As we
celebrate the resurrection of Jesus, we are challenged to expand our Easter joy
to more than just hope in eternal life.
The resurrection is the pouring forth of the promise of the Holy Spirit
here and now. It is the assurance of the
presence of God at this very moment, not just about what we can expect when we
leave this earth, but while we are still here.
The bigger picture of the Easter story is that we have not been
abandoned to hopelessness, ever.
But tell
that to the poor. Tell that to the beaten
and abused, the tortured and the unjustly imprisoned. Tell that to the terminally ill, and tell
that to the lonely. Tell that to the
hungry and the homeless who wander the scourged lands of the earth. Tell that to the people of this earth who
feel in very real ways that they have been abandoned to
hopelessness.
While our
faith in the resurrection is certainly about God keeping us safe and the
assurance of abiding in hope for our own lives, we pray in Psalm 16 that God
will also show us the path to life, and fullness of joys in the presence of
God. So if the death and resurrection of
Jesus was about our liberation from the hopelessness of our own deaths, why do
we have to follow a path to life? Hasn’t
it all been done for us already? Yes, it
has. But life is not living unless it is
experienced in joy, the joy of the presence of God. So there is something we can do in response
to our joy to make it fuller.
To more
fully experience the presence of God, we will tell the poor, the beaten, the
abused, the imprisoned, the sick, the hungry, the homeless and the lonely that
they too have not been abandoned to hopelessness. Christ is not just our hope, but the hope of
the world. The resurrection of Jesus is
the redemption of all of humanity. And
it isn’t just about whether we believe it or not, it is about whether we feel
confident enough to act on it
As I reflect
on these lessons, I think about the reason why the first words Jesus said to those
who saw Him after the resurrection were “Do not be afraid.” I don’t think it was because He thought they
might be afraid of ghosts. I think He
says this to us today, just as He did then, because His resurrection means that
He is the fulfillment of the promises of God.
It’s not our fear of death; it’s our fear of life that we need to think
about now. If Jesus really is alive,
then God really meant it when He said He loved us and we, meaning all of
humanity, are worth saving. That means
nobody has been abandoned to hopelessness.
Believing in the resurrection means believing in the entire promise of
God’s enduring presence with humanity.
I feel great
joy at Easter, but the fullness of joy that I seek in the presence of God is
not just about the relief that the fear of death has been lifted. The joyful Easter Sunday celebration
encourages me to identify with the suffering of others who don’t feel that
hope. Alleluia! I pray today that I will not be afraid to
stay on that path and share that Easter story by bringing hope and joy in very
concrete ways to those who do feel abandoned.
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