Tuesday, April 21, 2015

Easter 3 Yr B April 19, 2015:An adaptation of David Sellery’s piece in “Speaking to the Soul: I Told You So”on April 14, 2015 (www.episcopalcafe)

+Jesus cracks me up. Even in his resurrection glory his humanity still emerges. Today, in utter exasperation with the dullards known as the disciples, Jesus says, in no uncertain terms: “I told you so!” I told you I’d defeat death. I told you the forces of darkness and evil wouldn’t win.
Five times, in various Gospel accounts, including last week’s story of Thomas and this week’s conclusion to the Road to Emmaus story, the risen Christ shows his friends that the prophesies concerning his Resurrection were all true. That what he had predicted had come to be:
He had been taken away from them… tortured… crucified… died and was buried. And now, risen in glory. He’s not a ghost. He’s living flesh and blood… he’s eating fish with them! Yet, all instinct, reason and experience tells the disciples: The cross had done its wicked work. What’s dead is dead… end of story. Yet here is Jesus … to see, to hear, to touch.
It doesn’t make any sense.
 Even though we have the benefit of more than a few Easters under our belts, this idea of life after death remains a profound mystery that both challenges our reason and defines our faith.
Right there this “challenging our reason and defining our faith…” is what makes Christianity so confounding and yet so glorious.
Theologians have dedicated lifetimes to studying [the historical Jesus and searching for evidence of his Resurrection]. Yet [they’ve] never established an absolute empirical basis for the Resurrection that’s unsupported by faith. And that, of course, is the whole point.
[We’re] called to believe, not to litigate the evidence. “The Gospels do not explain the Resurrection; the Resurrection explains the Gospels. Belief in the Resurrection is not an appendage to the Christian faith, it is the Christian faith.[1]” Our faith as outlined in the Gospels hinge on this fundamental truth: we are an Easter people, we are people of resurrection, we are people who believe that death is dead and life is everlasting
Before, not after, he went to the cross, Jesus said: I am the Resurrection and the life. [Those] who believes in me, though [they] may die… shall live. And whoever lives and believes in me shall never die. (John 11:25-26)
In a classic “I-told-you-so” moment from this morning’s gospel, the risen Jesus reminds his disciples: “You are witnesses of this truth---I died and rose again and from now on, you---all of you---are to spread this Good News , to live this Good News, to be this Good News to all whom you encounter.”  These are our marching orders, to wrestle less with the “how” of the resurrection, and focus more on the truth of the resurrection: that we all, each and every one of us, have our own personal Calvarys, our own despair, our own darkness, our own doubt, our own fear, our own hurt but, through our faith in Jesus Christ, through the outrageous love of our Creator God, we are never alone in our difficulties, we are never abandoned into darkness, we are lifted high above the muck and through the glory of our faith are risen anew into the light and life of resurrection…time and time again.
You see, even though the reality of Jesus’ Resurrection may be difficult to wrap our brains around, the truth of Resurrection is alive and well.
[2]In eight years of ordained ministry, and 20 years as a practicing psychotherapist before then, in scores of treatment rooms, hospital rooms, hospice rooms and living rooms  I have witnessed the glory of resurrection. Over and over, I have been privileged to see people face the reality of their lives---the good, the not so good, the glorious and the horrifying and I’ve seen them, strengthened through their faith, emboldened by the love of God as given to us through Jesus Christ, make amends and live into repentance. I’ve seen them accept the love of God which surpasses all understanding. I’ve seen them move from the cross to the empty tomb of their own lives. I’ve seen them live their own Easter story. Again and again and again.
My friends, there is a personal Calvary that awaits us all. The flesh succumbs. But as Jesus shows us today, death is highly over-rated. The body eventually fails… but the spirit? The spirit never ever ends. What Jesus tells the disciples in these Easter gospels, what our faith tells us week in and week out is that while the forces of darkness will never stop trying to trip us up, the power of the Resurrection, as expressed by us and through us will always prevail.
If you’re looking for proof of the Resurrection, look nor further than right around you. We are the Body of Christ. We are the living witnesses to Christ’s love in the world. We are the empty tomb, we are the failed cross, we are the victors over evil and despair. It’s no coincidence that Jesus came to the disciples as they gathered around the table for a meal. He was in communion with them. They came together for sustenance and strength and he was there to provide it.
And so as we come each week to this altar for sustenance and strength… he’s here to provide it. He’s in the broken bread and the cup that we share. He’s in the love that we celebrate and He’s in the good works we do outside these doors.
The truth is, regardless of our episodic doubt, regardless of those who think we’re fools, Jesus Christ IS Risen. Death IS dead, Love IS Alive and by God’s grace, when we stand before him at the heavenly banquet Jesus will enfold us in his arms and remind us, once again, “I told you so!” Amen.





[1] John Whale, Oxford
[2] In this paragraph I have replaced David’s first person account with my own to aid in the act of preaching of this sermon

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