Christ is risen! (He is risen indeed. Alleluia!)
Christ’s resurrection is our great joy this day. There can be no better news, no more miraculous miracle, than Jesus Christ rising from the dead, just as he said he would! With as little effort as getting out of bed in the morning, Jesus left death behind on this day, this day of victory, this day of glory. Christ is risen!
But as St. Paul tells us in Colossians 3, it’s not only Christ that has been raised. You have been raised with Christ! Easter is for you, too, Christian. His resurrection is your resurrection! His life is your life. But... it is hidden.
Now, if Christ’s resurrection was only for himself, well that would be nice, and all, but it wouldn’t really benefit us would it? Sort of like if your favorite sports team wins the big game. Sure, you cheer for them. You feel like a part of it. But it doesn’t do anything for you. You don’t get any prize money. You don’t get a special ring or trophy. You maybe get the satisfaction of knowing your team won. But it’s not much more than that.
But you are connected to Christ in a much deeper way. Easter is not the Super Bowl for Christians. He’s not just your quarterback, or even your representative. He’s not just the guy you cheer for. He is your savior. He is your substitute. He is the Lamb of God, slain from the foundation of the world, God’s own son who was sent so that God’s love would be manifest to us. His saving death and glorious resurrection are far more than just a story, even a great and wonderful true story with a happy ending. These things change our entire reality and our eternal destiny. They make all the difference in the world.
For there is no greater problem for us than death, and the sin that causes it. There is nothing more final, more dreadful, more hope-less than death. And if death had the final word for us, how horrible would that be?
And so Jesus has done his work, even faced death for us, even death on a cross, to take the sting of death away, and to destroy death’s power, to make death but a sleep from which we will one day rise in glory. Death becomes a fangless beast that can only gum us in its harmless maws. It holds no terror for those who are in Christ. It is a rest, a rest in peace, a brief stint of the soul in paradise and the body in the grave. But it will give way to life, and that life will have no end.
Christ’s easter, Christ’s resurrection is the preview. It is the spoiler. It is the down payment on the grand prize that is on its way. But as Paul writes to the Colossians, that life is hidden.
We can’t see it just yet, at least not without the eyes of faith. We wait in hope, clinging to the promise. Knowing for certain that the Christ who predicted his own death and resurrection is absolutely reliable and always delivers. If he can conquer death for himself, he can do it for you, too, dear Christian. And in the most important part, he already has.
You are baptized. And it is there and then that you died and rose with Christ. Buried with him in baptism, and also raised with Christ in baptism. Coming out of those waters was the new creation, the new man he has made you to be. But it is hidden. You don’t look any different. You don’t feel any different. You don’t have any baptismal super-powers or a nice little halo to show everyone you’re a Christian now.
But you do have the name of God upon your brow as a seal. You do have the promise of Jesus that your sins are forgiven. You have the word of God spoken to you, then, and again, and again and again. And that word does not fail.
One day, when Christ appears, that is, when he comes again in glory, then our life will also appear. It will be visible, for all to see. As Job writes, “I know that my Redeemer lives, and that at the last he will stand upon the earth, and in my flesh I will see God with my own eyes”. It is on that day that your Baptismal life is no longer hidden. Your body will rise just as surely as Christ did. You will be glorified as he is glorified. And you will live forever with him who is your very life.
Until then... what? We wait. We wait in faith and hope and trust. We celebrate his Easter and look forward to our own. We fix our eyes of faith on the certainty of things unseen. Or, as Paul says, “Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth.”
Death is a thing of this earth. Don’t set your mind there. Don’t let death consume your thoughts. But rather, set your mind on the things above, the promise of life eternal in Christ. Let your thoughts and hearts be captive to the Word of God, and dwell on his promises and blessings.
Live the daily struggle of a Christian, always turning, repenting, of the things of this world. Always turning, and trusting, in the promises of the next. Each Sunday, each day, a little Easter in which we die and rise again anew, returning to those baptismal waters and baptismal promises.
And find your life in Christ. For he is your life. Apart from him there is only death and grave and sorrow and despair. The things of this earth. But with him, there are only things above. Heavenly things. Blessings. Life. Forgiveness. Freedom. Love. And eternity with God in glory.
Hear once more the simple, the powerful, the hopeful and joyous words of St. Paul this Easter Sunday:
Colossians 3:1–4
If then you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth. For you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God. When Christ who is your life appears, then you also will appear with him in glory.
And rejoice, dear Christians, for Christ is risen!


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