Sermon
Easter Sunday
Luke 24:1-12
Easter Sunday
Luke 24:1-12
Singapore
“Why do you seek the living among the dead?”
“Why do you seek the living among the dead?”
“Why do you seek the living among the
dead?” There's a good question.
On its face, the question the angels
ask of the women at the tomb seems fairly rhetorical. Jesus is
alive, just like he said. This is a grave. Why would someone alive
stay here? As we say in America, “duh!”
But there is more to this question than
meets the eye. It's a helpful question for framing the meaning of
Easter. Christ is ineed risen from the dead. The grave is empty.
Thanks be to God, Alleluia! But what does this mean for you and me?
How does his resurrection affect us? And what promise does it hold
even for our own future? In other words, why is Easter such a big
deal?
Who are the living, and who are the
dead? We usually think of life and death in biological terms. Life
is breathing and having a pulse. Eating, converting energy,
reproducing. And death is the opposite of that, and the onset of
decay. Death is the deterioration of the body, non-functioning.
It's the end.
But in spiritual terms, and perhaps
this is even more important, what is life, and what is death? The
Bible teaches us that the wages of sin is death. That in the very
day Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit, death came into the world.
Indeed, God said, “in the day you eat of it you shall die”. And
yet it seems, Adam lived for many years after his fall into sin. So
was God lying about death? Or are we missing something with such a
narrow understanding as the biological one?
Death is separation from life. And
life is found only in the Lord. The Holy Spirit, the Lord of life.
The Father, the creator of all things, all life. And Jesus Christ –
the resurrection and the Life. Life and death, you see, are far more
than sitting up and taking nourishment, or pushing up daisies in the
ground. Life and death are spiritual categories, spiritual
realities, that our eyes may not always see so clearly. Therefore we
must rely on the eyes and ears of faith. We must bend our
understanding of life and death to the one that God presents in his
Holy Word.
“Why do you seek the living among the
dead?” The Living One, if there ever was life, is Jesus Christ
himself. And why would he be among the dead? But he was – he was
born into this dying world of sin. He took on human flesh, only to
take it to the cross, and to death. He gave himself to death, no one
took his life from him. And in a great mystery beyond all
understanding, on a Friday afternoon outside of Jerusalem, 2000 years
ago, the source of all life met death.
And there, death was defeated. It
could not contain him. Sin and the devil and death itself were
defeated in the cross of Christ. And in his resurrection from Death
Jesus proves it.
Jesus had a lot to say about life and
death. Like, “I am the way, the truth and the life” and “If
anyone believes in me, even though he die, yet shall he live. And he
who lives and believes in me will never die.” and “For God so
loved the world, that he gave his only son, that whoever believes in
him will not perish but have eternal life.”
You see, Jesus' resurrection is far
more than a happy ending. It's more than just a feel-good conclusion
or the moral to a story. He really lives, and his resurrection means
something – for us!
We, by our sins, are dead. We are born
dead, spiritually. We are dead men walking. We are separated from
God, and separated from life. Not only destined for physical death,
but eternal death. And already, in this life, subject to the effects
of death – suffering, disease, decay.
But in our baptism, we are buried with
Christ, so that just as Christ is raised from the dead, so do we
arise anew from those waters. Now, here, even before our physical
death, we are spiritually alive in Christ, by Christ, and connected
to the Father in bonds of love that even death cannot separate. So
even though we will die, we will live. And even when we die, we
don't, really. And though our body dies, like Christ, we will rise in
these same bodies, to live forever. All of this is wrapped up in
Easter.
Corinthians calls Christ the
“firstfruits” of those who have fallen asleep. But he is not the
only or the last to rise. In Jesus' resurrection, we see our
resurrection. In Jesus' victory over death, we see our own victory.
In Jesus, the living one no longer among the dead – we see our own
future. Though we die, yet shall we live!
It is hard to overstate the importance
of this day. Paul says if Christ didn't rise from the dead, then we
are the most pitiful of all men – that everything we believe is in
vain. But if Jesus really did rise, just like he said, and if he
really is alive, that means everything!
It means we can trust every other word
he says. It means when he says your sins are forgiven, they truly
are! It means when he promises his body and blood to you here –
you can trust it fully. It means when he says you are clean, you
are.
Why do you seek the living among the
dead? We don't. We seek him where he promises to be. In his word.
In baptism. And at his altar, in his meal. And there, he who is
living, gives us his life. Life that he gave at the cross. But life
that death could not contain. Life that he has forever, and shares
with us forever.
A Blessed Easter to you, in the One who
is alive, Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.