John 20:1-9 · The Empty Tomb
April Sky
John 20:1-9
Sermon
by Frank Lyman
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Several years ago, when Margaret Thatcher was prime minister of Britain, a terrorist's bomb exploded in the conference room where many of the government meetings were held. Margaret Thatcher survived this blast, but some of her cabinet members were killed.

The following Sunday, Margaret Thatcher went to church as she always did. But that particular Sunday seemed different. As Margaret Thatcher sang the hymns, listened to the message, saw the candles upon the altar and the sunshine streaming through the stained-glass windows, she began to weep. She wept because everything around her had been changed by the loss of her friends. The familiar had now become strange. The goodness and beauty of the world around her seemed almost too much to bear. She knew she would not only miss her friends, but also the wonderful times they had had together.

(1) And so the Iron Lady wept. If we can relate to Maggie Thatcher's grief, maybe we can relate to the grief of Jesus' disciples and friends on that first Easter morning.

If there is one proverb which describes the followers of Jesus in those days following his crucifixion, it has to be Proverb 29:18 which reads, "Where there is no vision, the people perish." (2)

Though Jesus' followers may not have been physically dead after his crucifixion; emotionally and spiritually, they were walking cadavers. THEY HAD NO VISION. On the morning we know as Easter, Mary Magdalene goes to Jesus' tomb, not in anticipation of his resurrection, BUT TO COMPLETE HIS BURIAL. Like Maggie Thatcher after the death of her friends, Mary was crushed. Her closest friend, her mentor, her Lord was dead!

Some of you may be familiar with the haunting song of Marius in the Broadway musical, LES MISERABLES. He sings it after his friends have been killed in an ill-fated student rebellion:

There's a grief that can't be spoken /There's a pain goes on and on.

Empty chairs at empty tables /Now my friends are dead and gone.

Such was the pain of Jesus' followers after his crucifixion. On Easter afternoon on the road to Emmaus two of Jesus' followers speak of their dashed hopes by saying, ". . . we had hoped that he was the one to redeem Israel." (3) Notice the past tense. They HAD HOPED. Hope unrequited is a cruel emotion. They had hoped, but hope no more. Hope died when Jesus died, and who can blame the disciples for their depression? Not only was their friend dead, but if the Romans would kill Jesus, then why wouldn't they attack his followers? And even if they survived, they would certainly face derision for wasting three years in following Jesus. They had hoped . . . but hope no more.

An anonymous poet penned the poem, "Hope."

He died!
And with him perished all that men hold dear;
Hope lay beside him in the sepulchre,
Love grew corpse cold,
and all things beautiful beside.
Died when he died.

But then the poet adds,

He rose!
And with him hope arose, and life and light.
Men said, ˜not Christ but Death died yesternight.'
And joy and truth and all things virtuous
Rose when he rose."

The good news of Easter is that IT DOESN'T END with women anointing a life-less body. IT DOESN'T END with disillusioned disciples retreating into their houses. And IT SHOULD NOT END with us giving up the search for joy and purpose. Easter ends with Mary testifying to her frightened and discouraged friends: "I have seen the Lord." Easter ends with the disciples opening their eyes to Jesus as he breaks bread with them. And, if we keep the faith, Easter can mean more to us than chocolate bunnies, ham dinners and adding Turf-Builder to the lawn. IT CAN MEAN NEW LIFE. But, first, we need to place ourselves in the story and recall our own moments when we have thought, "I had hoped, but I hope no more."

When Mary came to the tomb she was puzzled to find Jesus' body missing. She ran to Simon Peter and the other disciple, the one Jesus loved, and said, "They have taken the Lord out of the tomb, and we don't know where they have put him!" After confirming her story, the two disciples return to their homes. Left alone, Mary's grief bursts forth in tears. She doesn't even recognize the risen Savior until he speaks her name. She turns toward him and cries out in a moment of wondrous recognition, "Rabboni!" (which in Aramaic means Teacher).

Jesus' resurrection is a positive answer to the question that a tortured man of faith named Job had raised centuries earlier. Just like the disciples, Job's world had come crashing down. He lost his property, his health and even his family. In his pain he asked a question he could not answer, "IF A (PERSON) DIES CAN HE LIVE AGAIN?" (4) The resurrection of Jesus is the answer to Job's question. A PERSON CAN RISE FROM THE DEAD.

John Dunne writes of the impact of the resurrection upon humankind: "The Resurrection is an enormous answer to the problem of death. The idea is that the Christian goes with Christ through death to everlasting life. Death becomes an event, like birth, that is lived through." (5)

What a magnificent statement of faith. Death is merely another event in the ongoing process of life--something one lives through with Christ. The resurrection of Jesus reinforces these words from THE WISDOM OF SOLOMON: "The souls of the just are in God's hand, and torment shall not touch them . . . they are at peace." (6)

Easter has as much impact upon life in this world as it does in life after death. That's what the disciples found on the first Easter afternoon. They were in low spirits because their spirits had been so high only a few days earlier. The time was Passover, always a hopeful season, for the themes of Passover are freedom and deliverance. Passover recalls how God delivered the Jews from slavery in Egypt, and the hope was that if God did it once, God could do it again. Jesus seems to nurse this nationalistic fervor. He enters the city of Jerusalem fanning the people's hope for a militaristic Messiah who will throw the Romans out. The people wave palm branches in joy. The choice of palm branches was no accident, for palm branches were the symbol of the Hasmonean Dynasty, which had been the last time that the Jews had been a free people. By waving palm branches before Jesus, the people were expressing their willingness to allow Jesus to lead them in ousting the Romans! No wonder the disciples were excited--their turn had come, but now, less than a week later, the death of Jesus had shattered their hope. No wonder they said, "WE HAD HOPED . . ." Where there is no vision, the people perish.

If we take that to be a truth, then its corollary must also be true: "Where there is vision there is life." We will see this become true for the disciples, but first I want to touch upon how it is revealed to be true in a wonderful motion picture that came out a few short years ago called, OCTOBER SKY.

OCTOBER SKY tells the true story of Homer Hickam, a teen-ager growing up in the mining town of Coalwood, West Virginia. Life in Coalwood is grim. Mining in itself is difficult, but now the coal is giving out. Homer has no interest in becoming a miner, but sees no way of getting out of Coalwood. The only boys from Coalwood who receive college educations are football players, and Homer is no football player.

But then comes a night in 1957 when Homer looks up into the October Sky and sees the Soviet satellite Sputnik passing over his town of Coalwood. IT IS A VISION WHICH INSPIRES HOMER TO PURSUE A BETTER LIFE. Enlisting the support of three other boys, Homer becomes obsessed with rocketry. A gifted teacher encourages them in their quest, and the boys become so proficient in rocketry that they win a national science competition. All four boys receive college educations, and Homer goes on to a career with NASA. The film works because it avoids mushy sentimentality and focuses upon the marvelous themes of CHARACTER, HARD WORK, PERSEVERANCE AND YES, VISION.

Mary Magdalene and the disciples of Jesus, who had no hope when Jesus died, received new hope that first Easter. We could say that it was their APRIL SKY experience. For Mary, it happened when the risen Christ called her name. For the two disciples, it happened along the road to Emmaus. At first, like Mary, the two disciples are joined by Jesus but are prevented from recognizing him.

As they walk Jesus opens the scriptures and explains the necessity of the Messiah dying upon the Cross. As they near the village, the disciples prevail upon Jesus to stay with them as their guest. But, when Jesus sits down at the table, the guest becomes the host and presides over the meal. Taking bread, blessing it, then breaking it; Jesus is himself made known. The disciples know that their Redeemer lives and their hope is restored.

Hope is a fragile entity. The forces of evil are still much alive in this world. We see those forces in the tragedy of ethnic hatred, in the exploitation of the drug trade, in the violence that still stalks our streets and even invades our schools. If we give in to the forces of evil which enslave, dispossess and murder, then wrong will triumph. But there is another way. It is a vision of the risen Christ conquering death. It is a vision of Christ's people standing up against evil in the name of hope.

We would do well to remember the example of Elie Wiesel.

Elie Wiesel, a Jewish writer and thinker, is a survivor of the Nazi holocaust. For the last half-century Wiesel has been a spokesperson for justice, human rights and yes, hope. For several years after they married, Wiesel and his wife did not have children fearing that the world could not be trusted with another Jewish child. But then they changed their mind. Their decision to have children was inspired by the STORY OF JOB. Elie Wiesel said that he was struck by the fact that after all the terrible things that happened to Job and his family, Job still decided to have more children. JOB REFUSED TO LET EVIL HAVE THE UPPER HAND. When we do the same, by rejecting the work of evil people whether they be down the street or across the sea, then we strike a blow for good. As long as evil is resisted, God's victory is sure.

When George H. Bush was Vice-President of the United States he represented our country at the funeral of Leonid Brezhnev. Bush noted the funeral's military precision and icy coldness. Since the Soviet Union was officially atheistic there were no prayers, no comforting hymns, and no mention of God. Mr. Bush was close to the casket when Mrs. Brezhnev came forward for her final good-bye. He related what he saw: "(Mrs. Brezhnev) walked up, took one last look at her husband and traced the DESIGN OF THE CROSS ON HER HUSBAND'S CHEST . . . In that single act," says Bush, "God had broken through the core of the Communist system." (7)

God still breaks through the cores of systems which enslave. The stones of hatred and oppression, violence and genocide, despair and futility are still rolled away. And when they do, surely heaven itself breaks out in its own HALLELUJAH CHORUS, "And he shall reign forever and ever!" May this be a most blessed Easter! May this be an April Sky Easter for many of us--a time when despair is replaced with hope. In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, Amen.


THE BEST THINGS IN LIFE ARE FREE by Todd Outcalt, Health Communications, Inc., Deerfield Beach, Florida, 1998, p. 163.

As translated in the King James Version

Luke 24:21

Job 14:14

Woodward, Kenneth, "2000 Years of Jesus," NEWSWEEK, March 29, 1999.

Wisdom of Solomon 3:1-3 (NEB). 7. CHRISTIANITY TODAY, October 16, 1986, p. 37.

by Frank Lyman