that crucifixion
God bears the sin, grief and suffering of the world.
And here’s the simple truth, the Good News of the Easter message is that in
Jesus’ resurrection God overcomes death. We hear in Luke’s account of that “first
day of the week” that the body of Jesus had been sealed in a tomb; but the tomb could
not hold him - the women find that the stone has been rolled away. Jesus is not to be
found in the land of the dead, they’re told. “Why do you look for the living among the
dead? He is not here, but has risen” – it was just as Jesus had said it would happen.
God not only overcomes death; but in raising Jesus, following the crucifixion, God says
a decisive “yes” to Jesus and his vision of the kingdom of God; and a decisive a “no” to
the powers who killed him. And this intensely matters today, because those same
powers, of occupation, brutality and injustice are still active in our world. We shouldn’t
need reminding of that after two world wars, the holocaust, and a history of ethnic and
cultural genocide, and now the criminal actions of Russian occupying forces in Ukraine.
At one level, therefore, the meaning of the resurrection is intensely political: Jesus’
passion was the kingdom of God, what would life on earth be like if God were king,
rather than the rulers and domination systems of the Roman empire? And by saying
“yes” to Jesus, to his example and teaching about justice, and the company he kept,
among the poor and marginalized, God reveals that the human problem is injustice, and
the solution is God’s justice. In other words, in the resurrection, God vindicates Jesus
and the passion for justice that led him to Jerusalem and to his execution. As followers
of Jesus, we’re therefore called, in the words of the UCC Creed, “to seek justice and
resist evil”, to show compassion for those experiencing injustice of whatever kind,
through violence or discrimination.
So, the resurrection is political; but it is also intensely personal and I want to end
on a more personal note and to ask you to reflect on your own understanding of
crucifixion and resurrection. For much of my life, this [crucifix with the body on] has
been the central image of the crucifixion – it is the image of the suffering Jesus on the
cross – Jesus who came into the world to save sinners, like me, centered in the anxious
and fearful self, preoccupied with one’s own desires for success or recognition, less
concerned with the needs of others and, yes, at times distant from God. Over time the
image of the suffering Jesus on the Cross has given way to a plain cross – it’s the cross
I now wear publicly – there’s no tortured body on it, in fact it’s an empty cross, the cross
you saw when you first came into the sanctuary this morning. It’s the cross that tells us
that the suffering Jesus has been raised – it has the same transforming meaning as the
empty tomb, Jesus is risen.
But this Easter Sunday we witness another image of the cross, and it’s the cross that
you now see decorated with daffodils and tulips – it’s a cross that speaks to us of hope
and new life, in fact of abundant and beautiful life – not in the same way that spring
follows winter or that flowers will bloom again or that Easter bunnies will show up this
morning. But a cross that is intentionally transformed by God’s goodness, a cross that
points not to suffering and death, but one that points to life beyond death – death of the
small self, death of fear and scarcity, death of illness and suffering – to new life in
Christ, a life committed to peace and justice and compassion. New life and hope after a
global pandemic; new life in Ukraine after this brutal and criminal war.
That for me is the powerful message of the Easter story – at it’s simplest, it’s a
story about transformation – whether at a social or political level, or a communal level
or, for us here this morning, at a personal level. We are all invited into this journey of
transformation – as we move on from the death of Jesus on a cross, to the empty cross
and empty tomb of the risen Jesus, to the new heaven and the new earth, that is the
kingdom of God. Jesus has given us a vision of that kingdom and it is a vision that God
has vindicated in his resurrection. And I can promise you this morning, with the power of
God’s transforming presence, that it is never too late to become the person, or the
community, that God wants us to be. And so we say Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Christ is
Risen! Amen.