Living God, long ago, faithful women proclaimed that
Jesus’ tomb was empty, and the world was forever changed. Help us to watch
them. Help us to listen to them. Teach us to keep faith with them, that our
witness may be as bold, our love as deep, and our faith as true.[1]
Amen.
*
* *
The scene is cinematic in its scope: It’s sunrise,
first thing in the morning. A huge stone has been rolled away from the tomb’s
entrance. Five or more women, charged with anointing the dead body of a man
they loved, linger at the entrance, wondering what they’ll find inside. Then, a
question:
“Why do you look for the living among the dead?” Perhaps
after two thousand years of telling the story of Jesus’ death and resurrection,
after hearing it over and over again, we might want to ask them the same thing.
If we’re thinking of it as a movie, it’s like a movie we’ve watched dozens of
times – we know more than the characters do, and we find ourselves yelling at
the screen.
“The poison’s in the other glass!” or “Don’t leave the deposit in
the newspaper, Uncle Billy!” or just “Don’t go in there!” This morning, taking
in this scene, maybe we want to yell at these women: “He’s alive! Don’t you get
it?”
But they don’t. And of COURSE they don’t! Because these
are the women who saw Jesus die. They saw him beaten and nailed to a cross; they
watched, from a distance, as he was mocked; they saw him suffer, heard him say,
“Father, into your hands I commit my spirit”; they watched as he breathed his
last; they saw the tomb and how his body was laid in it. Of course they were
looking for him among the dead – they saw him die.
But they saw other things as well.
Luke tells us that these women had been following Jesus
since Galilee – that means they had been following him since the very beginning
of his ministry, on a day perhaps three years before, when he stood up in the
synagogue in Nazareth (his hometown) and read from the book of Isaiah:
“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,” he said. “and has
anointed me to proclaim good news to the poor, freedom for the prisoners,
recovery of sight for the blind; to set the oppressed free; to proclaim the
Lord’s favor!” The women saw how the crowd first adored him, then turned on
him.
They watched as he moved from town to town, teaching
wherever he went, spreading the news of God’s love in a way that changed
people’s lives. And then, in a synagogue one day, they saw something
terrifying: a man possessed by a demon, crying out, “Go away! What do you want
with us, Jesus of Nazareth?” Jesus simply and sternly said, “Be quiet. Come out
of him!” The demon obeyed, and the women were amazed.
They watched as he continued casting out demons,
freeing people from all the things that tried to possess them. And then, he did
something new. It started with a woman whose fever mysteriously went away after
Jesus spoke to her; the skin of leprous people cleared up; those who were paralyzed
stood and walked; a man born blind was able to see.
Before long Jesus was
inundated with the sick and disabled – people who had long ago believed they
would never recover from their maladies – and he brought healing to all of them.
The women were astonished at these events, these miracles, but more than that,
they were shocked because, unlike every other healer they’d ever seen or heard
about, Jesus did it for free.[2]
Along the way, these women saw Jesus take an interest
in the lives of all kinds of people. One day, he stopped at a lakeside,
inviting some poor fisherman named Peter, James, and John to follow him. Later,
as he was passing by a tax booth, he invited a rich tax collector named Levi to
join them.
When people brought children to him, seeking a blessing, he didn’t
send them away as his disciples assumed he might; instead he was giddy, saying,
“The kingdom of heaven belongs to these ones! The Lord has hidden things from
the wise and revealed them instead to little children.”
He spent time with the Pharisees – the religious
elites of the day – and went to banquets at their homes. He also ate with
people from all walks of life – Jews and Gentiles alike, and even people the Pharisees
believed to be unworthy sinners.
As the women listened to Jesus’ sermons, they began to
hear him teach more and more about loving their enemies: “Bless those who curse
you,” he would say, “and pray for those who mistreat you. … Be merciful, just
as your Father is merciful.” And Jesus didn’t just talk about these things – he did
them! He healed a Roman Centurion’s son, even though the Romans were the Jews’
oppressors. He healed Samaritans and told stories in which they were the
heroes, even though they practiced a different religion than the Jewish people.
He also talked about the Kingdom of God, which didn’t
exactly sound like a particular place.
He said it was like a mustard seed – an invasive weed that could take over a
whole garden; or like yeast, just a little bit of which can leaven a whole ton
of wheat. To the civil authorities, this sounded like code language for
rebellion. To the religious authorities, it sounded like a threat to their
power.
And that was when the women started to hear people
plotting against him. There were whispers at first, and then the threats became
bolder and more specific. As time went on, it was more and more obvious that,
if Jesus were to set foot back in Jerusalem, he would be killed. His disciples
tried to temper his rhetoric: “Why do you always say what you believe?” they
asked. “Every proclamation guarantees free ammunition for your enemies!”[3]
The problem was, he didn’t just say what he believed; he did what he believed. Despite the protests of those who loved him
most, he continued his trek to the city that kills its prophets.
He wasn’t there a week before they arrested him. One
of his closest friends betrayed him, everyone deserted him, and the authorities
killed him.
And the women saw him die.
That’s why they were looking for him in the tomb that
morning.
*
* *
It seems odd to me that, of all the characters who
appear in today’s scripture reading – the appointed reading for Easter this
year – Jesus himself is not one of them. The women don’t find him in the tomb, and
neither does Peter. Luke’s story of the first Easter morning does not include
an appearance by the risen Christ.
So what does that mean?
It means we’ve got to go! We’ve got to get up and go and
find him. We’ve got to stop looking for the living among the dead. Perhaps this
seems like a daunting task – it’s hard to know where to begin. But the women in
this story can help us, because they’ve followed him throughout his ministry. They’ve
seen where he’s been. They know where he would go.
He cast out demons. We should look for Christ among
those who are wrestling with drug addiction, credit card debt, self-harm, alcoholism,
depression.
He healed the sick. We should look for Christ in the cold
and flu aisle, in the ambulance screaming down the highway, in the operating
room, in the ICU, in the rehab center, in the assisted living facility.
He welcomed children. We should look for Christ in classrooms
and schoolyards and daycare centers; in orphanages and foster homes and
juvenile detention centers; on the ball field and the ballet studio and the
playground.
He ate with the poor and the rich. We should look for Christ
at the fast-food drive-thru and the French restaurant and our own humble
kitchen tables.
He embraced his enemies. We should look for Christ in
the people we’d most like to avoid – at work, in our families, perhaps even in
this very sanctuary; we should look for Christ in the political candidate we’d be
least likely to vote for; we should look for Christ in suicide bomber.
He sought out the lost. We should look for Christ
among the grief-stricken families in Brussels, the undocumented workers in our
country, the prisoners in Guantanamo Bay, the refugees throughout the world.
This is what resurrection means: the Kingdom of God is
not a place we discover after we die, but a place God is making, here and now,
in this broken and hurting world. The empty tomb is a call to each one of us,
to go! Go out into the world, seeking the risen Christ wherever he may be found,
serving everyone we encounter along the way.
So go! Go! He is risen! He is risen indeed!
Amen.
[2]
Reza Aslan, Zealot. New York: Random
House, 2013. (103)
[3]
“Non-Stop” from the Hamilton
soundtrack, Lin-Manuel Miranda, original Broadway cast of Hamilton.